6533b851fe1ef96bd12a9e67
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Vertical stratification patterns of methanotrophs and their genetic controllers in water columns of oxygen-stratified boreal lakes
Antti J RissanenTaija SaarelaHelena JänttiMoritz BuckSari PeuraSanni L AaltoAnne OjalaJukka PumpanenMarja TiirolaMarcus ElvertHannu Nykänensubject
Oceanografi hydrologi och vattenresurserjärvetmetaaniMicrobiologyOceanography Hydrology and Water ResourcesGenetics (medical genetics to be 30107 and agricultural genetics to be 40402)RNA Ribosomal 16Sgenetic potentialvertical structuringmethanotroph16S rRNAhappikatoPhylogeny1172 Environmental sciencesAcademicSubjects/SCI01150metagenomicsEcology218 Environmental engineeringWatergenomiikkaOxygenLakesMikrobiologimikrobistoRNAkerrostuneisuusMethaneMethylococcalesResearch Articledescription
ABSTRACT The vertical structuring of methanotrophic communities and its genetic controllers remain understudied in the water columns of oxygen-stratified lakes. Therefore, we used 16S rRNA gene sequencing to study the vertical stratification patterns of methanotrophs in two boreal lakes, Lake Kuivajärvi and Lake Lovojärvi. Furthermore, metagenomic analyses were performed to assess the genomic characteristics of methanotrophs in Lovojärvi and the previously studied Lake Alinen Mustajärvi. The methanotroph communities were vertically structured along the oxygen gradient. Alphaproteobacterial methanotrophs preferred oxic water layers, while Methylococcales methanotrophs, consisting of putative novel genera and species, thrived, especially at and below the oxic-anoxic interface and showed distinct depth variation patterns, which were not completely predictable by their taxonomic classification. Instead, genomic differences among Methylococcales methanotrophs explained their variable vertical depth patterns. Genes in clusters of orthologous groups (COG) categories L (replication, recombination and repair) and S (function unknown) were relatively high in metagenome-assembled genomes representing Methylococcales clearly thriving below the oxic-anoxic interface, suggesting genetic adaptations for increased stress tolerance enabling living in the hypoxic/anoxic conditions. By contrast, genes in COG category N (cell motility) were relatively high in metagenome-assembled genomes of Methylococcales thriving at the oxic-anoxic interface, which suggests genetic adaptations for increased motility at the vertically fluctuating oxic-anoxic interface.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2021-01-01 |