| Literature DB >> 25477865 |
Alicia M Purcell1, Jill A Mikucki1, Amanda M Achberger2, Irina A Alekhina3, Carlo Barbante4, Brent C Christner2, Dhritiman Ghosh1, Alexander B Michaud5, Andrew C Mitchell6, John C Priscu5, Reed Scherer7, Mark L Skidmore8, Trista J Vick-Majors5.
Abstract
Diverse microbial assemblages inhabit subglacial aquatic environments. While few of these environments have been sampled, data reveal that subglacial organisms gain energy for growth from reduced minerals containing nitrogen, iron, and sulfur. Here we investigate the role of microbially mediated sulfur transformations in sediments from Subglacial Lake Whillans (SLW), Antarctica, by examining key genes involved in dissimilatory sulfur oxidation and reduction. The presence of sulfur transformation genes throughout the top 34 cm of SLW sediments changes with depth. SLW surficial sediments were dominated by genes related to known sulfur-oxidizing chemoautotrophs. Sequences encoding the adenosine-5'-phosphosulfate (APS) reductase gene, involved in both dissimilatory sulfate reduction and sulfur oxidation, were present in all samples and clustered into 16 distinct operational taxonomic units. The majority of APS reductase sequences (74%) clustered with known sulfur oxidizers including those within the "Sideroxydans" and Thiobacillus genera. Reverse-acting dissimilatory sulfite reductase (rDSR) and 16S rRNA gene sequences further support dominance of "Sideroxydans" and Thiobacillus phylotypes in the top 2 cm of SLW sediments. The SLW microbial community has the genetic potential for sulfate reduction which is supported by experimentally measured low rates (1.4 pmol cm(-3)d(-1)) of biologically mediated sulfate reduction and the presence of APS reductase and DSR gene sequences related to Desulfobacteraceae and Desulfotomaculum. Our results also infer the presence of sulfur oxidation, which can be a significant energetic pathway for chemosynthetic biosynthesis in SLW sediments. The water in SLW ultimately flows into the Ross Sea where intermediates from subglacial sulfur transformations can influence the flux of solutes to the Southern Ocean.Entities:
Keywords: Antarctic subglacial aquatic environments; chemosynthesis; geomicrobiology; sulfate reduction; sulfur oxidation
Year: 2014 PMID: 25477865 PMCID: PMC4237127 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2014.00594
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Subglacial Lake Whillans sediment samples used in this study, gene amplifications, sulfate reduction rates (SRR), and quantitative-PCR gene quantification.
| Sample | Gene | Sulfate Reduction Rates (SRR; pmol cm-3 d-1)b | Gene quantification (copies g-1 wet sediment) | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Core | Depth (cm) | Without formate | With formate | Bacterial 16S rRNA | Archaeal 16S rRNA | % | |||||
| MC-2B | 0–4 | + | - | + | + | 0.42** | 0.41** | 3.9 × 106 | 2.4 × 106 | 9.12 × 105 | 14.5/23.6 |
| MC-2B | 4–8 | + | - | + | - | ND | ND | 2.6 × 104 | 5.8 × 105 | 9.60 × 103 | 1.6/36.6 |
| MC-2B | 28–34 | + | + | + | - | ND | ND | 1.2 × 105 | 1.4 × 106 | 8.42 × 103 | 0.6/7.3 |
| MC-3C | 2–3.5 | + | - | + | + | 1.67* | 1.29* | 8.5 × 106 | 4.4 × 106 | 9.58 × 105 | 7.4/11.3 |
| MC-3C | 3.5–8 | + | + | + | + | 1.20* | 1.84** | 2.2 × 105 | 9.0 × 105 | 2.47 × 104 | 2.2/11.1 |
| MC-3C | 8–16 | + | + | + | - | ND | ND | 2.0 × 104 | 4.0 × 105 | 3.67 × 103 | 0.9/18 |
DNA oligonucleotide primers used in this study.
