Camille Poirier's research while affiliated with GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel and other places

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Publications (33)


3D intrusions transport active surface microbial assemblages to the dark ocean
  • Article

May 2024

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124 Reads

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Mara A Freilich

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Camille Poirier

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[...]

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Subtropical oceans contribute significantly to global primary production, but the fate of the picophytoplankton that dominate in these low-nutrient regions is poorly understood. Working in the subtropical Mediterranean, we demonstrate that subduction of water at ocean fronts generates 3D intrusions with uncharacteristically high carbon, chlorophyll, and oxygen that extend below the sunlit photic zone into the dark ocean. These contain fresh picophytoplankton assemblages that resemble the photic-zone regions where the water originated. Intrusions propagate depth-dependent seasonal variations in microbial assemblages into the ocean interior. Strikingly, the intrusions included dominant biomass contributions from nonphotosynthetic bacteria and enrichment of enigmatic heterotrophic bacterial lineages. Thus, the intrusions not only deliver material that differs in composition and nutritional character from sinking detrital particles, but also drive shifts in bacterial community composition, organic matter processing, and interactions between surface and deep communities. Modeling efforts paired with global observations demonstrate that subduction can flux similar magnitudes of particulate organic carbon as sinking export, but is not accounted for in current export estimates and carbon cycle models. Intrusions formed by subduction are a particularly important mechanism for enhancing connectivity between surface and upper mesopelagic ecosystems in stratified subtropical ocean environments that are expanding due to the warming climate.

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A single Prochlorococcus ecotype dominates the tropical Bay of Bengal with ultradian growth
  • Article
  • Full-text available

March 2024

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25 Reads

Environmental Microbiology

The Bay of Bengal (BoB) spans >2.2 million km ² in the northeastern Indian Ocean and is bordered by dense populations that depend upon its resources. Over recent decades, a shift from larger phytoplankton to picoplankton has been reported, yet the abundance, activity, and composition of primary producer communities are not well‐characterized. We analysed the BoB regions during the summer monsoon. Prochlorococcus ranged up to 3.14 × 10 ⁵ cells mL ⁻¹ in the surface mixed layer, averaging 1.74 ± 0.46 × 10 ⁵ in the upper 10 m and consistently higher than Synechococcus and eukaryotic phytoplankton. V1‐V2 rRNA gene amplicon analyses showed the High Light II (HLII) ecotype formed 98 ± 1% of Prochlorococcus amplicons in surface waters, comprising six oligotypes, with the dominant oligotype accounting for 65 ± 4% of HLII. Diel sampling of a coherent water mass demonstrated evening onset of cell division and rapid Prochlorococcus growth between 1.5 and 3.1 div day ⁻¹ , based on cell cycle analysis, as confirmed by abundance‐based estimates of 2.1 div day ⁻¹ . Accumulation of Prochlorococcus produced by ultradian growth was restricted by high loss rates. Alongside prior Arabian Sea and tropical Atlantic rates, our results indicate Prochlorococcus growth rates should be reevaluated with greater attention to latitudinal zones and influences on contributions to global primary production.

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Phosphate Limitation Responses in Marine Green Algae Are Linked to Reprogramming of the tRNA Epitranscriptome and Codon Usage Bias

November 2023

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59 Reads

Molecular Biology and Evolution

Marine algae are central to global carbon fixation and their productivity is dictated largely by resource availability. Reduced nutrient availability is predicted for vast oceanic regions as an outcome of climate change, however there is much to learn regarding response mechanisms of the tiny picoplankton that thrive in these environments, especially eukaryotic phytoplankton. Here, we investigate responses of the picoeukaryote Micromonas commoda, a green alga found throughout subtropical and tropical oceans. Under shifting phosphate (P) availability scenarios, transcriptomic analyses revealed altered expression of transfer RNA (tRNA) modification enzymes and biased codon usage of transcripts more abundant during P-limiting versus P-replete conditions, consistent with the role of tRNA modifications in regulating codon recognition. To associate the observed shift in expression of the tRNA modification enzyme complement with the tRNAs encoded by M. commoda, we also determined the tRNA repertoire of this alga revealing potential targets of the modification enzymes. Codon usage bias was particularly pronounced in transcripts encoding proteins with direct roles in managing P-limitation and photosystem-associated proteins that have ill-characterized putative functions in “light stress”. The observed codon usage bias corresponds to a proposed stress response mechanism in which the interplay between stress-induced changes in tRNA modifications and skewed codon usage in certain essential response genes drives preferential translation of the encoded proteins. Collectively, we expose a potential underlying mechanism for achieving growth under enhanced nutrient limitation, that extends beyond the catalog of up- or down-regulated protein-encoding genes, to the cell biological controls that underpin acclimation to changing environmental conditions.


