6533b824fe1ef96bd127ff55

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Fine stratification of microbial communities through a metagenomic profile of the photic zone

Jose M. Haro-morenoFrancisco Rodriguez-valeraMario López-pérezAntonio PicazoAntonio CamachoDe La Torre

subject

Mediterranean climateSphingomonadaceaePaleontologyWater columnbiologyMetagenomicsCommunity structureStratification (water)Photic zoneMicrobiomebiology.organism_classification

description

ABSTRACTMost marine metagenomic studies of the marine photic zone analyze only samples taken at one or two depths. However, when the water column is stratified, physicochemical parameters change dramatically over relatively short depth intervals. We sampled the photic water column every 15m depth at a single point of an off-shore Mediterranean site during a period of strong stratification (early autumn) to evaluate the effects of small depth increases on the microbiome. Using genomic assembly and metagenomic read recruitment, we found major shifts in the community structure over small variations of depth, with most microbes showing a distribution limited to layers approximately 30 meters thick (stenobathic). Only some representatives of the SAR11 clade and the Sphingomonadaceae appeared to be eurybathic, spanning a greater range of depths. These results were confirmed by studying a single gene (rhodopsin) for which we also found narrow depth distributions. Our results highlight the importance of considering vertical distribution as a major element when analyzing the presence of marine clades and species or comparing the microbiome present at different locations.

https://doi.org/10.1101/134635