4.6 Article

A year in the life of a thrombolite: comparative metatranscriptomics reveals dynamic metabolic changes over diel and seasonal cycles

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 20, Issue 2, Pages 842-861

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1462-2920.14029

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Funding

  1. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program
  2. Developing a European American NGS Network program
  3. NASA Exobiology and Evolutionary Biology program element [NNX12AD64G]
  4. NASA [NNX12AD64G, 52926] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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Microbialites are one of the oldest known ecosystems on Earth and the coordinated metabolisms and activities of these mineral-depositing communities have had a profound impact on the habitability of the planet. Despite efforts to understand the diversity and metabolic potential of these systems, there has not been a systematic molecular analysis of the transcriptional changes that occur within a living microbialite over time. In this study, we generated metatranscriptomic libraries from actively growing thrombolites, a type of microbialite, throughout diel and seasonal cycles and observed dynamic shifts in the population and metabolic transcriptional activity. The most transcribed genes in all seasons were associated with photosynthesis, but only transcripts associated with photosystem II exhibited diel cycling. Photosystem I transcripts were constitutively expressed at all time points including midnight and sunrise. Transcripts associated with nitrogen fixation, methanogenesis and dissimilatory sulfate reduction exhibited diel cycling, and variability between seasons. Networking analysis of the metatranscriptomes showed correlated expression patterns helping to elucidate how metabolic interactions are coordinated within the thrombolite community. These findings have identified distinctive temporal patterns within the thrombolites and will serve an important foundation to understand the mechanisms by which these communities form and respond to changes in their environment.

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