Abstract

Distinct lineages of Gammaproteobacteria clade Woeseiales are globally distributed in marine sediments, based on metagenomic and 16S rRNA gene analysis. Yet little is known about why they are dominant or their ecological role in Arctic fjord sediments, where glacial retreat is rapidly imposing change. This study combined 16S rRNA gene analysis, metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs), and genome-resolved metatranscriptomics uncovered the in situ abundance and transcriptional activity of Woeseiales with burial in four shallow sediment sites of Kongsfjorden and Van Keulenfjorden of Svalbard (79°N). We present five novel Woeseiales MAGs and show transcriptional evidence for metabolic plasticity during burial, including sulfur oxidation with reverse dissimilatory sulfite reductase (dsrAB) down to 4 cm depth and nitrite reduction down to 6 cm depth. A single stress protein, spore protein SP21 (hspA), had a tenfold higher mRNA abundance than any other transcript, and was a hundredfold higher on average than other transcripts. At three out of the four sites, SP21 transcript abundance increased with depth, while total mRNA abundance and richness decreased, indicating a shift in investment from metabolism and other cellular processes to build-up of spore protein SP21. The SP21 gene in MAGs was often flanked by genes involved in membrane-associated stress response. The ability of Woeseiales to shift from sulfur oxidation to nitrite reduction with burial into marine sediments with decreasing access to overlying oxic bottom waters, as well as enter into a dormant state dominated by SP21, may account for its ubiquity and high abundance in marine sediments worldwide, including those of the rapidly shifting Arctic.

Highlights

  • Seafloor sediments host a significant portion of Earth’s biomass [1]

  • The relative abundance of Woeseiales 16S rRNA gene amplicons remained steady with depth in Van Keulenfjorden sediment, between 1–3% of 16S rRNA gene amplicon libraries down to ~20 cm at sites AB and AC in Van Keulenfjorden (Fig 1d and 1e). 16S rRNA genes did not amplify for sites P and F in Kongsfjorden, likely due to the high concentrations of Fe, which can interfere with DNA extraction and amplification [24]

  • High Carbon to nitrogen (C/N) ratios and low total organic carbon (TOC) values at sites AC, F, and P indicate the deposition of refractory terrestrial organic material relative to site AB where corresponding values were lower [22, 25]

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Summary

Introduction

Seafloor sediments host a significant portion of Earth’s biomass [1]. Microorganisms must have physiological adaptations to be active in marine sediments. Redox active compounds, organic matter compositions, metal distributions, and metabolite. R Markdown files for Spearman calculations and depth-resolved transcript coverage plots for all individual genes are deposited at GitHub (https://github.com/JBuongio/ Woes)

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