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1.
Abstract The colorless sulfur bacterium Thiobacillus thioparus T5, isolated from a marine microbial mat, was grown in continuous culture under conditions ranging from sulfide limitation to oxygen limitation. Under sulfide-limiting conditions, sulfide was virtually completely oxidized to sulfate. Under oxygen-limiting conditions, sulfide was partially oxidized to zerovalent sulfur (75%) and thiosulfate (17%). In addition, low concentrations of tetrathionate and polysulfide were detected. The finding of in vivo thiosulfate formation supports the discredited observations of thiosulfate formation in cell free extracts in the early sixties. In a microbial mat most sulfide oxidation was shown to take place under oxygen-limiting conditions. It is suggested that zerovalent sulfur formation by thiobacilli is a major process resulting in polysulfide accumulation. Implications for the competition between colorless sulfur bacteria and purple sulfur bacteria are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
In situ microsensor measurements were combined with biogeochemical methods to determine oxygen, sulfur, and carbon cycling in microbial mats growing in a solar saltern (Salin-de-Giraud, France). Sulfate reduction rates closely followed the daily temperature changes and were highest during the day at 25°C and lowest during the night at 11°C, most probably fueled by direct substrate interactions between cyanobacteria and sulfate-reducing bacteria. Sulfate reduction was the major mineralization process during the night and the contribution of aerobic respiration to nighttime DIC production decreased. This decrease of aerobic respiration led to an increasing contribution of sulfide (and iron) oxidation to nighttime O2 consumption. A peak of elemental sulfur in a layer of high sulfate reduction at low sulfide concentration underneath the oxic zone indicated anoxygenic photosynthesis and/or sulfide oxidation by iron, which strongly contributed to sulfide consumption. We found a significant internal carbon cycling in the mat, and sulfate reduction directly supplied DIC for photosynthesis. The mats were characterized by a high iron content of 56 mol Fe cm–3, and iron cycling strongly controlled the sulfur cycle in the mat. This included sulfide precipitation resulting in high FeS contents with depth, and reactions of iron oxides with sulfide, especially after sunset, leading to a pronounced gap between oxygen and sulfide gradients and an unusual persistence of a pH peak in the uppermost mat layer until midnight.  相似文献   

3.
The sedimentary pyrite sulfur isotope (δ34S) record is an archive of ancient microbial sulfur cycling and environmental conditions. Interpretations of pyrite δ34S signatures in sediments deposited in microbial mat ecosystems are based on studies of modern microbial mat porewater sulfide δ34S geochemistry. Pyrite δ34S values often capture δ34S signatures of porewater sulfide at the location of pyrite formation. However, microbial mats are dynamic environments in which biogeochemical cycling shifts vertically on diurnal cycles. Therefore, there is a need to study how the location of pyrite formation impacts pyrite δ34S patterns in these dynamic systems. Here, we present diurnal porewater sulfide δ34S trends and δ34S values of pyrite and iron monosulfides from Middle Island Sinkhole, Lake Huron. The sediment–water interface of this sinkhole hosts a low-oxygen cyanobacterial mat ecosystem, which serves as a useful location to explore preservation of sedimentary pyrite δ34S signatures in early Earth environments. Porewater sulfide δ34S values vary by up to ~25‰ throughout the day due to light-driven changes in surface microbial community activity that propagate downwards, affecting porewater geochemistry as deep as 7.5 cm in the sediment. Progressive consumption of the sulfate reservoir drives δ34S variability, instead of variations in average cell-specific sulfate reduction rates and/or sulfide oxidation at different depths in the sediment. The δ34S values of pyrite are similar to porewater sulfide δ34S values near the mat surface. We suggest that oxidative sulfur cycling and other microbial activity promote pyrite formation in and immediately adjacent to the microbial mat and that iron geochemistry limits further pyrite formation with depth in the sediment. These results imply that primary δ34S signatures of pyrite deposited in organic-rich, iron-poor microbial mat environments capture information about microbial sulfur cycling and environmental conditions at the mat surface and are only minimally affected by deeper sedimentary processes during early diagenesis.  相似文献   

