4.7 Article

Metaproteomics reveals functional partitioning and vegetational variation among permafrost-affected Arctic soil bacterial communities

Journal

MSYSTEMS
Volume 8, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/msystems.01238-22

Keywords

soil; arctic; metaproteomics; permafrost; metabolism; microbial ecology; greening; warming

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The study used metaproteomic methods to investigate microbial activity and metabolic functions in Alaskan soils. It found that different bacterial groups have specialized roles in acquiring and degrading organic compounds. The research also showed that Acidobacteria have a key role in hemicellulose depolymerization. This study highlights the importance of understanding soil microbial ecology in relation to carbon cycling.
Microbial activity in Arctic soils controls the cycling of significant stores of organic carbon and nutrients. We studied in situ processes in Alaskan soils using original metaproteomic methods in order to relate important heterotrophic functions to microbial taxa and to understand the microbial response to Arctic greening. Major bacterial groups show strong metabolic specialization in organic topsoils. alpha-/beta-/gamma-Proteobacteria specialized in the acquisition of small, soluble compounds, whereas Acidobacteria, Actinobacteria, and other detritosphere groups specialized in the degradation of plant-derived polymers. alpha-/beta-/gamma-Proteobacteria dominated the expression of transporters for common root exudates and limiting nitrogenous compounds, supporting an ecological model of dependence upon plants for carbon and competition with plants for nitrogen. Detritosphere groups specialized in distinct substrates, with Acidobacteria producing the most enzymes for hemicellulose depolymerization. Acidobacteria was the most active group across the three plant ecotypes sampled-the largely nonvascular, lower biomass intertussock and the largely vascular, higher biomass tussock and shrub. Functional partitioning among bacterial groups was stable between plant ecotypes, but certain functions associated with alpha-/beta-/gamma-Proteobacteria were more strongly expressed in higher biomass ecotypes. We show that refined metaproteomic approaches can elucidate soil microbial ecology as well as biogeochemical trajectories of major carbon stocks. IMPORTANCE The Arctic is warming twice as fast as the rest of the planet, and Arctic soils currently store twice as much carbon as the entire atmosphere-two facts that make understanding how Arctic soil microbial communities are responding to climate change particularly urgent. Greening of vegetation cover across the Arctic landscape is one of the most prominent climate-driven shifts in Arctic terrestrial ecology, with potentially profound effects on biogeochemical cycling by the soil microbiome. Here we use metaproteomics to document microbial metabolic functions that drive soil carbon and nutrient cycling processes in an Arctic tundra landscape. We identify functional roles among bacterial taxonomic groups that are largely stable across vegetation types, with certain functions strongly expressed by rhizosphere groups reflecting a community metabolic response to greening.

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