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Creators/Authors contains: "Giovannoni, Stephen"

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  1. Free, publicly-accessible full text available December 1, 2026
  2. Abstract Labile dissolved organic carbon in the surface oceans accounts for ~¼ of carbon produced through photosynthesis and turns over on average every three days, fueling one of the largest engines of microbial heterotrophic production on the planet. Volatile organic compounds are poorly constrained components of dissolved organic carbon. Here, we detected 72 m/z signals, corresponding to unique volatile organic compounds, including petroleum hydrocarbons, totaling approximately 18.5 nM in the culture medium of a model diatom. In five cocultures with bacteria adapted to grow with this diatom, 1 to 59 m/z signals were depleted. Two of the most active volatile organic compound consumers, Marinobacter and Roseibium, contained more genes encoding volatile organic compound oxidation proteins, and attached to the diatom, suggesting volatile organic compound specialism. With nanoscale secondary ion mass spectrometry and stable isotope labeling, we confirmed that Marinobacter incorporated carbon from benzene, one of the depleted m/z signals detected in the co-culture. Diatom gross carbon production increased by up to 29% in the presence of volatile organic compound consumers, indicating that volatile organic compound consumption by heterotrophic bacteria in the phycosphere – a region of rapid organic carbon oxidation that surrounds phytoplankton cells – could impact global rates of gross primary production. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available October 15, 2026
  3. Abstract Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs) are a diverse collection of molecules critical to cell metabolism, food web interactions, and atmospheric chemistry. The eukaryotic coccolithophoreGephyrocapsa huxleyi, an abundant coastal eukaryotic phytoplankter, forms massive blooms in coastal upwelling regions, which are often terminated by viruses (EhVs).G. huxleyiproduces organosulfur VOCs such as dimethyl sulfide (DMS) and halogenated metabolites that play key roles in atmospheric chemistry. Here we resolved the role of lytic viral infection by EhV207 on VOC production of the model strainG. huxleyiCCMP374. Our analysis identified 79 VOCs significantly impacted by viral infection, particularly during cell lysis, with sulfur containing VOCs like DMS dominating the profiles. Viral lysis results in a nearly six-fold increase in VOC production and generated a previously unrecognized range of VOCs, including 15 sulfur, 22 nitrogen, 2 phosphorus, 19 oxygen and 17 halogen-containing compounds. These findings reveal that viral infection ofG. huxleyireleases VOCs which are much more diverse than previously recognized. We further show that EhV207 primarily accelerates existing metabolic processes inG. huxleyiand facilitates the release of pre-existing intracellular VOCs rather than inducing novel biochemical pathways. This wide range of VOCs may be produced on a massive scale during coccolithophore bloom-and-bust cycles, with important impacts on coastal biogeochemistry and surface ocean/atmosphere interactions. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available February 10, 2026
  4. Abstract The bacterial orderPelagibacterales(SAR11) is among the most abundant and widely distributed microbial lineages across the global surface ocean, where it forms an integral component of the marine carbon cycle. However, the limited availability of high-quality genomes has hampered comprehensive insights into the ecology and evolutionary history of this critical group. Here, we increase the number of complete SAR11 isolate genomes fourfold by describing 81 new SAR11 strains from seven distinct lineages isolated from coastal and offshore surface seawater of the tropical Pacific Ocean. We leveraged comprehensive phylogenomic insights afforded by these isolates to characterize 24 monophyletic, discrete ecotypes with unique spatiotemporal patterns of distribution across the global ocean, which we define as genera. Our data illustrate fine-scale differentiation in patterns of detection with ecologically-relevant gene content variation for some closely related genomes, demonstrating instances of ecological speciation within SAR11 genera. Our study provides unique insight into complex environmental SAR11 populations, and proposes an ecology-informed hierarchy to pave a path forward for the systematic nomenclature for this clade. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available December 24, 2025
