Landry Zachary, Swan Brandon K, Herndl Gerhard J, Stepanauskas Ramunas, Giovannoni Stephen J
Department of Microbiology, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon, USA.
Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences, Single-Cell Genomics Center, East Boothbay, Maine, USA.
mBio. 2017 Apr 18;8(2):e00413-17. doi: 10.1128/mBio.00413-17.
Deep-ocean regions beyond the reach of sunlight contain an estimated 615 Pg of dissolved organic matter (DOM), much of which persists for thousands of years. It is thought that bacteria oxidize DOM until it is too dilute or refractory to support microbial activity. We analyzed five single-amplified genomes (SAGs) from the abundant SAR202 clade of dark-ocean bacterioplankton and found they encode multiple families of paralogous enzymes involved in carbon catabolism, including several families of oxidative enzymes that we hypothesize participate in the degradation of cyclic alkanes. The five partial genomes encoded 152 flavin mononucleotide/F420-dependent monooxygenases (FMNOs), many of which are predicted to be type II Baeyer-Villiger monooxygenases (BVMOs) that catalyze oxygen insertion into semilabile alicyclic alkanes. The large number of oxidative enzymes, as well as other families of enzymes that appear to play complementary roles in catabolic pathways, suggests that SAR202 might catalyze final steps in the biological oxidation of relatively recalcitrant organic compounds to refractory compounds that persist. Carbon in the ocean is massively sequestered in a complex mixture of biologically refractory molecules that accumulate as the chemical end member of biological oxidation and diagenetic change. However, few details are known about the biochemical machinery of carbon sequestration in the deep ocean. Reconstruction of the metabolism of a deep-ocean microbial clade, SAR202, led to postulation of new biochemical pathways that may be the penultimate stages of DOM oxidation to refractory forms that persist. These pathways are tied to a proliferation of oxidative enzymes. This research illuminates dark-ocean biochemistry that is broadly consequential for reconstructing the global carbon cycle.
阳光无法到达的深海区域估计含有615Pg的溶解有机物(DOM),其中大部分会持续存在数千年。据认为,细菌会氧化DOM,直到其变得过于稀薄或难以分解而无法支持微生物活动。我们分析了来自深海浮游细菌中丰富的SAR202进化枝的五个单扩增基因组(SAG),发现它们编码了多个参与碳分解代谢的旁系同源酶家族,包括几个氧化酶家族,我们推测这些氧化酶参与环状烷烃的降解。这五个部分基因组编码了152种黄素单核苷酸/F420依赖的单加氧酶(FMNO),其中许多预计是II型拜耳-维利格单加氧酶(BVMO),可催化氧插入半不稳定的脂环族烷烃中。大量的氧化酶以及似乎在分解代谢途径中起互补作用的其他酶家族表明,SAR202可能催化相对难降解的有机化合物生物氧化为持久性难降解化合物的最后步骤。海洋中的碳大量封存于生物难降解分子的复杂混合物中,这些分子作为生物氧化和成岩变化的化学终产物而积累。然而,关于深海碳封存的生化机制,我们知之甚少。对深海微生物进化枝SAR202的代谢进行重建,从而推测出可能是DOM氧化为持久性难降解形式的倒数第二阶段的新生化途径。这些途径与氧化酶的增殖有关。这项研究阐明了对重建全球碳循环具有广泛影响的深海生物化学。