White Richard Allen, Power Ian M, Dipple Gregory M, Southam Gordon, Suttle Curtis A
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of British Columbia Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Department of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences, University of British Columbia Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Front Microbiol. 2015 Sep 23;6:966. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2015.00966. eCollection 2015.
Within the subarctic climate of Clinton Creek, Yukon, Canada, lies an abandoned and flooded open-pit asbestos mine that harbors rapidly growing microbialites. To understand their formation we completed a metagenomic community profile of the microbialites and their surrounding sediments. Assembled metagenomic data revealed that bacteria within the phylum Proteobacteria numerically dominated this system, although the relative abundances of taxa within the phylum varied among environments. Bacteria belonging to Alphaproteobacteria and Gammaproteobacteria were dominant in the microbialites and sediments, respectively. The microbialites were also home to many other groups associated with microbialite formation including filamentous cyanobacteria and dissimilatory sulfate-reducing Deltaproteobacteria, consistent with the idea of a shared global microbialite microbiome. Other members were present that are typically not associated with microbialites including Gemmatimonadetes and iron-oxidizing Betaproteobacteria, which participate in carbon metabolism and iron cycling. Compared to the sediments, the microbialite microbiome has significantly more genes associated with photosynthetic processes (e.g., photosystem II reaction centers, carotenoid, and chlorophyll biosynthesis) and carbon fixation (e.g., CO dehydrogenase). The Clinton Creek microbialite communities had strikingly similar functional potentials to non-lithifying microbial mats from the Canadian High Arctic and Antarctica, but are functionally distinct, from non-lithifying mats or biofilms from Yellowstone. Clinton Creek microbialites also share metabolic genes (R (2) < 0.750) with freshwater microbial mats from Cuatro Ciénegas, Mexico, but are more similar to polar Arctic mats (R (2) > 0.900). These metagenomic profiles from an anthropogenic microbialite-forming ecosystem provide context to microbialite formation on a human-relevant timescale.
在加拿大育空地区克林顿溪的亚北极气候区内,有一座废弃且被水淹没的露天石棉矿,其中孕育着快速生长的微生物岩。为了解它们的形成过程,我们完成了对微生物岩及其周围沉积物的宏基因组群落分析。组装后的宏基因组数据显示,变形菌门内的细菌在数量上主导了这个系统,不过该门内各分类单元的相对丰度在不同环境中有所变化。属于α-变形菌纲和γ-变形菌纲的细菌分别在微生物岩和沉积物中占主导地位。微生物岩也是许多与微生物岩形成相关的其他类群的栖息地,包括丝状蓝细菌和异化硫酸盐还原型δ-变形菌纲,这与全球共享的微生物岩微生物群落的观点一致。还存在一些通常与微生物岩无关的其他成员,包括参与碳代谢和铁循环的芽单胞菌门和铁氧化β-变形菌纲。与沉积物相比,微生物岩微生物群落具有更多与光合作用过程(如光系统II反应中心、类胡萝卜素和叶绿素生物合成)和碳固定(如CO脱氢酶)相关的基因。克林顿溪微生物岩群落与来自加拿大北极地区和南极洲的非石化微生物垫具有惊人相似的功能潜力,但在功能上与黄石公园的非石化垫子或生物膜不同。克林顿溪微生物岩还与墨西哥夸特罗谢内加斯的淡水微生物垫共享代谢基因(R² < 0.750),但与极地北极垫子更相似(R² > 0.900)。这些来自人为形成微生物岩的生态系统的宏基因组分析,为在与人类相关的时间尺度上微生物岩的形成提供了背景信息。