Department of Plant and Microbial Biology, University of Minnesotagrid.17635.36, St. Paul, Minnesota, USA.
The Biotechnology Institute, University of Minnesotagrid.17635.36, St. Paul, Minnesota, USA.
mSystems. 2022 Feb 22;7(1):e0145021. doi: 10.1128/msystems.01450-21. Epub 2022 Jan 4.
Geographic isolation can be a main driver of microbial evolution in hot springs while temperature plays a role on local scales. For example, cyanobacteria, particularly high-temperature spp., have undergone ecological diversification along temperature gradients in hot spring outflow channels. While water flow, and thus temperature, is largely stable in many hot springs, flow can vary in geysing/eruptive hot springs, resulting in large temperature fluctuations (sometimes more than 40°C). However, the role of large temperature fluctuations in driving diversification of cyanobacteria in eruptive hot springs has not been explored. Here, we examined phototroph community composition and potential photoautotrophic activity in two alkaline eruptive hot springs with similar geochemistry in the Lower Geyser Basin in Yellowstone National Park, WY. We observed distinct cyanobacterial amplicon sequencing variants (ASVs) consistent with allopatry and levels of light-dependent inorganic carbon uptake rates similar to other hot springs, despite large temperature fluctuations. Our data suggest median temperatures may drive phototroph fitness in eruptive hot springs while future studies are necessary to determine the evolutionary consequences of thriving under continuously fluctuating temperatures. We propose that large temperature swings in eruptive hot springs offer unique environments to examine the role of allopatry versus physical and chemical characteristics of ecosystems in driving cyanobacterium evolution and add to the debate regarding the ecology of thermal adaptation and the potential for narrowing niche breadth with increasing temperature. Hot spring cyanobacteria have long been model systems for examining ecological diversification as well as characterizing microbial adaptation and evolution to extreme environments. These studies have reported cyanobacterial diversification in hot spring outflow channels that can be defined by distinct temperature ranges. Our study builds on these previous studies by examining cyanobacteria in geysing hot springs. Geysing hot springs result in outflow channels that experience regular and large temperature fluctuations. While community compositions are similar between geysing and nongeysing hot spring outflow channels, our data suggest median, rather than high, temperature drives the fitness of cyanobacteria in geysing hot springs. We propose that large temperature swings may result in patterns of ecological diversification that are distinct from more stable outflows.
地理隔离可能是温泉中微生物进化的主要驱动因素,而温度则在局部范围内起作用。例如,蓝细菌,特别是高温 spp.,在温泉流出通道的温度梯度上经历了生态多样化。虽然许多温泉中的水流(因此温度)在很大程度上是稳定的,但在间歇泉/喷发温泉中,水流会发生变化,导致温度波动很大(有时超过 40°C)。然而,大温度波动在驱动喷发温泉中蓝细菌多样化方面的作用尚未得到探索。在这里,我们检查了怀俄明州黄石国家公园Lower Geyser Basin 中两个具有相似地球化学性质的碱性喷发温泉中的光养生物群落组成和潜在的光自养活性。我们观察到与异域有关的明显蓝细菌扩增子测序变体 (ASV),以及与其他温泉相似的依赖光照的无机碳摄取率水平,尽管温度波动很大。我们的数据表明中值温度可能驱动喷发温泉中的光养生物适应性,而未来的研究有必要确定在不断波动的温度下茁壮成长的进化后果。我们提出,喷发温泉中的大温度波动为研究异域与生态系统的物理和化学特征在驱动蓝细菌进化中的作用提供了独特的环境,并增加了关于热适应生态和随着温度升高缩小生态位宽度的潜力的争论。温泉蓝细菌一直是研究生态多样化以及描述微生物对极端环境的适应和进化的模型系统。这些研究报告了可以通过不同的温度范围来定义的温泉流出通道中的蓝细菌多样化。我们的研究通过检查间歇泉中的蓝细菌来扩展这些先前的研究。间歇泉会导致流出通道经历定期和大的温度波动。虽然间歇泉和非间歇泉流出通道之间的群落组成相似,但我们的数据表明,中值温度而不是高温驱动间歇泉中蓝细菌的适应性。我们提出,大的温度波动可能导致与更稳定的流出物不同的生态多样化模式。