Dataset: Synechococcus growth and genetic sequence accessions from pCO2 experiments
Data Citation:
Morris, J. (2022) Synechococcus (WH8102 and CC9311) growth and genetic sequence accessions from experiments with variable pCO2 treatments from 2016 to 2018. Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO). (Version 1) Version Date 2022-10-13 [if applicable, indicate subset used]. doi:10.26008/1912/bco-dmo.882390.1 [access date]
Terms of Use
This dataset is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0.
If you wish to use this dataset, it is highly recommended that you contact the original principal investigators (PI). Should the relevant PI be unavailable, please contact BCO-DMO (info@bco-dmo.org) for additional guidance. For general guidance please see the BCO-DMO Terms of Use document.
DOI:10.26008/1912/bco-dmo.882390.1
Temporal Extent: 2016-10-24 - 2018-01-28
Principal Investigator:
James Morris (University of Alabama at Birmingham, UA/Birmingham)
Scientist:
Zhiying Lu (University of Alabama at Birmingham, UA/Birmingham)
Student:
Marcelo Malisano Barreto Filho (University of Alabama at Birmingham, UA/Birmingham)
Melissa Walker (University of Alabama at Birmingham, UA/Birmingham)
BCO-DMO Data Manager:
Amber D. York (Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, WHOI BCO-DMO)
Version:
1
Version Date:
2022-10-13
Restricted:
No
Validated:
Yes
Current State:
Final no updates expected
Synechococcus (WH8102 and CC9311) growth and genetic sequence accessions from experiments with variable pCO2 treatments from 2016 to 2018
Abstract:
Synechococcus (WH8102 and CC9311) growth and genetic sequence accessions from experiments with variable pCO2 treatments. These data were produced as part of a study of the "Community context and pCO2 impact the transcriptome of the "helper" bacterium Alteromonas in co-culture with picocyanobacteria" (Barreto Filho et al., 2022). Sequences files are accessible from the National Center for Biotechnology Information (BioProject PRJNA377729).
The following results abstract describes these data along with related datasets which can be accessed from the "Related Datasets" section of this page.
Many microbial photoautotrophs depend on heterotrophic bacteria for accomplishing essential functions. Environmental changes, however, could alter or eliminate such interactions. We investigated the effects of changing pCO2 on gene expression in co-cultures of 3 strains of picocyanobacteria (Synechococcus strains CC9311 and WH8102 and Prochlorococcus strain MIT9312) paired with the ‘helper’ bacterium Alteromonas macleodii EZ55. Co-culture with cyanobacteria resulted in a much higher number of up- and down-regulated genes in EZ55 than pCO2 by itself. Pathway analysis revealed significantly different expression of genes involved in carbohydrate metabolism, stress response, and chemotaxis, with different patterns of up- or down-regulation in co-culture with different cyanobacterial strains. Gene expression patterns of organic and inorganic nutrient transporter and catabolism genes in EZ55 suggested resources available in the culture media were altered under elevated (800 ppm) pCO2 conditions. Altogether, changing expression patterns were consistent with the possibility that the composition of cyanobacterial excretions changed under the two pCO2 regimes, causing extensive ecophysiological changes in both members of the co-cultures. Additionally, significant downregulation of oxidative stress genes inMIT9312/EZ55 cocultures at 800 ppm pCO2 were consistent with a link between the predicted reduced availability of photorespiratory byproducts (i.e., glycolate/2PG) under this condition and observed reductions in internal oxidative stress loads for EZ55, providing a possible explanation for the previously observed lack of “help” provided by EZ55 to MIT9312 under elevated pCO2. The data and code stored in this archive will allow the reconstruction of our analysis pipelines. Additionally, we provide annotation mapping files and other resources for conducting transcriptomic analyses with Alteromonas sp. EZ55.