Archaeal Lipids and 16S rRNA Genes Characterizing Non-hydrate and Hydrate-Impacted Sediments in the Gulf of Mexico |
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Authors: | Yundan Pi Qi Ye Hongchen Jiang Peng Wang Shuguang Li John Noakes |
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Affiliation: | 1. School of Earth and Space Sciences , The University of Sciences and Technology of China , Hefei, China;2. Department of Marine Sciences , University of Georgia , Athens, GA, 20602, USA;3. Department of Geology , Miami University , Oxford, OH, 45056, USA;4. Geomicrobiology Laboratory, State Key Laboratory of Geological Processes and Mineral Resources , China University of Geosciences , Beijing, 100083, China;5. State Key Laboratory of Marine Geology , Tongji University , Shanghai, 200092, China;6. Center for Applied Isotope Studies , University of Georgia , Athens, GA, 30602, USA |
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Abstract: | ![]() This study reports the intact lipids and the phylogenetic compositions of archaea from marine sediments adjacent to or within a region of methane seeps and hydrate mounds in the Mississippi Canyon (MC) Block 118 in the Gulf of Mexico. An aliquot of lyophilized sediment (~5 g) was extracted for total lipids. Fractions of the glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraethers (GDGTs) were obtained through column fractionation and determined using liquid-chromatography-mass spectrometry. DNA was extracted from a different aliquot of the sample (~7 g) that was kept at ?80°C. GDGTs showed distinct patterns between non-hydrate and hydrate-impacted samples, suggesting dramatically different archaeal communities caused by the presence of gas hydrates or cold seeps. Clone libraries of 16S rRNA genes were constructed to provide a phylogenetic explanation of the archaeal populations possibly causing the variation in lipid profiles. In contrast to the non-thermophilic crenarchaeota-dominant species in the normal marine sediment, the hydrate-impacted samples showed the predominance of ANME-1 subgroups with Thermoplasmatales being secondarily abundant; both of them are known to produce tetraether lipids and may be responsible for the enhanced archaeal lipids in the hydrate samples. MC 118 is designed to be a seafloor observatory in the Gulf of Mexico and our study represents the initial efforts in characterizing archaeal populations and their role in carbon cycle at this location. |
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Keywords: | archaea gas hydrates GDGTs Gulf of Mexico 16S rRNA gene |
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