Fig. 1│Chlorophyll maxima below the Mediterranean Sea photic zone are formed by surface-derived intrusions. a, Eastern and Western Alborán gyres and transects (lines) sampled synoptically (symbols) and locations where molecular analyses and flow cytometry were performed (filled symbols); Background shows absolute dynamic topography (ADT) on May 25, 2018, illustrating general gyre positioning. b,c, Chlorophyll fluorescence, apparent oxygen utilization (AOU), and temperature for representatives of the two profile types in summer (May 2018) (b) and winter/spring (March 2019) (c), with the aphotic chlorophyll maxima (indicated) between 100-150 m and co-occurring inversions relative to background trends in temperature and AOU. d, Example 2-dimensional section across transect B2 (panel B), with 0 km being at the western edge. Locations of EcoCTD casts (triangles), standard CTD casts (dashed lines) and backscatter (grey scale) indicated. The panel C cast is highlighted for reference (bold dashed line). Molecular samples (dots) originating from the photic zone (black dots), ACM (dark pink), origin waters of the ACM, namely the chlorophyll maximum on the dense side of the front (green), or the aphotic background (light pink); larger dots represent those displayed in panel F. e, Phytoplankton abundances and community composition by V1-V2 16S rRNA gene ASV analyses along transect B2 at depths representing the intrusion (green and dark pink connected by a line) and in background samples (light pink; i.e. same depth as intrusions but outside).
3D-intrusions transport active surface microbial assemblages to the dark ocean

September 2023

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180 Reads

Subtropical oceans contribute significantly to global primary production, but the fate of the picophytoplankton that dominate in these low nutrient regions is poorly understood. Working in the subtropical Mediterranean, we demonstrate that subduction of water at ocean fronts generates 3D intrusions with uncharacteristically high carbon, chlorophyll, and oxygen that extend below the sunlit photic-zone into the dark ocean. These contain "fresh" picophytoplankton assemblages that resemble the photic-zone regions where the water originated. Intrusions propagate depth-dependent seasonal variations in microbial assemblages into the ocean interior. Strikingly, the intrusions included dominant biomass contributions from non-photosynthetic bacteria and enrichment of enigmatic heterotrophic bacterial lineages. Thus, the intrusions not only deliver material that differs in composition and nutritional character from sinking detrital particles, but also drive shifts in bacterial community composition, organic matter processing, and interactions between surface and deep communities. Modeling efforts paired with global observations demonstrate that subduction can flux similar magnitudes of particulate organic carbon as sinking export, but is not accounted for in current export estimates and carbon cycle models. Intrusions formed by subduction are a particularly important mechanism for enhancing connectivity between surface and upper mesopelagic ecosystems in stratified subtropical ocean environments that are expanding due to the warming climate.


Eukaryotic algal community composition in tropical environments from solar salterns to the open sea

