| Literature DB >> 33554274 |
Derui Zhu1, Guoping Shen1, Zhibo Wang1, Rui Han2, Qifu Long1, Xiang Gao1, Jiangwa Xing1, Yongzhen Li1, Rong Wang3.
Abstract
Halophilic Archaea are widely distributed globally in hypersaline environments. However, little is known of how dominant halophilic archaeal genera are distributed across environments and how they may co-associate across ecosystems. Here, the archaeal community composition and diversity from hypersaline environments (> 300 g/L salinity; total of 33 samples) in the Qaidam Basin of China were investigated using high-throughput Illumina sequencing of 16S rRNA genes. The archaeal communities (total of 3,419 OTUs) were dominated by the class Halobacteria (31.7-99.6% relative abundances) within the phylum Euryarchaeota (90.8-99.9%). Five predominant taxa, including Halorubrum, Halobacterium, Halopenitus, Methanothrix, and Halomicrobium, were observed across most samples. However, several distinct genera were associated with individual samples and were inconsistently distributed across samples, which contrast with previous studies of hypersaline archaeal communities. Additionally, co-occurrence network analysis indicated that five network clusters were present and potentially reflective of interspecies interactions among the environments, including three clusters (clusters II, III, and IV) comprising halophilic archaeal taxa within the Halobacteriaceae and Haloferacaceae families. In addition, two other clusters (clusters I and V) were identified that comprised methanogens. Finally, salinity comprising ionic concentrations (in the order of Na+ > Ca2+ > Mg2+) and pH were most correlated with taxonomic distributions across sample sites.Entities:
Keywords: Archaeal community; Archaeal diversity; Co-occurrence network; Hypersaline environments; Qaidam basin
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33554274 DOI: 10.1007/s00203-020-02181-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Microbiol ISSN: 0302-8933 Impact factor: 2.552