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      Estuarine mangrove niches select cultivable heterotrophic diazotrophs with diverse metabolic potentials—a prospective cross-dialog for functional diazotrophy

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          Abstract

          Introduction

          Biological nitrogen fixation (BNF), an unparalleled metabolic novelty among living microorganisms on earth, globally contributes ~88-101 Tg N year −1 to natural ecosystems, ~56% sourced from symbiotic BNF while ~22-45% derived from free-living nitrogen fixers (FLNF). The success of symbiotic BNF is largely dependent on its interaction with host-plant, however ubiquitous environmental heterotrophic FLNFs face many limitations in their immediate ecological niches to sustain unhindered BNF. The autotrophic FLNFs like cyanobacteria and oceanic heterotrophic diazotrophs have been well studied about their contrivances acclimated/adapted by these organisms to outwit the environmental constraints for functional diazotrophy. However, FLNF heterotrophs face more adversity in executing BNF under stressful estuarine/marine/aquatic habitats.

          Methods

          In this study a large-scale cultivation-dependent investigation was accomplished with 190 NCBI accessioned and 45 non-accessioned heterotrophic FLNF cultivable bacterial isolates (total 235) from halophilic estuarine intertidal mangrove niches of Indian Sundarbans, a Ramsar site and UNESCO proclaimed World Heritage Site. Assuming ~1% culturability of the microbial community, the respective niches were also studied for representing actual bacterial diversity via cultivation-independent next-generation sequencing of V3-V4 rRNA regions.

          Results

          Both the studies revealed a higher abundance of culturable Gammaproteobacteria followed by Firmicutes, the majority of 235 FLNFs studied belonging to these two classes. The FLNFs displayed comparable selection potential in media for free nitrogen fixers and iron-oxidizing bacteria, linking diazotrophy with iron oxidation, siderophore production, phosphorus solubilization, phosphorus uptake and accumulation as well as denitrification.

          Discussion

          This observation validated the hypothesis that under extreme estuarine mangrove niches, diazotrophs are naturally selected as a specialized multidimensional entity, to expedite BNF and survive. Earlier metagenome data from mangrove niches demonstrated a microbial metabolic coupling among C, N, P, S, and Fe cycling in mangrove sediments, as an adaptive trait, evident with the co-abundant respective functional genes, which corroborates our findings in cultivation mode for multiple interrelated metabolic potential facilitating BNF in a challenging intertidal mangrove environment.

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          DADA2: High resolution sample inference from Illumina amplicon data

          We present DADA2, a software package that models and corrects Illumina-sequenced amplicon errors. DADA2 infers sample sequences exactly, without coarse-graining into OTUs, and resolves differences of as little as one nucleotide. In several mock communities DADA2 identified more real variants and output fewer spurious sequences than other methods. We applied DADA2 to vaginal samples from a cohort of pregnant women, revealing a diversity of previously undetected Lactobacillus crispatus variants.
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            Evaluation of general 16S ribosomal RNA gene PCR primers for classical and next-generation sequencing-based diversity studies

            16S ribosomal RNA gene (rDNA) amplicon analysis remains the standard approach for the cultivation-independent investigation of microbial diversity. The accuracy of these analyses depends strongly on the choice of primers. The overall coverage and phylum spectrum of 175 primers and 512 primer pairs were evaluated in silico with respect to the SILVA 16S/18S rDNA non-redundant reference dataset (SSURef 108 NR). Based on this evaluation a selection of ‘best available’ primer pairs for Bacteria and Archaea for three amplicon size classes (100–400, 400–1000, ≥1000 bp) is provided. The most promising bacterial primer pair (S-D-Bact-0341-b-S-17/S-D-Bact-0785-a-A-21), with an amplicon size of 464 bp, was experimentally evaluated by comparing the taxonomic distribution of the 16S rDNA amplicons with 16S rDNA fragments from directly sequenced metagenomes. The results of this study may be used as a guideline for selecting primer pairs with the best overall coverage and phylum spectrum for specific applications, therefore reducing the bias in PCR-based microbial diversity studies.
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              Microbial interactions: from networks to models.

              Metagenomics and 16S pyrosequencing have enabled the study of ecosystem structure and dynamics to great depth and accuracy. Co-occurrence and correlation patterns found in these data sets are increasingly used for the prediction of species interactions in environments ranging from the oceans to the human microbiome. In addition, parallelized co-culture assays and combinatorial labelling experiments allow high-throughput discovery of cooperative and competitive relationships between species. In this Review, we describe how these techniques are opening the way towards global ecosystem network prediction and the development of ecosystem-wide dynamic models.
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                Author and article information

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                Journal
                Front Microbiol
                Front Microbiol
                Front. Microbiol.
                Frontiers in Microbiology
                Frontiers Media S.A.
                1664-302X
                24 May 2024
                2024
                : 15
                : 1324188
                Affiliations
                [1] 1Environmental Biotechnology Group, Department of Botany, West Bengal State University , Kolkata, India
                [2] 2Department of Microbiology, St. Xavier’s College (Autonomous) , Kolkata, India
                [3] 3Department of Botany, Sree Chaitanya College , Habra, India
                [4] 4Department of Botany, Kalimpong College , Darjeeling, India
                [5] 5School of Biological and Life Sciences, Galgotias University , Greater Noida, India
                [6] 6Department of Botany, Sarat Centenary College , Dhaniakhali, India
                Author notes

                Edited by: Camila Fernandez, UMR7621 Laboratoire d'Océanographie Microbienne (LOMIC), France

                Reviewed by: Chengjian Jiang, Guangxi University of Science and Technology, China

                Punyasloke Bhadury, Indian Institute of Science Education and Research Kolkata, India

                *Correspondence: Krishna Ray, kray91@ 123456gmail.com

                These authors have contributed equally to this work and share first authorship

                ORCID: Krishna Ray, orcid.org/0000-0002-1893-5993

                Article
                10.3389/fmicb.2024.1324188
                11174608
                38873137
                83b31896-5166-46e9-8835-4fecedc61f2d
                Copyright © 2024 Mondal, Biswas, Chowdhury, Sengupta, Mandal, Kotal, Giri, Ghosh, Saha, Begam, Mukherjee, Das, Basak, Mitra Ghosh and Ray.

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

                History
                : 19 October 2023
                : 10 May 2024
                Page count
                Figures: 7, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 123, Pages: 21, Words: 17047
                Funding
                Funded by: Department of Biotechnology, Government of India
                Award ID: BT/PR30531/BCE/8/1496/2018
                The author(s) declare that financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. This work was supported by Department of Biotechnology, Government of India (File No. BT/PR30531/BCE/8/1496/2018). SM received INSPIRE Fellowship from Department of Science and Technology, Government of India and BB received Rajiv Gandhi National Fellowship from University Grant Commission, Government of India while conducting this research.
                Categories
                Microbiology
                Original Research
                Custom metadata
                Aquatic Microbiology

                Microbiology & Virology
                biological nitrogen fixation,free-living heterotrophic diazotroph,estuarine mangrove ecosystem,indian sundarbans,stringent narrow niche,multidimensional specialization

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