Herrmann Martina, Wegner Carl-Eric, Taubert Martin, Geesink Patricia, Lehmann Katharina, Yan Lijuan, Lehmann Robert, Totsche Kai Uwe, Küsel Kirsten
Aquatic Geomicrobiology, Institute of Biodiversity, Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Jena, Germany.
German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) Halle-Jena-Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany.
Front Microbiol. 2019 Jun 20;10:1407. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2019.01407. eCollection 2019.
Despite the widely observed predominance of . Patescibacteria in subsurface communities, their input source and ecophysiology are poorly understood. Here we study mechanisms of the formation of a groundwater microbiome and the subsequent differentiation of . Patescibacteria. In the Hainich Critical Zone Exploratory, Germany, we trace the input of microorganisms from forested soils of preferential recharge areas through fractured aquifers along a 5.4 km hillslope well transect. . Patescibacteria were preferentially mobilized from soils and constituted 66% of species-level OTUs shared between seepage and shallow groundwater. These OTUs, mostly related to . Kaiserbacteraceae, . Nomurabacteraceae, and unclassified UBA9983 at the family level, represented a relative abundance of 71.4% of the . Patescibacteria community at the shallowest groundwater well, and still 44.4% at the end of the transect. Several . Patescibacteria subclass-level groups exhibited preferences for different conditions in the two aquifer assemblages investigated: . Kaiserbacteraceae surprisingly showed positive correlations with oxygen concentrations, while . Nomurabacteraceae were negatively correlated. Co-occurrence network analysis revealed a central role of . Patescibacteria in the groundwater microbial communities and pointed to potential associations with specific organisms, including abundant autotrophic taxa involved in nitrogen, sulfur and iron cycling. Strong associations among . Patescibacteria themselves further suggested that for many groups within this phylum, distribution was mainly driven by conditions commonly supporting a fermentative life style without direct dependence on specific hosts. We propose that import from soil, and community differentiation driven by hydrochemical conditions, including the availability of organic resources and potential hosts, determine the success of . Patescibacteria in groundwater environments.
尽管在地下群落中普遍观察到“Patescibacteria”占主导地位,但其输入源和生态生理学仍知之甚少。在这里,我们研究了地下水微生物群落的形成机制以及随后“Patescibacteria”的分化。在德国海尼希关键带探索区,我们沿着一条5.4公里的山坡井剖面追踪了优先补给区森林土壤中的微生物通过裂隙含水层的输入情况。“Patescibacteria”优先从土壤中被 mobilized,并且在渗流和浅层地下水之间共享的物种水平OTU中占66%。这些OTU,在科级水平上大多与“Kaiserbacteraceae”、“Nomurabacteraceae”以及未分类的UBA9983相关,在最浅的地下水井中占“Patescibacteria”群落相对丰度的71.4%,在剖面末端仍占44.4%。在研究的两个含水层组合中,几个“Patescibacteria”亚科级组对不同条件表现出偏好:“Kaiserbacteraceae”出人意料地与氧浓度呈正相关,而“Nomurabacteraceae”呈负相关。共现网络分析揭示了“Patescibacteria”在地下水微生物群落中的核心作用,并指出了与特定生物体的潜在关联,包括参与氮、硫和铁循环的丰富自养类群。“Patescibacteria”自身之间的强关联进一步表明,对于该门内的许多类群,分布主要由通常支持发酵生活方式的条件驱动,而不直接依赖特定宿主。我们提出,来自土壤的输入以及由水化学条件驱动的群落分化,包括有机资源和潜在宿主的可用性,决定了“Patescibacteria”在地下水环境中的成功。 (注:“mobilized”这里可能是“迁移、移动”等意思,结合语境暂译为“mobilized”,具体准确含义需结合更多背景知识确定)