The water depth-dependent co-occurrence patterns of marine bacteria in shallow and dynamic Southern Coast, Korea

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Title
The water depth-dependent co-occurrence patterns of marine bacteria in shallow and dynamic Southern Coast, Korea
Author(s)
Y Cui; Seong Jun Chun; S H Baek; M Lee; Y Kim; Hyung Gwan LeeSo Ra KoSeungwoo HwangChi-Yong Ahn; Hee-Mock Oh
Bibliographic Citation
Scientific Reports, vol. 9, pp. 9176-9176
Publication Year
2019
Abstract
To investigate the interactions between bacterial species in relation to the biotic and abiotic environmental fluctuations, free-living (FL), nanoparticle-associated (NP), and microparticle-associated (MP) bacterial community compositions (BCCs) were analyzed. A total of 267 samples were collected from July to December 2016 in the dynamic and shallow southern coastal water of Korea. The variations in BCC mostly depended on planktonic size fraction. Network analysis revealed water depth-dependent co-occurrence patterns of coastal bacterial communities. Higher interspecies connectivity was observed within FL bacteria than NP/MP bacteria, suggesting that FL bacteria with a streamlined genome may need other bacterial metabolites for survival, while the NP/MP copiotrophs may have the self-supporting capacity to produce the vital nutrients. The analysis of topological roles of individual OTUs in the network revealed that several groups of metabolically versatile bacteria (the marine Roseobacters, Flavobacteriales, Desulfobacterales, and SAR406 clade) acted as module hubs in different water depth. In conclusion, interspecies interactions dominated in FL bacteria, compared to NP and MP bacteria; modular structures of bacterial communities and keystone species strongly depended on the water depth-derived environmental factors. Furthermore, the multifunctional, versatile FL bacteria could play pivotal roles in dynamic shallow coastal ecosystems.
ISSN
2045-2322
Publisher
Springer-Nature Pub Group
Full Text Link
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-45512-5
Type
Article
Appears in Collections:
Synthetic Biology and Bioengineering Research Institute > Cell Factory Research Center > 1. Journal Articles
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