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1.
BMC Biol ; 19(1): 8, 2021 01 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33455582

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Numerous deep-sea invertebrates, at both hydrothermal vents and methane seeps, have formed symbiotic associations with internal chemosynthetic bacteria in order to harness inorganic energy sources typically unavailable to animals. Despite success in nearly all marine habitats and their well-known associations with photosynthetic symbionts, Cnidaria remain one of the only phyla present in the deep-sea without a clearly documented example of dependence on chemosynthetic symbionts. RESULTS: A new chemosynthetic symbiosis between the sea anemone Ostiactis pearseae and intracellular bacteria was discovered at ~ 3700 m deep hydrothermal vents in the southern Pescadero Basin, Gulf of California. Unlike most sea anemones observed from chemically reduced habitats, this species was observed in and amongst vigorously venting fluids, side-by-side with the chemosynthetic tubeworm Oasisia aff. alvinae. Individuals of O. pearseae displayed carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur tissue isotope values suggestive of a nutritional strategy distinct from the suspension feeding or prey capture conventionally employed by sea anemones. Molecular and microscopic evidence confirmed the presence of intracellular SUP05-related bacteria housed in the tentacle epidermis of O. pearseae specimens collected from 5 hydrothermally active structures within two vent fields ~ 2 km apart. SUP05 bacteria (Thioglobaceae) dominated the O. pearseae bacterial community, but were not recovered from other nearby anemones, and were generally rare in the surrounding water. Further, the specific Ostiactis-associated SUP05 phylotypes were not detected in the environment, indicating a specific association. Two unusual candidate bacterial phyla (the OD1 and BD1-5 groups) appear to associate exclusively with O. pearseae and may play a role in symbiont sulfur cycling. CONCLUSION: The Cnidarian Ostiactis pearseae maintains a physical and nutritional alliance with chemosynthetic bacteria. The mixotrophic nature of this symbiosis is consistent with what is known about other cnidarians and the SUP05 bacterial group, in that they both form dynamic relationships to succeed in nature. The advantages gained by appropriating metabolic and structural resources from each other presumably contribute to their striking abundance in the Pescadero Basin, at the deepest known hydrothermal vents in the Pacific Ocean.


Assuntos
Bactérias/metabolismo , Fenômenos Fisiológicos Bacterianos , Fontes Hidrotermais , Anêmonas-do-Mar/metabolismo , Simbiose , Fenômenos Fisiológicos da Nutrição Animal , Animais , México , Oceano Pacífico
2.
Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom ; 35(1): e8958, 2021 Jan 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32991016

RESUMO

RATIONALE: Secondary ion mass spectrometry data collected using electron multiplier detectors are subject to a correction for the quasi-simultaneous arrival (QSA) effect. Published Poisson statistical models indicate that the QSA coefficients, ß, should have an invariant value of 0.5, whereas, with one exception, published experimental determinations vary between 0.6 and 1.0, with a mean value of 0.75. METHODS: We developed a more complex model, combining both ion emission and attenuation, that predicts the observed range in measured ß and elucidates the mechanism of secondary ion formation. For a given aperture setting, any secondary ion has an equal probability of successful transit to the electron multiplier. Binomial statistics can model pass-fail aperture attenuation but require probability distributions of the quasi-simultaneously emitted (QSE) ion tally, per primary ion, as input. Assuming (a) that each primary ion impact results in 0, 1, 2,… secondary ion emissions, randomly, with an average Ks and (b) that there is finite probability (P2) of a further emission process dependent on Ks , the required QSE probability distributions were generated via a combined Poisson-binomial statistical model. RESULTS: The value of ß was output as a function of Ks and P2. For values of P2 > 0 and any value of Ks , ß always exceeds 0.5. As P2 → 0, ß â†’ 0.5; for values of increasing P2 > 0.5 and decreasing Ks < 0.5, ß â†’ >1. CONCLUSIONS: Were the emission of one ion not to influence the probability of the formation of a second (i.e. model output for P2 = 0), ß should always be 0.5. Yet measurements have never reported this value. Consequently, assuming that published ß values are correct, emissions of QSE secondary ions do not occur independently, and it may be inferred that there are linked mechanisms of secondary ion formation as shown here.