4.
Bacterial sulfur reduction in hot vents   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Abstract: Elemental sulfur can be reduced through different microbial processes, including catabolically significant sulfur respiration and reduction of sulfur in the course of fermentation. Both of these processes are found in thermophilic microorganisms inhabiting continental and submarine hot vents, where elemental sulfur is one of the most common sulfur species. Among extreme thermophiles, respresented mainly by Archaea, sulfur-respiring bacteria include hydrogen-utilizing lithoautotrophs and heterotrophs, oxidizing complex organic substrates. Some marine heterotrophic sulfur-reducing Archaea were found to ferment peptides and polysaccharides, using elemental sulfur as an electron sink and thus avoiding the formation of molecular hydrogen which is highly inhibiting. Moderately thermophilic communities contain eubacterial sulfur reducers capable of lithotrophic and heterotrophic growth. Total mineralization of organic matter is carried out by a complex microbial system consisting of fermentative heterotrophs, which use elemental sulfur as an electron sink, and sulfur-respiring bacteria of the genus Desulfurella , which oxidize other fermentation products, yielding only COf2 and Hf2S. The most remarkable thermophilic microbial community is the thermophilic cyanobacterial mat found in the Uzon caldera, Kamchatka, which contains elemental sulfur among the layers. Organic matter produced by the thermophilic Oscillatoria is completely and rapidly mineralized by means of sulfur reduction.  相似文献   

5.
The Ancaster sulfur spring is a cold (9°C) sulfur spring located near Ancaster, Ontario, Canada, which hosts an abundant and diverse microbial mat community. We conducted an extensive microscopical study of the microbial community of this spring using a number of techniques: phase light, confocal scanning laser microscopy, conventional scanning electron microscopy using both chemical/critical point drying and cryofixation preparative techniques, environmental scanning electron microscopy, and transmission electron microscopy. The latter two techniques were coupled with energy dispersive X-ray spectrometry for elemental analysis to complement wet geochemical data collected on bulk spring water and mat pore water. In the anoxic source of the spring, green and purple sulfur bacteria were found together with a sulfide-utilizing type of cyanobacteria that had the unusual characteristic of storing colloidal sulfur intracellularly. Deeper within the source, the mats were dominated by green sulfur bacteria and thick biofilms of cells that precipitated Fe and Zn sulfide minerals on their surfaces. Downstream from the source, thick, filamentous white mats lined the stream channel, formed by a diverse mass of nonphotosynthetic sulfur oxidizers, which were responsible for forming thick masses of spherical colloidal sulfur. These were distinguished by ESEM-EDS from cells by their simple elemental composition (only S was detected). Aqueous geochemistry analysis by ICP-MS showed that some elements (Fe, C, P, Zn, Mg, Ba) were present at higher levels in mat pore water than in bulk spring water. Our approach allowed us to gain an appreciation of the characteristics of this microbial community and allowed us to develop a good understanding of the types of microorganisms present and infer some of the relationships among the members of the community. In addition, we wish to convey the utility of a thorough microscopical approach in geomicrobiological and microbial ecology studies.  相似文献   

