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Temporal covariation of epibacterial community and surface metabolome in the Mediterranean seaweed holobiont <scp> <i>Taonia atomaria</i> </scp>

Environmental Microbiology 2019 44 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Didier Debroas, Benoît Paix, Ahlem Othmani, Jean‐François Briand Ahlem Othmani, Didier Debroas, Gérald Culioli, Gérald Culioli, Jean‐François Briand Jean‐François Briand Jean‐François Briand Gérald Culioli, Gérald Culioli, Jean‐François Briand Jean‐François Briand Jean‐François Briand Jean‐François Briand Jean‐François Briand Jean‐François Briand Jean‐François Briand Jean‐François Briand

Summary

This study tracked how the microbial community and chemical compounds on the surface of a Mediterranean seaweed changed across seasons over a year. While focused on seaweed biology, the findings are relevant to understanding how natural organic matter interacts with marine microplastics.

An integrative multi-omics approach allowed monthly variations for a year of the surface metabolome and the epibacterial community of the Mediterranean Phaeophyceae Taonia atomaria to be investigated. The LC-MS-based metabolomics and 16S rDNA metabarcoding data sets were integrated in a multivariate meta-omics analysis (multi-block PLS-DA from the MixOmic DIABLO analysis) showing a strong seasonal covariation (Mantel test: p < 0.01). A network based on positive and negative correlations between the two data sets revealed two clusters of variables, one relative to the 'spring period' and a second to the 'summer period'. The 'spring period' cluster was mainly characterized by dipeptides positively correlated with a single bacterial taxon of the Alteromonadaceae family (BD1-7 clade). Moreover, 'summer' dominant epibacterial taxa from the second cluster (including Erythrobacteraceae, Rhodospirillaceae, Oceanospirillaceae and Flammeovirgaceae) showed positive correlations with few metabolites known as macroalgal antifouling defences [e.g. dimethylsulphoniopropionate (DMSP) and proline] which exhibited a key role within the correlation network. Despite a core community that represents a significant part of the total epibacteria, changes in the microbiota structure associated with surface metabolome variations suggested that both environment and algal host shape the bacterial surface microbiota.

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