3.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 114(23): 5941-5945, 2017 06 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28533378

RESUMO

The sulfur biogeochemical cycle plays a key role in regulating Earth's surface redox through diverse abiotic and biological reactions that have distinctive stable isotopic fractionations. As such, variations in the sulfur isotopic composition (δ34S) of sedimentary sulfate and sulfide phases over Earth history can be used to infer substantive changes to the Earth's surface environment, including the rise of atmospheric oxygen. Such inferences assume that individual δ34S records reflect temporal changes in the global sulfur cycle; this assumption may be well grounded for sulfate-bearing minerals but is less well established for pyrite-based records. Here, we investigate alternative controls on the sedimentary sulfur isotopic composition of marine pyrite by examining a 300-m drill core of Mediterranean sediments deposited over the past 500,000 y and spanning the last five glacial-interglacial periods. Because this interval is far shorter than the residence time of marine sulfate, any change in the sulfur isotopic record preserved in pyrite (δ34Spyr) necessarily corresponds to local environmental changes. The stratigraphic variations (>76‰) in the isotopic data reported here are among the largest ever observed in pyrite, and are in phase with glacial-interglacial sea level and temperature changes. In this case, the dominant control appears to be glacial-interglacial variations in sedimentation rates. These results suggest that there exist important but previously overlooked depositional controls on sedimentary sulfur isotope records, especially associated with intervals of substantial sea level change. This work provides an important perspective on the origin of variability in such records and suggests meaningful paleoenvironmental information can be derived from pyrite δ34S records.

4.
Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom ; 33(5): 491-502, 2019 Mar 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30561860

RESUMO

RATIONALE: Sulfur isotope ratio measurements of bulk sulfide from marine sediments have often been used to reconstruct environmental conditions associated with their formation. In situ microscale spot analyses by secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) and laser ablation multiple-collector inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-MC-ICP-MS) have been utilized for the same purpose. However, these techniques are often not suitable for studying small (≤10 µm) grains or for detecting intra-grain variability. METHODS: Here, we present a method for the physical extraction (using lithium polytungstate heavy liquid) and subsequent sulfur isotope analysis (using SIMS; CAMECA IMS 7f-GEO) of microcrystalline iron sulfides. SIMS sulfur isotope ratio measurements were made via Cs+ bombardment of raster squares with sides of 20-130 µm, using an electron multiplier (EM) detector to collect counts of 32 S- and 34 S- for each pixel (128 × 128 pixel grids) for between 20 and 960 cycles. RESULTS: The extraction procedure did not discernibly alter pyrite grain-size distributions. The apparent inter-grain variability in 34 S/32 S in 1-4 µm-sized pyrite and marcasite fragments from isotopically homogeneous hydrothermal crystals was ~ ±2‰ (1σ), comparable with the standard error of the mean for individual measurements (≤ ±2‰, 1σ). In contrast, grain-specific 34 S/32 S ratios in modern and ancient sedimentary pyrites and marcasites can have inter- and intra-grain variability >60‰. The distributions of intra-sample isotopic variability are consistent with bulk 34 S/32 S values. CONCLUSIONS: SIMS analyses of isolated iron sulfide grains yielded distributions that are isotopically representative of bulk 34 S/32 S values. Populations of iron sulfide grains from sedimentary samples record the evolution of the S-isotopic composition of pore water sulfide in their S-isotopic compositions. These data allow past local environmental conditions to be inferred.

