Luo Chengwei, Rodriguez-R Luis M, Johnston Eric R, Wu Liyou, Cheng Lei, Xue Kai, Tu Qichao, Deng Ye, He Zhili, Shi Jason Zhou, Yuan Mengting Maggie, Sherry Rebecca A, Li Dejun, Luo Yiqi, Schuur Edward A G, Chain Patrick, Tiedje James M, Zhou Jizhong, Konstantinidis Konstantinos T
Center for Bioinformatics and Computational Genomics, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
Appl Environ Microbiol. 2014 Mar;80(5):1777-86. doi: 10.1128/AEM.03712-13. Epub 2013 Dec 27.
Soil microbial communities are extremely complex, being composed of thousands of low-abundance species (<0.1% of total). How such complex communities respond to natural or human-induced fluctuations, including major perturbations such as global climate change, remains poorly understood, severely limiting our predictive ability for soil ecosystem functioning and resilience. In this study, we compared 12 whole-community shotgun metagenomic data sets from a grassland soil in the Midwestern United States, half representing soil that had undergone infrared warming by 2°C for 10 years, which simulated the effects of climate change, and the other half representing the adjacent soil that received no warming and thus, served as controls. Our analyses revealed that the heated communities showed significant shifts in composition and predicted metabolism, and these shifts were community wide as opposed to being attributable to a few taxa. Key metabolic pathways related to carbon turnover, such as cellulose degradation (∼13%) and CO2 production (∼10%), and to nitrogen cycling, including denitrification (∼12%), were enriched under warming, which was consistent with independent physicochemical measurements. These community shifts were interlinked, in part, with higher primary productivity of the aboveground plant communities stimulated by warming, revealing that most of the additional, plant-derived soil carbon was likely respired by microbial activity. Warming also enriched for a higher abundance of sporulation genes and genomes with higher G+C content. Collectively, our results indicate that microbial communities of temperate grassland soils play important roles in mediating feedback responses to climate change and advance the understanding of the molecular mechanisms of community adaptation to environmental perturbations.
土壤微生物群落极其复杂,由数千种低丰度物种组成(占总量的<0.1%)。对于这样复杂的群落如何响应自然或人为引起的波动,包括全球气候变化等重大扰动,我们仍知之甚少,这严重限制了我们对土壤生态系统功能和恢复力的预测能力。在本研究中,我们比较了来自美国中西部一片草原土壤的12个全群落鸟枪法宏基因组数据集,其中一半代表经历了10年2°C红外增温的土壤,模拟了气候变化的影响,另一半代表未增温的相邻土壤,作为对照。我们的分析表明,受热的群落显示出组成和预测代谢的显著变化,这些变化是全群落范围的,而不是归因于少数分类群。与碳周转相关的关键代谢途径,如纤维素降解(约13%)和二氧化碳产生(约10%),以及与氮循环相关的途径,包括反硝化作用(约12%),在增温条件下富集,这与独立的理化测量结果一致。这些群落变化部分与增温刺激的地上植物群落较高的初级生产力相关联,表明大部分额外的、植物来源的土壤碳可能通过微生物活动被呼吸。增温还使较高丰度的孢子形成基因和较高G+C含量的基因组富集。总体而言,我们的结果表明,温带草原土壤的微生物群落在介导对气候变化的反馈响应中发挥重要作用,并推进了对群落适应环境扰动分子机制的理解。