Abstract

Filamentous diazotrophic Cyanobacteria of the genus Trichodesmium, often found in colonial form, provide an important source of new nitrogen to tropical and subtropical marine ecosystems. Colonies are composed of several clades of Trichodesmium in association with a diverse community of bacterial and eukaryotic epibionts. We used high-throughput 16S rRNA and nifH gene sequencing, carbon (C) and dinitrogen (N2) fixation assays, and metagenomics to describe the diversity and functional potential of the microbiome associated with Trichodesmium colonies collected from the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre (NPSG). The 16S rRNA and nifH gene sequences from hand-picked colonies were predominantly (>99%) from Trichodesmium Clade I (i.e., T. thiebautii), which is phylogenetically and ecologically distinct from the Clade III IMS101 isolate used in most laboratory studies. The bacterial epibiont communities were dominated by Bacteroidetes, Alphaproteobacteria, and Gammaproteobacteria, including several taxa with a known preference for surface attachment, and were relatively depleted in the unicellular Cyanobacteria and small photoheterotrophic bacteria that dominate NPSG surface waters. Sequencing the nifH gene (encoding a subcomponent of the nitrogenase enzyme) identified non-Trichodesmium diazotrophs that clustered predominantly among the Cluster III nifH sequence-types that includes putative anaerobic diazotrophs. Trichodesmium colonies may represent an important habitat for these Cluster III diazotrophs, which were relatively rare in the surrounding seawater. Sequence analyses of nifH gene transcripts revealed several cyanobacterial groups, including heterocystous Richelia, associated with the colonies. Both the 16S rRNA and nifH datasets indicated strong differences between Trichodesmium epibionts and picoplankton in the surrounding seawater, and also between the epibionts inhabiting Trichodesmium puff and tuft colony morphologies. Metagenomic and 16S rRNA gene sequence analyses suggested that lineages typically associated with a copiotrophic lifestyle comprised a large fraction of colony-associated epibionts, in contrast to the streamlined genomes typical of bacterioplankton in these oligotrophic waters. Additionally, epibiont metagenomes were enriched in specific genes involved in phosphate and iron acquisition and denitrification pathways relative to surface seawater metagenomes. We propose that the unique microbial consortium inhabiting colonies has a significant impact on the biogeochemical functioning of Trichodesmium colonies in pelagic environments.

Highlights

  • The filamentous, dinitrogen (N2)-fixing cyanobacterium Trichodesmium provides a major source of bioavailable nitrogen (N) to the oligotrophic subtropical and tropical oceans (Karl et al, 2002; Capone et al, 2005)

  • Illumina paired-end reads Contigs assembled Weighted-average contig length (N50a) Contigs annotated to KEGG ortholog groups (KO) Contigs annotated (%) Counts mapped to KO Counts mapped to KO of known functionb Genomes per million genesb,c KO of known function (%)

  • Parenthetical values represent only those KO assigned to non-Cyanobacteria. aN50 values were generated by MEGAHIT. bLength-corrected counts. cAverage Genes Per Million (GPM) from 29 KOs previously identified as single-copy genes (Nayfach and Pollard, 2015, Table S4)

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Summary

Introduction

The filamentous, dinitrogen (N2)-fixing (diazotrophic) cyanobacterium Trichodesmium provides a major source of bioavailable nitrogen (N) to the oligotrophic subtropical and tropical oceans (Karl et al, 2002; Capone et al, 2005). Natural Trichodesmium populations are composed of species from four known phylogenetically distinct clades (Hynes et al, 2012), which can vary in physiological traits, such as carbon (C) affinity and phosphonate biosynthesis (Dyhrman et al, 2009; Hutchins et al, 2013). In nature they are commonly found associated with attached microorganisms (Borstad and Borstad, 1977). The diversity of this complex community likely affects the overall functioning of colonies (Gradoville et al, 2014), yet few studies have examined the ecology of Trichodesmium species and associated epibionts ( see Hmelo et al, 2012; Rouco et al, 2016)

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