5.
Environ Microbiol ; 20(12): 4281-4296, 2018 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29968367

RESUMO

Nitrogen fixation, the biological conversion of N2 to NH3 , is critical to alleviating nitrogen limitation in many marine ecosystems. To date, few measurements exist of N2 fixation in deep-sea sediments. Here, we conducted > 400 bottle incubations with sediments from methane seeps, whale falls and background sites off the western coast of the United States from 600 to 2893 m water depth to investigate the potential rates, spatial distribution and biological mediators of benthic N2 fixation. We found that N2 fixation was widespread, yet heterogeneously distributed with sediment depth at all sites. In some locations, rates exceeded previous measurements by > 10×, and provided up to 30% of the community anabolic growth requirement for nitrogen. Diazotrophic activity appeared to be inhibited by pore water ammonium: N2 fixation was only observed if incubation ammonium concentrations were ≤ 25 µM, and experimental additions of ammonium reduced diazotrophy. In seep sediments, N2 fixation was dependent on CH4 and coincident with sulphate reduction, consistent with previous work showing diazotrophy by microorganisms mediating sulphate-coupled methane oxidation. However, the pattern of diazotrophy was different in whale-fall and associated reference sediments, where it was largely unaffected by CH4 , suggesting catabolically different diazotrophs at these sites.


Assuntos
Bactérias/metabolismo , Carbono/química , Carbono/metabolismo , Sedimentos Geológicos/microbiologia , Fixação de Nitrogênio/fisiologia , Compostos de Amônio , Ecossistema , Metano , Nitrogênio , Oceano Pacífico , Água do Mar , Microbiologia do Solo
6.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 112(20): 6319-24, 2015 May 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25941363

RESUMO

Here we establish the timing of major flood events of the central Mississippi River over the last 1,800 y, using floodwater sediments deposited in two floodplain lakes. Shifts in the frequency of high-magnitude floods are mediated by moisture availability over midcontinental North America and correspond to the emergence and decline of Cahokia--a major late prehistoric settlement in the Mississippi River floodplain. The absence of large floods from A.D. 600 to A.D. 1200 facilitated agricultural intensification, population growth, and settlement expansion across the floodplain that are associated with the emergence of Cahokia as a regional center around A.D. 1050. The return of large floods after A.D. 1200, driven by waning midcontinental aridity, marks the onset of sociopolitical reorganization and depopulation that culminate in the abandonment of Cahokia and the surrounding region by A.D. 1350. Shifts in the frequency and magnitude of flooding may be an underappreciated but critical factor in the formation and dissolution of social complexity in early agricultural societies.


Assuntos
Inundações , Indígenas Norte-Americanos/história , Rios , Fatores Etários , Arqueologia , Radioisótopos de Carbono/análise , Sedimentos Geológicos/química , História Medieval , Humanos , Illinois , Espectrometria de Massas , Tamanho da Partícula
7.
Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom ; 31(7): 623-630, 2017 Apr 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28093819

RESUMO

RATIONALE: IMS 7f-GEO isotope ratio applications increasingly involve analyses (e.g., S- or O- isotopes, coupled with primary ion currents <30 pA) for which quasi-simultaneous arrival (QSA) could compromise precision and accuracy of data. QSA and associated correction have been widely investigated for the CAMECA NanoSIMS instruments, but not for the IMS series. METHODS: Sulfur and oxygen isotopic ratio experiments were performed using an electron multiplier (EM) detector, employing Cs+ primary ion currents of 1, 2, 5 and 11.5 pA (nominal) and a variety of secondary ion transmissions to vary QSA probability. An experiment to distinguish between QSA undercounting and purported aperture-related mass fractionation was performed using an EM for 16 O- and 18 O- plus an additional 16 O- measurement using a Faraday cup (FC) detector. An experiment to investigate the accuracy of the QSA correction was performed by comparing S isotopic ratios obtained using an EM with those obtained on the same sample using dual FCs. RESULTS: The QSA effect was observed on the IMS-7f-GEO, and QSA coefficients (ß) of ~0.66 were determined, in agreement with reported NanoSIMS measurements, but different from the value (0.5) predicted using Poisson statistics. Aperture-related fractionation was not sufficient to explain the difference but uncertainties in primary ion flux measurement could play a role. When QSA corrected, the isotope ratio data obtained using the EM agreed with the dual FC data, within statistical error. CONCLUSIONS: QSA undercounting could compromise isotope ratio analyses requiring ~1 × 105 counts per second for the major isotope and primary currents <20 pA. The error could be >8‰ for a 1 pA primary current. However, correction can be accurately applied. For instrumental mass fractionation (IMF)-corrected data, the magnitude of the error resulting from not correcting for QSA is dependent on the difference in secondary ion count rate between the unknown and standard analyses. Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

