Alkane Hydroxylase Gene (alkB) Phylotype Composition and Diversity in Northern Gulf of Mexico Bacterioplankton
Natural and anthropogenic activities introduce alkanes into marine systems where they are degraded by alkane hydroxylases expressed by phylogenetically diverse bacteria. Partial sequences for alkB, one of the structural genes of alkane hydroxylase, have been used to assess the composition of alkane...
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doaj-042428c9796d4179860d3b8e86e4eba12020-11-24T23:49:53ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Microbiology1664-302X2013-12-01410.3389/fmicb.2013.0037067485Alkane Hydroxylase Gene (alkB) Phylotype Composition and Diversity in Northern Gulf of Mexico BacterioplanktonConor Blake Smith0Bradley B Tolar1James T Hollibaugh2Gary M King3LSUUniversity of GeorgiaUniversity of GeorgiaLSUNatural and anthropogenic activities introduce alkanes into marine systems where they are degraded by alkane hydroxylases expressed by phylogenetically diverse bacteria. Partial sequences for alkB, one of the structural genes of alkane hydroxylase, have been used to assess the composition of alkane-degrading communities, and to determine their responses to hydrocarbon inputs. We present here the first spatially extensive analysis of alkB in bacterioplankton of the northern Gulf of Mexico (nGoM), a region that experiences numerous hydrocarbon inputs. We have analyzed 401 partial alkB gene sequences amplified from genomic extracts collected during March 2010 from 17 water column samples that included surface waters and bathypelagic depths. Previous analyses of 16S rRNA gene sequences for these and related samples have shown that nGoM bacterial community composition and structure stratify strongly with depth, with distinctly different communities above and below 100 m. Although we hypothesized that alkB gene sequences would exhibit a similar pattern, PCA analyses of operational protein units (OPU) indicated that community composition did not vary consistently with depth or other major physical-chemical variables. We observed 22 distinct OPUs, one of which was ubiquitous and accounted for 57% of all sequences. This OPU clustered with alkB sequences from known hydrocarbon oxidizers (e.g., Alcanivorax and Marinobacter). Some OPUs could not be associated with known alkane degraders, however, and perhaps represent novel hydrocarbon-oxidizing populations or genes. These results indicate that the capacity for alkane hydrolysis occurs widely in the nGoM, but that alkane degrader diversity varies substantially among sites and responds differently than bulk communities to physical-chemical variables.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fmicb.2013.00370/fullGulf of MexicodiversitybacterioplanktonAlkBalkane hydroxylases |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Conor Blake Smith Bradley B Tolar James T Hollibaugh Gary M King |
spellingShingle |
Conor Blake Smith Bradley B Tolar James T Hollibaugh Gary M King Alkane Hydroxylase Gene (alkB) Phylotype Composition and Diversity in Northern Gulf of Mexico Bacterioplankton Frontiers in Microbiology Gulf of Mexico diversity bacterioplankton AlkB alkane hydroxylases |
author_facet |
Conor Blake Smith Bradley B Tolar James T Hollibaugh Gary M King |
author_sort |
Conor Blake Smith |
title |
Alkane Hydroxylase Gene (alkB) Phylotype Composition and Diversity in Northern Gulf of Mexico Bacterioplankton |
title_short |
Alkane Hydroxylase Gene (alkB) Phylotype Composition and Diversity in Northern Gulf of Mexico Bacterioplankton |
title_full |
Alkane Hydroxylase Gene (alkB) Phylotype Composition and Diversity in Northern Gulf of Mexico Bacterioplankton |
title_fullStr |
Alkane Hydroxylase Gene (alkB) Phylotype Composition and Diversity in Northern Gulf of Mexico Bacterioplankton |
title_full_unstemmed |
Alkane Hydroxylase Gene (alkB) Phylotype Composition and Diversity in Northern Gulf of Mexico Bacterioplankton |
title_sort |
alkane hydroxylase gene (alkb) phylotype composition and diversity in northern gulf of mexico bacterioplankton |
publisher |
Frontiers Media S.A. |
series |
Frontiers in Microbiology |
issn |
1664-302X |
publishDate |
2013-12-01 |
description |
Natural and anthropogenic activities introduce alkanes into marine systems where they are degraded by alkane hydroxylases expressed by phylogenetically diverse bacteria. Partial sequences for alkB, one of the structural genes of alkane hydroxylase, have been used to assess the composition of alkane-degrading communities, and to determine their responses to hydrocarbon inputs. We present here the first spatially extensive analysis of alkB in bacterioplankton of the northern Gulf of Mexico (nGoM), a region that experiences numerous hydrocarbon inputs. We have analyzed 401 partial alkB gene sequences amplified from genomic extracts collected during March 2010 from 17 water column samples that included surface waters and bathypelagic depths. Previous analyses of 16S rRNA gene sequences for these and related samples have shown that nGoM bacterial community composition and structure stratify strongly with depth, with distinctly different communities above and below 100 m. Although we hypothesized that alkB gene sequences would exhibit a similar pattern, PCA analyses of operational protein units (OPU) indicated that community composition did not vary consistently with depth or other major physical-chemical variables. We observed 22 distinct OPUs, one of which was ubiquitous and accounted for 57% of all sequences. This OPU clustered with alkB sequences from known hydrocarbon oxidizers (e.g., Alcanivorax and Marinobacter). Some OPUs could not be associated with known alkane degraders, however, and perhaps represent novel hydrocarbon-oxidizing populations or genes. These results indicate that the capacity for alkane hydrolysis occurs widely in the nGoM, but that alkane degrader diversity varies substantially among sites and responds differently than bulk communities to physical-chemical variables. |
topic |
Gulf of Mexico diversity bacterioplankton AlkB alkane hydroxylases |
url |
http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fmicb.2013.00370/full |
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