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Methane Filtration and Metabolic Cooperation of Microbial Communities in Cold Seep Water Columns from South China Sea

Version 3 2025-06-11, 03:54
Version 2 2025-06-05, 05:59
Version 1 2024-12-28, 01:46
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posted on 2025-06-11, 03:54 authored by Yanjun LiuYanjun Liu, Huan ZhangHuan Zhang, lei caolei cao, Lulu Fu, Chao Lian, GuoGuo, Zhaoshan ZhongZhaoshan Zhong, Inge Seim, Minxiao Wang, Chaolun Li

The distribution and variability of microbes in cold seep water columns play a crucial role in methane sequestration and biogeochemical cycling within local ecosystems. However, we still have a poor understanding of the structures and ecological functions of these microbial communities, especially at the bottom water interface (BWI). To address this, our study collected large-volume water samples and conducted metagenomic analyses to investigate microbial biodiversity, metabolic potential, and interactions across vertically stratified water layers at the F-site cold seep, which is primarily influenced by methane seepage. Using 377 high-quality metagenome-assembled genomes, we constructed genome-scale metabolic models, which unveiled significant metabolic interactions among microbes, particularly at the BWI. This facilitated the coupling of carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur. Here are the genome contigs of all the 377 MAGs and related dataset.

Funding

National Natural Science Foundation of China (42030407)

Marine S&T Fund of Shandong Province for Pilot National Laboratory for Marine Science and Technology (Qingdao) (2022QNLM030004-3)

National Natural Science Foundation of China (42106100)

National Natural Science Foundation of China (42076091)

State Key Laboratory of Microbial Technology Open Projects Fund (Project NO. M2023-10)

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