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1.
Commun Biol ; 4(1): 1006, 2021 08 25.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34433861

Temperature and bioavailable energy control the distribution of life on Earth, and interact with each other due to the dependency of biological energy requirements on temperature. Here we analyze how temperature-energy interactions structure sediment microbial communities in two hydrothermally active areas of Guaymas Basin. Sites from one area experience advective input of thermogenically produced electron donors by seepage from deeper layers, whereas sites from the other area are diffusion-dominated and electron donor-depleted. In both locations, Archaea dominate at temperatures >45 °C and Bacteria at temperatures <10 °C. Yet, at the phylum level and below, there are clear differences. Hot seep sites have high proportions of typical hydrothermal vent and hot spring taxa. By contrast, high-temperature sites without seepage harbor mainly novel taxa belonging to phyla that are widespread in cold subseafloor sediment. Our results suggest that in hydrothermal sediments temperature determines domain-level dominance, whereas temperature-energy interactions structure microbial communities at the phylum-level and below.


Geologic Sediments/microbiology , Hydrothermal Vents/microbiology , Microbiota , Seawater/microbiology , Bacterial Physiological Phenomena , Energy Metabolism , Temperature
2.
Science ; 370(6521): 1230-1234, 2020 12 04.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33273103

Microorganisms in marine subsurface sediments substantially contribute to global biomass. Sediments warmer than 40°C account for roughly half the marine sediment volume, but the processes mediated by microbial populations in these hard-to-access environments are poorly understood. We investigated microbial life in up to 1.2-kilometer-deep and up to 120°C hot sediments in the Nankai Trough subduction zone. Above 45°C, concentrations of vegetative cells drop two orders of magnitude and endospores become more than 6000 times more abundant than vegetative cells. Methane is biologically produced and oxidized until sediments reach 80° to 85°C. In 100° to 120°C sediments, isotopic evidence and increased cell concentrations demonstrate the activity of acetate-degrading hyperthermophiles. Above 45°C, populated zones alternate with zones up to 192 meters thick where microbes were undetectable.


Endospore-Forming Bacteria/growth & development , Geologic Sediments/microbiology , Hot Temperature , Acetates/metabolism , Endospore-Forming Bacteria/metabolism , Geologic Sediments/chemistry , Methane/metabolism
3.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 117(27): 15911-15922, 2020 07 07.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32576690

Through a process called "bioturbation," burrowing macrofauna have altered the seafloor habitat and modified global carbon cycling since the Cambrian. However, the impact of macrofauna on the community structure of microorganisms is poorly understood. Here, we show that microbial communities across bioturbated, but geochemically and sedimentologically divergent, continental margin sites are highly similar but differ clearly from those in nonbioturbated surface and underlying subsurface sediments. Solid- and solute-phase geochemical analyses combined with modeled bioturbation activities reveal that dissolved O2 introduction by burrow ventilation is the major driver of archaeal community structure. By contrast, solid-phase reworking, which regulates the distribution of fresh, algal organic matter, is the main control of bacterial community structure. In nonbioturbated surface sediments and in subsurface sediments, bacterial and archaeal communities are more divergent between locations and appear mainly driven by site-specific differences in organic carbon sources.


Geologic Sediments/chemistry , Geologic Sediments/microbiology , Microbiota/physiology , Archaea/classification , Archaea/genetics , Archaea/metabolism , Bacteria/classification , Bacteria/genetics , Bacteria/metabolism , Biodiversity , Carbon/metabolism , Nitrogen/metabolism , Oxygen/metabolism , Phylogeny , Seawater/chemistry , Seawater/microbiology
4.
Environ Microbiol Rep ; 7(3): 404-13, 2015 Jun.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25581373

Sediments across the Namibian continental margin feature a strong microbial activity gradient at their surface. This is reflected in ammonium concentrations of < 10 µM in oligotrophic abyssal plain sediments near the South Atlantic Gyre compared with ammonium concentrations of > 700 µM in upwelling areas near the coast. Here we address changes in apparent abundance and structure of ammonia-oxidizing archaeal and bacterial communities (AOA and AOB) along a transect of seven sediment stations across the Namibian shelf by analysing their respective ammonia monooxygenase genes (amoA). The relative abundance of archaeal and bacterial amoA (g(-1) DNA) decreased with increasing ammonium concentrations, and bacterial amoA frequently outnumbered archaeal amoA at the sediment-water interface [0-1 cm below seafloor (cmbsf)]. In contrast, AOA were apparently as abundant as AOB or dominated in several deeper (> 10 cmbsf), anoxic sediment layers. Phylogenetic analyses showed a change within the AOA community along the transect, from two clusters without cultured representatives at the gyre to Nitrososphaera and Nitrosopumilus clusters in the upwelling region. AOB almost exclusively belonged to the Nitrosospira cluster 1. Our results suggest that this predominantly marine AOB lineage without cultured representatives can thrive at low ammonium concentrations and is active in the marine nitrogen cycle.


Ammonia/metabolism , Archaea/isolation & purification , Archaea/metabolism , Bacteria/isolation & purification , Bacteria/metabolism , Biodiversity , Geologic Sediments/microbiology , Atlantic Ocean , Cluster Analysis , Molecular Sequence Data , Oxidation-Reduction , Oxidoreductases/genetics , Phylogeny , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Sequence Homology
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