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Acetate-utilizing microbial communities revealed by stable-isotope probing in sediment underlying the upwelling system of the Ulleung Basin, East Sea

Authors
Cho, HyeyounKim, BominaMok, Jin-SookChoi, AyeonThamdrup, BoHyun, Jung-Ho
Issue Date
Jan-2020
Publisher
Inter-Research Science Publishing
Keywords
Acetate-oxidizing bacteria; Benthic microbial communities; East Sea; Organic carbon oxidation; RNA-SIP; Ulleung Basin
Citation
Marine Ecology - Progress Series, v.634, pp.45 - 61
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Marine Ecology - Progress Series
Volume
634
Start Page
45
End Page
61
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/erica/handle/2021.sw.erica/1338
DOI
10.3354/meps13182
ISSN
0171-8630
Abstract
Molecular analyses and biogeochemical measurements were combined to investigate the microbial communities associated with major terminal electron accepting processes and acetate oxidation at 2 contrasting sediments on the continental shelf (EB1) and basin (EB6) of the Ulleung Basin, East Sea. At EB1, sulfate reduction (SR) and iron reduction (FeR) dominated organic carbon (C-org) oxidation, accounting for 65 and 25% of anaerobic C-org oxidation, respectively. In contrast, manganese reduction (MnR) was responsible for >50% of anaerobic C-org mineralization at manganese oxide-rich EB6. Members of Desulfobacteraceae, known as putative sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB), constituted a major C-org-oxidizing clade (22% of Bacteria) at EB1. Meanwhile, putatively Mn-reducing bacteria affiliated with Colwelliaceae, Shewanellaceae and Oceanospirillaceae were abundant in EB6 (8% of Bacteria). RNA-stable isotope probing (RNA-SIP) further identified Arcobacter as acetate-oxidizers associated with FeR, while no SRB were labeled at EB1. At EB6, microorganisms affiliated with Colwelliaceae and Oceanospirillaceae were identified as putative Mn-reducing acetate-oxidizers. Interestingly, at both sites, Thaumarchaeota were labeled with C-13 derived from acetate during the anoxic incubations. The results from RNA-SIP give new insights into the biogeochemical and ecological role of Arcobacter in FeR, and the metabolic activity of Thaumarchaeota under anoxia. As the upwelling intensity in the UB declines due to the rapid warming of surface waters, our results are relevant for evaluation of future changes in benthic biogeochemical processes and microbial communities in response to the variations of water-column productivity.
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