Abstract
SummaryIn chemosynthetic symbioses between marine invertebrates and autotrophic sulfur-oxidizing bacteria the symbionts feed their host by producing organic compounds from CO2using reduced sulfur compounds as an energy source. One such symbiosis, the gutless marineworm Olavius algarvensisharbors at least five bacterial symbionts of which four have the genetic potential for an autotrophic metabolism.In this study we combined single-cell analyses of CO2fixation, CO2release and bulk uptake, with measurements of O2respiration, sulfur content, and polyhydroxyalkanoate content, as well as mathematical modelling to investigate how energy derived from sulfur oxidation drives carbon fluxes within the symbiosis and between the holobiont and its habitat. We found that under aerobic conditions without external energy sources only the primary symbiont,Ca. Thiosymbion algarvensis, fixed carbon. This symbiont relied on internal sulfur storage for energy production. Our model showed that the apparent efficiency of carbon fixation driven by sulfur oxidation in the symbiosis was higher than thermodynamically feasible if only stored sulfur was considered as source of energy and reducing equivalents. The model and additional calculations showed that reducing equivalents must be derived from a different source than energy. We identified the large amounts of polyhdroxyalkanoate stored by the symbiont as the likely source of reducing equivalents for carbon fixation in the symbiont which boosts the yield of sulfur-driven carbon fixation. The model also showed that heterotrophic carbon fixation by host tissue is not negligible and has to be considered when assessing transfer of carbon from the symbionts to the host.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
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