| Literature DB >> 29211716 |
Mukan Ji1, Chris Greening2, Inka Vanwonterghem3, Carlo R Carere4, Sean K Bay2, Jason A Steen3, Kate Montgomery1, Thomas Lines2, John Beardall2, Josie van Dorst1, Ian Snape5, Matthew B Stott4, Philip Hugenholtz3, Belinda C Ferrari1.
Abstract
Cultivation-independent surveys have shown that the desert soils of Antarctica harbour surprisingly rich microbial communities. Given that phototroph abundance varies across these Antarctic soils, an enduring question is what supports life in those communities with low photosynthetic capacity. Here we provide evidence that atmospheric trace gases are the primary energy sources of two Antarctic surface soil communities. We reconstructed 23 draft genomes from metagenomic reads, including genomes from the candidate bacterial phyla WPS-2 and AD3. The dominant community members encoded and expressed high-affinity hydrogenases, carbon monoxide dehydrogenases, and a RuBisCO lineage known to support chemosynthetic carbon fixation. Soil microcosms aerobically scavenged atmospheric H2 and CO at rates sufficient to sustain their theoretical maintenance energy and mediated substantial levels of chemosynthetic but not photosynthetic CO2 fixation. We propose that atmospheric H2, CO2 and CO provide dependable sources of energy and carbon to support these communities, which suggests that atmospheric energy sources can provide an alternative basis for ecosystem function to solar or geological energy sources. Although more extensive sampling is required to verify whether this process is widespread in terrestrial Antarctica and other oligotrophic habitats, our results provide new understanding of the minimal nutritional requirements for life and open the possibility that atmospheric gases support life on other planets.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29211716 DOI: 10.1038/nature25014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962