8.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 111(15): 5468-73, 2014 Apr 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24706767

RESUMO

Many aspects of Earth's early sulfur cycle, from the origin of mass-anomalous fractionations to the degree of biological participation, remain poorly understood--in part due to complications from postdepositional diagenetic and metamorphic processes. Using a combination of scanning high-resolution magnetic superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) microscopy and secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) of sulfur isotopes ((32)S, (33)S, and (34)S), we examined drill core samples from slope and basinal environments adjacent to a major Late Archean (∼2.6-2.5 Ga) marine carbonate platform from South Africa. Coupled with petrography, these techniques can untangle the complex history of mineralization in samples containing diverse sulfur-bearing phases. We focused on pyrite nodules, precipitated in shallow sediments. These textures record systematic spatial differences in both mass-dependent and mass-anomalous sulfur-isotopic composition over length scales of even a few hundred microns. Petrography and magnetic imaging demonstrate that mass-anomalous fractionations were acquired before burial and compaction, but also show evidence of postdepositional alteration 500 million y after deposition. Using magnetic imaging to screen for primary phases, we observed large spatial gradients in Δ(33)S (>4‰) in nodules, pointing to substantial environmental heterogeneity and dynamic mixing of sulfur pools on geologically rapid timescales. In other nodules, large systematic radial δ(34)S gradients (>20‰) were observed, from low values near their centers increasing to high values near their rims. These fractionations support hypotheses that microbial sulfate reduction was an important metabolism in organic-rich Archean environments--even in an Archean ocean basin dominated by iron chemistry.


Assuntos
Meio Ambiente , Evolução Química , Microscopia de Interferência/instrumentação , Microscopia de Interferência/métodos , Isótopos de Enxofre/química , Carbonatos/química , Fracionamento Químico , Geologia , História Antiga , Espectrometria de Massas , África do Sul
10.
Nature ; 457(7230): 718-21, 2009 Feb 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19194449

RESUMO

The Neoproterozoic era (1,000-542 Myr ago) was an era of climatic extremes and biological evolutionary developments culminating in the emergence of animals (Metazoa) and new ecosystems. Here we show that abundant sedimentary 24-isopropylcholestanes, the hydrocarbon remains of C(30) sterols produced by marine demosponges, record the presence of Metazoa in the geological record before the end of the Marinoan glaciation ( approximately 635 Myr ago). These sterane biomarkers are abundant in all formations of the Huqf Supergroup, South Oman Salt Basin, and, based on a new high-precision geochronology, constitute a continuous 100-Myr-long chemical fossil record of demosponges through the terminal Neoproterozoic and into the Early Cambrian epoch. The demosponge steranes occur in strata that underlie the Marinoan cap carbonate (>635 Myr ago). They currently represent the oldest evidence for animals in the fossil record, and are evidence for animals pre-dating the termination of the Marinoan glaciation. This suggests that shallow shelf waters in some late Cryogenian ocean basins (>635 Myr ago) contained dissolved oxygen in concentrations sufficient to support basal metazoan life at least 100 Myr before the rapid diversification of bilaterians during the Cambrian explosion. Biomarker analysis has yet to reveal any convincing evidence for ancient sponges pre-dating the first globally extensive Neoproterozoic glacial episode (the Sturtian, approximately 713 Myr ago in Oman).


Assuntos
Evolução Biológica , Colestanos/análise , Colestanos/química , Fósseis , Sedimentos Geológicos/química , Poríferos/fisiologia , Animais , Arábia , Biomarcadores/análise , Biomarcadores/química , Colestanos/isolamento & purificação , Cromatografia Gasosa-Espectrometria de Massas , História Antiga , Hidrocarbonetos/análise , Hidrocarbonetos/química , Camada de Gelo , Oceanos e Mares , Oxigênio/análise , Água do Mar/química
11.
Environ Microbiol ; 16(11): 3398-415, 2014 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24428801

