Abstract
Synechococcus is a dominant genus of the coastal phytoplankton with an effective contribution to primary productivity. Here, the phylogenetic and phenogenetic composition of Synechococcus in the coastal Yellow Sea was addressed by sequencing marker gene methods. Meanwhile, its co-occurrence pattern with bacterial and eukaryotic microbes was further investigated based on the construction of networks. The result revealed that Synechococcus abundance ranged from 9.8 × 102 cells mL−1 to 1.6 × 105 cells mL−1, which was significantly correlated to sampling depth and nutrient contents of nitrite, ammonia, and dissolved silicon. A total of eight Synechococcus phylogenetic lineages were detected, of which clade III was dominant in most of the samples. Meanwhile, clade I increased along the water column and even reached a maximum value of 76.13% at 20 m of station B. Phenogenetically, Synechococcus PT3 was always the predominant pigment type across the whole study zone. Only salinity was significantly correlated to the phenogenetic constitution. The networks revealed that Synechococcus co-occurred with 159 prokaryotes, as well as 102 eukaryotes including such possible grazers as Gymnodinium clades and Alveolata. Potential function prediction further showed that microbes co-occurring with Synechococcus were associated with diverse element cycles, but the exact mechanism needed further experimentation to verify. This research promotes exploring regularity in the genomic composition and niche position of Synechococcus in the coastal ecosystem and is significant to further discuss its potential participation in materials circulation and bottom-up effects in microbial food webs.
Highlights
Marine Synechococcus is a main group of photosynthetic picophytoplankton with the feature of self-assembly orange phycoerythrin for light capturing
Synechococcus can be classified into three phylogenetic subclusters including subcluster 5.1 (S5.1), subcluster 5.2 (S5.2), and subcluster 5.3 (S5.3) [2], which at least consist of 20 clades, 2 clades, and 6 clades, respectively [3]
OTUs was constructed from the correlation matrix community relationships encompassing all prokaryotic and eukaryotic OTUs was constructed from the correlation matrix using a force-directed layout algorithm; red nodes represent six OTUs belong to Synechococcus; gray nodes represent OTUs using a force-directed layout algorithm; red nodes represent six OTUs belong to Synechococcus; gray nodes represent OTUs with the absolute value of Spearman coefficients < 0.6 and p > 0.05 with Synechococcus; green nodes represent prokaryotic with the absolute value of Spearman coefficients < 0.6 and p > 0.05 with Synechococcus; green nodes represent prokaryotic
Summary
Marine Synechococcus is a main group of photosynthetic picophytoplankton with the feature of self-assembly orange phycoerythrin for light capturing. Synechococcus exhibits a diverse distribution concerning abundance, phylogenetic composition, and PTs around the world’s oceans It is widely distributed in the global marine ecosystems, from equatorial to polar sea waters [11]. Biological [38] studies have been conducted here It was selected in our study with the goal to (i) reveal the distribution pattern of Synechococcus in terms of cell abundance and the impact of environmental variables on it along the Yellow Sea section; (ii) unveil both phylogenetic and phenogenetic diversity and structure of Synechococcus assemblages and their environmental constraints; and (iii) study the co-occurrence pattern of Synechococcus with multiple eukaryotic and prokaryotic taxa to explore its ecological functions associated with microbiome Synechococcus in the coastal ecosystem
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have
Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.