Ammonia-oxidizing bacteria and archaea exhibit differential nitrogen source preferences

被引:0
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作者
Wei Qin
Stephany P. Wei
Yue Zheng
Eunkyung Choi
Xiangpeng Li
Juliet Johnston
Xianhui Wan
Britt Abrahamson
Zachary Flinkstrom
Baozhan Wang
Hanyan Li
Lei Hou
Qing Tao
Wyatt W. Chlouber
Xin Sun
Michael Wells
Long Ngo
Kristopher A. Hunt
Hidetoshi Urakawa
Xuanyu Tao
Dongyu Wang
Xiaoyuan Yan
Dazhi Wang
Chongle Pan
Peter K. Weber
Jiandong Jiang
Jizhong Zhou
Yao Zhang
David A. Stahl
Bess B. Ward
Xavier Mayali
Willm Martens-Habbena
Mari-Karoliina H. Winkler
机构
[1] University of Oklahoma,School of Biological Sciences, Institute for Environmental Genomics
[2] University of Washington,Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
[3] Xiamen University,State Key Laboratory of Marine Environmental Science, College of the Environment and Ecology
[4] University of Florida,Department of Microbiology and Cell Science, Fort Lauderdale Research and Education Center
[5] Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory,Department of Geosciences
[6] Princeton University,College of Life Sciences
[7] Nanjing Agricultural University,Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
[8] Yale University,Department of Ecology and Environmental Studies
[9] Florida Gulf Coast University,State Key Laboratory of Soil and Sustainable Agriculture, Institute of Soil Science
[10] Chinese Academy of Sciences,State Key Laboratory of Marine Environmental Science, College of Ocean and Earth Sciences
[11] Xiamen University,undefined
来源
Nature Microbiology | 2024年 / 9卷
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摘要
Ammonia-oxidizing microorganisms (AOM) contribute to one of the largest nitrogen fluxes in the global nitrogen budget. Four distinct lineages of AOM: ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA), beta- and gamma-proteobacterial ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (β-AOB and γ-AOB) and complete ammonia oxidizers (comammox), are thought to compete for ammonia as their primary nitrogen substrate. In addition, many AOM species can utilize urea as an alternative energy and nitrogen source through hydrolysis to ammonia. How the coordination of ammonia and urea metabolism in AOM influences their ecology remains poorly understood. Here we use stable isotope tracing, kinetics and transcriptomics experiments to show that representatives of the AOM lineages employ distinct regulatory strategies for ammonia or urea utilization, thereby minimizing direct substrate competition. The tested AOA and comammox species preferentially used ammonia over urea, while β-AOB favoured urea utilization, repressed ammonia transport in the presence of urea and showed higher affinity for urea than for ammonia. Characterized γ-AOB co-utilized both substrates. These results reveal contrasting niche adaptation and coexistence patterns among the major AOM lineages.
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页码:524 / 536
页数:12
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