二甲基磺酰丙酸盐
γ蛋白杆菌
二甲基硫醚
α蛋白细菌
浮游细菌
透光带
海洋学
海水
沉积物
海洋噬菌体
环境化学
盐沼
细菌
环境科学
生物
生态学
化学
硫黄
浮游植物
地质学
营养物
有机化学
古生物学
遗传学
16S核糖体RNA
作者
Beth T. Williams,Kasha Cowles,Ana Bermejo Martínez,Andrew R. J. Curson,Yanfen Zheng,Jingli Liu,Simone Newton‐Payne,Andrew J. Hind,Chunyang Li,Peter Paolo L. Rivera,Ornella Carrión,Ji Liu,Lewis G. Spurgin,Charles A. Brearley,Brett Wagner Mackenzie,Benjamin J. Pinchbeck,Ming Peng,Jennifer Pratscher,Xiao‐Hua Zhang,Yu‐Zhong Zhang,J. Colin Murrell,Jonathan D. Todd
出处
期刊:Nature microbiology
日期:2019-08-19
卷期号:4 (11): 1815-1825
被引量:83
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41564-019-0527-1
摘要
Dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP) and its catabolite dimethyl sulfide (DMS) are key marine nutrients1,2 that have roles in global sulfur cycling2, atmospheric chemistry3, signalling4,5 and, potentially, climate regulation6,7. The production of DMSP was previously thought to be an oxic and photic process that is mainly confined to the surface oceans. However, here we show that DMSP concentrations and/or rates of DMSP and DMS synthesis are higher in surface sediment from, for example, saltmarsh ponds, estuaries and the deep ocean than in the overlying seawater. A quarter of bacterial strains isolated from saltmarsh sediment produced DMSP (up to 73 mM), and we identified several previously unknown producers of DMSP. Most DMSP-producing isolates contained dsyB8, but some alphaproteobacteria, gammaproteobacteria and actinobacteria used a methionine methylation pathway independent of DsyB that was previously only associated with higher plants. These bacteria contained a methionine methyltransferase gene (mmtN)—a marker for bacterial synthesis of DMSP through this pathway. DMSP-producing bacteria and their dsyB and/or mmtN transcripts were present in all of the tested seawater samples and Tara Oceans bacterioplankton datasets, but were much more abundant in marine surface sediment. Approximately 1 × 108 bacteria g−1 of surface marine sediment are predicted to produce DMSP, and their contribution to this process should be included in future models of global DMSP production. We propose that coastal and marine sediments, which cover a large part of the Earth’s surface, are environments with high levels of DMSP and DMS productivity, and that bacteria are important producers of DMSP and DMS within these environments. Bacterial dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP) production was recently demonstrated in surface oceans. Here the authors show that bacterial production is higher in sediment from coastal areas and the deep ocean, and identify an alternative pathway for its synthesis, indicating that coastal and marine sediments are important sources of this climate-relevant metabolite.