Resin acids play key roles in shaping microbial communities during degradation of spruce bark
Journal article, 2023

The bark is the outermost defense of trees against microbial attack, largely thanks to toxicity and prevalence of extractive compounds. Nevertheless, bark decomposes in nature, though by which species and mechanisms remains unknown. Here, we have followed the development of microbial enrichments growing on spruce bark over six months, by monitoring both chemical changes in the material and performing community and metagenomic analyses. Carbohydrate metabolism was unexpectedly limited, and instead a key activity was metabolism of extractives. Resin acid degradation was principally linked to community diversification with specific bacteria revealed to dominate the process. Metagenome-guided isolation facilitated the recovery of the dominant enrichment strain in pure culture, which represents a new species (Pseudomonas abieticivorans sp. nov.), that can grow on resin acids as a sole carbon source. Our results illuminate key stages in degradation of an abundant renewable resource, and how defensive extractive compounds have major roles in shaping microbiomes.

Resin acids

bacterial isolation

spruce

bark

MAGs

Author

Amanda Sörensen Ristinmaa

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Industrial Biotechnology

Albert Tafur Rangel

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Systems and Synthetic Biology

Eduard Kerkhoven

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Systems and Synthetic Biology

Alexander Idström

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Applied Chemistry

Sebastian Valenzuela

University of Gothenburg

Phillip B. Pope

Norwegian University of Life Sciences

Merima Hasani

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Chemical Technology

Johan Larsbrink

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Industrial Biotechnology

Nature Communications

2041-1723 (ISSN) 20411723 (eISSN)

Vol. 14 8171

Biochemical conversion of bark

Swedish Energy Agency (46559-1), 2019-04-08 -- 2023-10-31.

Subject Categories

Polymer Technologies

Forest Science

Microbiology

Organic Chemistry

DOI

10.1038/s41467-023-43867-y

More information

Latest update

12/22/2023