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Survival and growth of two heterotrophic hydrothermal vent archaea, <Emphasis Type="Italic">Pyrococcus</Emphasis> strain GB-D and <Emphasis Type="Italic">Thermococcus fumicolans</Emphasis>, under low pH and high sulfide concentrations in combination with high temperature and pressure regimes
Authors:Virginia P Edgcomb  Stephen J Molyneaux  Simone Böer  Carl O Wirsen  Mak Saito  Michael S Atkins  Karen Lloyd  Andreas Teske
Institution:(1) Biology Department, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, MA 02543, USA;(2) Department of Marine Chemistry and Geochemistry, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, MS #52, Woods Hole, MA 02543, USA;(3) Institute for Biology and Chemistry of the Ocean (ICBM), Oldenburg University, Oldenburg, 26110, Germany;(4) Department of Marine Sciences, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA
Abstract:Growth and survival of hyperthermophilic archaea in their extreme hydrothermal vent and subsurface environments are controlled by chemical and physical key parameters. This study examined the effects of elevated sulfide concentrations, temperature, and acidic pH on growth and survival of two hydrothermal vent archaea (Pyrococcus strain GB-D and Thermococcus fumicolans) under high temperature and pressure regimes. These two strains are members of the Thermococcales, a family of hyperthermophilic, heterotrophic, sulfur-reducing archaea that occur in high densities at vent sites. As actively growing cells, these two strains tolerated regimes of pH, pressure, and temperature that were in most cases not tolerated under severe substrate limitation. A moderate pH of 5.5–7 extends their survival and growth range over a wider range of sulfide concentrations, temperature and pressure, relative to lower pH conditions. T. fumicolans and Pyrococcus strain GB-D grew under very high pressures that exceeded in-situ pressures typical of hydrothermal vent depths, and included deep subsurface pressures. However, under the same conditions, but in the absence of carbon substrates and electron acceptors, survival was generally lower, and decreased rapidly when low pH stress was combined with high pressure and high temperature. Electronic supplementary material Supplementary material is available in the online version of this article at and is accessible for authorized users.
Keywords:Pressure  Sulfide  Archaea  pH  Survival  Growth  Stress factors  Hyperthermophiles
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