Department of Genetics and Evolution, University of Geneva, CH-1211 Geneva 4, Switzerland.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2011 Aug 9;108(32):13177-82. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1018426108. Epub 2011 Jul 25.
Deep-sea floors represent one of the largest and most complex ecosystems on Earth but remain essentially unexplored. The vastness and remoteness of this ecosystem make deep-sea sampling difficult, hampering traditional taxonomic observations and diversity assessment. This problem is particularly true in the case of the deep-sea meiofauna, which largely comprises small-sized, fragile, and difficult-to-identify metazoans and protists. Here, we introduce an ultra-deep sequencing-based metagenetic approach to examine the richness of benthic foraminifera, a principal component of deep-sea meiofauna. We used Illumina sequencing technology to assess foraminiferal richness in 31 unsieved deep-sea sediment samples from five distinct oceanic regions. We sequenced an extremely short fragment (36 bases) of the small subunit ribosomal DNA hypervariable region 37f, which has been shown to accurately distinguish foraminiferal species. In total, we obtained 495,978 unique sequences that were grouped into 1,643 operational taxonomic units, of which about half (841) could be reliably assigned to foraminifera. The vast majority of the operational taxonomic units (nearly 90%) were either assigned to early (ancient) lineages of soft-walled, single-chambered (monothalamous) foraminifera or remained undetermined and yet possibly belong to unknown early lineages. Contrasting with the classical view of multichambered taxa dominating foraminiferal assemblages, our work reflects an unexpected diversity of monothalamous lineages that are as yet unknown using conventional micropaleontological observations. Although we can only speculate about their morphology, the immense richness of deep-sea phylotypes revealed by this study suggests that ultra-deep sequencing can improve understanding of deep-sea benthic diversity considered until now as unknowable based on a traditional taxonomic approach.
深海海底是地球上最大和最复杂的生态系统之一,但基本上仍未被探索。这个生态系统的广阔和偏远使得深海采样变得困难,阻碍了传统的分类学观察和多样性评估。在深海小型生物中,这个问题尤为明显,因为它们主要由小型、脆弱和难以识别的后生动物和原生生物组成。在这里,我们介绍了一种基于超深度测序的宏基因组方法,用于检查深海小型生物主要成分——底栖有孔虫的丰富度。我们使用 Illumina 测序技术评估了来自五个不同海洋区域的 31 个未筛选深海沉积物样本中的有孔虫丰富度。我们对小亚基核糖体 DNA 高变区 37f 的极短片段(36 个碱基)进行了测序,该片段已被证明可以准确区分有孔虫物种。总共获得了 495978 个独特序列,将其分为 1643 个操作分类单元,其中约一半(841 个)可以可靠地分配给有孔虫。绝大多数操作分类单元(近 90%)要么被分配给软壁、单室(单瓣)有孔虫的早期(古老)谱系,要么无法确定,可能属于未知的早期谱系。与多室类群主导有孔虫组合的经典观点相反,我们的工作反映了未知的单瓣谱系的多样性,这是使用传统的微体古生物学观察无法发现的。尽管我们只能推测它们的形态,但这项研究揭示的深海生物型的巨大丰富度表明,超深度测序可以提高对深海底栖多样性的理解,而这些多样性迄今为止被认为是基于传统分类学方法无法了解的。