Phagotrophic Protists Modulate Copper Resistance of the Bacterial Community in Soil

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

  • Zhenguang Lv
  • Min Xu
  • Ying Liu
  • Rønn, Regin
  • Christopher Rensing
  • Song Liu
  • Shenghan Gao
  • Hao Liao
  • Yu Rong Liu
  • Wenli Chen
  • Yong Guan Zhu
  • Qiaoyun Huang
  • Xiuli Hao

Protist predation is a crucial biotic driver modulating bacterial populations and functional traits. Previous studies using pure cultures have demonstrated that bacteria with copper (Cu) resistance exhibited fitness advantages over Cu-sensitive bacteria under the pressure of protist predation. However, the impact of diverse natural communities of protist grazers on bacterial Cu resistance in natural environments remains unknown. Here, we characterized the communities of phagotrophic protists in long-term Cu-contaminated soils and deciphered their potential ecological impacts on bacterial Cu resistance. Long-term field Cu pollution increased the relative abundances of most of the phagotrophic lineages in Cercozoa and Amoebozoa but reduced the relative abundance of Ciliophora. After accounting for soil properties and Cu pollution, phagotrophs were consistently identified as the most important predictor of the Cu-resistant (CuR) bacterial community. Phagotrophs positively contributed to the abundance of a Cu resistance gene (copA) through influencing the cumulative relative abundance of Cu-resistant and -sensitive ecological clusters. Microcosm experiments further confirmed the promotion effect of protist predation on bacterial Cu resistance. Our results indicate that the selection by protist predation can have a strong impact on the CuR bacterial community, which broadens our understanding of the ecological function of soil phagotrophic protists.

Original languageEnglish
JournalEnvironmental Science and Technology
Volume57
Issue number9
Pages (from-to)3590-3601
Number of pages12
ISSN0013-936X
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 American Chemical Society.

    Research areas

  • bacterial copper (Cu) resistance, copA gene, Cu contamination, soil phagotrophic protists, trophic regulation

ID: 339729441