  5. Hansell, Dennis A; Carlson, Craig A (Ed.)
  6. Rappe, Michael S. (Ed.)
    ABSTRACT For the abundant marine Alphaproteobacterium Pelagibacter (SAR11), and other bacteria, phages are powerful forces of mortality. However, little is known about the most abundant Pelagiphages in nature, such as the widespread HTVC023P-type, which is currently represented by two cultured phages. Using viral metagenomic data sets and fluorescence-activated cell sorting, we recovered 80 complete, undescribed Podoviridae genomes that form 10 phylogenomically distinct clades (herein, named Clades I to X) related to the HTVC023P-type. These expanded the HTVC023P-type pan-genome by 15-fold and revealed 41 previously unknown auxiliary metabolic genes (AMGs) in this viral lineage. Numerous instances of partner-AMGs (colocated and involved in related functions) were observed, including partners in nucleotide metabolism, DNA hypermodification, and Curli biogenesis. The Type VIII secretion system (T8SS) responsible for Curli biogenesis was identified in nine genomes and expanded the repertoire of T8SS proteins reported thus far in viruses. Additionally, the identified T8SS gene cluster contained an iron-dependent regulator (FecR), as well as a histidine kinase and adenylate cyclase that can be implicated in T8SS function but are not within T8SS operons in bacteria. While T8SS are lacking in known Pelagibacter , they contribute to aggregation and biofilm formation in other bacteria. Phylogenetic reconstructions of partner-AMGs indicate derivation from cellular lineages with a more recent transfer between viral families. For example, homologs of all T8SS genes are present in syntenic regions of distant Myoviridae Pelagiphages, and they appear to have alphaproteobacterial origins with a later transfer between viral families. The results point to an unprecedented multipartner-AMG transfer between marine Myoviridae and Podoviridae. Together with the expansion of known metabolic functions, our studies provide new prospects for understanding the ecology and evolution of marine phages and their hosts. IMPORTANCE One of the most abundant and diverse marine bacterial groups is Pelagibacter . Phages have roles in shaping Pelagibacter ecology; however, several Pelagiphage lineages are represented by only a few genomes. This paucity of data from even the most widespread lineages has imposed limits on the understanding of the diversity of Pelagiphages and their impacts on hosts. Here, we report 80 complete genomes, assembled directly from environmental data, which are from undescribed Pelagiphages and render new insights into the manipulation of host metabolism during infection. Notably, the viruses have functionally related partner genes that appear to be transferred between distant viruses, including a suite that encode a secretion system which both brings a new functional capability to the host and is abundant in phages across the ocean. Together, these functions have important implications for phage evolution and for how Pelagiphage infection influences host biology in manners extending beyond canonical viral lysis and mortality. 
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  7. null (Ed.)
    Planktonic communities constitute the basis of life in marine environments and have profound impacts in geochemical cycles. In the North Atlantic, seasonality drives annual transitions in the ecology of the water column. Phytoplankton bloom annually in spring as a result of these transitions, creating one of the major biological pulses in productivity on earth. The timing and geographical distribution of the spring bloom as well as the resulting biomass accumulation have largely been studied using the global capacity of satellite imaging. However, fine-scale variability in the taxonomic composition, spatial distribution, seasonal shifts, and ecological interactions with heterotrophic bacterioplankton has remained largely uncharacterized. The North Atlantic Aerosols and Marine Ecosystems Study (NAAMES) conducted four meridional transects to characterize plankton ecosystems in the context of the annual bloom cycle. Using 16S rRNA gene-based community profiles we analyzed the temporal and spatial variation in plankton communities. Seasonality in phytoplankton and bacterioplankton composition was apparent throughout the water column, with changes dependent on the hydrographic origin. From winter to spring in the subtropic and subpolar subregions, phytoplankton shifted from the predominance of cyanobacteria and picoeukaryotic green algae to diverse photosynthetic eukaryotes. By autumn, the subtropics were dominated by cyanobacteria, while a diverse array of eukaryotes dominated the subpolar subregions. Bacterioplankton were also strongly influenced by geographical subregions. SAR11, the most abundant bacteria in the surface ocean, displayed higher richness in the subtropics than the subpolar subregions. SAR11 subclades were differentially distributed between the two subregions. Subclades Ia.1 and Ia.3 co-occurred in the subpolar subregion, while Ia.1 dominated the subtropics. In the subtropical subregion during the winter, the relative abundance of SAR11 subclades “II” and 1c.1 were elevated in the upper mesopelagic. In the winter, SAR202 subclades generally prevalent in the bathypelagic were also dominant members in the upper mesopelagic zones. Co-varying network analysis confirmed the large-scale geographical organization of the plankton communities and provided insights into the vertical distribution of bacterioplankton. This study represents the most comprehensive survey of microbial profiles in the western North Atlantic to date, revealing stark seasonal differences in composition and richness delimited by the biogeographical distribution of the planktonic communities. 
