Enzyme adaptation to habitat thermal legacy shapes the thermal plasticity of marine microbiomes

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  • Ramona Marasco
    King Abdullah University of Science and Technology
  • Marco Fusi
    King Abdullah University of Science and Technology
  • Cristina Coscolín
    CSIC, Institute of Catalysis, Madrid
  • Alan Borozzi
    King Abdullah University of Science and Technology
  • David Almendral
    CSIC, Institute of Catalysis, Madrid
  • Rafael Bargiela
  • Christina Gohlke neé Nutschel
    Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH
  • Jonas Dittrich
    Heinrich-Heine-Universität , Dusseldorf
  • Holger Gohlke
    Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH
  • Ruth Matesanz
    CSIC, Institute of Catalysis, Madrid
  • Sergio Sanchez-Carrillo
    CSIC, Institute of Catalysis, Madrid
  • Francesca Mapelli
    University of Milan
  • Tatyana Chernikova
  • Peter Golyshin
  • Manuel Ferrer
    CSIC, Institute of Catalysis, Madrid
  • Daniele Daffonchio
    King Abdullah University of Science and Technology
Microbial communities respond to temperature with physiological adaptation and compositional turnover. Whether thermal selection of enzymes explains marine microbiome plasticity in response to temperature remains unresolved. By quantifying the thermal behaviour of seven functionally-independent enzyme classes (esterase, extradiol dioxygenase, phosphatase, beta-galactosidase, nuclease, transaminase, and aldo-keto reductase) in native proteomes of marine sediment microbiomes from the Irish Sea to the southern Red Sea, we record a significant effect of the mean annual temperature (MAT) on enzyme response in all cases. Activity and stability profiles of 228 esterases and 5 extradiol dioxygenases from sediment and seawater across 70 locations worldwide validate this thermal pattern. Modelling the esterase phase transition temperature as a measure of structural flexibility confirms the observed relationship with MAT. Furthermore, when considering temperature variability in sites with non-significantly different MATs, the broadest range of enzyme thermal behaviour and the highest growth plasticity of the enriched heterotrophic bacteria occur in samples with the widest annual thermal variability. These results indicate that temperature-driven enzyme selection shapes microbiome thermal plasticity and that thermal variability finely tunes such processes and should be considered alongside MAT in forecasting microbial community thermal response.

Keywords

  • Cellular microbiology, Ecophysiology, Marine biology, Microbial ecology, Water Microbiology
Original languageEnglish
Article number1045
JournalNature Communications
Volume14
Issue number1
Early online date24 Feb 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 24 Feb 2023

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