Division of Environmental and Biomolecular Systems, Institute of Environmental Health, Oregon Health & Science University Portland, OR, USA.
School of Marine Sciences, University of Maine Orono, ME, USA.
Front Microbiol. 2015 Mar 11;6:179. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2015.00179. eCollection 2015.
The Earth's crust hosts a subsurface, dark, and oligotrophic biosphere that is poorly understood in terms of the energy supporting its biomass production and impact on food webs at the Earth's surface. Dark oligotrophic volcanic ecosystems (DOVEs) are good environments for investigations of life in the absence of sunlight as they are poor in organics, rich in chemical reactants and well known for chemical exchange with Earth's surface systems. Ice caves near the summit of Mt. Erebus (Antarctica) offer DOVEs in a polar alpine environment that is starved in organics and with oxygenated hydrothermal circulation in highly reducing host rock. We surveyed the microbial communities using PCR, cloning, sequencing and analysis of the small subunit (16S) ribosomal and Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate Carboxylase/Oxygenase (RubisCO) genes in sediment samples from three different caves, two that are completely dark and one that receives snow-filtered sunlight seasonally. The microbial communities in all three caves are composed primarily of Bacteria and fungi; Archaea were not detected. The bacterial communities from these ice caves display low phylogenetic diversity, but with a remarkable diversity of RubisCO genes including new deeply branching Form I clades, implicating the Calvin-Benson-Bassham (CBB) cycle as a pathway of CO2 fixation. The microbial communities in one of the dark caves, Warren Cave, which has a remarkably low phylogenetic diversity, were analyzed in more detail to gain a possible perspective on the energetic basis of the microbial ecosystem in the cave. Atmospheric carbon (CO2 and CO), including from volcanic emissions, likely supplies carbon and/or some of the energy requirements of chemoautotrophic microbial communities in Warren Cave and probably other Mt. Erebus ice caves. Our work casts a first glimpse at Mt. Erebus ice caves as natural laboratories for exploring carbon, energy and nutrient sources in the subsurface biosphere and the nutritional limits on life.
地壳拥有一个地下、黑暗、贫营养的生物圈,其生物质生产所依赖的能量以及对地球表面食物网的影响在很大程度上仍未被了解。黑暗贫营养火山生态系统(DOVEs)是研究无阳光条件下生命的理想环境,因为它们有机物含量低,化学反应剂丰富,并且以与地球表面系统的化学交换而闻名。位于南极洲埃里伯斯山(Mount Erebus)山顶附近的冰洞为 DOVEs 提供了一个极地高山环境,这里有机物匮乏,富含氧化的热液循环,并与富含还原性的宿主岩石进行着强烈的化学交换。我们使用 PCR、克隆、测序和小亚基(16S)核糖体和核酮糖-1,5-二磷酸羧化酶/加氧酶(RubisCO)基因分析,对来自三个不同洞穴的沉积物样本中的微生物群落进行了调查,其中两个洞穴完全黑暗,一个洞穴则季节性地接收雪过滤的阳光。所有三个洞穴中的微生物群落主要由细菌和真菌组成;未检测到古菌。这些冰洞中的细菌群落具有较低的系统发育多样性,但 RubisCO 基因的多样性却非常显著,包括新的深分支 I 类群,暗示卡尔文-本森-巴斯汉姆(Calvin-Benson-Bassham,CBB)循环是 CO2 固定的途径。Warren 洞穴是三个洞穴之一,其细菌群落的系统发育多样性非常低,我们对其进行了更详细的分析,以期对洞穴微生物生态系统的能量基础有一个可能的了解。大气中的碳(CO2 和 CO),包括火山排放的碳,可能为 Warren 洞穴和可能的埃里伯斯山其他冰洞中的化能自养微生物群落提供碳和/或部分能量需求。我们的工作首次揭示了埃里伯斯山冰洞作为探索地下生物圈中碳、能量和营养源以及生命营养限制的天然实验室。