A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal
Global niche partitioning of purine and pyrimidine cross-feeding among ocean microbes
Authors: Braakman, Rogier; Satinsky, Brandon; O’Keefe, Tyler J.; Longnecker, Krista; Hogle, Shane L.; Becker, Jamie W.; Li, Robert C.; Dooley, Keven; Arellano, Aldo; Kido Soule, Melissa C.; Kujawinski, Elizabeth B.; Chisholm, Sallie W.
Publisher: American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
Publication year: 2025
Journal: Science Advances
Journal name in source: Science Advances
Article number: eadp1949
Volume: 11
Issue: 1
eISSN: 2375-2548
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.adp1949
Web address : https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.adp1949
Self-archived copy’s web address: https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/484201319
Cross-feeding involves microbes consuming exudates of other surrounding microbes, mediating elemental cycling. Characterizing the diversity of cross-feeding pathways in ocean microbes illuminates evolutionary forces driving self-organization of ocean ecosystems. Here, we uncover a purine and pyrimidine cross-feeding network in globally abundant groups. The cyanobacterium Prochlorococcus exudes both compound classes, which metabolic reconstructions suggest follows synchronous daily genome replication. Co-occurring heterotrophs differentiate into purine- and pyrimidine-using generalists or specialists that use compounds for different purposes. The most abundant heterotroph, SAR11, is a specialist that uses purines as sources of energy, carbon, and/or nitrogen, with subgroups differentiating along ocean-scale gradients in the supply of energy and nitrogen, in turn producing putative cryptic nitrogen cycles that link many microbes. Last, in an SAR11 subgroup that dominates where Prochlorococcus is abundant, adenine additions to cultures inhibit DNA synthesis, poising cells for replication. We argue that this subgroup uses inferred daily adenine pulses from Prochlorococcus to synchronize to the daily photosynthate supply from surrounding phytoplankton.
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Funding information in the publication:
This research was supported by grants from the Simons Foundation award ID 509034SCFY20 (R.B. and S.W.C.), Simons Foundation award ID 509034FY20 (E.B.K.), Simons Foundation award ID 337262FY23 (S.W.C.), Simons Foundation SCOPE award ID 721246 (to S.W.C.), Simons Foundation SCOPE award ID 329108 (to M. J. Follows), the Robert and Ardis James Foundation (to S.W.C.), and the National Science Foundation Award OCE-2019589 (R.B.).