Depth and dissolved organic carbon shape microbial communities in surface influenced but not ancient saline terrestrial aquifers
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Frontiers
Materia
16S rRNA gene Amplicon sequencing Deep subsurface
Fecha
2018-11-27Referencia bibliográfica
Lopez-Fernandez M, Åström M, Bertilsson S and Dopson M (2018) Depth and Dissolved Organic Carbon Shape Microbial Communities in Surface Influenced but Not Ancient Saline Terrestrial Aquifers. Front. Microbiol. 9:2880. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2018.02880
Patrocinador
Swedish Research Council (2014-4398, 2012-3892, 2017-04422); Nova Center for University Studies, Research and Development; The Hellman Family Foundation; The Crafoord FoundationResumen
The continental deep biosphere is suggested to contain a substantial fraction of
the earth’s total biomass and microorganisms inhabiting this environment likely
have a substantial impact on biogeochemical cycles. However, the deep microbial
community is still largely unknown and can be influenced by parameters such as
temperature, pressure, water residence times, and chemistry of the waters. In this
study, 21 boreholes representing a range of deep continental groundwaters from
the Äspö Hard Rock Laboratory were subjected to high-throughput 16S rRNA gene
sequencing to characterize how the different water types influence the microbial
communities. Geochemical parameters showed the stability of the waters and allowed
their classification into three groups. These were (i) waters influenced by infiltration
from the Baltic Sea with a “modern marine (MM)” signature, (ii) a “thoroughly
mixed (TM)” water containing groundwaters of several origins, and (iii) deep “old
saline (OS)” waters. Decreasing microbial cell numbers positively correlated with
depth. In addition, there was a stronger positive correlation between increased
cell numbers and dissolved organic carbon for the MM compared to the OS
waters. This supported that the MM waters depend on organic carbon infiltration
from the Baltic Sea while the ancient saline waters were fed by “geogases”
such as carbon dioxide and hydrogen. The 16S rRNA gene relative abundance
of the studied groundwaters revealed different microbial community compositions.
Interestingly, the TM water showed the highest dissimilarity compared to the other
two water types, potentially due to the several contrasting water types contributing
to this groundwater. The main identified microbial phyla in the groundwaters
were Gammaproteobacteria, unclassified sequences, Campylobacterota (formerly
Epsilonproteobacteria), Patescibacteria, Deltaproteobacteria, and Alphaproteobacteria.
Many of these taxa are suggested to mediate ferric iron and nitrate reduction, especially
in the MM waters. This indicated that nitrate reduction may be a neglected but important
process in the deep continental biosphere. In addition to the high number of unclassified sequences, almost 50% of the identified phyla were archaeal or bacterial candidate
phyla. The percentage of unknown and candidate phyla increased with depth, pointing
to the importance and necessity of further studies to characterize deep biosphere
microbial populations.