6.
Modern laminated photosynthetic microbial mats are ideal environments to study how microbial activity creates and modifies carbon and sulfur isotopic signatures prior to lithification. Laminated microbial mats from a hypersaline lagoon (Guerrero Negro, Baja California, Mexico) maintained in a flume in a greenhouse at NASA Ames Research Center were sampled for δ13C of organic material and carbonate to assess the impact of carbon fixation (e.g., photosynthesis) and decomposition (e.g., bacterial respiration) on δ13C signatures. In the photic zone, the δ13Corg signature records a complex relationship between the activities of cyanobacteria under variable conditions of CO2 limitation with a significant contribution from green sulfur bacteria using the reductive TCA cycle for carbon fixation. Carbonate is present in some layers of the mat, associated with high concentrations of bacteriochlorophyll e (characteristic of green sulfur bacteria) and exhibits δ13C signatures similar to DIC in the overlying water column (?2.0‰), with small but variable decreases consistent with localized heterotrophic activity from sulfate‐reducing bacteria (SRB). Model results indicate respiration rates in the upper 12 mm of the mat alter in situ pH and concentrations to create both phototrophic CO2 limitation and carbonate supersaturation, leading to local precipitation of carbonate minerals. The measured activity of SRB with depth suggests they variably contribute to decomposition in the mat dependent on organic substrate concentrations. Millimeter‐scale variability in the δ13Corg signature beneath the photic zone in the mat is a result of shifting dominance between cyanobacteria and green sulfur bacteria with the aggregate signature overprinted by heterotrophic reworking by SRB and methanogens. These observations highlight the impact of sedimentary microbial processes on δ13Corg signatures; these processes need to be considered when attempting to relate observed isotopic signatures in ancient sedimentary strata to conditions in the overlying water column at the time of deposition and associated inferences about carbon cycling.  相似文献   

7.
Nitrogen fixation (nitrogenase activity, NA) of a microbial mat and a living stromatolite from Cuatro Cienegas, Mexico, was examined over spring, summer, and winter of 2004. The goal of the study was to characterize the diazotrophic community through molecular analysis of the nifH gene and using inhibitors of sulfate reduction and oxygenic and anoxygenic photosynthesis. We also evaluated the role of ultraviolet radiation on the diazotrophic activity of the microbial communities. Both microbial communities showed patterns of NA with maximum rates during the day that decreased significantly with 3-3,4-dichlorophenyl-1′,1′-dimethylurea, suggesting the potential importance of heterocystous cyanobacteria. There is also evidence of NA by sulfur-reducing bacteria in both microbial communities suggested by the negative effect exerted by the addition of sodium molybdate. Elimination of infrared and ultraviolet radiation had no effect on NA. Both microbial communities had nifH sequences that related to group I, including cyanobacteria and purple sulfur and nonsulfur bacteria, as well as group II nitrogenases, including sulfur reducing and green sulfur bacteria.  相似文献   

8.
A Miocene methane-seep limestone from the Romagna Apennine (Pietralunga, Italy) was found to contain an extraordinarily well-preserved microbial mat consisting of filamentous fossils. Individual filaments of the lithified Pietralunga mat are 50 to 80 μ m in diameter and resemble the sulfide-oxidizing bacterium Beggiatoa. Mats of sulfur bacteria are common around modern methane-seeps, but have not yet been reported from ancient seep limestones. This is thought to be related to the conditions prevailing in metabolically active mats of sulfur bacteria that do not favor carbonate formation. The preservation of the Pietralunga mat was most likely caused by a sudden change from oxidizing to anoxic conditions, leading to the rapid carbonate precipitation induced by anaerobic oxidation of methane. Lipid biomarkers specific for archaea and sulfate-reducing bacteria linked with the anaerobic oxidation of methane co-occur with compounds derived from methanotrophic bacteria and ciliates. These findings confirm a close proximity of oxic and anoxic conditions, as required for the growth of sulfide-oxidizing bacteria in the methane-based ecosystem. The lack of earlier reports on fossilized thiotrophic mats in seep limestones is most likely related to the rarity of environmental changes rapid enough to preserve the filaments rather than to a lower frequency of thiotrophic mats around methane-seeps in the geological past.  相似文献   

9.
We investigated the genotypic diversity of oxygenic and anoxygenic phototrophic microorganisms in microbial mat samples collected from three hot spring localities on the east coast of Greenland. These hot springs harbour unique Arctic microbial ecosystems that have never been studied in detail before. Specific oligonucleotide primers for cyanobacteria, purple sulfur bacteria, green sulfur bacteria and Choroflexus/Roseiflexus-like green non-sulfur bacteria were used for the selective amplification of 16S rRNA gene fragments. Amplification products were separated by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) and sequenced. In addition, several cyanobacteria were isolated from the mat samples, and classified morphologically and by 16S rRNA-based methods. The cyanobacterial 16S rRNA sequences obtained from DGGE represented a diverse, polyphyletic collection of cyanobacteria. The microbial mat communities were dominated by heterocystous and non-heterocystous filamentous cyanobacteria. Our results indicate that the cyanobacterial community composition in the samples were different for each sampling site. Different layers of the same heterogeneous mat often contained distinct and different communities of cyanobacteria. We observed a relationship between the cyanobacterial community composition and the in situ temperatures of different mat parts. The Greenland mats exhibited a low diversity of anoxygenic phototrophs as compared with other hot spring mats which is possibly related to the photochemical conditions within the mats resulting from the Arctic light regime.  相似文献   