RESUMO

Microbial metabolism is the engine that drives global biogeochemical cycles, yet many key transformations are carried out by microbial consortia over short spatiotemporal scales that elude detection by traditional analytical approaches. We investigate syntrophic sulfur cycling in the 'pink berry' consortia of the Sippewissett Salt Marsh through an integrative study at the microbial scale. The pink berries are macroscopic, photosynthetic microbial aggregates composed primarily of two closely associated species: sulfide-oxidizing purple sulfur bacteria (PB-PSB1) and sulfate-reducing bacteria (PB-SRB1). Using metagenomic sequencing and (34) S-enriched sulfate stable isotope probing coupled with nanoSIMS, we demonstrate interspecies transfer of reduced sulfur metabolites from PB-SRB1 to PB-PSB1. The pink berries catalyse net sulfide oxidation and maintain internal sulfide concentrations of 0-500 µm. Sulfide within the berries, captured on silver wires and analysed using secondary ion mass spectrometer, increased in abundance towards the berry interior, while δ(34) S-sulfide decreased from 6‰ to -31‰ from the exterior to interior of the berry. These values correspond to sulfate-sulfide isotopic fractionations (15-53‰) consistent with either sulfate reduction or a mixture of reductive and oxidative metabolisms. Together this combined metagenomic and high-resolution isotopic analysis demonstrates active sulfur cycling at the microscale within well-structured macroscopic consortia consisting of sulfide-oxidizing anoxygenic phototrophs and sulfate-reducing bacteria.


Assuntos
Bactérias/metabolismo , Chromatiaceae/metabolismo , Consórcios Microbianos , Enxofre/metabolismo , Áreas Alagadas , Bactérias/genética , Chromatiaceae/genética , Metagenoma , Oxirredução , Fotossíntese , Filogenia , Sulfatos/metabolismo , Sulfetos/metabolismo
12.
Geochem Trans ; 15: 12, 2014.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25183951

RESUMO

Shallow-sea (5 m depth) hydrothermal venting off Milos Island provides an ideal opportunity to target transitions between igneous abiogenic sulfide inputs and biogenic sulfide production during microbial sulfate reduction. Seafloor vent features include large (>1 m(2)) white patches containing hydrothermal minerals (elemental sulfur and orange/yellow patches of arsenic-sulfides) and cells of sulfur oxidizing and reducing microorganisms. Sulfide-sensitive film deployed in the vent and non-vent sediments captured strong geochemical spatial patterns that varied from advective to diffusive sulfide transport from the subsurface. Despite clear visual evidence for the close association of vent organisms and hydrothermalism, the sulfur and oxygen isotope composition of pore fluids did not permit delineation of a biotic signal separate from an abiotic signal. Hydrogen sulfide (H2S) in the free gas had uniform δ(34)S values (2.5 ± 0.28‰, n = 4) that were nearly identical to pore water H2S (2.7 ± 0.36‰, n = 21). In pore water sulfate, there were no paired increases in δ(34)SSO4 and δ(18)OSO4 as expected of microbial sulfate reduction. Instead, pore water δ(34)SSO4 values decreased (from approximately 21‰ to 17‰) as temperature increased (up to 97.4°C) across each hydrothermal feature. We interpret the inverse relationship between temperature and δ(34)SSO4 as a mixing process between oxic seawater and (34)S-depleted hydrothermal inputs that are oxidized during seawater entrainment. An isotope mass balance model suggests secondary sulfate from sulfide oxidation provides at least 15% of the bulk sulfate pool. Coincident with this trend in δ(34)SSO4, the oxygen isotope composition of sulfate tended to be (18)O-enriched in low pH (<5), high temperature (>75°C) pore waters. The shift toward high δ(18)OSO4 is consistent with equilibrium isotope exchange under acidic and high temperature conditions. The source of H2S contained in hydrothermal fluids could not be determined with the present dataset; however, the end-member δ(34)S value of H2S discharged to the seafloor is consistent with equilibrium isotope exchange with subsurface anhydrite veins at a temperature of ~300°C. Any biological sulfur cycling within these hydrothermal systems is masked by abiotic chemical reactions driven by mixing between low-sulfate, H2S-rich hydrothermal fluids and oxic, sulfate-rich seawater.

