Metaproteomic analysis decodes trophic interactions of microorganisms in the dark ocean

Jul 30, 2024·
Zihao Zhao
Chie Amano
Chie Amano
,
Thomas Reinthaler
,
Federico Baltar
,
Mónica V. Orellana
,
Gerhard J. Herndl
· 1 min read
DOI
publication

Proteins in the open ocean represent a significant source of organic matter, and their profiles reflect the metabolic activities of marine microorganisms. Here, by analyzing metaproteomic samples collected from the Pacific, Atlantic and Southern Ocean, we reveal size-fractionated patterns of the structure and function of the marine microbiota protein pool in the water column, particularly in the dark ocean (>200 m). Zooplankton proteins contributed three times more than algal proteins to the deep-sea community metaproteome. Gammaproteobacteria exhibited high metabolic activity in the deep-sea, contributing up to 30% of bacterial proteins. Close virus-host interactions of this taxon might explain the dominance of gammaproteobacterial proteins in the dissolved fraction. A high urease expression in nitrifiers suggested links between their dark carbon fixation and zooplankton urea production. In summary, our results uncover the taxonomic contribution of the microbiota to the oceanic protein pool, revealing protein fluxes from particles to the dissolved organic matter pool.

Chie Amano
Authors
Associate Professor
Chie Amano is a marine microbial ecologist studying the role of bacteria and archaea in the ocean’s biogeochemical cycles, with a focus on the dark, deep ocean. Her research addresses both sides of the carbon cycle: the heterotrophic degradation of organic matter, including by particle-associated communities, and dark inorganic carbon fixation through anaplerotic and chemolithoautotrophic processes. She also examines how hydrostatic pressure shapes microbial activity and carbon cycling in the deep sea, and she develops single-cell approaches such as BONCAT and microautoradiography, together with in situ instrumentation, to quantify microbial activity in the deep ocean.