Cold seeps are potential hotspots of deep-sea nitrogen loss driven by microorganisms across 21 phyla
Qiuyun Jiang,
Lei Cao,
Yingchun Han,
Shengjie Li,
Rui Zhao,
Xiaoli Zhang,
S. Emil Ruff,
Zhuoming Zhao,
Jiaxue Peng,
Jing Liao,
Baoli Zhu,
Minxiao Wang,
Xianbiao Lin () and
Xiyang Dong ()
Additional contact information
Qiuyun Jiang: Ministry of Natural Resources
Lei Cao: Chinese Academy of Sciences
Yingchun Han: Ministry of Natural Resources
Shengjie Li: Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology
Rui Zhao: Cambridge
Xiaoli Zhang: Chinese Academy of Sciences
S. Emil Ruff: Marine Biological Laboratory
Zhuoming Zhao: Ministry of Natural Resources
Jiaxue Peng: Ministry of Natural Resources
Jing Liao: Ministry of Natural Resources
Baoli Zhu: Chinese Academy of Sciences
Minxiao Wang: Chinese Academy of Sciences
Xianbiao Lin: Ocean University of China
Xiyang Dong: Ministry of Natural Resources
Nature Communications, 2025, vol. 16, issue 1, 1-16
Abstract:
Abstract Nitrogen bioavailability, governed by fixation and loss processes, is crucial for oceanic productivity and global biogeochemical cycles. The key nitrogen loss organisms—denitrifiers and anaerobic ammonium-oxidizing (anammox) bacteria—remain poorly understood in deep-sea cold seeps. This study combined geochemical measurements, 15N stable isotope tracer analysis, metagenomics, metatranscriptomics, and three-dimensional protein structural simulations to explore cold-seeps nitrogen loss processes. Geochemical evidence from 359 sediment samples shows significantly higher nitrogen loss rates in cold seeps compared to typical deep-sea sediments, with nitrogen loss flux from surface sediments estimated at 4.96–7.63 Tg N yr-1 (1.65–2.54% of global marine sediment). Examination of 147 million non-redundant genes indicates a high prevalence of nitrogen loss genes, including nitrous-oxide reductase (NosZ; 6.88 genes per million reads, GPM), nitric oxide dismutase (Nod; 1.29 GPM), and hydrazine synthase (HzsA; 3.35 GPM) in surface sediments. Analysis of 3,164 metagenome-assembled genomes expands the nitrous-oxide reducers by three phyla, nitric oxide-dismutating organisms by one phylum and two orders, and anammox bacteria by ten phyla going beyond Planctomycetota. These microbes exhibit structural adaptations and complex gene cluster enabling survival in cold seeps. Cold seeps likely are previously underestimated nitrogen loss hotspots, potentially contributing notably to the global nitrogen cycle.
Date: 2025
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DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-56774-1
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