10.
The creation of a mathematical simulation model of photosynthetic microbial mats is important to our understanding of key biogeochemical cycles that may have altered the atmospheres and lithospheres of early Earth. A model is presented here as a tool to integrate empirical results from research on hypersaline mats from Baja California Sur (BCS), Mexico into a computational system that can be used to simulate biospheric inputs of trace gases to the atmosphere. The first version of our model, presented here, calculates fluxes and cycling of O(2), sulfide, and dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) via abiotic components and via four major microbial guilds: cyanobacteria (CYA), sulfate reducing bacteria (SRB), purple sulfur bacteria (PSB) and colorless sulfur bacteria (CSB). We used generalized Monod-type equations that incorporate substrate and energy limits upon maximum rates of metabolic processes such as photosynthesis and sulfate reduction. We ran a simulation using temperature and irradiance inputs from data collected from a microbial mat in Guerrero Negro in BCS (Mexico). Model O(2), sulfide, and DIC concentration profiles and fluxes compared well with data collected in the field mats. There were some model-predicted features of biogeochemical cycling not observed in our actual measurements. For instance, large influxes and effluxes of DIC across the MBGC mat boundary may reveal previously unrecognized, but real, in situ limits on rates of biogeochemical processes. Some of the short-term variation in field-collected mat O(2) was not predicted by MBGC. This suggests a need both for more model sensitivity to small environmental fluctuations for the incorporation of a photorespiration function into the model.  相似文献   

11.
For a large part of earth's history, cyanobacterial mats thrived in low‐oxygen conditions, yet our understanding of their ecological functioning is limited. Extant cyanobacterial mats provide windows into the putative functioning of ancient ecosystems, and they continue to mediate biogeochemical transformations and nutrient transport across the sediment–water interface in modern ecosystems. The structure and function of benthic mats are shaped by biogeochemical processes in underlying sediments. A modern cyanobacterial mat system in a submerged sinkhole of Lake Huron (LH) provides a unique opportunity to explore such sediment–mat interactions. In the Middle Island Sinkhole (MIS), seeping groundwater establishes a low‐oxygen, sulfidic environment in which a microbial mat dominated by Phormidium and Planktothrix that is capable of both anoxygenic and oxygenic photosynthesis, as well as chemosynthesis, thrives. We explored the coupled microbial community composition and biogeochemical functioning of organic‐rich, sulfidic sediments underlying the surface mat. Microbial communities were diverse and vertically stratified to 12 cm sediment depth. In contrast to previous studies, which used low‐throughput or shotgun metagenomic approaches, our high‐throughput 16S rRNA gene sequencing approach revealed extensive diversity. This diversity was present within microbial groups, including putative sulfate‐reducing taxa of Deltaproteobacteria, some of which exhibited differential abundance patterns in the mats and with depth in the underlying sediments. The biological and geochemical conditions in the MIS were distinctly different from those in typical LH sediments of comparable depth. We found evidence for active cycling of sulfur, methane, and nutrients leading to high concentrations of sulfide, ammonium, and phosphorus in sediments underlying cyanobacterial mats. Indicators of nutrient availability were significantly related to MIS microbial community composition, while LH communities were also shaped by indicators of subsurface groundwater influence. These results show that interactions between the mats and sediments are crucial for sustaining this hot spot of biological diversity and biogeochemical cycling.  相似文献   

