FN Archimer Export Format PT J TI The gill chamber epibiosis of deep-sea shrimp Rimicaris exoculata: an in-depth metagenomic investigation and discovery of Zetaproteobacteria BT AF JAN, Cyrielle PETERSEN, Jillian M. WERNER, Johannes TEELING, Hanno HUANG, Sixing GLOECKNER, Frank Oliver GOLYSHINA, Olga V. DUBILIER, Nicole GOLYSHIN, Peter N. JEBBAR, Mohamed CAMBON-BONAVITA, Marie-Anne AS 1:1;2:2;3:2,3;4:2;5:2;6:2,3;7:4;8:2;9:4;10:1,5;11:6; FF 1:;2:;3:;4:;5:;6:;7:;8:;9:;10:;11:PDG-REM-EEP-LMEE; C1 Univ Bretagne Occidentale, LM2E, IUEM, UMR 6197, Plouzane, France. Max Planck Inst Marine Microbiol, Bremen, Germany. Jacobs Univ Bremen gGmbH, Bremen, Germany. Bangor Univ, Sch Biol Sci, Bangor, Gwynedd, Wales. IUEM, CNRS, UMR6197, LM2E, F-29280 Plouzane, France. IFREMER, Ctr Brest, REM EEP LM2E, ZI Pointe Diable, F-29280 Plouzane, France. C2 UBO, FRANCE MAX PLANCK INST, GERMANY UNIV JACOBS BREMEN, GERMANY UNIV BANGOR, UK UBO, FRANCE IFREMER, FRANCE SI BREST SE PDG-REM-EEP-LMEE IN WOS Ifremer jusqu'en 2018 copubli-france copubli-europe copubli-univ-france IF 6.201 TC 35 UR https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00177/28874/28622.pdf LA English DT Article CR MOMARDREAM-NAUT1-NAUT2 BO Pourquoi pas ? AB The gill chamber of deep-sea hydrothermal vent shrimp Rimicaris exoculata hosts a dense community of epibiotic bacteria dominated by filamentous Epsilonproteobacteria and Gammaproteobacteria. Using metagenomics on shrimp from the Rainbow hydrothermal vent field, we showed that both epibiont groups have the potential to grow autotrophically and oxidize reduced sulfur compounds or hydrogen with oxygen or nitrate. For carbon fixation, the Epsilonproteobacteria use the reductive tricarboxylic acid cycle, whereas the Gammaproteobacteria use the Calvin–Benson–Bassham cycle. Only the epsilonproteobacterial epibionts had the genes necessary for producing ammonium. This ability likely minimizes direct competition between epibionts and also broadens the spectrum of environmental conditions that the shrimp may successfully inhabit. We identified genes likely to be involved in shrimp–epibiont interactions, as well as genes for nutritional and detoxification processes that might benefit the host. Shrimp epibionts at Rainbow are often coated with iron oxyhydroxides, whose origin is intensely debated. We identified 16S rRNA sequences and functional genes affiliated with iron-oxidizing Zetaproteobacteria, which indicates that biological iron oxidation might play a role in forming these deposits. Fluorescence in situ hybridizations confirmed the presence of active Zetaproteobacteria in the R. exoculata gill chamber, thus providing the first evidence for a Zetaproteobacteria–invertebrate association. PY 2014 PD SEP SO Environmental Microbiology SN 1462-2912 PU Wiley-blackwell VL 16 IS 9 UT 000341579700009 BP 2723 EP 2738 DI 10.1111/1462-2920.12406 ID 28874 ER EF