Publication | Open Access
Molecular hydrogen in seawater supports growth of diverse marine bacteria
72
Citations
82
References
2023
Year
Molecular hydrogen (H<sub>2</sub>) is an abundant and readily accessible energy source in marine systems, but it remains unknown whether marine microbial communities consume this gas. Here we use a suite of approaches to show that marine bacteria consume H<sub>2</sub> to support growth. Genes for H<sub>2</sub>-uptake hydrogenases are prevalent in global ocean metagenomes, highly expressed in metatranscriptomes and found across eight bacterial phyla. Capacity for H<sub>2</sub> oxidation increases with depth and decreases with oxygen concentration, suggesting that H<sub>2</sub> is important in environments with low primary production. Biogeochemical measurements of tropical, temperate and subantarctic waters, and axenic cultures show that marine microbes consume H<sub>2</sub> supplied at environmentally relevant concentrations, yielding enough cell-specific power to support growth in bacteria with low energy requirements. Conversely, our results indicate that oxidation of carbon monoxide (CO) primarily supports survival. Altogether, H<sub>2</sub> is a notable energy source for marine bacteria and may influence oceanic ecology and biogeochemistry.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1