14.
Geobiology ; 20(1): 60-78, 2022 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34331395

RESUMO

The sedimentary pyrite sulfur isotope (δ34 S) record is an archive of ancient microbial sulfur cycling and environmental conditions. Interpretations of pyrite δ34 S signatures in sediments deposited in microbial mat ecosystems are based on studies of modern microbial mat porewater sulfide δ34 S geochemistry. Pyrite δ34 S values often capture δ34 S signatures of porewater sulfide at the location of pyrite formation. However, microbial mats are dynamic environments in which biogeochemical cycling shifts vertically on diurnal cycles. Therefore, there is a need to study how the location of pyrite formation impacts pyrite δ34 S patterns in these dynamic systems. Here, we present diurnal porewater sulfide δ34 S trends and δ34 S values of pyrite and iron monosulfides from Middle Island Sinkhole, Lake Huron. The sediment-water interface of this sinkhole hosts a low-oxygen cyanobacterial mat ecosystem, which serves as a useful location to explore preservation of sedimentary pyrite δ34 S signatures in early Earth environments. Porewater sulfide δ34 S values vary by up to ~25‰ throughout the day due to light-driven changes in surface microbial community activity that propagate downwards, affecting porewater geochemistry as deep as 7.5 cm in the sediment. Progressive consumption of the sulfate reservoir drives δ34 S variability, instead of variations in average cell-specific sulfate reduction rates and/or sulfide oxidation at different depths in the sediment. The δ34 S values of pyrite are similar to porewater sulfide δ34 S values near the mat surface. We suggest that oxidative sulfur cycling and other microbial activity promote pyrite formation in and immediately adjacent to the microbial mat and that iron geochemistry limits further pyrite formation with depth in the sediment. These results imply that primary δ34 S signatures of pyrite deposited in organic-rich, iron-poor microbial mat environments capture information about microbial sulfur cycling and environmental conditions at the mat surface and are only minimally affected by deeper sedimentary processes during early diagenesis.


Assuntos
Cianobactérias , Microbiota , Sedimentos Geológicos/química , Ferro/química , Oxigênio , Sulfetos/química , Isótopos de Enxofre/análise
15.
Nat Commun ; 12(1): 4403, 2021 07 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34285238

RESUMO

Sulfur cycling is ubiquitous in sedimentary environments, where it mediates organic carbon remineralization, impacting both local and global redox budgets, and leaving an imprint in pyrite sulfur isotope ratios (δ34Spyr). It is unclear to what extent stratigraphic δ34Spyr variations reflect local aspects of the depositional environment or microbial activity versus global sulfur-cycle variations. Here, we couple carbon-nitrogen-sulfur concentrations and stable isotopes to identify clear influences on δ34Spyr of local environmental changes along the Peru margin. Stratigraphically coherent glacial-interglacial δ34Spyr fluctuations (>30‰) were mediated by Oxygen Minimum Zone intensification/expansion and local enhancement of organic matter deposition. The higher resulting microbial sulfate reduction rates led to more effective drawdown and 34S-enrichment of residual porewater sulfate and sulfide produced from it, some of which is preserved in pyrite. We identify organic carbon loading as a major influence on δ34Spyr, adding to the growing body of evidence highlighting the local controls on these records.


Assuntos
Bactérias Anaeróbias/metabolismo , Sedimentos Geológicos/microbiologia , Ferro/metabolismo , Oxigênio/metabolismo , Sulfetos/metabolismo , Enxofre/metabolismo , Carbono/metabolismo , Ciclo do Carbono , Geografia , Sedimentos Geológicos/análise , Sedimentos Geológicos/química , Ferro/química , Oxirredução , Peru , Sulfetos/química , Isótopos de Enxofre/análise
16.
Front Microbiol ; 11: 529317, 2020.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33072004

