Investigation of viable taxa in the deep terrestrial biosphere suggests high rates of nutrient recycling
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
López Fernández, Margarita; Broman, Elias; Turner, Stephanie; Wu, Xiaofen; Bertilsson, Stefan; Dopson, MarkEditorial
Oxford University Press
Fecha
2018-06-15Referencia bibliográfica
Lopez-Fernandez, M., Broman, E., Turner, S., Wu, X., Bertilsson, S., & Dopson, M. (2018). Investigation of viable taxa in the deep terrestrial biosphere suggests high rates of nutrient recycling. FEMS Microbiology Ecology, 94(8), fiy121.
Resumen
The deep biosphere is the largest ‘bioreactor’ on earth, and microbes inhabiting this biome profoundly influence global
nutrient and energy cycles. An important question for deep biosphere microbiology is whether or not specific populations
are viable. To address this, we used quantitative PCR and high throughput 16S rRNA gene sequencing of total and viable
cells (i.e. with an intact cellular membrane) from three groundwaters with different ages and chemical constituents. There
were no statistically significant differences in 16S rRNA gene abundances and microbial diversity between total and viable
communities. This suggests that populations were adapted to prevailing oligotrophic conditions and that non-viable cells
are rapidly degraded and recycled into new biomass. With higher concentrations of organic carbon, the modern marine and
undefined mixed waters hosted a community with a larger range of predicted growth strategies than the ultra-oligotrophic
old saline water. These strategies included fermentative and potentially symbiotic lifestyles by candidate phyla that
typically have streamlined genomes. In contrast, the old saline waters had more 16S rRNA gene sequences in previously
cultured lineages able to oxidize hydrogen and fix carbon dioxide. This matches the paradigm of a hydrogen and carbon
dioxide-fed chemolithoautotrophic deep biosphere.