12.
Chemoautotrophy has been little studied in typical coastal marine sediments, but may be an important component of carbon recycling as intense anaerobic mineralization processes in these sediments lead to accumulation of high amounts of reduced compounds, such as sulfides and ammonium. We studied chemoautotrophy by measuring dark-fixation of 13C-bicarbonate into phospholipid derived fatty acid (PLFA) biomarkers at two coastal sediment sites with contrasting sulfur chemistry in the Eastern Scheldt estuary, the Netherlands. At one site where free sulfide accumulated in the pore water right to the top of the sediment, PLFA labeling was restricted to compounds typically found in sulfur and ammonium oxidizing bacteria. At the other site, with no detectable free sulfide in the pore water, a very different PLFA labeling pattern was found with high amounts of label in branched i- and a-PLFA besides the typical compounds for sulfur and ammonium oxidizing bacteria. This suggests that other types of chemoautotrophic bacteria were also active, most likely Deltaproteobacteria related to sulfate reducers. Maximum rates of chemoautotrophy were detected in first 1 to 2 centimeters of both sediments and chemosynthetic biomass production was high ranging from 3 to 36 mmol C m−2 d−1. Average dark carbon fixation to sediment oxygen uptake ratios were 0.22±0.07 mol C (mol O2)−1, which is in the range of the maximum growth yields reported for sulfur oxidizing bacteria indicating highly efficient growth. Chemoautotrophic biomass production was similar to carbon mineralization rates in the top of the free sulfide site, suggesting that chemoautotrophic bacteria could play a crucial role in the microbial food web and labeling in eukaryotic poly-unsaturated PLFA was indeed detectable. Our study shows that dark carbon fixation by chemoautotrophic bacteria is a major process in the carbon cycle of coastal sediments, and should therefore receive more attention in future studies on sediment biogeochemistry and microbial ecology.  相似文献   

13.
In modern microbial mats, hydrogen sulfide shows pronounced sulfur isotope (δ34S) variability over small spatial scales (~50‰ over <4 mm), providing information about microbial sulfur cycling within different ecological niches in the mat. In the geological record, the location of pyrite formation, overprinting from mat accretion, and post‐depositional alteration also affect both fine‐scale δ34S patterns and bulk δ34Spyrite values. We report μm‐scale δ34S patterns in Proterozoic samples with well‐preserved microbial mat textures. We show a well‐defined relationship between δ34S values and sulfide mineral grain size and type. Small pyrite grains (<25 μm) span a large range, tending toward high δ34S values (?54.5‰ to 11.7‰, mean: ?14.4‰). Larger pyrite grains (>25 μm) have low but equally variable δ34S values (?61.0‰ to ?10.5‰, mean: ?44.4‰). In one sample, larger sphalerite grains (>35 μm) have intermediate and essentially invariant δ34S values (?22.6‰ to ?15.6‰, mean: ?19.4‰). We suggest that different sulfide mineral populations reflect separate stages of formation. In the first stage, small pyrite grains form near the mat surface along a redox boundary where high rates of sulfate reduction, partial closed‐system sulfate consumption in microenvironments, and/or sulfide oxidation lead to high δ34S values. In another stage, large sphalerite grains with low δ34S values grow along the edges of pore spaces formed from desiccation of the mat. Large pyrite grains form deeper in the mat at slower sulfate reduction rates, leading to low δ34Ssulfide values. We do not see evidence for significant 34S‐enrichment in bulk pore water sulfide at depth in the mat due to closed‐system Rayleigh fractionation effects. On a local scale, Rayleigh fractionation influences the range of δ34S values measured for individual pyrite grains. Fine‐scale analyses of δ34Spyrite patterns can thus be used to extract environmental information from ancient microbial mats and aid in the interpretation of bulk δ34Spyrite records.  相似文献   

