| Literature DB >> 30123637 |
Steven K Schmidt1, Lara Vimercati1, John L Darcy1, Pablo Arán2,3, Eli M S Gendron1,4, Adam J Solon1, Dorota Porazinska1, Cristina Dorador2,3.
Abstract
Here, we review the current state of knowledge concerning high-elevation members of the extremophilic Cryptococcus albidus clade (now classified as the genus Naganishia). These fungi dominate eukaryotic microbial communities across the highest elevation, soil-like material (tephra) on volcanoes such as Llullaillaco, Socompa, and Saírecabur in the Atacama region of Chile, Argentina, and Bolivia. Recent studies indicate that Naganishia species are among the most resistant organisms to UV radiation, and a strain of N. friedmannii from Volcán Llullaillaco is the first organism that is known to grow during the extreme, diurnal freeze-thaw cycles that occur on a continuous basis at elevations above 6000 m.a.s.l. in the Atacama region. These and other extremophilic traits discussed in this review may serve a dual purpose of allowing Naganishia species to survive long-distance transport through the atmosphere and to survive the extreme conditions found at high elevations. Current evidence indicates that there are frequent dispersal events between high-elevation volcanoes of Atacama region and the Dry Valleys of Antarctica via "Rossby Wave" merging of the polar and sub-tropical jet streams. This dispersal hypothesis needs further verification, as does the hypothesis that Naganishia species are flexible "opportunitrophs" that can grow during rare periods of water (from melting snow) and nutrient availability (from Aeolian inputs) in one of the most extreme terrestrial habitats on Earth.Entities:
Keywords: Antarctica; Atacama; Cryptococcus; Llullaillaco; astrobiology; volcanoes
Year: 2017 PMID: 30123637 PMCID: PMC6059072 DOI: 10.1080/21501203.2017.1344154
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mycology ISSN: 2150-1203
Figure 1.Map showing the location of the three volcanoes discussed in this paper. From south to north, microbial communities on Llullaillaco (6723 m) and Socompa (6051 m) have been studied extensively via culture-independent and culturing approaches (Costello et al. 2009; Lynch et al. 2012, Vimercati et al. 2016; Solon et al. 2017), whereas Naganishia and other yeasts have been cultured (Pulschen et al. 2015) from moderately high slopes of Saírecabur (5971 m). Map is redrawn from Costello et al. (2009).
Biogeochemical characteristic of soils from the three volcanoes and the Colorado site (Navajo Peak) discussed in this paper. Note the low pH values at these sites.
| Mountain | elevation | pH | % C | % N | % H2O | ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Llullaillaco | 6034 | 4.2 | 0.017 | <dla | 0.24 | Lynch et al. |
| 6330 | 4.6 | 0.005 | <dl | 0.25 | Lynch et al. | |
| Saírecabur | 3981 | 5.4 | ndb | nd | nd | Pulschen et al. |
| 5047 | 4.3 | nd | nd | nd | Pulschen et al. | |
| Socompa | 5235 | 5.2 | 0.03 | <dl | <dl | Costello et al. |
| 5820 | 5.1 | 0.06 | <dl | 3.4 | Solon et al. | |
| 6030 | 4.8 | nd | nd | 0.67 | Solon et al. | |
| Navajo | 3878 | 4.5 | 0.85 | 0.09 | 10.7 | King et al. |
abelow detection limits
bnot determined
Figure 2.Photograph taken on Volcán Llullaillaco in February, 2009 looking down from 5800 m.a.s.l. to the landscape between Llullaillaco and Socompa. The immediate foreground shows the Mars-like tephra material (at 5800 m.a.s.l.) dominated by N. friedmannii OTUs.
Figure 3.Soil temperatures and light measured at 5500 m.a.s.l. on Volcán Socompa during a summer night and day (Feb. 10 and 11, 2009). Soil surface temperatures ranged from −10.2°C at 7:30 h to a high of 56.2°C at 13:45 h. Temperatures at 4 cm depth ranged from −6.5°C at 7:45 h to 41.7°C at 15:15 h. No light penetrated to 4 cm depth and light at the surface reached the maximum measurable levels (253,512 lx) for a period of 1.75 h starting at 12:15 h. Temperature data were originally reported in Lynch et al. (2012) and light data are previously unpublished.
Growth rates, optimal temperatures (Opt), and maximum temperature (Tmax) for growth of N. friedmannii isolates from Llullaillaco, Socompa and Antarctic sites, and N. vishniacii and N. antarcticus from the Dry Valleys of Antarctica.
| Growth rate (h−1) at: | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Isolate | −6°C | −2°C | 4°C | Opt | Tmax | reference |
| Llullaillaco | + | 0.012 | 0.020 | 17°C | 27°C | Vimercati et al. |
| Saírecabur | + | + | + | nd* | 25°C | Pulschen et al. |
| Antarctica | nd | nd | + | nd | 25°C | Vishniac |
| nd | nd | + | nd | 25°C | Vishniac and Hempfling | |
| nd | nd | + | nd | 15–25°C** | Vishniac and Kurtzman | |
*not determined
**Different strains of C. antarcticus had different Tmax values.
Figure 4.Growth of the N. friedmannii isolate from Volcán Llullaillaco during five consecutive freeze-thaw cycles in a specially designed freeze-thaw chamber (Vimercati et al. 2016). Growth of the cultures (4 replicates, large dots) was measured using absorbance at 630 nm and verified by microscopic observations. Temperature of the growth medium (small dots, background) was measured using data loggers and verified by thermocouples in the actual growth media. The exponential growth curve (black line) was fit to the data by non-linear regression and the exponential growth model: at = a0 eµt, where µ is the exponential growth rate with units of h−1, and a0 and at are absorbance at time 0 and time t, respectively (Schmidt et al. 2009b). Error bars are standard deviation of measurements from four replicate cultures. Data are redrawn (with permission from the authors) from Vimercati et al. (2016).