Department of Life and Environmental Sciences, Polytechnic University of Marche, Ancona 60131, Italy.; Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn, Villa Comunale, 80121 Naples, Italy.
Department of Life and Environmental Sciences, Polytechnic University of Marche, Ancona 60131, Italy.
Sci Adv. 2016 Oct 12;2(10):e1600492. doi: 10.1126/sciadv.1600492. eCollection 2016 Oct.
Viruses are the most abundant biological entities in the world's oceans, and they play a crucial role in global biogeochemical cycles. In deep-sea ecosystems, archaea and bacteria drive major nutrient cycles, and viruses are largely responsible for their mortality, thereby exerting important controls on microbial dynamics. However, the relative impact of viruses on archaea compared to bacteria is unknown, limiting our understanding of the factors controlling the functioning of marine systems at a global scale. We evaluate the selectivity of viral infections by using several independent approaches, including an innovative molecular method based on the quantification of archaeal versus bacterial genes released by viral lysis. We provide evidence that, in all oceanic surface sediments (from 1000- to 10,000-m water depth), the impact of viral infection is higher on archaea than on bacteria. We also found that, within deep-sea benthic archaea, the impact of viruses was mainly directed at members of specific clades of Marine Group I Thaumarchaeota. Although archaea represent, on average, ~12% of the total cell abundance in the top 50 cm of sediment, virus-induced lysis of archaea accounts for up to one-third of the total microbial biomass killed, resulting in the release of ~0.3 to 0.5 gigatons of carbon per year globally. Our results indicate that viral infection represents a key mechanism controlling the turnover of archaea in surface deep-sea sediments. We conclude that interactions between archaea and their viruses might play a profound, previously underestimated role in the functioning of deep-sea ecosystems and in global biogeochemical cycles.
病毒是世界海洋中最丰富的生物实体,它们在全球生物地球化学循环中起着至关重要的作用。在深海生态系统中,古菌和细菌驱动主要的营养循环,而病毒在很大程度上导致了它们的死亡,从而对微生物动态产生了重要的控制作用。然而,病毒对古菌的相对影响相对于细菌而言是未知的,这限制了我们对控制海洋系统在全球范围内运作的因素的理解。我们使用几种独立的方法来评估病毒感染的选择性,包括一种基于病毒裂解释放的古菌和细菌基因定量的创新分子方法。我们提供的证据表明,在所有海洋表层沉积物(水深 1000 至 10000 米)中,病毒感染对古菌的影响大于对细菌的影响。我们还发现,在深海海底古菌中,病毒的影响主要针对海洋 I 组 Thaumarchaeota 特定分支的成员。虽然古菌平均占沉积物顶层 50 厘米内总细胞丰度的~12%,但病毒诱导的古菌裂解导致了高达三分之一的微生物生物量死亡,导致每年全球释放约 0.3 至 0.5 千兆吨碳。我们的研究结果表明,病毒感染是控制表层深海沉积物中古菌周转的关键机制。我们得出结论,古菌及其病毒之间的相互作用可能在深海生态系统和全球生物地球化学循环的功能中发挥着深远的、以前被低估的作用。