14.
A photosynthetic microbial mat was investigated in a large pond of a Mediterranean saltern (Salins-de-Giraud, Camargue, France) having water salinity from 70 per thousand to 150 per thousand (w/v). Analysis of characteristic biomarkers (e.g., major microbial fatty acids, hydrocarbons, alcohols and alkenones) revealed that cyanobacteria were the major component of the pond, in addition to diatoms and other algae. Functional bacterial groups involved in the sulfur cycle could be correlated to these biomarkers, i.e. sulfate-reducing, sulfur-oxidizing and anoxygenic phototrophic bacteria. In the first 0.5 mm of the mat, a high rate of photosynthesis showed the activity of oxygenic phototrophs in the surface layer. Ten different cyanobacterial populations were detected with confocal laser scanning microscopy: six filamentous species, with Microcoleus chthonoplastes and Halomicronema excentricum as dominant (73% of total counts); and four unicellular types affiliated to Microcystis, Chroococcus, Gloeocapsa, and Synechocystis (27% of total counts). Denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis of PCR-amplified 16S rRNA gene fragments confirmed the presence of Microcoleus, Oscillatoria, and Leptolyngbya strains (Halomicronema was not detected here) and revealed additional presence of Phormidium, Pleurocapsa and Calotrix types. Spectral scalar irradiance measurements did not reveal a particular zonation of cyanobacteria, purple or green bacteria in the first millimeter of the mat. Terminal-restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis of PCR-amplified 16S rRNA gene fragments of bacteria depicted the community composition and a fine-scale depth-distribution of at least five different populations of anoxygenic phototrophs and at least three types of sulfate-reducing bacteria along the microgradients of oxygen and light inside the microbial mat.  相似文献   

15.
So-called sulfur-turf microbial mats, which are macroscopic white filaments or bundles consisting of large sausage-shaped bacteria and elemental sulfur particles, occur in sulfide-containing hot springs in Japan. However, no thermophiles from sulfur-turf mats have yet been isolated as cultivable strains. This study was undertaken to determine the phylogenetic positions of the sausage-shaped bacteria in sulfur-turf mats by direct cloning and sequencing of 16S rRNA genes amplified from the bulk DNAs of the mats. Common clones with 16S rDNA sequences with similarity levels of 94.8 to 99% were isolated from sulfur-turf mat samples from two geographically remote hot springs. Phylogenetic analysis showed that the phylotypes of the common clones formed a major cluster with members of the Aquifex-Hydrogenobacter complex, which represents the most deeply branching lineage of the domain bacteria. Furthermore, the bacteria of the sulfur-turf mat phylotypes formed a clade distinguishable from that of other members of the Aquifex-Hydrogenobacter complex at the order or subclass level. In situ hybridization with clone-specific probes for 16S rRNA revealed that the common phylotype of sulfur-turf mat bacteria is that of the predominant sausage-shaped bacteria.Microbial mats develop in a wide variety of aquatic environments, including geothermal hot springs and hydrothermal vents. There are several types of thermophilic microbial mats, e.g., those of cyanobacteria, anoxygenic phototrophic bacteria, and chemotrophic sulfur bacteria, which differ according to the physical and chemical conditions they favor and other environmental factors (10, 38). These microbial mats in thermal habitats have been studied extensively as a peculiar microbial community of the ecosystem, in relation to the phylogeny and evolution of thermophilic prokaryotes, or as a source of new functional enzymes.So-called sulfur-turf microbial mats are macroscopic bundles of white filaments consisting of colorless sulfur bacteria and elemental sulfur particles that form in shallow streams of sulfide-containing high-temperature hot springs. Since first reported by Miyoshi in 1897 (33), this kind of microbial mat has been recorded for several geographically remote hot springs in Japan, although there have been only scattered reports of sulfur-turf microbial mats or chemotrophic sulfur streamers in geothermal springs in other countries (9, 13, 14). The sulfur-turf mats generally develop within a temperature range of 45 to 73°C, within a pH range of 6 to 9, and at discrete sulfide-oxygen interfaces in geothermal springs. These characteristics suggest that the major constituents of the sulfur-turf prokaryotic community are (hyper)thermophilic, neutrophilic, microaerophilic, and chemolithotrophic bacteria. Early studies of these sulfur-turf mats distinguished microscopically three morphotypes of bacteria, two of which were tentatively named Thiovibrio miyoshi and Thiothrix miyoshi (15). Moreover, in situ ecophysiological and microscopic studies have shown that one of these bacteria, the large sausage-shaped “Thiovibrio miyoshi,” predominates in sulfur-turf mats and oxidizes environmental sulfide to elemental sulfur and then to sulfate via thiosulfate (2731). So far, however, it has not been possible to isolate and cultivate any thermophilic prokaryotes from the sulfur-turf mats predominated by these sausage-shaped bacteria with artificial media, and no attempt has been made to clarify their taxonomic and phylogenetic positions.Determination of 16S rRNA genes is a useful research strategy for identifying uncultivated prokaryotes and is now commonly performed in ecological studies. This technique, involving PCR amplification of 16S rRNA genes or synthesis of cDNAs from bulk 16S rRNAs of natural mixed microbial populations, has been used successfully for the phylogenetic characterization of prokaryotes in hydrothermal environments (6, 7, 34, 40, 41, 47, 48). In the present study, this approach was applied to characterize the sausage-shaped bacteria in sulfur-turf mats without isolating and cultivating them. Here we report that sulfur-turf mats contain novel thermophilic bacteria belonging to the earliest-branching lineage of the domain bacteria.  相似文献   

