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Pili allow dominant marine cyanobacteria to avoid sinking and evade predation

Maria del Mar Aguiló‐Ferretjans, Rafael Bosch, Richard J. Puxty, Mira Latva, Vinko Zadjelovic, Audam Chhun, Despoina Sousoni, Marco Polin, David J. Scanlan, Joseph A. Christie‐Oleza

2021Nature Communications39 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

How oligotrophic marine cyanobacteria position themselves in the water column is currently unknown. The current paradigm is that these organisms avoid sinking due to their reduced size and passive drift within currents. Here, we show that one in four picocyanobacteria encode a type IV pilus which allows these organisms to increase drag and remain suspended at optimal positions in the water column, as well as evade predation by grazers. The evolution of this sophisticated floatation mechanism in these purely planktonic streamlined microorganisms has important implications for our current understanding of microbial distribution in the oceans and predator-prey interactions which ultimately will need incorporating into future models of marine carbon flux dynamics.

Topics & Concepts

Water columnPredationPlanktonCyanobacteriaEcologyEnvironmental sciencePilusBiologyCurrent (fluid)OceanographyBacteriaGeologyPaleontologyGeneBiochemistryVirulenceMicrobial Community Ecology and PhysiologyMarine and coastal ecosystemsProtist diversity and phylogeny
Pili allow dominant marine cyanobacteria to avoid sinking and evade predation | Litcius