Affiliation:
1. School of Marine Science and Policy, University of Delaware, Lewes, Delaware, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Bacteria often respond to environmental stimuli using transcriptional control, but this may not be the case for marine bacteria such as “
Candidatus
Pelagibacter ubique,” a cultivated representative of the SAR11 clade, the most abundant organism in the ocean. This bacterium has a small, streamlined genome and an unusually low number of transcriptional regulators, suggesting that transcriptional control is low in
Pelagibacter
and limits its response to environmental conditions. Transcriptome sequencing during batch culture growth revealed that only 0.1% of protein-encoding genes appear to be under transcriptional control in
Pelagibacter
and in another oligotroph (SAR92) whereas >10% of genes were under transcriptional control in the copiotrophs
Polaribacter
sp. strain MED152 and
Ruegeria pomeroyi
. When growth levels changed, transcript levels remained steady in
Pelagibacter
and SAR92 but shifted in MED152 and
R. pomeroyi
. Transcript abundances per cell, determined using an internal RNA sequencing standard, were low (<1 transcript per cell) for all but a few of the most highly transcribed genes in all four taxa, and there was no correlation between transcript abundances per cell and shifts in the levels of transcription. These results suggest that low transcriptional control contributes to the success of
Pelagibacter
and possibly other oligotrophic microbes that dominate microbial communities in the oceans.
IMPORTANCE
Diverse heterotrophic bacteria drive biogeochemical cycling in the ocean. The most abundant types of marine bacteria are oligotrophs with small, streamlined genomes. The metabolic controls that regulate the response of oligotrophic bacteria to environmental conditions remain unclear. Our results reveal that transcriptional control is lower in marine oligotrophic bacteria than in marine copiotrophic bacteria. Although responses of bacteria to environmental conditions are commonly regulated at the level of transcription, metabolism in the most abundant bacteria in the ocean appears to be regulated by other mechanisms.
Funder
National Science Foundation
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
46 articles.
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