| Literature DB >> 24402302 |
Marta Diaz-Herraiz1, Valme Jurado1, Soledad Cuezva2, Leonila Laiz3, Pasquino Pallecchi4, Piero Tiano5, Sergio Sanchez-Moral6, Cesareo Saiz-Jimenez3.
Abstract
The Etruscan civilisation originated in the Villanovan Iron Age in the ninth century BC and was absorbed by Rome in the first century BC. Etruscan tombs, many of which are subterranean, are one of the best representations of this culture. The principal importance of these tombs, however, lies in the wall paintings and in the tradition of rich burial, which was unique in the Mediterranean Basin, with the exception of Egypt. Relatively little information is available concerning the biodeterioration of Etruscan tombs, which is caused by a colonisation that covers the paintings with white, circular to irregular aggregates of bacteria or biofilms that tend to connect each other. Thus, these colonisations sometimes cover extensive surfaces. Here we show that the colonisation of paintings in Tomba del Colle is primarily due to bacteria of the order Rhizobiales (Alphaproteobacteria), which were likely influenced by the neighbouring rhizosphere community and the availability of nutrients from root exudates.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24402302 PMCID: PMC3885883 DOI: 10.1038/srep03610
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Paintings in Tomba del Colle.
(A). Sampling points on white colonisations. (B). Roots on the ceiling and wall efflorescences. (C). Ceiling efflorescences. Photographs taken by the authors.
Figure 2Scanning electron micrographs of the bacterial colonisations in Tomba del Colle.
(A). A colonisation on black pigment (i.e., ET1) with a continuous bed formed of CaCO3 nest-like aggregates and dispersed spheroidal elements. (B). Detail of A at the point where aggregates are attached by filaments and extracellular polymeric substances. (C). A colonisation on black pigment (i.e., ET5) with similar composition to ET1 and more spheroidal elements. (D). A colonisation on red pigment (i.e., ET2) with nest-like aggregates and microbial filaments emerging from the mineral substratum.
Figure 3Percentage of shared and specific OTUs in the Tomba del Colle samples.
Figure 4Venn diagram of the OTUs in the Tomba del Colle samples (A), and the Tomba del Colle, Tomba della Scimmia and volcanic caves samples (B) at a distance of 0.03.