Reitschuler Christoph, Spötl Christoph, Hofmann Katrin, Wagner Andreas O, Illmer Paul
Institute of Microbiology, University of Innsbruck, Technikerstrasse 25, A-6020, Innsbruck, Austria.
Institute of Geology, University of Innsbruck, Innrain 52, A-6020, Innsbruck, Austria.
Microb Ecol. 2016 Apr;71(3):686-99. doi: 10.1007/s00248-015-0727-z. Epub 2016 Jan 20.
(Alpine) caves are, in general, windows into the Earth's subsurface. Frequently occurring structures in caves such as moonmilk (secondary calcite deposits) offer the opportunity to study intraterrestrial microbial communities, adapted to oligotrophic and cold conditions. This is an important research field regarding the dimensions of subsurface systems and cold regions on Earth. On a methodological level, moonmilk deposits from 11 caves in the Austrian Alps were collected aseptically and investigated using a molecular (qPCR and DGGE sequencing-based) methodology in order to study the occurrence, abundance, and diversity of the prevailing native Archaea community. Furthermore, these Archaea were enriched in complex media and studied regarding their physiology, with a media selection targeting different physiological requirements, e.g. methanogenesis and ammonia oxidation. The investigation of the environmental samples showed that all moonmilk deposits were characterized by the presence of the same few habitat-specific archaeal species, showing high abundances and constituting about 50 % of the total microbial communities. The largest fraction of these Archaea was ammonia-oxidizing Thaumarchaeota, while another abundant group was very distantly related to extremophilic Euryarchaeota (Moonmilk Archaea). The archaeal community showed a depth- and oxygen-dependent stratification. Archaea were much more abundant (around 80 %), compared to bacteria, in the actively forming surface part of moonmilk deposits, decreasing to about 5 % down to the bedrock. Via extensive cultivation efforts, it was possible to enrich the enigmatic Moonmilk Archaea and also AOA significantly above the level of bacteria. The most expedient prerequisites for cultivating Moonmilk Archaea were a cold temperature, oligotrophic conditions, short incubation times, a moonmilk surface inoculum, the application of erythromycin, and anaerobic (microaerophilic) conditions. On a physiological level, it seems that methanogenesis is of marginal importance, while ammonia oxidation and a still undiscovered metabolic pathway are vital elements in the (archaeal) moonmilk biome.
(阿尔卑斯山的)洞穴通常是了解地球地下情况的窗口。洞穴中常见的结构,如月奶石(次生方解石沉积物),为研究适应贫营养和寒冷条件的地下微生物群落提供了机会。这是一个关于地球地下系统和寒冷地区规模的重要研究领域。在方法层面上,无菌采集了奥地利阿尔卑斯山11个洞穴的月奶石沉积物,并使用分子方法(基于定量聚合酶链反应和变性梯度凝胶电泳测序)进行研究,以探究优势本地古菌群落的存在、丰度和多样性。此外,这些古菌在复杂培养基中得到富集,并针对其生理学进行研究,培养基的选择针对不同的生理需求,例如甲烷生成和氨氧化。对环境样本的调查表明,所有月奶石沉积物的特征都是存在相同的少数几种特定栖息地的古菌物种,这些物种丰度很高,约占微生物群落总数的50%。这些古菌中最大的一部分是氨氧化泉古菌,而另一个丰富的类群与嗜极端环境的广古菌(月奶石古菌)关系非常疏远。古菌群落呈现出与深度和氧气相关的分层现象。在月奶石沉积物活跃形成的表面部分,古菌比细菌丰富得多(约80%),向下至基岩处则降至约5%。通过广泛的培养努力,有可能显著富集神秘的月奶石古菌以及氨氧化古菌,使其数量超过细菌。培养月奶石古菌最适宜的条件是低温、贫营养条件、短培养时间、月奶石表面接种物、应用红霉素以及厌氧(微需氧)条件。在生理层面上,甲烷生成似乎不太重要,而氨氧化和一种尚未发现的代谢途径是(古菌)月奶石生物群落中的关键要素。