Interdisciplinary Centre of Marine and Environmental Research, University of Porto Porto, Portugal.
Institute of Biomedical Sciences University of Porto Porto, Portugal.
Front Microbiol. 2014 Sep 30;5:515. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2014.00515. eCollection 2014.
The McMurdo Dry Valleys of Antarctica are considered to be one of the most physically and chemically extreme terrestrial environments on the Earth. However, little is known about the organisms involved in nitrogen transformations in these environments. In this study, we investigated the diversity and abundance of ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) and bacteria (AOB) in four McMurdo Dry Valleys with highly variable soil geochemical properties and climatic conditions: Miers Valley, Upper Wright Valley, Beacon Valley and Battleship Promontory. The bacterial communities of these four Dry Valleys have been examined previously, and the results suggested that the extremely localized bacterial diversities are likely driven by the disparate physicochemical conditions associated with these locations. Here we showed that AOB and AOA amoA gene diversity was generally low; only four AOA and three AOB operational taxonomic units (OTUs) were identified from a total of 420 AOA and AOB amoA clones. Quantitative PCR analysis of amoA genes revealed clear differences in the relative abundances of AOA and AOB amoA genes among samples from the four dry valleys. Although AOB amoA gene dominated the ammonia-oxidizing community in soils from Miers Valley and Battleship Promontory, AOA amoA gene were more abundant in samples from Upper Wright and Beacon Valleys, where the environmental conditions are considerably harsher (e.g., extremely low soil C/N ratios and much higher soil electrical conductivity). Correlations between environmental variables and amoA genes copy numbers, as examined by redundancy analysis (RDA), revealed that higher AOA/AOB ratios were closely related to soils with high salts and Cu contents and low pH. Our findings hint at a dichotomized distribution of AOA and AOB within the Dry Valleys, potentially driven by environmental constraints.
南极洲的麦克默多干谷被认为是地球上物理和化学条件最极端的陆地环境之一。然而,对于这些环境中参与氮转化的生物,人们知之甚少。在这项研究中,我们调查了四个具有高度变化的土壤地球化学性质和气候条件的麦克默多干谷(迈尔斯谷、上赖特谷、比克内尔湾和战舰岬)中氨氧化古菌(AOA)和细菌(AOB)的多样性和丰度。这四个干谷的细菌群落以前已经进行了研究,结果表明,极其局部的细菌多样性可能是由与这些地点相关的不同理化条件驱动的。在这里,我们表明 AOB 和 AOA amoA 基因多样性通常较低;从总共 420 个 AOA 和 AOB amoA 克隆中仅鉴定出 4 个 AOA 和 3 个 AOB 操作分类单元(OTU)。amoA 基因的定量 PCR 分析显示,来自四个干谷的样本中 AOA 和 AOB amoA 基因的相对丰度存在明显差异。尽管 AOB amoA 基因在迈尔斯谷和战舰岬的土壤中主导氨氧化群落,但 AOA amoA 基因在环境条件相当恶劣的上赖特谷和比克内尔湾的样本中更为丰富(例如,土壤 C/N 比极低,土壤电导率高得多)。冗余分析(RDA)检查环境变量和 amoA 基因拷贝数之间的相关性表明,较高的 AOA/AOB 比值与富含盐分和 Cu 含量、pH 值较低的土壤密切相关。我们的发现暗示了 AOA 和 AOB 在干谷内的二分分布,这可能是由环境限制驱动的。