Monchamp Marie-Eve, Walser Jean-Claude, Pomati Francesco, Spaak Piet
Eawag, Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, Department of Aquatic Ecology, Dübendorf, Switzerland Institute of Integrative Biology, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH), Zürich, Switzerland
Genetic Diversity Centre (GDC), Department of Environmental Systems Science, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH), Zürich, Switzerland.
Appl Environ Microbiol. 2016 Oct 14;82(21):6472-6482. doi: 10.1128/AEM.02174-16. Print 2016 Nov 1.
We reconstructed cyanobacterial community structure and phylogeny using DNA that was isolated from layers of stratified sediments spanning 200 years of lake history in the perialpine lakes Greifensee and Lake Zurich (Switzerland). Community analysis based on amplification and sequencing of a 400-nucleotide (nt)-long 16S rRNA fragment specific to Cyanobacteria revealed operational taxonomic units (OTUs) capturing the whole phylum, including representatives of a newly characterized clade termed Melainabacteria, which shares common ancestry with Cyanobacteria and has not been previously described in lakes. The reconstruction of cyanobacterial richness and phylogenetic structure was validated using a data set consisting of 40 years of pelagic microscopic counts from each lake. We identified the OTUs assigned to common taxa known to be present in Greifensee and Lake Zurich and found a strong and significant relationship (adjusted R = 0.89; P < 0.001) between pelagic species richness in water and OTU richness in the sediments. The water-sediment richness relationship varied between cyanobacterial orders, indicating that the richness of Chroococcales and Synechococcales may be underestimated by microscopy. PCR detection of the microcystin synthetase gene mcyA confirmed the presence of potentially toxic cyanobacterial taxa over recent years in Greifensee and throughout the last century in Lake Zurich. The approach presented in this study demonstrates that it is possible to reconstruct past pelagic cyanobacterial communities in lakes where the integrity of the sedimentary archive is well preserved and to explore changes in phylogenetic and functional diversity over decade-to-century timescales.
Cyanobacterial blooms can produce toxins that affect water quality, especially under eutrophic conditions, which are a consequence of human-induced climate warming and increased nutrient availability. Lakes worldwide have suffered from regular cyanobacterial blooms over the last century. The lack of long-term data limits our understanding of how these blooms form. We successfully reconstructed the past diversity of whole cyanobacterial communities over two hundred years by sequencing genes preserved in the sediments of two perialpine lakes in Switzerland. We identified changes in diversity over time and validated our results using existing data collected in the same two lakes over the past 40 years. This work shows the potential of our approach for addressing important ecological questions about the effects of a changing environment on lake ecology.
我们利用从瑞士格里芬湖和苏黎世湖这两个阿尔卑斯山周边湖泊200年湖相历史的分层沉积物中分离出的DNA,重建了蓝藻群落结构和系统发育。基于对蓝藻特有的一段400个核苷酸(nt)长的16S rRNA片段进行扩增和测序的群落分析,揭示了涵盖整个门的操作分类单元(OTU),包括一个新鉴定的分支Melainabacteria的代表,该分支与蓝藻有共同祖先,此前未在湖泊中被描述过。利用每个湖泊40年的浮游显微镜计数数据集,对蓝藻丰富度和系统发育结构的重建进行了验证。我们鉴定出了分配给已知存在于格里芬湖和苏黎世湖的常见分类群的OTU,并发现水体中的浮游物种丰富度与沉积物中的OTU丰富度之间存在强烈且显著的关系(调整后的R = 0.89;P < 0.001)。蓝藻目之间的水 - 沉积物丰富度关系有所不同,这表明通过显微镜观察可能低估了色球藻目和聚球藻目的丰富度。对微囊藻毒素合成酶基因mcyA的PCR检测证实,近年来在格里芬湖以及整个上个世纪在苏黎世湖都存在潜在有毒的蓝藻分类群。本研究中提出的方法表明,在沉积档案完整性保存良好的湖泊中,有可能重建过去的浮游蓝藻群落,并探索在十年到世纪时间尺度上系统发育和功能多样性的变化。
蓝藻水华会产生影响水质的毒素,特别是在富营养化条件下,这是人为导致的气候变暖和营养物质可用性增加的结果。在过去的一个世纪里,全球的湖泊都遭受了频繁的蓝藻水华。缺乏长期数据限制了我们对这些水华如何形成的理解。我们通过对瑞士两个阿尔卑斯山周边湖泊沉积物中保存的基因进行测序,成功重建了过去两百多年整个蓝藻群落的多样性。我们确定了多样性随时间的变化,并使用过去40年在这两个相同湖泊中收集的现有数据验证了我们的结果。这项工作展示了我们的方法在解决关于不断变化的环境对湖泊生态影响的重要生态问题方面的潜力。