June 2023

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280 Reads

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1 Citation

Frontiers in Marine Science

Frontiers in Marine Science

Tropical environments with unique abiotic and biotic factors—such as salt ponds, mangroves, and coral reefs—are often in close proximity. The heterogeneity of these environments is reflected in community shifts over short distances, resulting in high biodiversity. While phytoplankton assemblages physically associated with corals, particularly their symbionts, are well studied, less is known about phytoplankton diversity across tropical aquatic environments. We assess shifts in phytoplankton community composition along inshore to offshore gradients by sequencing and analyzing 16S rRNA gene amplicons using primers targeting the V1-V2 region that capture plastids from eukaryotic phytoplankton and cyanobacteria, as well as heterotrophic bacteria. Microbial alpha diversity computed from 16S V1-V2 amplicon sequence variant (ASV) data from 282 samples collected in and around Curaçao, in the Southern Caribbean Sea, varied more within the dynamic salt ponds, salterns, and mangroves, compared to the seemingly stable above-reef, off-reef, and open sea environments. Among eukaryotic phytoplankton, stramenopiles often exhibited the highest relative abundances in mangrove, above-reef, off-reef, and open sea environments, where cyanobacteria also showed high relative abundances. Within stramenopiles, diatom amplicons dominated in salt ponds and mangroves, while dictyochophytes and pelagophytes prevailed above reefs and offshore. Green algae and cryptophytes were also present, and the former exhibited transitions following the gradient from inland to offshore. Chlorophytes and prasinophyte Class IV dominated in salt ponds, while prasinophyte Class II, including Micromonas commoda and Ostreococcus Clade OII, had the highest relative abundances of green algae in mangroves, above-reef, off-reef, and the open sea. To improve Class II prasinophyte classification, we sequenced 18S rRNA gene amplicons from the V4 region in 41 samples which were used to interrelate plastid-based results with information on uncultured prasinophyte species from prior 18S rRNA gene-based studies. This highlighted the presence of newly described Ostreococcus bengalensis and two Micromonas candidate species. Network analyses identified co-occurrence patterns between individual phytoplankton groups, including cyanobacteria, and heterotrophic bacteria. Our study reveals multiple uncultured and novel lineages within green algae and dictyochophytes in tropical marine habitats. Collectively, the algal diversity patterns and potential co-occurrence relationships observed in connection to physicochemical and spatial influences help provide a baseline against which future change can be assessed.


Choanoflagellates alongside diverse uncultured predatory protists consume the abundant open-ocean cyanobacterium Prochlorococcus

June 2023

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108 Reads

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5 Citations

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Prochlorococcus is a key member of open-ocean primary producer communities. Despite its importance, little is known about the predators that consume this cyanobacterium and make its biomass available to higher trophic levels. We identify potential predators along a gradient wherein Prochlorococcus abundance increased from near detection limits (coastal California) to >200,000 cells mL-1 (subtropical North Pacific Gyre). A replicated RNA-Stable Isotope Probing experiment involving the in situ community, and labeled Prochlorococcus as prey, revealed choanoflagellates as the most active predators of Prochlorococcus, alongside a radiolarian, chrysophytes, dictyochophytes, and specific MAST lineages. These predators were not appropriately highlighted in multiyear conventional 18S rRNA gene amplicon surveys where dinoflagellates and other taxa had highest relative amplicon abundances across the gradient. In identifying direct consumers of Prochlorococcus, we reveal food-web linkages of individual protistan taxa and resolve routes of carbon transfer from the base of marine food webs.


The Bay of Bengal exposes abundant photosynthetic picoplankton and newfound diversity along salinity-driven gradients

June 2023

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155 Reads

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3 Citations

Environmental Microbiology

The Bay of Bengal (BoB) is a 2,600,000 km^2 expanse in the Indian Ocean upon which many humans rely. However, the primary producers underpinning food chains here remain poorly characterized. We examined phytoplankton abundance and diversity along strong BoB latitudinal and vertical salinity gradients which have low temperature variation (27–29˚C) between the surface and subsurface chlorophyll maximum (SCM). In surface waters, Prochlorococcus averaged 11.7 ± 4.4 x 10^4 cells ml^-1, predominantly HLII, whereas LLII and ‘rare’ ecotypes, HLVI and LLVII, dominated in the SCM. Synechococcus averaged 8.4 ± 2.3 x 10^4 cells ml^-1 in the surface, declined rapidly with depth, and population structure of dominant Clade II differed between surface and SCM; Clade X was notable at both depths. Across all sites, Ostreococcus Clade OII dominated SCM eukaryotes whereas communities differentiated strongly moving from Arabian Sea-influenced high salinity (southerly; prasinophytes) to freshwater-influenced low salinity (northerly; stramenopiles, specifically, diatoms, pelagophytes, and dictyochophytes, plus the prasinophyte Micromonas) surface waters. Eukaryotic phytoplankton peaked in the south (1.9 x 10^4 cells ml^-1, surface) where a novel Ostreococcus was revealed, named here Ostreococcus bengalensis. We expose dominance of a single picoeukaryote and hitherto ‘rare’ picocyanobacteria at depth in this complex ecosystem where studies suggest picoplankton are replacing larger phytoplankton due to climate change.