RESUMO

The use of stable isotopes to trace biogeochemical sulfur cycling relies on an understanding of how isotopic fractionation is imposed by metabolic networks. We investigated the effects of the first two enzymatic steps in the dissimilatory sulfate reduction (DSR) network - sulfate permease and sulfate adenylyl transferase (Sat) - on the sulfur and oxygen isotopic composition of residual sulfate. Mutant strains of Desulfovibrio vulgaris str. Hildenborough (DvH) with perturbed expression of these enzymes were grown in batch culture, with a subset grown in continuous culture, to examine the impact of these enzymatic steps on growth rate, cell specific sulfate reduction rate and isotopic fractionations in comparison to the wild type strain. Deletion of several permease genes resulted in only small (∼1‰) changes in sulfur isotope fractionation, a difference that approaches the uncertainties of the measurement. Mutants that perturb Sat expression show higher fractionations than the wild type strain. This increase probably relates to an increased material flux between sulfate and APS, allowing an increase in the expressed fractionation of rate-limiting APS reductase. This work illustrates that flux through the initial steps of the DSR pathway can affect the fractionation imposed by the overall pathway, even though these steps are themselves likely to impose only small fractionations.

17.
Astrobiology ; 20(4): 525-536, 2020 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31859527

RESUMO

Uncovering and understanding the chemical and fossil record of ancient life is crucial to understanding how life arose, evolved, and distributed itself across Earth. Potential signs of ancient life, however, are often challenging to establish as definitively biological and require multiple lines of evidence. Hydrothermal silica deposits may preserve some of the most ancient evidence of life on Earth, and such deposits are also suggested to exist on the surface of Mars. Here we use micron-scale elemental mapping by secondary ion mass spectrometry to explore for trace elements that are preferentially sequestered by microbial life and subsequently preserved in hydrothermal deposits. The spatial distributions and concentrations of trace elements associated with life in such hydrothermal silica deposits may have a novel application as a biosignature in constraining ancient life on Earth as well as the search for evidence of past life on Mars. We find that active microbial mats and recent siliceous sinter deposits from an alkaline hot spring in Yellowstone National Park appear to sequester and preserve Ga, Fe, and perhaps Mn through early diagenesis as indicators of the presence of life during formation.


Assuntos
Sedimentos Geológicos/química , Fontes Termais , Dióxido de Silício/química , Oligoelementos/análise , Planeta Terra , Gálio/análise , Ferro/análise , Manganês/análise , Espectrometria de Massas , Montana , Origem da Vida
18.
PLoS One ; 15(6): e0234175, 2020.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32502166

RESUMO

Shallow-sea hydrothermal systems, like their deep-sea and terrestrial counterparts, can serve as relatively accessible portals into the microbial ecology of subsurface environments. In this study, we determined the chemical composition of 47 sediment porewater samples along a transect from a diffuse shallow-sea hydrothermal vent to a non-thermal background area in Paleochori Bay, Milos Island, Greece. These geochemical data were combined with thermodynamic calculations to quantify potential sources of energy that may support in situ chemolithotrophy. The Gibbs energies (ΔGr) of 730 redox reactions involving 23 inorganic H-, O-, C-, N-, S-, Fe-, Mn-, and As-bearing compounds were calculated. Of these reactions, 379 were exergonic at one or more sampling locations. The greatest energy yields were from anaerobic CO oxidation with NO2- (-136 to -162 kJ/mol e-), followed by reactions in which the electron acceptor/donor pairs were O2/CO, NO3-/CO, and NO2-/H2S. When expressed as energy densities (where the concentration of the limiting reactant is taken into account), a different set of redox reactions are the most exergonic: in sediments affected by hydrothermal input, sulfide oxidation with a range of electron acceptors or nitrite reduction with different electron donors provide 85~245 J per kg of sediment, whereas in sediments less affected or unaffected by hydrothermal input, various S0 oxidation reactions and aerobic respiration reactions with several different electron donors are most energy-yielding (80~95 J per kg of sediment). A model that considers seawater mixing with hydrothermal fluids revealed that there is up to ~50 times more energy available for microorganisms that can use S0 or H2S as electron donors and NO2- or O2 as electron acceptors compared to other reactions. In addition to revealing likely metabolic pathways in the near-surface and subsurface mixing zones, thermodynamic calculations like these can help guide novel microbial cultivation efforts to isolate new species.


