Cable bacteria colonise new sediment environments through water column dispersal
- PMID: 39414566
- DOI: 10.1111/1462-2920.16694
Cable bacteria colonise new sediment environments through water column dispersal
Abstract
Cable bacteria exhibit a unique metabolism involving long-distance electron transport, significantly impacting elemental cycling in various sediments. These long filamentous bacteria are distributed circumglobally, suggesting an effective mode of dispersal. However, oxygen strongly inhibits their activity, posing a challenge to their dispersal through the water column. We investigated the effective dispersal of marine cable bacteria in a compartmentalised microcosm experiment. Cable bacteria were grown in natural 'source' sediment, and their metabolic activity was recorded in autoclaved 'destination' cores, which were only accessible through oxygenated seawater. Colonisation occurred over weeks, and destination cores contained only one cable bacterium strain. Filament 'snippets' (fragments with a median size of ~15 cells) accumulated in the microcosm water, with about 30% of snippets attached to sediment particles. Snippet release was also observed in situ in a salt marsh creek. This provides a model for the dispersal of cable bacteria through oxygenated water: snippets are formed by filament breakage in the sediment, released into the overlying water and transported with sediment particles that likely offer protection. These insights are informative for broader theories on microbial community assembly and prokaryotic biogeography in marine sediments.
© 2024 The Author(s). Environmental Microbiology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
References
REFERENCES
-
- Barbour, K.M., Barrón‐Sandoval, A., Walters, K.E. & Martiny, J.B.H. (2023) Towards quantifying microbial dispersal in the environment. Environmental Microbiology, 25, 137–142.
-
- Barnett, J.M., Arts, I.C.W. & Penders, J. (2021) microViz: an R package for microbiome data visualization and statistics. Journal of Open Source Software, 6(63), 3201.
-
- Becking, B. (1934) Geobiologie of inleiding tot de milieukunde. The Hague: W. P. Van Stockum & Zoon.
-
- Bjerg, J.J., Lustermans, J.J.M., Marshall, I.P.G., Mueller, A.J., Brokjaer, S., Thorup, C.A. et al. (2023) Cable bacteria with electric connection to oxygen attract flocks of diverse bacteria. Nature Communications, 14, 1614.
-
- Bjerg, J.T., Boschker, H.T.S., Larsen, S., Berry, D., Schmid, M., Millo, D. et al. (2018) Long‐distance electron transport in individual, living cable bacteria. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 115, 5786–5791.
MeSH terms
Substances
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
