Details zur Publikation

Kategorie Textpublikation
Referenztyp Zeitschriften
DOI 10.1016/j.soilbio.2023.108995
Volltext Autorenversion
Titel (primär) Turnover of bacterial biomass to soil organic matter via fungal biomass and its metabolic implications
Autor Zheng, T.; Miltner, A. ORCID logo ; Liang, C.; Nowak, K.M.; Kästner, M.
Quelle Soil Biology & Biochemistry
Erscheinungsjahr 2023
Department UBT
Band/Volume 180
Seite von art. 108995
Sprache englisch
Topic T7 Bioeconomy
Keywords Amino sugars; Microbial necromass; Amino acids; TCA cycle; Soil organic matter
Abstract Microbial biomass residues play a significant role in biogeochemical cycling but the mechanism by which material from microbial sources is sequestered in soil organic matter still remains elusive. Although we previously investigated the detailed turnover process of Gram-negative bacterial biomass (E. coli) derived carbon (C) in soil and found indications that fungi were the first clade to incorporate E. coli-derived C, no reliable estimate is available for the amount of bacterial biomass-derived C that is stabilized via fungal residues during turnover in soils. Here we tracked 13C-amino sugars (from chitin and peptidoglycan) and amino acids (from proteins) in order to shed light onto the bacterial and fungal food web. During incubation, 13C-amino acids decreased significantly, whereas 13C-amino sugars changed only slightly over time, suggesting that amino sugars as biomarkers are relatively stable compared to amino acids. The ratio of 13C-fungal derived glucosamine to 13C-muramic acid significantly increased before day 14, then levelled off until the end of the experiment. This further highlighted that bacterial C was stabilized in soil by conversion to fungal biomass grown on the bacterial biomass. Interestingly, the shifts in 13C-amino acids distribution pattern reflect three phases of the central metabolism: in the beginning, the added biomass was low in carbohydrates compared to the needs of the active microbes, resulting in a dominance of the glyoxylate cycle. In a second phase, the general metabolism and thus the tricarboxylic acid cycle (TCA) was very active, most probably supported by the use of a mixture of compounds from soil organic matter. This phase also included anaplerotic reactions resulting in C incorporation from CO2. Finally, metabolism slowed down and thus the TCA cycle was less active and C rather than energy was preserved. In summary, our study provided evidence that bacterial biomass residues were predominantly utilized by fungi; thus, at the end, the C was mainly stabilized as fungal necromass. Our results also indicated that bacterial biomass residues are turned over for preservation of C (∼50%) rather than energy towards the end of the incubation. This may thus be an important pathway for soil organic carbon sequestration in soil.
dauerhafte UFZ-Verlinkung https://www.ufz.de/index.php?en=20939&ufzPublicationIdentifier=24530
Zheng, T., Miltner, A., Liang, C., Nowak, K.M., Kästner, M. (2023):
Turnover of bacterial biomass to soil organic matter via fungal biomass and its metabolic implications
Soil Biol. Biochem. 180 , art. 108995 10.1016/j.soilbio.2023.108995