Authors
JL Rolando, M Kolton, T Song, Y Liu, P Pinamang, R Conrad, JT Morris, KT Konstantinidis, JE Kostka
Publication date
2023/5/1
Journal
bioRxiv
Pages
2023.05. 01.538948
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Description
Symbiotic root microbiota are crucial for plant growth as they assist their hosts in nutrient acquisition. In the roots of coastal marine plants, heterotrophic activity in the rhizosphere by sulfate-reducing microorganisms has been linked to nitrogen fixation. In this study, we recovered 239 high-quality metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) from a salt marsh dominated by the foundation plant Spartina alterniflora, including diazotrophic sulfate-reducing and sulfur-oxidizing bacteria thriving in the root compartment. Here we show for the first time that highly-abundant sulfur-oxidizing bacteria in the roots of a coastal macrophyte encode and highly express genes for nitrogen fixation (nifHDK). Further, we leveraged a S. alterniflora biomass gradient to gain a mechanistic understanding on how root-microbe interactions respond to abiotic stress from anoxia and elevated sulfide concentration. We observed that the roots of the stressed S. alterniflora phenotype exhibited the highest rates of nitrogen fixation and expression levels of both the oxidative and reductive forms of the dissimilatory sulfite reductase gene (dsrAB). Approximately 25% and 15% of all sulfur-oxidizing dsrA and nitrogen-fixing nifK transcripts, respectively, were associated with novel MAGs of the Candidatus Thiodiazotropha genus in the roots of the stressed S. alterniflora phenotype. We conclude that the rapid cycling of sulfur in the dynamic S. alterniflora root zone is coupled to nitrogen fixation during both reductive and oxidative sulfur reactions, and that the S. alternifloraCa. Thiodiazotropha symbiosis is an adaptive response to anoxic and sulfidic sediment conditions, whereby the …
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