Department of Biological Sciences, University of Maryland-Baltimore County, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Department of Plant and Microbial Biology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.
Appl Environ Microbiol. 2024 Oct 23;90(10):e0106224. doi: 10.1128/aem.01062-24. Epub 2024 Sep 12.
Bacteria are major drivers of organic matter decomposition and play crucial roles in global nutrient cycling. Although the degradation of dead fungal biomass (necromass) is increasingly recognized as an important contributor to soil carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) cycling, the genes and metabolic pathways involved in necromass degradation are less characterized. In particular, how bacteria degrade necromass containing different quantities of melanin, which largely control rates of necromass decomposition , is largely unknown. To address this gap, we conducted a multi-timepoint transcriptomic analysis using three Gram-negative, bacterial species grown on low or high melanin necromass of . The bacterial species, , and , belong to genera known to degrade necromass . We found that while bacterial growth was consistently higher on low than high melanin necromass, the CAZyme-encoding gene expression response of the three species was similar between the two necromass types. Interestingly, this trend was not shared for genes encoding nitrogen utilization, which varied in and during growth on high vs low melanin necromass. Additionally, this study tested the metabolic capabilities of these bacterial species to grow on a diversity of C and N sources and found that the three bacteria have substantially different utilization patterns. Collectively, our data suggest that as necromass changes chemically over the course of degradation, certain bacterial species are favored based on their differential metabolic capacities.IMPORTANCEFungal necromass is a major component of the carbon (C) in soils as well as an important source of nitrogen (N) for plant and microbial growth. Bacteria associated with necromass represent a distinct subset of the soil microbiome and characterizing their functional capacities is the critical next step toward understanding how they influence necromass turnover. This is particularly important for necromass varying in melanin content, which has been observed to control the rate of necromass decomposition across a variety of ecosystems. Here we assessed the gene expression of three necromass-degrading bacteria grown on low or high melanin necromass and characterized their metabolic capacities to grow on different C and N substrates. These transcriptomic and metabolic studies provide the first steps toward assessing the physiological relevance of up-regulated CAZyme-encoding genes in necromass decomposition and provide foundational data for generating a predictive model of the molecular mechanisms underpinning necromass decomposition by soil bacteria.
细菌是有机质分解的主要驱动因素,在全球养分循环中起着至关重要的作用。尽管越来越多的人认识到死真菌生物质(坏死物质)的降解是土壤碳(C)和氮(N)循环的重要贡献者,但涉及坏死物质降解的基因和代谢途径仍不太清楚。特别是,在很大程度上控制坏死物质分解速率的细菌如何降解含有不同量黑色素的坏死物质,在很大程度上尚不清楚。为了解决这一差距,我们对三种革兰氏阴性细菌进行了多次时间点转录组分析,这些细菌在低或高黑色素坏死物质上生长。细菌种类 、 和 属于已知可降解坏死物质的属。我们发现,虽然细菌在低黑色素坏死物质上的生长始终高于高黑色素坏死物质,但三种细菌在两种坏死物质类型之间的 CAZyme 编码基因表达反应相似。有趣的是,这种趋势不适用于编码氮利用的基因,在高黑色素和低黑色素坏死物质上生长时, 和 的基因表达不同。此外,本研究测试了这些细菌在多种 C 和 N 源上生长的代谢能力,发现这三种细菌的利用模式有很大差异。总的来说,我们的数据表明,随着坏死物质在降解过程中化学性质的变化,某些细菌会因其不同的代谢能力而受到青睐。