Figure 3. Beta diversity analyses using DEICODE robust Aitchison PCA for (a) COI, (b) 18S rRNA, (c) V1-V2 16S rRNA plastidial ASVs, and (d) V1-V2 16S rRNA bacterial ASVs, including photosynthetic taxa. Data points represent individual samples; the number next to each data point indicates the day collected. ASV loadings on PC1 from the DEICODE robust Aitchison PCA for (e) COI, (f) 18S rRNA, (g) V1-V2 16S rRNA plastidial ASVs, and (h) V1-V2 16S rRNA bacterial ASVs. As seen in (a), (b), (c), and (d) and confirmed by a PERMANOVA test, PC1 separates the Pacific samples and pre-OMZ water addition M1 samples from the post-OMZ water addition M1 samples (days 15+), and thus positive loading scores are associated with the mesocosm, whereas negative loading scores are associated with the Pacific samples. The text adjacent to the loading scores represents the lowest taxonomy to which that ASV was annotated. The taxonomy assigned to 16S rRNA ASVs corresponds to that of the SILVA taxonomy.
Ecological divergence of a mesocosm in an eastern boundary upwelling system assessed with multi-marker environmental DNA metabarcoding

April 2023

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196 Reads

Biogeosciences

Eastern boundary upwelling systems (EBUS) contribute a disproportionate fraction of the global fish catch relative to their size and are especially susceptible to global environmental change. Here we present the evolution of communities over 50 d in an in situ mesocosm 6 km offshore of Callao, Peru, and in the nearby unenclosed coastal Pacific Ocean. The communities were monitored using multi-marker environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcoding and flow cytometry. DNA extracted from weekly water samples were subjected to amplicon sequencing for four genetic loci: (1) the V1–V2 region of the 16S rRNA gene for photosynthetic eukaryotes (via their chloroplasts) and bacteria; (2) the V9 region of the 18S rRNA gene for exploration of eukaryotes but targeting phytoplankton; (3) cytochrome oxidase I (COI) for exploration of eukaryotic taxa but targeting invertebrates; and (4) the 12S rRNA gene, targeting vertebrates. The multi-marker approach showed a divergence of communities (from microbes to fish) between the mesocosm and the unenclosed ocean. Together with the environmental information, the genetic data furthered our mechanistic understanding of the processes that are shaping EBUS communities in a changing ocean. The unenclosed ocean experienced significant variability over the course of the 50 d experiment, with temporal shifts in community composition, but remained dominated by organisms that are characteristic of high-nutrient upwelling conditions (e.g., diatoms, copepods, anchovies). A large directional change was found in the mesocosm community. The mesocosm community that developed was characteristic of upwelling regions when upwelling relaxes and waters stratify (e.g., dinoflagellates, nanoflagellates). The selection of dinoflagellates under the salinity-driven experimentally stratified conditions in the mesocosm, as well as the warm conditions brought about by the coastal El Niño, may be an indication of how EBUS will respond under the global environmental changes (i.e., increases in surface temperature and freshwater input, leading to increased stratification) forecast by the IPCC.


