Department of Marine Sciences, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, USA.
Institute of Bioinformatics, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, USA.
Appl Environ Microbiol. 2024 Aug 21;90(8):e0108324. doi: 10.1128/aem.01083-24. Epub 2024 Jul 23.
Oil spills are a frequent perturbation to the marine environment that has rapid and significant impacts on the local microbiome. Previous studies have shown that exposure to synthetic dispersant alone did not enhance heterotrophic microbial activity or oxidation rates of specific hydrocarbon components but increased the abundance of some taxa (e.g., ). In contrast, exposure to oil, but not dispersants, increased the abundance of other taxa (e.g., ) and stimulated hydrocarbon oxidation rates. Here, we advance these findings by interpreting metatranscriptomic data from this experiment to explore how and why specific components of the microbial community responded to distinct organic carbon exposure regimes. Dispersant alone was selected for a unique community and for dominant organisms that reflected treatment- and time-dependent responses. Dispersant amendment also led to diverging functional profiles among the different treatments. Similarly, oil alone was selected for a community that was distinct from treatments amended with dispersants. The presence of oil and dispersants with added nutrients led to substantial differences in microbial responses, likely suggesting increased fitness driven by the presence of additional inorganic nutrients. The oil-only additions led to a marked increase in the expression of phages, prophages, transposable elements, and plasmids (PPTEPs), suggesting that aspects of microbial community response to oil are driven by the "mobilome," potentially through viral-associated regulation of metabolic pathways in ciliates and flagellates that would otherwise throttle the microbial community through grazing.IMPORTANCEMicrocosm experiments simulated the April 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill by applying oil and synthetic dispersants (Corexit EC9500A and EC9527A) to deep ocean water samples. The exposure regime revealed severe negative alterations in the treatments' heterotrophic microbial activity and hydrocarbon oxidation rates. We expanded these findings by exploring metatranscriptomic signatures of the microbial communities during the chemical amendments in the microcosm experiments. Here we report how dominant organisms were uniquely associated with treatment- and time-dependent trajectories during the exposure regimes; nutrient availability was a significant factor in driving changes in metatranscriptomic responses. Remarkable signals associated with PPTEPs showed the potential role of mobilome and viral-associated survival responses. These insights underscore the time-dependent environmental perturbations of fragile marine environments under oil and anthropogenic stress.
溢油是海洋环境的一种常见扰动,对当地微生物组会产生快速而显著的影响。先前的研究表明,单独暴露于合成分散剂并不会增强异养微生物的活性或特定碳氢化合物成分的氧化速率,但会增加某些分类群的丰度(例如,)。相比之下,暴露于石油而不是分散剂会增加其他分类群(例如,)的丰度,并刺激碳氢化合物的氧化速率。在这里,我们通过解释来自该实验的宏转录组学数据来推进这些发现,以探索微生物群落的特定成分如何以及为何对不同的有机碳暴露条件做出反应。单独的分散剂被选择用于独特的群落和占主导地位的生物体,这些生物体反映了处理和时间依赖性的反应。分散剂的添加还导致不同处理之间的功能谱出现分歧。同样,仅添加石油就会选择一个与用分散剂处理的群落不同的群落。油和添加营养物质的分散剂的存在导致微生物反应的显著差异,这可能表明由于额外无机营养物质的存在而增加了适应性。仅添加油会导致噬菌体、前噬菌体、转座元件和质粒(PPTEP)的表达显著增加,这表明微生物群落对石油的某些反应是由“可移动组”驱动的,可能通过病毒相关的纤毛虫和鞭毛虫代谢途径的调节来实现,否则这些途径会通过放牧来抑制微生物群落。
重要性:微宇宙实验通过将石油和合成分散剂(Corexit EC9500A 和 EC9527A)应用于深海水样来模拟 2010 年 4 月的深水地平线溢油事件。暴露条件导致处理中的异养微生物活性和碳氢化合物氧化速率严重负向改变。我们通过探索微宇宙实验中化学处理期间微生物群落的宏转录组学特征来扩展这些发现。在这里,我们报告了在暴露条件下,优势生物如何与处理和时间依赖性轨迹独特相关;营养物质的可用性是驱动宏转录组学反应变化的重要因素。与 PPTEP 相关的显著信号表明了可移动组和病毒相关生存反应的潜在作用。这些见解强调了在石油和人为压力下脆弱的海洋环境的时间依赖性环境扰动。