| Literature DB >> 27112493 |
Alexander J Probst1, Cindy J Castelle1, Andrea Singh1, Christopher T Brown2, Karthik Anantharaman1, Itai Sharon1, Laura A Hug1, David Burstein1, Joanne B Emerson1, Brian C Thomas1, Jillian F Banfield1,3,4.
Abstract
As in many deep underground environments, the microbial communities in subsurface high-CO2 ecosystems remain relatively unexplored. Recent investigations based on single-gene assays revealed a remarkable variety of organisms from little studied phyla in Crystal Geyser (Utah, USA), a site where deeply sourced CO2 -saturated fluids are erupted at the surface. To provide genomic resolution of the metabolisms of these organisms, we used a novel metagenomic approach to recover 227 high-quality genomes from 150 microbial species affiliated with 46 different phylum-level lineages. Bacteria from two novel phylum-level lineages have the capacity for CO2 fixation. Analyses of carbon fixation pathways in all studied organisms revealed that the Wood-Ljungdahl pathway and the Calvin-Benson-Bassham Cycle occurred with the highest frequency, whereas the reverse TCA cycle was little used. We infer that this, and selection for form II RuBisCOs, are adaptions to high CO2 -concentrations. However, many autotrophs can also grow mixotrophically, a strategy that confers metabolic versatility. The assignment of 156 hydrogenases to 90 different organisms suggests that H2 is an important inter-species energy currency even under gaseous CO2 -saturation. Overall, metabolic analyses at the organism level provided insight into the biochemical cycles that support subsurface life under the extreme condition of CO2 saturation.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27112493 DOI: 10.1111/1462-2920.13362
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Microbiol ISSN: 1462-2912 Impact factor: 5.491