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Bacterial community assembly, succession, and metabolic function during outdoor cultivation of Microchloropsis salina

dc.citation.journaltitlemSphere
dc.contributor.authorMorris, Megan M.
dc.contributor.authorKimbrel, Jeffrey A.
dc.contributor.authorGeng, Haifeng
dc.contributor.authorTran-Gyamfi, Mary Bao
dc.contributor.authorYu, Eizadora T.
dc.contributor.authorSale, Kenneth L.
dc.contributor.authorLane, Todd W.
dc.contributor.authorMayali, Xavier
dc.date.accessioned2025-06-15T10:35:41Z
dc.date.issued2022-08-31
dc.description.abstract<p>Outdoor cultivation of microalgae has promising potential for renewable bioenergy, but there is a knowledge gap on the structure and function of the algal microbiome that coinhabits these ecosystems. Here, we describe the assembly mechanisms, taxonomic structure, and metabolic potential of bacteria associated with <i>Microchloropsis salina</i> cultivated outdoors. Open mesocosms were inoculated with algal cultures that were either free of bacteria or coincubated with one of two different strains of alga-associated bacteria and were sampled across five time points taken over multiple harvesting rounds of a 40-day experiment. Using quantitative analyses of metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs), we tracked bacterial community compositional abundance and taxon-specific functional capacity involved in algal-bacterial interactions. One of the inoculated bacteria (<i>Alteromonas</i> sp.) persisted and dispersed across mesocosms, whereas the other inoculated strain (<i>Phaeobacter gallaeciensis</i>) disappeared by day 17 while a taxonomically similar but functionally distinct <i>Phaeobacter</i> strain became established. The inoculated strains were less abundant than 6 numerically dominant newly recruited taxa with functional capacities for mutualistic or saprophytic lifestyles, suggesting a generalist approach to persistence. This includes a highly abundant unclassified <i>Rhodobacteraceae</i> species that fluctuated between 25% and 77% of the total community. Overall, we did not find evidence for priority effects exerted by the distinct inoculum conditions; all mesocosms converged with similar microbial community compositions by the end of the experiment. Instead, we infer that the 15 total populations were retained due to host selection, as they showed high metabolic potential for algal-bacterial interactions such as recycling alga-produced carbon and nitrogen and production of vitamins and secondary metabolites associated with algal growth and senescence, including B vitamins, tropodithietic acid, and roseobacticides.</p> <p><strong>IMPORTANCE</strong> Bacteria proliferate in nutrient-rich aquatic environments, including engineered algal biofuel systems, where they remineralize photosynthates, exchange secondary metabolites with algae, and can influence system output of biomass or oil. Despite this, knowledge on the microbial ecology of algal cultivation systems is lacking, and the subject is worthy of investigation. Here, we used metagenomics to characterize the metabolic capacities of the predominant bacteria associated with the biofuel-relevant microalga <i>Microchloropsis salina</i> and to predict testable metabolic interactions between algae and manipulated communities of bacteria. We identified a previously undescribed and uncultivated organism that dominated the community. Collectively, the microbial community may interact with the alga in cultivation via exchange of secondary metabolites which could affect algal success, which we demonstrate as a possible outcome from controlled experiments with metabolically analogous isolates. These findings address the scalability of lab-based algal-bacterial interactions through to cultivation systems and more broadly provide a framework for empirical testing of genome-based metabolic predictions.</p>
dc.identifier.citationMorris, M. M., Kimbrel, J. A., Geng, H., Tran-Gyamfi, M. B., Yu, E. T., Sale, K. L., Lane, T. W., & Mayali, X. (2022). Bacterial community assembly, succession, and metabolic function during outdoor cultivation of <i>Microchloropsis salina</i>. <i>mSphere</i>, <i>7</i>(4), Article e00231-22.
dc.identifier.doi10.1128/msphere.00231-22
dc.identifier.issn2379-5042
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14697/575
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherAmerican Society for Microbiology
dc.relation.urihttps://journals.asm.org/doi/epub/10.1128/msphere.00231-22
dc.subjectBacteria
dc.subject.agrovocBacteria
dc.subject.agrovoccultivation
dc.subject.agrovocmicroalgae
dc.subject.agrovocmesocosms
dc.subject.agrovocalgal culture
dc.subject.agrovocalgal blooms
dc.subject.agrovocinteractions
dc.subject.agrovocoxidation
dc.subject.agrovocdenitrification
dc.subject.agrovocDNA extraction
dc.subject.lcshMarine bacteria
dc.subject.lcshMicroalgae
dc.subject.odcChallenge 2: Protect and restore ecosystems and biodiversity
dc.subject.odcChallenge 3: Sustainably feed the global population
dc.subject.odcChallenge 8: Create a digital representation of the Ocean
dc.subject.sdgSDG 14 - Life below water
dc.subject.sdgSDG 9 - Industry, innovation and infrastructure
dc.titleBacterial community assembly, succession, and metabolic function during outdoor cultivation of <i>Microchloropsis salina</i>
dc.typeArticle
local.subjectalgal-bacterial interactions
local.subjectmetagenome-assembled genomes
local.subjectcommunity assembly
local.subjectRhodobacteraceae
local.subjectMicrochloropsis
local.subject.scientificnameMicrochloropsis salina
local.subject.scientificnameRhodobacteraceae
local.subject.scientificnameMicrochloropsis
oaire.citation.issue4
oaire.citation.startPagee00231-22
oaire.citation.volume7

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