School of Biological Sciences, College of Natural Sciences, Bangor University, Deiniol Road, Bangor, LL57 2UW, UK.
Environ Microbiol. 2011 Aug;13(8):2092-104. doi: 10.1111/j.1462-2920.2011.02434.x. Epub 2011 Mar 7.
The geochemical dynamics and composition of microbial communities within a low-temperature (≈ 8.5°C), long-abandoned (> 90 years) underground pyrite mine (Cae Coch, located in north Wales) were investigated. Surface water percolating through fractures in the residual pyrite ore body that forms the roof of the mine becomes extremely acidic and iron-enriched due to microbially accelerated oxidative dissolution of the sulfide mineral. Water droplets on the mine roof were found to host a very limited diversity of exclusively autotrophic microorganisms, dominated by the recently described psychrotolerant iron/sulfur-oxidizing acidophile Acidithiobacillus ferrivorans, and smaller numbers of iron-oxidizing Leptospirillum ferrooxidans. In contrast, flowing water within the mine chamber was colonized with vast macroscopic microbial growths, in the form of acid streamers and microbial stalactites, where the dominant microorganisms were Betaproteobacteria (autotrophic iron oxidizers such as 'Ferrovum myxofaciens' and a bacterium related to Gallionella ferruginea). An isolated pool within the mine showed some similarity (although greater biodiversity) to the roof droplets, and was the only site where archaea were relatively abundant. Bacteria not previously associated with extremely acidic, metal-rich environments (a Sphingomonas sp. and Ralstonia pickettii) were found within the abandoned mine. Data supported the hypothesis that the Cae Coch ecosystem is underpinned by acidophilic, mostly autotrophic, bacteria that use ferrous iron present in the pyrite ore body as their source of energy, with a limited role for sulfur-based autotrophy. Results of this study highlight the importance of novel bacterial species (At. ferrivorans and acidophilic iron-oxidizing Betaproteobacteria) in mediating mineral oxidation and redox transformations of iron in acidic, low-temperature environments.
研究了位于北威尔士的一个低温(≈8.5°C)、长期废弃(>90 年)地下黄铁矿矿(Cae Coch)中微生物群落的地球化学动力学和组成。由于微生物加速了硫化物矿物的氧化溶解,通过残矿体裂缝渗透的地表水变得非常酸性和富铁。矿顶的水滴被发现只含有非常有限的专性自养微生物多样性,主要由最近描述的耐寒铁/硫氧化嗜酸菌 Acidithiobacillus ferrivorans 和少量的铁氧化菌 Leptospirillum ferrooxidans 组成。相比之下,矿室内的流动水则被大量的宏观微生物生长所占据,以酸流和微生物钟乳石的形式存在,其中主要的微生物是 Betaproteobacteria(自养铁氧化菌,如“Ferrovum myxofaciens”和一种与 Gallionella ferruginea 相关的细菌)。矿内一个孤立的水池与屋顶水滴有些相似(尽管生物多样性更大),是唯一相对丰富的古菌的地方。在废弃的矿中发现了一些以前与极酸性、富金属环境无关的细菌(一种 Sphingomonas sp. 和 Ralstonia pickettii)。数据支持了这样一种假设,即 Cae Coch 生态系统是由嗜酸的、主要是自养的细菌支撑的,这些细菌利用黄铁矿体中的亚铁作为能源,硫自养的作用有限。本研究的结果强调了新型细菌(At. ferrivorans 和嗜酸铁氧化 Betaproteobacteria)在介导酸性低温环境中矿物氧化和铁的氧化还原转化中的重要性。