4.6 Article

Rokubacteria in Northern Peatlands: Habitat Preferences and Diversity Patterns

Journal

MICROORGANISMS
Volume 10, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms10010011

Keywords

Rokubacteria; boreal wetlands; eutrophic fens; bacterial diversity; unknown metabolic potential; incubation with methane

Categories

Funding

  1. Russian Science Foundation [21-14-00034]
  2. Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation
  3. Russian Science Foundation [21-14-00034] Funding Source: Russian Science Foundation

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Rokubacteria, an unculitvated phylogenetic clade of prokaryotes, are found in diverse terrestrial habitats and are considered part of the rare biosphere. A study of bacteria populations in wetland habitats revealed that the abundance of Rokubacteriales is positively correlated with pH, total nitrogen content, and availability of Ca and Mg.
Rokubacteria is a phylogenetic clade of as-yet-uncultivated prokaryotes, which are detected in diverse terrestrial habitats and are commonly addressed as members of the rare biosphere. This clade was originally described as a candidate phylum; however, based on the results of comparative genome analysis, was later defined as the order-level lineage, Rokubacteriales, within the phylum Methylomirabilota. The physiology and lifestyles of these bacteria are poorly understood. A dataset of 16S rRNA gene reads retrieved from four boreal raised bogs and six eutrophic fens was examined for the presence of the Rokubacteriales; the latter were detected exclusively in fens. Their relative abundance varied between 0.2 and 4% of all bacteria and was positively correlated with pH, total nitrogen content, and availability of Ca and Mg. To test an earlier published hypothesis regarding the presence of methanotrophic capabilities in Rokubacteria, peat samples were incubated with 10% methane for four weeks. No response to methane availability was detected for the Rokubacteriales, while clear a increase in relative abundance was observed for the conventional Methylococcales methanotrophs. The search for methane monooxygenase encoding genes in 60 currently available Rokubacteriales metagenomes yielded negative results, although copper-containing monooxygenases were encoded by some members of this order. This study suggests that peat-inhabiting Rokubacteriales are neutrophilic non-methanotrophic bacteria that colonize nitrogen-rich wetlands.

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