Ecological divergence of a mesocosm in an eastern boundary upwelling system assessed with multi-marker environmental DNA metabarcoding

November 2022

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46 Reads

Eastern boundary upwelling systems (EBUS) contribute a disproportionate fraction of the global fish catch relative to their size and are especially susceptible to global environmental change. Here we present the evolution of communities over 50 days in an in situ mesocosm 6 km offshore of Callao, Peru and in the nearby unenclosed coastal Pacific Ocean. The communities were monitored using multi-marker environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcoding and flow cytometry. DNA extracted from weekly water samples were subjected to amplicon sequencing for four genetic loci: 1) the V1-V2 region of the 16S rRNA gene, for photosynthetic eukaryotes (via their chloroplasts) and bacteria; 2) the V9 region of the 18S rRNA gene for exploration of eukaryotes but targeting phytoplankton; 3) cytochrome oxidase I (COI), for exploration of eukaryotic taxa but targeting invertebrates, and 4) the 12S rRNA gene, targeting vertebrates. The multi-marker approach showed a divergence of communities (from microbes to fish) between the mesocosm and the unenclosed ocean. Together with the environmental information, the genetic data furthered our mechanistic understanding of the processes that are shaping EBUS communities in a changing ocean. The unenclosed ocean experienced significant variability over the course of the 50-day experiment with temporal shifts in community composition but remained dominated by organisms that are characteristic of high nutrient, upwelling conditions (e.g. diatoms, copepods, anchovies). A large directional change was found in the mesocosm community. The mesocosm community that developed was characteristic of upwelling regions when upwelling relaxes and waters stratify (e.g. dinoflagellates, nanoflagellates). The selection of dinoflagellates under the warm (coastal El Niño) and stratified conditions in the mesocosm may be an indication of how EBUS will respond under the global environmental changes (i.e. continued global warming) forecast by the IPCC.


