Microbial ecosystems and ecological driving forces in the deepest ocean sediments

Xiang Xiao(Shanghai Jiao Tong University), Weishu Zhao(Shanghai Jiao Tong University), Zewei Song(BGI Group (China)), Qi Qi(Shanghai Jiao Tong University), Bó Wáng(BGI Group (China)), Jiahui Zhu(BGI Group (China)), James Jeng-Weei Lin(Shanghai Jiao Tong University), Jing Wang(BGI Group (China)), Aoran Hu(Shanghai Jiao Tong University), Shanshan Huang(Shanghai Jiao Tong University), Yinzhao Wang(Shanghai Jiao Tong University), Jianwei Chen(Qingdao University), Chao Fang(BGI Group (China)), Qianyue Ji(BGI Research), Nannan Zhang(BGI Research), Liang Meng(BGI Research), Xiaofeng Wei(BGI Group (China)), Chuanxu Chen(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Shanya Cai(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Shun Chen(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Kang Ding(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Dong Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Shuangquan Liu(BGI Group (China)), Taoran Song(Hainan Tropical Ocean University), Liyang Tian(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Haibin Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yu Zhang(Shanghai Jiao Tong University), Shiyu Xu, Jiayu Chen(Qingdao University), Haixin Chen(BGI Research), Qian Cen(China National GeneBank), Fangfang Jiang(China National GeneBank), Guohai Hu(BGI Group (China)), Chenguang Tang, Guohua Wu(Shanghai Jiao Tong University), Xiaohan Wang(BGI Group (China)), Liping Zhan(BGI Research), Jie Fan(BGI Research), Jun Wang(BGI Group (China)), Changhao Zhou(BGI Research), Liuyang Li(Shanghai Jiao Tong University), Zhenbo Lv(Shanghai Jiao Tong University), Yaoxun Hu(Shanghai Jiao Tong University), Xiaonan Lin(BGI Research), Guoqiang Mai(China National GeneBank), Linlin Luo(China National GeneBank), Tao Yang(BGI Group (China)), Weiwen Wang(BGI Group (China)), Karsten Kristiansen(BGI Group (China)), Liqun Chen(China National GeneBank), Huanming Yang(BGI Group (China)), Ming Ni, Ying Gu(BGI Group (China)), Feng Mu, Yunfeng Yang(Tsinghua–Berkeley Shenzhen Institute), Jizhong Zhou(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Jian Wang(BGI Group (China)), Weijia Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Mo Han(BGI Group (China)), Xun Xu(BGI Group (China)), Shanshan Liu(BGI Group (China))
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Abstract

Systematic exploration of the hadal zone, Earth's deepest oceanic realm, has historically faced technical limitations. Here, we collected 1,648 sediment samples at 6-11 km in the Mariana Trench, Yap Trench, and Philippine Basin for the Mariana Trench Environment and Ecology Research (MEER) project. Metagenomic and 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing generated the 92-Tbp MEER dataset, comprising 7,564 species (89.4% unreported), indicating high taxonomic novelty. Unlike in reported environments, neutral drift played a minimal role, while homogeneous selection (HoS, 50.5%) and dispersal limitation (DL, 43.8%) emerged as dominant ecological drivers. HoS favored streamlined genomes with key functions for hadal adaptation, e.g., aromatic compound utilization (oligotrophic adaptation) and antioxidation (high-pressure adaptation). Conversely, DL promoted versatile metabolism with larger genomes. These findings indicated that environmental factors drive the high taxonomic novelty in the hadal zone, advancing our understanding of the ecological mechanisms governing microbial ecosystems in such an extreme oceanic environment.


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