Composite Bacterial Hopanoids and Their Microbial Producers across Oxygen Gradients in the Water Column of the California Current
DNA, Bacterial
Ecology
Bacteria
Molecular Sequence Data
Bacterial
Lyases
DNA
Biodiversity
Sequence Analysis, DNA
Biological Sciences
Medical microbiology
Microbiology
California
Triterpenes
Oxygen
13. Climate action
Cluster Analysis
Metagenome
Seawater
14. Life underwater
Life Below Water
Sequence Analysis
Phylogeny
DOI:
10.1128/aem.00847-14
Publication Date:
2014-04-25T14:39:00Z
AUTHORS (5)
ABSTRACT
ABSTRACT Hopanoids are pentacyclic triterpenoid lipids produced by many prokaryotes as cell membrane components. The structural variations of composite hopanoids, or bacteriohopanepolyols (BHPs), produced by various bacterial genera make them potentially useful molecular biomarkers of bacterial communities and metabolic processes in both modern and ancient environments. Building on previous work suggesting that organisms in low-oxygen environments are important contributors to BHP production in the marine water column and that there may be physiological roles for BHPs specific to these environments, this study investigated the relationship between trends in BHP structural diversity and abundance and the genetic diversity of BHP producers for the first time in a low-oxygen environment of the Eastern Tropical North Pacific. Amplification of the hopanoid biosynthesis gene for squalene hopene cyclase ( sqhC ) indicated far greater genetic diversity than would be predicted by examining BHP structural diversity alone and that greater sqhC genetic diversity exists in the marine environment than is represented by cultured representatives and most marine metagenomes. In addition, the genetic relationships in this data set suggest microaerophilic environments as potential “hot spots” of BHP production. Finally, structural analysis of BHPs showed that an isomer of the commonly observed BHP bacteriohopanetetrol may be linked to a producer that is more abundant in low-oxygen environments. Results of this study increase the known diversity of BHP producers and provide a detailed phylogeny with implications for the role of hopanoids in modern bacteria, as well as the evolutionary history of hopanoid biosynthesis, both of which are important considerations for future interpretations of the marine sedimentary record.
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