scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Bacterial Versus Archaeal Origin of Extracellular Enzymatic Activity in the Northeast Atlantic Deep Waters

TLDR
The major contribution of Bacteria to cell-associated EEA and the long life-time of dissolved EEA suggest that Bacteria—and not mesophilic Archaea—are essentially the main producers of EEA in the open subtropical Northeast Atlantic down to bathypelagic layers.
Abstract
We determined the total and dissolved extracellular enzymatic activity (EEA) of α-glucosidase and β-glucosidase (AGase and BGase), alkaline phosphatase (APase) and leucine aminopeptidase (LAPase) activities in the epi-, meso- and bathypelagic waters of the subtropical Northeast Atlantic. EEA was also determined in treatments in which bacterial EEA was inhibited by erythromycin. Additionally, EEA decay experiments were performed with surface and deep waters to determine EEA lifetimes in both water masses. The proportion of dissolved to total EEA (66–89 %, 44–88 %, 57–82 % and 86–100 % for AGase, BGase, APase and LAPase, respectively) was generally higher than the cell-associated (i.e., particulate) EEA. The percentage of dissolved to total EEA was inversely proportional to the percentage of erythromycin-inhibited to total EEA. Since erythromycin-inhibited plus dissolved EEA equaled total EEA, this tentatively suggests that cell-associated EEA in the open oceanic water column is almost exclusively of bacterial origin. The decay constants of dissolved EEA were in the range of 0.002–0.048 h−1 depending on the type of extracellular enzyme, temperature and depth in the water column. Although dissolved EEA can have different origins, the major contribution of Bacteria to cell-associated EEA and the long life-time of dissolved EEA suggest that Bacteria—and not mesophilic Archaea—are essentially the main producers of EEA in the open subtropical Northeast Atlantic down to bathypelagic layers.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Microbial Surface Colonization and Biofilm Development in Marine Environments

TL;DR: Recent progress in the study of marine microbial surface colonization and biofilm development is synthesized and discussed and questions are posed for targeted investigation of surface-specific community-level microbial features to advance understanding ofsurface-associated microbial community ecology and the biogeochemical functions of these communities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Extracellular enzymes in terrestrial, freshwater, and marine environments: perspectives on system variability and common research needs

TL;DR: The extent to which environmental factors may regulate extracellular enzyme activities within each ecosystem is considered, and commonalities and current methodological challenges are highlighted to identify research questions that may aid in integrating cross-system perspectives in the future.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Model of Extracellular Enzymes in Free-Living Microbes: Which Strategy Pays Off?

TL;DR: The results of this study suggest that specific dissolved organic compounds in the ocean likely persist below a threshold concentration impervious to biological utilization, which could help explain the persistence and apparent refractory state of oceanic dissolved organic matter (DOM).
Journal ArticleDOI

Linking extracellular enzymes to phylogeny indicates a predominantly particle-associated lifestyle of deep-sea prokaryotes.

TL;DR: The abundance, percentage, and diversity of genes encoding secretory processes, i.e., dissolved enzymes, consistently increased from epipelagic to bathypelagic waters, indicating that organic matter cleavage, and hence prokaryotic metabolism, is mediated mainly by particle-associated proKaryotes releasing their extracellular enzymes into diffusion-limited particles in the bathypalagic realm.
Journal ArticleDOI

Patterns of Microbially Driven Carbon Cycling in the Ocean: Links between Extracellular Enzymes and Microbial Communities

TL;DR: Focusing on microbial community function as well as composition and potential should yield clearer understanding of the factors driving carbon cycling in the ocean, and patterns of community function that may be connected to emerging patterns of microbial community composition are reviewed.
References
More filters
Book

Basic and Clinical Pharmacology

TL;DR: Basic and clinical pharmacology , Basic and clinical Pharmacology , کتابخانه دیجیتال جندی شاپور اهواز
Journal ArticleDOI

Archaeal dominance in the mesopelagic zone of the Pacific Ocean

TL;DR: A year-long study of the abundance of two specific archaeal groups (pelagic euryarchaeota and pelagic crenarchAEota) in one of the ocean's largest habitats suggests that most pelagic deep-sea microorganisms are metabolically active and the results suggest that the global oceans harbour approximately 1.3 × 1028Archaeal cells, and 3.1‬×‬10 28 bacterial cells.
Journal ArticleDOI

Community Genomics Among Stratified Microbial Assemblages in the Ocean's Interior

TL;DR: Genomic analyses of planktonic microbial communities in the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre, from the ocean's surface to near–sea floor depths, suggested depth-variable community trends in carbon and energy metabolism, attachment and motility, gene mobility, and host-viral interactions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mesophilic crenarchaeota: proposal for a third archaeal phylum, the Thaumarchaeota

TL;DR: It is shown that these mesophilic archaea are different from hyperthermophilic Crenarchaeota and branch deeper than was previously assumed, and should be considered as a third archaeal phylum, which the authors propose to name Thaum archaeota.
Related Papers (5)