Sulfur speciation in Sphagnum peat moss modified by mutualistic interactions with cyanobacteria

New Phytol. 2024 Mar;241(5):1998-2008. doi: 10.1111/nph.19476. Epub 2023 Dec 22.

Abstract

Peat moss (Sphagnum spp.) develops mutualistic interactions with cyanobacteria by providing carbohydrates and S compounds in exchange for N-rich compounds, potentially facilitating N inputs into peatlands. Here, we evaluate how colonization of Sphagnum angustifolium hyaline cells by Nostoc muscorum modifies S abundance and speciation at the scales of individual cells and across whole leaves. For the first time, S K-edge X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy was used to identify bulk and micron-scale S speciation across isolated cyanobacteria colonies, and in colonized and uncolonized leaves. Uncolonized leaves contained primarily reduced organic S and oxidized sulfonate- and sulfate-containing compounds. Increasing Nostoc colonization resulted in an enrichment of S and changes in speciation, with increases in sulfate relative to reduced S and sulfonate. At the scale of individual hyaline cells, colonized cells exhibited localized enrichment of reduced S surrounded by diffuse sulfonate, similar to observations of cyanobacteria colonies cultured in the absence of leaves. We infer that colonization stimulates plant S uptake and the production of sulfate-containing metabolites that are concentrated in stem tissues. Sulfate compounds that are produced in response to colonization become depleted in colonized cells where they may be converted into reduced S metabolites by cyanobacteria.

Keywords: Sphagnum; X-ray absorption spectroscopy; X-ray microprobe; cyanobacteria; peat moss; sulfur.

MeSH terms

  • Nostoc*
  • Soil
  • Sphagnopsida* / physiology
  • Sulfates
  • Sulfur

Substances

  • Soil
  • Sulfur
  • Sulfates