16.
Thrombolites are unlaminated carbonate deposits formed by the metabolic activities of microbial mats and can serve as potential models for understanding the molecular mechanisms underlying the formation of lithifying communities. To assess the metabolic complexity of these ecosystems, high throughput DNA sequencing of a thrombolitic mat metagenome was coupled with phenotypic microarray analysis. Functional protein analysis of the thrombolite community metagenome delineated several of the major metabolic pathways that influence carbonate mineralization including cyanobacterial photosynthesis, sulfate reduction, sulfide oxidation, and aerobic heterotrophy. Spatial profiling of metabolite utilization within the thrombolite-forming microbial mats suggested that the top 5 mm contained a more metabolically diverse and active community than the deeper within the mat. This study provides evidence that despite the lack of mineral layering within the clotted thrombolite structure there is a vertical gradient of metabolic activity within the thrombolitic mat community. This metagenomic profiling also serves as a foundation for examining the active role individual functional groups of microbes play in coordinating metabolisms that lead to mineralization.  相似文献   

17.
Modern microbial mats are highly complex and dynamic ecosystems. Diffusive equilibration in thin films (DET) and diffusive gradients in thin films (DGT) samplers were deployed in a modern smooth microbial mat from Shark Bay in order to observe, for the first time, two‐dimensional distributions of porewater solutes during day and night time. Two‐dimensional sulfide and alkalinity distributions revealed a strong spatial heterogeneity and a minor contribution of sulfide to alkalinity. Phosphate distributions were also very heterogeneous, while iron(II) distributions were quite similar during day and night with a few hotspots of mobilization. Lipid biomarkers from the three successive layers of the mat were also analysed in order to characterize the microbial communities regulating analyte distributions. The major hydrocarbon products detected in all layers included n‐alkanes and isoprenoids, whilst other important biomarkers included hopanoids. Phospholipid fatty acid profiles revealed a decrease in cyanobacterial markers with depth, whereas sulfate‐reducing bacteria markers increased in abundance in accordance with rising sulfide concentrations with depth. Despite the general depth trends in community structure and physiochemical conditions within the mat, two‐dimensional solute distributions showed considerable small‐scale lateral variability, indicating that the distributions and activities of the microbial communities regulating these solute distributions were equally heterogeneous and complex.  相似文献   

