4.7 Article

The Role of Phosphorus Limitation in Shaping Soil Bacterial Communities and Their Metabolic Capabilities

期刊

MBIO
卷 11, 期 5, 页码 -

出版社

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/mBio.01718-20

关键词

phosphorus limitation; C-P lyase pathway; organophosphonate degradation; phosphate starvation; soil microbiology

资金

  1. U.S. National Science Foundation [DEB 1556090]
  2. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship
  3. NSF Graduate Research Internship Program Fellowship
  4. Bioplatforms Australia
  5. Integrated Marine Observing System (IMOS) through the Australian Government's National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy (NCRIS)
  6. CSIRO
  7. Simons Foundation [429440]
  8. Parks Australia through the Bush Blitz program - Australian Government
  9. BHP

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Phosphorus (P) is an essential nutrient that is often in limited supply, with P availability constraining biomass production in many terrestrial ecosystems. Despite decades of work on plant responses to P deficiency and the importance of soil microbes to terrestrial ecosystem processes, how soil microbes respond to, and cope with, P deficiencies remains poorly understood. We studied 583 soils from two independent sample sets that each span broad natural gradients in extractable soil P and collectively represent diverse biomes, including tropical forests, temperate grass-lands, and arid shrublands. We paired marker gene and shotgun metagenomic analyses to determine how soil bacterial and archaeal communities respond to differences in soil P availability and to detect corresponding shifts in functional attributes. We identified microbial taxa that are consistently responsive to extractable soil P, with those taxa found in low P soils being more likely to have traits typical of oligotrophic life history strategies. Using environmental niche modeling of genes and gene pathways, we found an enriched abundance of key genes in low P soils linked to the carbon-phosphorus (C-P) lyase and phosphonotase degradation pathways, along with key components of the high-affinity phosphate-specific transporter (Pst) and phosphate regulon (Pho) systems. Taken together, these analyses suggest that catabolism of phosphonates is an important strategy used by bacteria to scavenge phosphate in P-limited soils. Surprisingly, these same pathways are important for bacterial growth in P-limited marine waters, highlighting the shared metabolic strategies used by both terrestrial and marine microbes to cope with P limitation.

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