Puente Sanchez, Fernando
- Institutionen för vatten och miljö, Sveriges lantbruksuniversitet
Forskningsartikel2024Vetenskapligt granskadÖppen tillgång
Galisteo, Cristina; Puente-Sanchez, Fernando; de la Haba, Rafael R.; Bertilsson, Stefan; Sanchez-Porro, Cristina; Ventosa, Antonio
Saline soils and their microbial communities have recently been studied in response to ongoing desertification of agricultural soils caused by anthropogenic impacts and climate change. Here we describe the prokaryotic microbiota of hypersaline soils in the Odiel Saltmarshes Natural Area of Southwest Spain. This region has been strongly affected by mining and industrial activity and feature high levels of certain heavy metals. We sequenced 18 shotgun metagenomes through Illumina NovaSeq from samples obtained from three different areas in 2020 and 2021. Taxogenomic analyses demonstrate that these soils harbored equal proportions of archaea and bacteria, with Methanobacteriota, Pseudomonadota, Bacteroidota, Gemmatimonadota, and Balneolota as most abundant phyla. Functions related to the transport of heavy metal outside the cytoplasm are among the most relevant features of the community (i.e., ZntA and CopA enzymes). They seem to be indispensable to avoid the increase of zinc and copper concentration inside the cell. Besides, the archaeal phylum Methanobacteriota is the main arsenic detoxifier within the microbiota although arsenic related genes are widely distributed in the community. Regarding the osmoregulation strategies, "salt-out" mechanism was identified in part of the bacterial population, whereas "salt-in" mechanism was present in both domains, Bacteria and Archaea. De novo biosynthesis of two of the most universal compatible solutes was detected, with predominance of glycine betaine biosynthesis (betAB
Extreme environments; Halophilic microorganisms; Microbial diversity; Functional metagenomics; Osmoregulation; Heavy metal tolerance
Science of the Total Environment
2024, volym: 951, artikelnummer: 175497
Utgivare: ELSEVIER
Miljövetenskap
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/132234