4.8 Article

Gulf of Mexico blue hole harbors high levels of novel microbial lineages

Journal

ISME JOURNAL
Volume 15, Issue 8, Pages 2206-2232

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41396-021-00917-x

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Funding

  1. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Office of Exploration and Research [7NA18OAR0110291]

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Exploration of oxygen-depleted marine environments has led to the discovery of novel microbial taxa and metabolic capabilities, expanding our understanding of microbial evolution and ecology. The study of Amberjack Hole on the Florida continental shelf revealed stable microbial communities with extensive biochemical capabilities for sulfur and nitrogen cycling. Overall, the blue hole habitat provides a natural marine laboratory for sampling taxa with potentially important roles in redox-stratified microbial processes.
Exploration of oxygen-depleted marine environments has consistently revealed novel microbial taxa and metabolic capabilities that expand our understanding of microbial evolution and ecology. Marine blue holes are shallow karst formations characterized by low oxygen and high organic matter content. They are logistically challenging to sample, and thus our understanding of their biogeochemistry and microbial ecology is limited. We present a metagenomic and geochemical characterization of Amberjack Hole on the Florida continental shelf (Gulf of Mexico). Dissolved oxygen became depleted at the hole's rim (32 m water depth), remained low but detectable in an intermediate hypoxic zone (40-75 m), and then increased to a secondary peak before falling below detection in the bottom layer (80-110 m), concomitant with increases in nutrients, dissolved iron, and a series of sequentially more reduced sulfur species. Microbial communities in the bottom layer contained heretofore undocumented levels of the recently discovered phylum Woesearchaeota (up to 58% of the community), along with lineages in the bacterial Candidate Phyla Radiation (CPR). Thirty-one high-quality metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) showed extensive biochemical capabilities for sulfur and nitrogen cycling, as well as for resisting and respiring arsenic. One uncharacterized gene associated with a CPR lineage differentiated hypoxic from anoxic zone communities. Overall, microbial communities and geochemical profiles were stable across two sampling dates in the spring and fall of 2019. The blue hole habitat is a natural marine laboratory that provides opportunities for sampling taxa with under-characterized but potentially important roles in redox-stratified microbial processes.

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