Abstract

Prochlorococcus and Synechococcus are the most abundant photosynthesizing organisms in the oceans. Gene content variation among picocyanobacterial populations in separate ocean basins often mirrors the selective pressures imposed by the region’s distinct biogeochemistry. By pairing genomic datasets with trace metal concentrations from across the global ocean, we show that the genomic capacity for siderophore-mediated iron uptake is widespread in Synechococcus and low-light adapted Prochlorococcus populations from deep chlorophyll maximum layers of iron-depleted regions of the oligotrophic Pacific and S. Atlantic oceans: Prochlorococcus siderophore consumers were absent in the N. Atlantic ocean (higher new iron flux) but constituted up to half of all Prochlorococcus genomes from metagenomes in the N. Pacific (lower new iron flux). Picocyanobacterial siderophore consumers, like many other bacteria with this trait, also lack siderophore biosynthesis genes indicating that they scavenge exogenous siderophores from seawater. Statistical modeling suggests that the capacity for siderophore uptake is endemic to remote ocean regions where atmospheric iron fluxes are the smallest, especially at deep chlorophyll maximum and primary nitrite maximum layers. We argue that abundant siderophore consumers at these two common oceanographic features could be a symptom of wider community iron stress, consistent with prior hypotheses. Our results provide a clear example of iron as a selective force driving the evolution of marine picocyanobacteria.

Highlights

  • Prochlorococcus and its sister lineage Synechococcus are some of the smallest known photosynthetic organisms and are among the most numerically abundant life forms on the planet

  • We identify environmental features associated with picocyanobacterial siderophore uptake and reveal that siderophore uptake is predominantly a feature of low-light adapted LLI clade Prochlorococcus residing near deep chlorophyll maximum layer (DCM) layers from the lower limits of the euphotic zone

  • Synechococcus siderophore consumers were from the North Pacific subtropical gyre (Supplementary Fig. S3) and polar frontal regions between 28 °N and 37 °N [27], where surface Dissolved Fe (dFe) concentrations are typically low

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Summary

Introduction

Prochlorococcus and its sister lineage Synechococcus are some of the smallest known photosynthetic organisms and are among the most numerically abundant life forms on the planet. Synechococcus siderophore consumers were from the North Pacific subtropical gyre (Supplementary Fig. S3) and polar frontal regions between 28 °N and 37 °N [27], where surface dFe concentrations are typically low.

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