Down-regulation of the bacterial protein biosynthesis machinery in response to weeks, years, and decades of soil warming
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/26470Dato
2022-03-25Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Söllinger, Andrea; Séneca, Joana; Mathilde, Borg Dahl; Motleleng, Liabo Lillien; Prommer, Judith; Verbruggen, Erik; Sigurdsson, Bjarni D.; Janssens, Ivan A.; Peñuelas, Josep; Urich, Tim; Richter, Andreas; Tveit, AlexanderSammendrag
How soil microorganisms respond to global warming is key to infer future soil-climate feedbacks, yet poorly
understood. Here, we applied metatranscriptomics to investigate microbial physiological responses to mediumterm (8 years) and long-term (>50 years) subarctic grassland soil warming of +6°C. Besides indications for a
community-wide up-regulation of centralmetabolic pathways and cell replication, we observed a down-regulation of
the bacterial protein biosynthesis machinery in the warmed soils, coinciding with a lower microbial biomass, RNA,
and soil substrate content. We conclude that permanently accelerated reaction rates at higher temperatures and
reduced substrate concentrations result in cellular reduction of ribosomes, the macromolecular complexes carrying
out protein biosynthesis. Later efforts to test this, including a short-term warming experiment (6 weeks, +6°C),
further supported our conclusion. Down-regulating the protein biosynthesis machinery liberates energy and matter,
allowing soil bacteria to maintain high metabolic activities and cell division rates even after decades of warming.
Forlag
American Association for the Advancement of ScienceSitering
Söllinger, Séneca, Mathilde, Motleleng, Prommer, Verbruggen, Sigurdsson, Janssens, Peñuelas, Urich, Richter, Tveit. Down-regulation of the bacterial protein biosynthesis machinery in response to weeks, years, and decades of soil warming. Science Advances. 2022Metadata
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