Donachie S P, Hou S, Lee K S, Riley C W, Pikina A, Belisle C, Kempe S, Gregory T S, Bossuyt A, Boerema J, Liu J, Freitas T A, Malahoff A, Alam M
Department of Microbiology, University of Hawai, 2538 The Mall, Snyder Hall #111, Honolulu, HI 96822, USA.
Microb Ecol. 2004 Nov;48(4):509-20. doi: 10.1007/s00248-004-0217-1. Epub 2004 Oct 28.
The Hawaiian Archipelago is a "biodiversity hotspot" where significant endemism among eukaryotes has evolved through geographic isolation and local topography. To address the absence of corresponding region-wide data on Hawaii's microbiota, we compiled the first 16S SSU rDNA clone libraries and cultivated bacteria from five Hawaiian lakes, an anchialine pool, and the Lō'ihi submarine volcano. These sites offer diverse niches over approximately 5000 m elevation and approximately 1150 nautical miles. Each site hosted a distinct prokaryotic community dominated by Bacteria. Cloned sequences fell into 158 groups from 18 Bacteria phyla, while seven were unassigned and two belonged in the Euryarchaeota. Only seven operational taxonomic units (each OTU comprised sequences that shared > or =97% sequence identity) occurred in more than one site. Pure bacterial cultures from all sites fell into 155 groups (each group comprised pure cultures that shared > or =97% 16S SSU rDNA sequence identity) from 10 Bacteria phyla; 15 Proteobacteria and Firmicutes were cultivated from more than one site. One hundred OTUs (60%) and 52 (33.3%) cultures shared <97% 16S SSU rDNA sequence identity with published sequences. Community structure reflected habitat chemistry; most delta-Proteobacteria occurred in anoxic and sulfidic waters of one lake, while beta-Proteobacteria were cultivated exclusively from fresh or brackish waters. Novel sequences that affiliate with an Antarctic-specific clade of Deinococci, and Candidate Divisions TM7 and BRC1, extend the geographic ranges of these phyla. Globally and locally remote, as well as physically and chemically diverse, Hawaiian aquatic habitats provide unique niches for the evolution of novel communities and microorganisms.
夏威夷群岛是一个“生物多样性热点地区”,真核生物中的显著特有现象在这里通过地理隔离和局部地形演变而来。为了解决夏威夷微生物群缺乏相应区域范围数据的问题,我们编制了首个16S SSU rDNA克隆文库,并从五个夏威夷湖泊、一个咸淡水湖和罗伊希海底火山中培养细菌。这些地点在海拔约5000米和距离约1150海里的范围内提供了多样的生态位。每个地点都有一个以细菌为主导的独特原核生物群落。克隆序列分为来自18个细菌门的158个组,其中7个未分类,2个属于广古菌门。只有7个操作分类单元(每个OTU包含序列相似度≥97%的序列)出现在不止一个地点。所有地点的纯细菌培养物分为来自10个细菌门的155个组(每个组包含16S SSU rDNA序列相似度≥97%的纯培养物);从不止一个地点培养出了15个变形菌门和厚壁菌门。100个OTU(60%)和52个(33.3%)培养物与已发表序列的16S SSU rDNA序列相似度<97%。群落结构反映了栖息地化学性质;大多数δ-变形菌出现在一个湖泊的缺氧和含硫水域,而β-变形菌仅从淡水或微咸水中培养出来。与嗜热放线菌南极特异性分支以及候选分类群TM7和BRC1相关的新序列扩展了这些门的地理范围。夏威夷的水生栖息地在全球和本地都很偏远,而且在物理和化学性质上也各不相同,为新群落和微生物的进化提供了独特的生态位。