Environmental predictors of electroactive bacterioplankton in small boreal lakes

Extracellular electron transfer (EET) by electroactive bacteria in anoxic soils and sediments is an intensively researched subject, but EET's function in planktonic ecology has been less considered. Following the discovery of an unexpectedly high prevalence of EET genes in a bog lake's bac...

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Published inEnvironmental microbiology Vol. 25; no. 3; pp. 705 - 720
Main Authors Olmsted, Charles N., Ort, Roger, Tran, Patricia Q., McDaniel, Elizabeth A., Roden, Eric E., Bond, Daniel R., He, Shaomei, McMahon, Katherine D.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Hoboken, USA John Wiley & Sons, Inc 01.03.2023
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc
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ISSN1462-2912
1462-2920
1462-2920
DOI10.1111/1462-2920.16314

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Summary:Extracellular electron transfer (EET) by electroactive bacteria in anoxic soils and sediments is an intensively researched subject, but EET's function in planktonic ecology has been less considered. Following the discovery of an unexpectedly high prevalence of EET genes in a bog lake's bacterioplankton, we hypothesized that the redox capacities of dissolved organic matter (DOM) enrich for electroactive bacteria by mediating redox chemistry. We developed the bioinformatics pipeline FEET (Find EET) to identify and summarize predicted EET protein‐encoding genes from metagenomics data. We then applied FEET to 36 bog and thermokarst lakes and correlated gene occurrence with environmental data to test our predictions. Our results provide indirect evidence that DOM may participate in bacterioplankton EET. We found a similarly high prevalence of genes encoding putative EET proteins in most of these lakes, where oxidative EET strongly correlated with DOM. Numerous novel clusters of multiheme cytochromes that may enable EET were identified. Taxa previously not considered EET‐capable were found to carry EET genes. We propose that EET and DOM interactions are of ecologically important to bacterioplankton in small boreal lakes, and that EET, particularly by methylotrophs and anoxygenic phototrophs, should be further studied and incorporated into methane emission models of melting permafrost.
Bibliography:Funding information
National Science Foundation North Temperate Lakes Long‐Term Ecological Research, Grant/Award Number: NTL‐LTER DEB‐1440297; DEB‐0702395
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ISSN:1462-2912
1462-2920
1462-2920
DOI:10.1111/1462-2920.16314