Identification of a physical association between the uncultivated choanoflagellate B. minor and a divergent Gammaproteobacterial lineage
a, Locations of the single-cell sorting experiment (Station M2), metatranscriptome sequencing (Stations M1 and M2) and amplicon-based rRNA gene sequencing surveys performed herein at the Monterey Bay Time Series (MBTS; M1, M2) and amplicon data analysed from the San Pedro Ocean Time-series (SPOT). b, Left: population of choanoflagellates, which belong to the Opisthokont supergroup that includes metazoans³⁷, sorted by FACS on the basis of forward angle light scatter (proxy for cell size), fluorescence labelling of food vacuoles and absence of fluorescence from photosynthetic pigments. The green box indicates the position of bead standards run before and after sorting at the same settings. Middle: choanoflagellates sorted were almost exclusively B. minor (family Salpingoecidae). Here, ‘B. minor ASV 1’ (100% nucleotide identity to uncultivated B. minor) refers to the dominant B. minor ASV (90% of all choanoflagellate cells), while the others are less frequently observed choanoflagellate ASVs. Right: the most common bacteria detected with the dominant B. minor ASV (only bacterial ASVs present with more than two B. minor cells are shown) comprised two Gammaproteobacteria (Comchoano-1 and Comchoano-2) and a third, less common Gammaproteobacterium (86% 16S rRNA amplicon identity to Comchoano with 2% of cells), alongside a Planctomycete (Blastopirellula, 93% identity to Mariniblastus fucicola with 3% of cells), two Flavobacteria (Saprospiraceae and Lewinella 93% and 91% identity to closest relatives Membranicola marinus and Portibacter lacus, respectively, with 2% and 1% of cells) and two Rickettsiales (87% identity to an endosymbiont of Oligobrachia haakonmosbiensis with 2% and 1% of cells, respectively). c, Oceanic distributions of choanoflagellates, Bicosta and B. minor as classified by QIIME 2⁷¹. Relative abundances in surface samples are represented as percentage of 18S rRNA gene V4 amplicons from Malaspina 2010 (3 m depth, solid circles) and V9 amplicons from Tara Oceans (5 m depth, dashed circles) circumnavigations, with metazoan sequences (about 0.001% on average) excluded. Data were summed across ASVs (Malaspina) or OTUs (operational taxonomic unit; Tara Oceans) for the taxonomic level assigned by QIIME 2. Choanoflagellates were not detected in six samples (all from Malaspina).
Phylogenetic relatedness of diverse uncultivated Gammaproteobacterial order and daily time-series dynamic with B. minor
a, ML reconstruction using full-length (including Comchoano) or nearly full-length (minimum 1,200 bp) 16S rRNA gene sequences and 1,593 analysed positions under the GTR+Γ+I model demonstrates that Comchoano-1 (orange star) and Comchoano-2 (purple star) branch within an uncultivated lineage of marine Gammaproteobacteria. All assembled full-length 16S rRNA genes for a respective Comchoano were 100% identical. ML bootstrap support was generated with 1,000 rapid replicates and additional support (posterior probability) was generated via Bayesian inference. Black stars indicate 16S rRNA genes from SAG assemblies. The dashed line orange box indicates sequences that have 95% nt identity to Comchoano.b, Daily relative abundances of B. minor, Comchoano-1 and Comchoano-2 at SPOT following a phytoplankton bloom (as captured in chlorophyll data; green shading, right axis). B. minor and Comchoano values reflect percentages of the total rRNA gene sequence reads of all eukaryotic (18S) and prokaryotic (16S) amplicons, respectively. Lines represent temporal dynamics within the size-fractionated seawater samples, with ‘protistan size fraction’ (1–80 µm) and ‘free-living prokaryote fraction’ (0.2–1 µm) being represented by solid and dashed lines, respectively. B. minor was correlated with Comchoano-1 and 2 in the protistan size fraction (r = 0.73, 0.80; P = 0.001, 0.0002, respectively; Supplementary Data 1) and with Comchoano-1 and 2 in the free-living prokaryote fraction (2 d time-shifted r = 0.62, 0.78; P = 0.019, 0.0011, respectively; Supplementary Data 1).
Diminutive genomes and gaps in multiple biosynthesis pathways highlight host dependencies
a, Genome map of Comchoano-1 genome. The innermost layer shows GC skew with axes of −0.4 to 0.4 (green negative; purple positive), demonstrating the location of the replication origin and terminus. The second layer indicates GC content (with axes of 27–54% GC content; 1,000 bp moving average), showing stability of GC content across the genome at 39% GC content. The two outermost layers indicate metatranscriptome read mapping from Stations M2 and M1 one month after M2 sampling, demonstrating Comchoano gene expression in nature. b, Genome size or scaled total size (as opposed to sequence assembly size) for genomes of ‘marine’ prokaryotes (Methods). Data for Comchoano show consistent estimated size regardless of assembly method and source data. Red circles indicate taxa we identified as belonging to UBA7916 on the basis of GTDB-tk classification (Methods, also see Extended Data Fig. 7). The boxplot represents the lower and upper quartiles, the centre line is the median and whiskers are 1.5× interquartile range. c, Binned and summed SNP data across Comchoano-1 from nine B. minor single cells, indicating low variability between cells. The total variability considering all SNPs (4.5 ± 3.1 SNPs per cell) showed that just one position was variable across more than one cell (present in a gene lacking functional annotation; indicated by asterisk). d, Major pathways present in Comchoano-1 and Comchoano-2, and selected opportunistic pathogens, obligate endosymbionts and free-living bacteria. Genomes indicated by black stars are MAGs (estimated as over 90% complete) belonging to UBA7916. The heat map colour scale corresponds to the number of proteins present in each pathway or function (Methods). The estimated genome size of each bacterium is shown to the left of the taxon names (logarithmic scale). Gammaproteobacteria (apart from the Comchoano) are indicated by green text. Free-living replication refers to bacteria capable of free-living growth as demonstrated by cultivation studies. Genomes are clustered by the scaled values of the metabolic pathways as shown in the heat map (Manhattan distance and complete linkage clustering), with pvclust bootstrap analysis (n = 1,000). Hierarchical clustering is for visualization purposes and may change if additional pathways are considered.
Comchoano’s T4SS is rare in free-living marine bacteria and phylogenetically closest to those of confirmed pathogens
a, T4SS proteins present in C. burnetii, Comchoano-1 and Comchoano-2 (represented to scale on the genome scaffold, that is, nucleotides). Synteny is indicated (grey shading), along with percent amino acid similarity between homologous proteins (darkness level of shading). Colour fills indicate metatranscriptome read mapping (reads per kb million, rpkm) from Pacific Ocean station M2 (all pT4SSi genes were expressed). The break mark shown in the C. burnetii genomic segment represents ~5,800 bp. b, ML phylogenetic reconstruction of 1,629 T4SS VirB/IcmB/TraU proteins with tips coloured by bacterial class. c, Rooted subtree ML phylogeny of 72 pT4SSi, T4 type I and related sequences from a supported clade extracted from b representing an analysis of homologous positions. For the subtree, some clades were collapsed for display purposes and node support is indicated by open circles (≥95% ML; 1 posterior probability, Bayesian) or numerical percentages (if ≥50% ML or ≥0.9 posterior probability, Bayesian). d, Prevalence of secretion systems across genomes of 18,671 marine prokaryotic isolates, SAGs and MAGs, regardless of genome completion level (Methods). Arrow, the pT4SSi possessed by Comchoano and other UBA7916 members, as well as 25 Proteobacteria from other lineages (as defined by the presence of the mandatory VirB/IcmB/TraU and greater than six component genes; Methods), the majority being classified as Coxiellales or Legionellales and relatives of host-associated bacteria in terrestrial ecosystems. Shading within bars reflects distribution of each subtype of the respective secretion system type, where applicable (for example, the T5a–c bar has three shaded segments representing T5a, T5b and T5c).
The microbiome of a bacterivorous marine choanoflagellate contains a resource-demanding obligate bacterial associate

