Deciphering Metabolic Currencies That Support Marine Microbial Networks

ABSTRACT Microbes are omnipresent in the biosphere and perform biological and chemical processes critical to ecosystem function, nutrient cycling, and global climate regulation. In the ocean, microbes constitute more than two-thirds of biomass with abundances reaching over one million microbial cell...

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Main Author: Bryndan P. Durham
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Society for Microbiology 2021-08-01
Series:mSystems
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.asm.org/doi/10.1128/mSystems.00763-21
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spelling doaj-d397d3189527407e9412acc19d1d32522021-08-31T13:57:55ZengAmerican Society for MicrobiologymSystems2379-50772021-08-016410.1128/mSystems.00763-21Deciphering Metabolic Currencies That Support Marine Microbial NetworksBryndan P. Durham0Department of Biology, Genetics Institute, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USAABSTRACT Microbes are omnipresent in the biosphere and perform biological and chemical processes critical to ecosystem function, nutrient cycling, and global climate regulation. In the ocean, microbes constitute more than two-thirds of biomass with abundances reaching over one million microbial cells per milliliter of seawater. Our understanding of the marine microbial world has rapidly expanded with use of innovative molecular and chemical ‘omics tools to uncover previously hidden taxonomic diversity, spatiotemporal distributions, and novel metabolic functions. Recognition that specific microbial taxa cooccur in consistent patterns in the ocean has implicated microbe-microbe interactions as important, but poorly constrained, regulators of microbial activity. Here, I examine cooperative interactions among marine plankton, with a focus on the metabolic “currencies” that establish microbial partnerships in the surface-ocean trade economy. I discuss current and future directions to study microbial metabolic interactions in order to strengthen our understanding of ecosystem interdependencies and their impact on ocean biogeochemistry.https://journals.asm.org/doi/10.1128/mSystems.00763-21cell signalingcell-cell interactionmarine microbiologymetabolic regulationmetabolomicsmicrobial networks
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bryndan P. Durham
spellingShingle Bryndan P. Durham
Deciphering Metabolic Currencies That Support Marine Microbial Networks
mSystems
cell signaling
cell-cell interaction
marine microbiology
metabolic regulation
metabolomics
microbial networks
author_facet Bryndan P. Durham
author_sort Bryndan P. Durham
title Deciphering Metabolic Currencies That Support Marine Microbial Networks
title_short Deciphering Metabolic Currencies That Support Marine Microbial Networks
title_full Deciphering Metabolic Currencies That Support Marine Microbial Networks
title_fullStr Deciphering Metabolic Currencies That Support Marine Microbial Networks
title_full_unstemmed Deciphering Metabolic Currencies That Support Marine Microbial Networks
title_sort deciphering metabolic currencies that support marine microbial networks
publisher American Society for Microbiology
series mSystems
issn 2379-5077
publishDate 2021-08-01
description ABSTRACT Microbes are omnipresent in the biosphere and perform biological and chemical processes critical to ecosystem function, nutrient cycling, and global climate regulation. In the ocean, microbes constitute more than two-thirds of biomass with abundances reaching over one million microbial cells per milliliter of seawater. Our understanding of the marine microbial world has rapidly expanded with use of innovative molecular and chemical ‘omics tools to uncover previously hidden taxonomic diversity, spatiotemporal distributions, and novel metabolic functions. Recognition that specific microbial taxa cooccur in consistent patterns in the ocean has implicated microbe-microbe interactions as important, but poorly constrained, regulators of microbial activity. Here, I examine cooperative interactions among marine plankton, with a focus on the metabolic “currencies” that establish microbial partnerships in the surface-ocean trade economy. I discuss current and future directions to study microbial metabolic interactions in order to strengthen our understanding of ecosystem interdependencies and their impact on ocean biogeochemistry.
topic cell signaling
cell-cell interaction
marine microbiology
metabolic regulation
metabolomics
microbial networks
url https://journals.asm.org/doi/10.1128/mSystems.00763-21
work_keys_str_mv AT bryndanpdurham decipheringmetaboliccurrenciesthatsupportmarinemicrobialnetworks
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