Assuntos
Metabolismo Energético , Fontes Hidrotermais , Grécia , Fontes Hidrotermais/microbiologia , Ilhas , Termodinâmica
19.
Geobiology ; 17(5): 564-576, 2019 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31180189

RESUMO

Microbial sulfur cycling in marine sediments often occurs in environments characterized by transient chemical gradients that affect both the availability of nutrients and the activity of microbes. High turnover rates of intermediate valence sulfur compounds and the intermittent availability of oxygen in these systems greatly impact the activity of sulfur-oxidizing micro-organisms in particular. In this study, the thiosulfate-oxidizing hydrothermal vent bacterium Thiomicrospira thermophila strain EPR85 was grown in continuous culture at a range of dissolved oxygen concentrations (0.04-1.9 mM) and high pressure (5-10 MPa) in medium buffered at pH 8. Thiosulfate oxidation under these conditions produced tetrathionate, sulfate, and elemental sulfur, in contrast to previous closed-system experiments at ambient pressure during which thiosulfate was quantitatively oxidized to sulfate. The maximum observed specific growth rate at 5 MPa pressure under unlimited O2 was 0.25 hr-1 . This is comparable to the µmax (0.28 hr-1 ) observed at low pH (<6) at ambient pressure when T. thermophila produces the same mix of sulfur species. The half-saturation constant for O2 ( KO2 ) estimated from this study was 0.2 mM (at a cell density of 105 cells/ml) and was robust at all pressures tested (0.4-10 MPa), consistent with piezotolerant behavior of this strain. The cell-specific KO2 was determined to be 1.5 pmol O2 /cell. The concentrations of products formed were correlated with oxygen availability, with tetrathionate production in excess of sulfate production at all pressure conditions tested. This study provides evidence for transient sulfur storage during times when substrate concentration exceeds cell-specific KO2 and subsequent consumption when oxygen dropped below that threshold. These results may be common among sulfur oxidizers in a variety of environments (e.g., deep marine sediments to photosynthetic microbial mats).


Assuntos
Sedimentos Geológicos/química , Oxigênio/análise , Piscirickettsiaceae/metabolismo , Enxofre/metabolismo , Tiossulfatos/metabolismo , Oxirredução , Pressão , Água do Mar/microbiologia
20.
Geobiology ; 17(2): 199-222, 2019 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30548907

RESUMO

Environmental fluctuations are recorded in a variety of sedimentary archives of lacustrine depositional systems. Geochemical signals recovered from bottom sediments in closed-basin lakes are among the most sensitive paleoenvironmental indicators and are commonly used in reconstructing lake evolution. Microbialites (i.e., organosedimentary deposits accreted through microbial trapping and binding of detrital sediment or in situ mineral precipitation on organics [Palaios, 2, 1987, 241]), however, have been largely overlooked as paleoenvironmental repositories. Here, we investigate concentrically laminated mineralized microbialites from Laguna Negra, a high-altitude (4,100 m above sea level) hypersaline, closed-basin lake in northwestern Argentina, and explore the potential for recovery of environmental signals from these unique sedimentary archives. Spatial heterogeneity in hydrological regime helps define zones inside Laguna Negra, each with their own morphologically distinct microbialite type. Most notably, platey microbialites (in Zone 3A) are precipitated by evaporative concentration processes, while discoidal oncolites (in Zone 3C) are interpreted result from fluid mixing and biologically mediated nucleation. This spatial heterogeneity is reflected in petrographically distinct carbonate fabrics: micritic, botryoidal, and isopachous. Fabric type is interpreted to reflect a combination of physical and biological influences during mineralization, and paired C-isotope measurement of carbonate and organic matter supports ecological differences as a dominant control on C-isotopic evolution between zones. Laminae of Laguna Negra microbialites preserve a range of δ13 Ccarb from +5.75‰ to +18.25‰ and δ18 Ocarb from -2.04‰ to +9.28‰. Temporal trends of lower carbon and oxygen isotopic compositions suggest that the influence of CO2 degassing associated with evaporation has decreased over time. Combined, these results indicate that microbialite archives can provide data that aid in interpretation of both lake paleohydrology and paleoenvironmental change.


Assuntos
Bactérias/metabolismo , Sedimentos Geológicos/química , Lagos/química , Argentina , Carbonatos/metabolismo , Minerais/metabolismo , Isótopos de Oxigênio/metabolismo
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