| Primer and use | Sequence (5’–3’) | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| AprA-1-FW Forward | TGGCAGATCATGATYMAYGG | |
| AprA-5-RV Reverse | GCGCCAACYGGRCCRTA | |
| DSR1F+ Forward | ACSCACTGGAAGCACGGCGG | |
| DSR-R Reverse | GTGGMRCCGTGCAKRTTGG | |
| DSR1 Forward | ACSCACTGGAAGCACG | |
| DSR4 Reverse | GTGTAGCAGTTACCGCA | |
| rDSR1Fa | AARGGNTAYTGGAARG | |
| rDSR1Fb | TTYGGNTAYTGGAARG | |
| rDSR1Fc | ATGGGNTAYTGGAARG | |
| rDSR4Ra | CCRAARCAIGCNCCRCA | |
| rDSR4Rb | GGRWARCAIGCNCCRCA | |
| rDSRA240F | GGNTAYTGGAARGGNGG | |
| rDSR808R | CCDCCNACCCADATNGC | |
| T3 | ATTAACCCTCACTAAAGGGA | |
| T7 | TAATACGACTCACTATAGGG | |
| Bac340 Forward | TCCTACGGGAGGCAGCAGT | |
| Bac515 Reverse | CGTATTACCGCGGCTGCTGGCAC | |
| Arc915 Forward | AGGAATTGGCGGGGGAGCAC | |
| Arc1059 Reverse | GCCATGCACCWCCTCT |
Estimates of aprA diversity, richness, and clone library coverage in SLW sediments.
| Sediment sample | All | MC-2B(0-4 cm) | MC-2B(4-8 cm) | MC-2B(28 34cm) | MC-3C(2-3.5 cm) | MC-3C(3.5-8 cm) | MC-3C(8-16 cm) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total # clones | 275 | 45 | 28 | 39 | 45 | 40 | 39 |
| Total # operational taxonomic unit (OTUs) | 16 | 6 | 3 | 8 | 4 | 6 | 8 |
| Good’s coverage | 0.98 | 0.93 | 0.96 | 0.92 | 0.98 | 0.93 | 0.92 |
| Simpson’s index (D) | 0.40 | 0.61 | 0.5 | 0.24 | 0.68 | 0.45 | 0.16 |
| Shannon–Weaver index (H′) | 1.50 | 0.83 | 0.77 | 1.62 | 0.63 | 1.09 | 1.82 |
| Chao1 richness estimator | 34 | 11 | 3 | 13 | 5 | 6 | 8 |
Description of the closest cultured relatives related to SLW aprA OTUs and putative sulfur cycle function.
| OTUs | % total sequences | Sediment depths observed | Closest cultured representative | % AA identity | Characteristics | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 61 | All | “Sideroxydans lithotrophicus” ES-1 | 97–93 | Neutrophilic, iron and sulfur oxidizer | ||
| 1 | MC-2B(0-4, 28-34 cm), MC-3C(3.5-8 cm) | Single cell genome | 93–89 | N. Pacific and S. Atlantic Subtropical Gyre at 770 m and 800 m water depth | ||
| 6 | MC-2B(0-4 cm), MC-3C(2-3.5, 3.5-8 cm) | “Thiobacillus plumbophilus” | 95–92 | Mesophilic, aerobic, hydrogen and sulfur oxidizer | ||
| 94–93 | Photoautotrophic, iron oxidizer | |||||
| 6 | MC-2B(0-4, 28-34 cm), MC-3C(2-3.5 cm) | 93–86 | Facultative anaerobic autotroph, sulfur oxidizer | |||
| 2 | MC-3C(8-16 cm) | 95–94 | Anaerobic sulfate reducer from marine sludge | |||
| 1 | MC-3C(8-16 cm) | 88–80 | Thermophilic anaerobic heterotrophic sulfate reducer | |||
| 1 | MC-2B(28-34 cm), MC-3C(8-16 cm) | 94–91 | Anaerobic sulfate reducer, aromatic compound degradation, from marine sediments | |||
| 11 | MC-2B (4-8, 28-34 cm), MC-3C(3.5-8, 8-16 cm) | 83–81 | Thermophilic heterotrophic, obligate anaerobe, sulfate reducer | |||
| 3 | MC-2B(0-4 cm), MC-3C(2-3.5, 3.5-8, 8-16 cm) | 71 | Thermophilic heterotrophic, obligate anaerobe, sulfate reducer | |||
| 9 | MC-2B(4-8, 28-34 cm), MC-3C(3.5-8, 8-16 cm) | 78–69 | Thermophilic heterotrophic, obligate anaerobe, sulfate reducer | |||
| 78–69 | Thermophilic sulfate reducer, isolated from hot spring in Iceland | |||||
| 78–69 | Anoxygenic phototrophic sulfur oxidizer, isolated from a meromictic freshwater lake |