August 2022

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218 Reads

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7 Citations

Nature Microbiology

Microbial predators such as choanoflagellates are key players in ocean food webs. Choanoflagellates, which are the closest unicellular relatives of animals, consume bacteria and also exhibit marked biological transitions triggered by bacterial compounds, yet their native microbiomes remain uncharacterized. Here we report the discovery of a ubiquitous, uncultured bacterial lineage we name Candidatus Comchoanobacterales ord. nov., related to the human pathogen Coxiella and physically associated with the uncultured marine choanoflagellate Bicosta minor. We analyse complete ‘Comchoano’ genomes acquired after sorting single Bicosta cells, finding signatures of obligate host-dependence, including reduction of pathways encoding glycolysis, membrane components, amino acids and B-vitamins. Comchoano encode the necessary apparatus to import energy and other compounds from the host, proteins for host-cell associations and a type IV secretion system closest to Coxiella’s that is expressed in Pacific Ocean metatranscriptomes. Interactions between choanoflagellates and their microbiota could reshape the direction of energy and resource flow attributed to microbial predators, adding complexity and nuance to marine food webs.


Citations (23)


... In the Southern Caribbean, temperatures were similar to BATS SS surface water, but nutrient concentrations were higher, especially above coral reefs and in mangroves 53 . A species absent from BATS, Ostreococcus bengalensis, was present in mangroves as well as the southern Bay of Bengal stations 59 . ...

Reference:

Recurring seasonality exposes dominant species and niche partitioning strategies of open ocean picoeukaryotic algae
Eukaryotic algal community composition in tropical environments from solar salterns to the open sea
Frontiers in Marine Science

Frontiers in Marine Science

... • Flow cytometric single-cell sorting (Needham et al., 2022) • Physiological traits (cell size and rate measurements) and stable isotope and RNA-SIP (Wilken et al., 2023) • 3D subcellular imaging (Uwizeye et al., 2021) • Resource allocation models (Berge et al., 2017) What are the mechanisms underlying mixotrophy trade-offs? ...

Choanoflagellates alongside diverse uncultured predatory protists consume the abundant open-ocean cyanobacterium Prochlorococcus
  • Citing Article
  • June 2023

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

... species 1. For example, M. commoda ss ASV345 contributed to plastid amplicons in the surface 1-2 m in the Bay of Bengal, especially in southern stations 59 . Ostreococcus Clade OII contributed greatly at the surface in southern stations and dominated the DCM throughout, where Bathycoccus calidus was also observed. ...

The Bay of Bengal exposes abundant photosynthetic picoplankton and newfound diversity along salinity-driven gradients
  • Citing Article
  • June 2023

Environmental Microbiology

... However, only a small subset of mixoplankton have been cultured in the lab, sequenced, and available in reference annotation databases which models are trained on, limiting our ability to infer phago-mixotrophy in the field based on sequences. Single-cell sorting approaches, in which mixotrophic status can be empirically ascertained and combined with single-cell amplicon, genomic or transcriptomic sequencing, offers a promising way to address this issue Needham et al., 2022). Furthermore, strengthening reference sequence databases with the inclusion of more cultured representatives and supplementing with TABLE 1 Summary of possible research questions that could be asked within each topic area and the combination of methods that could be used to address each question. ...

