posted on 2024-01-10, 14:39authored byAdrien Vigneron, Rémy Guyoneaud, Marisol Goñi-Urriza
Long-term
hydrocarbon pollution is a devious threat to aquatic
and marine ecosystems. However, microbial responses to chronic pollution
remain poorly understood. Combining genome-centric metagenomic and
metatranscriptomic analyses of microbial mat samples that experienced
chronic hydrocarbon pollution for more than 80 years, we analyzed
the transcriptomic activity of alkane and aromatic hydrocarbon degradation
pathways at the population level. Consistent with the fluctuating
and stratified redox conditions of the habitat, both aerobic and anaerobic
hydrocarbon degradation pathways were expressed by taxonomically and
metabolically contrasted lineages including members of Bacteroidiales, Desulfobacteraceae, Pseudomonadales; Alcanivoraceae and Halieaceae populations with (photo)-heterotrophic,
sulfur- and organohalide-based metabolisms, providing evidence for
the co-occurrence and activity of aerobic and anaerobic hydrocarbon
degradation pathways in shallow marine microbial mats. In addition,
our results suggest that aerobic alkane degradation in long-term pollution
involved bacterial families that are naturally widely distributed
in marine habitats, but hydrocarbon concentration and composition
were found to be a strong structuring factor of their intrafamily
diversity and transcriptomic activities.