18.
Eukaryotic steranes are typically absent or occur in very low concentrations in Precambrian sedimentary rocks. However, it is as yet unclear whether this may reflect low source inputs or a preservational bias. For instance, it has been proposed that eukaryotic lipids were profoundly degraded in benthic microbial mats that were ubiquitous prior to the advent of vertical bioturbation in the Cambrian (“mat‐seal effect”). It is therefore important to test the microbial turnover and degradation of eukaryotic steroids in real‐world microbial mats. Here we assessed steroid inventories in different layers of a microbial mat from a hypersaline lake on Kiritimati (Central Pacific). Various eukaryote‐derived C27‐C30 steroids were detected in all mat layers. These compounds most likely entered the mat system as unsaturated sterols from the water column or the topmost mat, and were progressively altered during burial in the deeper, anoxic mat layers over c. 103 years. This is reflected by increasing proportions of saturated sterols and sterenes, as well as the presence of thiosteranes in certain horizons. Sterol alteration can partly be assigned to microbial transformation but is also due to chemical reactions promoted by the reducing environment in the deeper mat layers. Notably, however, compounds with a sterane skeleton were similarly abundant in all mat layers and their absolute concentrations did not show any systematic decrease. The observed decrease of steroid/hopanoid ratios with depth may thus rather indicate a progressive “dilution” by lipids derived from heterotrophic bacteria. Further, pyrolysis revealed that steroids, in contrast to hopanoids, were not sequestered into non‐extractable organic matter. This may lead to a preservational bias against steroids during later stages of burial. Taken together, steroid preservation in the microbial mat is not only controlled by heterotrophic degradation, but rather reflects a complex interplay of taphonomic processes.  相似文献   

19.
【目的】当前对全球冷泉生态系统微生物生态学研究显示,冷泉生态系统中主要微生物类群为参与甲烷代谢的微生物,它们的分布差异与所处冷泉区生物地球化学环境密切相关。但在冷泉区内也存在环境因子截然不同的生境,尚缺乏比较冷泉区内小尺度生境间微生物多样性和分布规律的研究。本研究旨在分析南海Formosa冷泉区内不同生境间微生物多样性差异,完善和理解不同环境因子对冷泉内微生物群落结构的影响。【方法】对采集自南海Formosa冷泉区不同生境(黑色菌席区、白色菌席区和碳酸盐岩区)沉积物样本中古菌和细菌16S rRNA基因进行测序,结合环境因子,比较微生物多样性差异,分析环境因子对微生物分布的影响。【结果】发现在Formosa冷泉内的不同生境中,甲烷厌氧氧化古菌(anaerobic methanotrophic archaea,ANME)是主要古菌类群,占古菌总体相对丰度超过70%;在菌席区ANME-1b和ANME-2a/b是主要ANME亚群,碳酸盐岩区则是ANME-1b。硫酸盐还原菌(sulfate-reducing bacteria,SRB)和硫氧化菌(sulfur-oxidizing bacteria...  相似文献   

20.
On the Kiritimati atoll, several lakes exhibit microbial mat-formation under different hydrochemical conditions. Some of these lakes trigger microbialite formation such as Lake 21, which is an evaporitic, hypersaline lake (salinity of approximately 170‰). Lake 21 is completely covered with a thick multilayered microbial mat. This mat is associated with the formation of decimeter-thick highly porous microbialites, which are composed of aragonite and gypsum crystals. We assessed the bacterial and archaeal community composition and its alteration along the vertical stratification by large-scale analysis of 16S rRNA gene sequences of the nine different mat layers. The surface layers are dominated by aerobic, phototrophic, and halotolerant microbes. The bacterial community of these layers harbored Cyanobacteria (Halothece cluster), which were accompanied with known phototrophic members of the Bacteroidetes and Alphaproteobacteria. In deeper anaerobic layers more diverse communities than in the upper layers were present. The deeper layers were dominated by Spirochaetes, sulfate-reducing bacteria (Deltaproteobacteria), Chloroflexi (Anaerolineae and Caldilineae), purple non-sulfur bacteria (Alphaproteobacteria), purple sulfur bacteria (Chromatiales), anaerobic Bacteroidetes (Marinilabiacae), Nitrospirae (OPB95), Planctomycetes and several candidate divisions. The archaeal community, including numerous uncultured taxonomic lineages, generally changed from Euryarchaeota (mainly Halobacteria and Thermoplasmata) to uncultured members of the Thaumarchaeota (mainly Marine Benthic Group B) with increasing depth.  相似文献   

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