Functional complementarity between vitamin B1 and B12 metabolisms shapes seasonal marine microbial communities
Maxime Beauvais, Philippe Schatt, Tanguy Soulié, Stefan Lambert, Lidia Montiel, Marinna Gaudin, Samuel Chaffron, Ramiro Logares, François-Yves Bouget, Pierre E Galand

TL;DR
Marine microbes rely on seasonal interactions between vitamin B1 and B12 producers and consumers, shaping their community structure and dynamics.
Contribution
The study reveals seasonal patterns of functional complementarity between B1 and B12 metabolisms in marine microbial communities.
Findings
B1 auxotrophs requiring pyrimidine were most prevalent in summer.
Double B1/B12 complementarities were more common in summer, while single vitamin complementarity dominated in winter.
B1 and B12 amendments altered microbial community composition, affecting both producers and auxotrophs.
Abstract
Marine microbial communities are fundamental to nutrient and biogeochemical cycling, with intricate networks of metabolic interdependencies influencing their structure and dynamics. Among these, vitamins B1 (thiamin) and B12 (cobalamin) play crucial roles as enzymatic cofactors in central metabolic pathways. Despite their importance, the temporal dynamics of vitamin production, bioavailability, and associated microbial interactions remain poorly understood. Using a 7-year monthly metagenomic time series from the NW Mediterranean Sea (SOLA station), we found that vitamin B1/B12 auxotrophs (need for an exogenous vitamin source) were present throughout the year. Among B1 auxotrophs, those requiring the thiamin precursor pyrimidine were the most prevalent, with peak abundances in summer. Distinct metagenome-assembled genome co-abundance patterns between B1 and B12 producers/auxotrophs…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFolate and B Vitamins Research · Porphyrin Metabolism and Disorders · Microbial Community Ecology and Physiology