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  8. Dubilier, Nicole (Ed.)
    ABSTRACT In the ocean surface layer and cell culture, the polyamine transport protein PotD of SAR11 bacteria is often one of the most abundant proteins detected. Polyamines are organic cations at seawater pH produced by all living organisms and are thought to be an important component of dissolved organic matter (DOM) produced in planktonic ecosystems. We hypothesized that SAR11 cells uptake and metabolize multiple polyamines and use them as sources of carbon and nitrogen. Metabolic footprinting and fingerprinting were used to measure the uptake of five polyamine compounds (putrescine, cadaverine, agmatine, norspermidine, and spermidine) in two SAR11 strains that represent the majority of SAR11 cells in the surface ocean environment, “ Candidatus Pelagibacter” strain HTCC7211 and “ Candidatus Pelagibacter ubique” strain HTCC1062. Both strains took up all five polyamines and concentrated them to micromolar or millimolar intracellular concentrations. Both strains could use most of the polyamines to meet their nitrogen requirements, but polyamines did not fully substitute for their requirements of glycine (or related compounds) or pyruvate (or related compounds). Our data suggest that potABCD transports all five polyamines and that spermidine synthase, speE, is reversible, catalyzing the breakdown of spermidine and norspermidine, in addition to its usual biosynthetic role. These findings provide support for the hypothesis that enzyme multifunctionality enables streamlined cells in planktonic ecosystems to increase the range of DOM compounds they metabolize. IMPORTANCE Genome streamlining in SAR11 bacterioplankton has resulted in a small repertoire of genes, yet paradoxically, they consume a substantial fraction of primary production in the oceans. Enzyme multifunctionality, referring to enzymes that are adapted to have broader substrate and catalytic range than canonically defined, is hypothesized to be an adaptation that increases the range of organic compounds metabolized by cells in environments where selection favors genome minimization. We provide experimental support for this hypothesis by demonstrating that SAR11 cells take up and metabolize multiple polyamine compounds and propose that a small set of multifunctional enzymes catalyze this metabolism. We report that polyamine uptake rates can exceed metabolic rates, resulting in both high intracellular concentrations of these nitrogen-rich compounds (in comparison to native polyamine levels) and an increase in cell size. 
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  9. null (Ed.)
    Vitamin B1 (thiamin) is an essential coenzyme for all cells. Recent findings from experimental cell biology and genome surveys have shown that thiamin cycling by plankton is far more complex than was previously understood. Many plankton cells cannot produce thiamin (are auxotrophic) and obligately require an exogenous source of thiamin or one or more of 5 different thiamin-related compounds (TRCs). Despite this emerging evidence for the evolution among plankton of complex interactions related to thiamin, the influence of TRCs on plankton community structure and productivity are not understood. We report measurements of three dissolved TRCs 4-amino-5-aminomethyl-2-methylpyrimidine (AmMP), 5-(2-hydroxyethyl)-4-methyl-1,3-thiazole-2-carboxylic acid (cHET), and 4-methyl-5-thiazoleethanol (HET) that have never before been assayed in seawater. Here we characterize them alongside other TRCs that were measured previously [thiamin and 4-amino-5-hydroxymethyl-2-methylpyrimidine (HMP)], in depth profiles from a latitudinal transect in the north Atlantic in March 2018. TRC concentrations ranged from femptomolar to picomolar. Surface depletion relative to a maximum near the bottom of the euphotic zone and low concentrations at deeper depths were consistent features. Our observations suggest that when bacterial abundance and production are low, TRC concentrations approach a steady state where TRC production and consumption terms are balanced. Standing stocks of TRCs also appear to be positively correlated with bacterial production. However, near the period of peak biomass in the accumulation phase of a bloom we observed an inverse relationship between TRCs and bacterial production, coincident with an increased abundance of Flavobacteria that comparative genomics indicates could be vitamin B1 auxotrophs. While these observations suggest that the dissolved pool of TRCs is often at steady state, with TRC production and consumption balanced, our data suggests that bloom induced shifts in microbial community structure and activity may cause a decoupling between TRC production and consumption, leading to increased abundances of some populations of bacteria that are putatively vitamin B1 auxotrophs. 
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