The microbiome of a bacterivorous marine choanoflagellate contains a resource-demanding obligate bacterial associate

Nature Microbiology

... Using rigorous phylogenetic analyses, we compiled a set of 225 orthologous single-copy genes based on previous work [40,41]. Our taxon-sampling contained a total of 56 taxa, including M6MM, the five ascetosporean species, other rhizarians with publicly available genomes or transcriptomes, and outgroups consisting of Telonema subtile and selected alveolates and stramenopiles (Additional file 6: Datafile S2). ...

Single cell genomics reveals plastid-lacking Picozoa are close relatives of red algae

Nature Communications

... We recover a monophyletic Archaeplasatida (traditionally Glaucophyta + Chlorophyta + Rhodophyta) that includes Rhodelphidia and Picozoa and is sister to the Cryptista, although this potential relationship lacks strong statistical support (80% IQ-TREE maximum likelihood bootstrap support [MLBS]). The inclusion of Rhodelphidia and Picozoa in Archaeplastida and the group's potential sister relationship to the Cryptista has been shown recently in separate studies that used independent datasets for the phylogenomic analyses performed within [16][17][18]. Interestingly, our analyses also recover some novel potential relationships that deserve further investigation. For example, a clade made up of the enigmatic "orphan taxa" Telonemia and Hemimastigophora (Hemimastix and Spironema) is recovered. ...

Picozoa are archaeplastids without plastid

... In addition to photosynthates provided by Symbiodiniaceae, corals can obtain fixed carbon from the ingestion of bacterioplankton trapped in the coral SML [74,79,80]. Corals preferentially feed on cyanobacteria Synechococcus, especially when recovering from heat stress and bleaching [74,82,83]. We confirm lower relative abundances of Synechococcus in the coral SML after heat exposure, which is an indication that the corals were hypothetically consuming these microbes to acquire nutrients and compensate for lower productivity of the algal symbiont. ...

Selective Uptake of Pelagic Microbial Community Members by Caribbean Reef Corals

... However, capturing a deep convective mixing event at the time nutrient entrainment occurs can be difficult due to the ephemeral nature of the events. While studies using representative pigments to identify phytoplankton groups have been instrumental in gaining a general sense of how different phytoplankton communities contribute to NPP, they do not resolve key open ocean groups 14,15 . Nevertheless, it is clear that the greatest eukaryotic contributions occur during the DM and bloom period, while cyanobacterial abundances are maximal when the water column is thermally stratified 16 . ...

Seasonal and Geographical Transitions in Eukaryotic Phytoplankton Community Structure in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans

... One contiguous, highly covered sequence was recovered from the assembly, consisting in a 184,954 bp long sequence, with overall 24.9% GC enrichment. While it was unusually long, even when compared with other mitochondrial genomes from other related protists from the Cercozoa group (Wideman et al., 2020) we are confident that it corresponds to a bona fide mitochondrion. Indeed, mitochondrial genome annotation revealed gene repertoires similar to mitochondria from other cercozoans, while showing even coverage and reproducible assembly features, even with short reads only (Supplementary Figure S1). ...

Unexpected mitochondrial genome diversity revealed by targeted single-cell genomics of heterotrophic flagellated protists

Nature Microbiology

... A laser in situ scattering and transmissometry sensor (LISST 100-X; Sequoia Scientific Inc.) was used for all three cruises to estimate particle size distributions between $ 1.25 and 100 μm (Supporting Information Fig. S4). For further details of these measurements, assumptions, and conversions to biomass, see Ribalet et al. (2019), White et al. (2015), Juranek et al. (2020), and Supporting Information Text S1.1. ...

SeaFlow data v1, high-resolution abundance, size and biomass of small phytoplankton in the North Pacific

Scientific Data