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Culture-dependent and -independent approaches were employed to identify the bacterial community structure from olive-mill wastewater produced from three olive-fruit varieties. The 233 bacterial isolates recovered were phylogenetically related to 38 members of Firmicutes, Actinobacteria, α-Proteobacteria, β-Proteobacteria, γ-Proteobacteria, and Bacteroidetes. Employing a novel microarray-based approach (PhyloChip) a high bacterial diversity was revealed consisting of 18 different phyla with representatives from 99 different families. The bacterial diversity in olive-mill wastewater from the three olive tree varieties was dominated by α-, β-, γ-, δ-, ε-Proteobacteria, Firmicutes, Bacteroidetes, Chloroflexi, Cyanobacteria, and Actinobacteria. This in-depth analysis of the indigenous microbiota indicated a cultivar-specific bacterial profile. Interestingly, the common bacterial taxa present in all three varieties examined were restricted indicating that the bacterial communities present in the olive-mill wastewater are greatly influenced by the olive-fruit variety.  相似文献   

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Ruminants rely on a complex rumen microbial community to convert dietary plant material to energy-yielding products. Here we developed a method to simultaneously analyze the community''s bacterial and archaeal 16S rRNA genes, ciliate 18S rRNA genes and anaerobic fungal internal transcribed spacer 1 genes using 12 DNA samples derived from 11 different rumen samples from three host species (Ovis aries, Bos taurus, Cervus elephas) and multiplex 454 Titanium pyrosequencing. We show that the mixing ratio of the group-specific DNA templates before emulsion PCR is crucial to compensate for differences in amplicon length. This method, in contrast to using a non-specific universal primer pair, avoids sequencing non-targeted DNA, such as plant- or endophyte-derived rRNA genes, and allows increased or decreased levels of community structure resolution for each microbial group as needed. Communities analyzed with different primers always grouped by sample origin rather than by the primers used. However, primer choice had a greater impact on apparent archaeal community structure than on bacterial community structure, and biases for certain methanogen groups were detected. Co-occurrence analysis of microbial taxa from all three domains of life suggested strong within- and between-domain correlations between different groups of microorganisms within the rumen. The approach used to simultaneously characterize bacterial, archaeal and eukaryotic components of a microbiota should be applicable to other communities occupying diverse habitats.  相似文献   

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Spatial heterogeneity in physical, chemical, and biological properties of soils allows for the proliferation of diverse microbial communities. Factors influencing the structuring of microbial communities, including availability of nutrients and water, pH, and soil texture, can vary considerably with soil depth and within soil aggregates. Here we investigated changes in the microbial and functional communities within soil aggregates obtained along a soil profile spanning the surface, vadose zone, and saturated soil environments. The composition and diversity of microbial communities and specific functional groups involved in key pathways in the geochemical cycling of nitrogen, Fe, and sulfur were characterized using a coupled approach involving cultivation-independent analysis of both 16S rRNA (bacterial and archaeal) and functional genes (amoA and dsrAB) as well as cultivation-based analysis of Fe(III)-reducing organisms. Here we found that the microbial communities and putative ammonia-oxidizing and Fe(III)-reducing communities varied greatly along the soil profile, likely reflecting differences in carbon availability, water content, and pH. In particular, the Crenarchaeota 16S rRNA sequences are largely unique to each horizon, sharing a distribution and diversity similar to those of the putative (amoA-based) ammonia-oxidizing archaeal community. Anaerobic microenvironments within soil aggregates also appear to allow for both anaerobic- and aerobic-based metabolisms, further highlighting the complexity and spatial heterogeneity impacting microbial community structure and metabolic potential within soils.  相似文献   

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Sulfidic, anoxic sediments of the moderately hypersaline Salton Sea contain gradients in salinity and carbon that potentially structure the sedimentary microbial community. We investigated the abundance, community structure, and diversity of Bacteria and Archaea along these gradients to further distinguish the ecologies of these domains outside their established physiological range. Quantitative PCR was used to enumerate 16S rRNA gene abundances of Bacteria, Archaea, and Crenarchaeota. Community structure and diversity were evaluated by terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP), quantitative analysis of gene (16S rRNA) frequencies of dominant microorganisms, and cloning and sequencing of 16S rRNA. Archaea were numerically dominant at all depths and exhibited a lesser response to environmental gradients than that of Bacteria. The relative abundance of Crenarchaeota was low (0.4 to 22%) at all depths but increased with decreased carbon content and increased salinity. Salinity structured the bacterial community but exerted no significant control on archaeal community structure, which was weakly correlated with total carbon. Partial sequencing of archaeal 16S rRNA genes retrieved from three sediment depths revealed diverse communities of Euryarchaeota and Crenarchaeota, many of which were affiliated with groups previously described from marine sediments. The abundance of these groups across all depths suggests that many putative marine archaeal groups can tolerate elevated salinity (5.0 to 11.8% [wt/vol]) and persist under the anaerobic conditions present in Salton Sea sediments. The differential response of archaeal and bacterial communities to salinity and carbon patterns is consistent with the hypothesis that adaptations to energy stress and availability distinguish the ecologies of these domains.The vast majority of cultured Archaea isolates are characterized as extremophiles, which thrive under environmental extremes of temperature, pH, salinity, and oxygen availability. Unlike Bacteria, these organisms are well defined by select physiologies or catabolic activities. Cultivated halophilic archaea are obligate aerobes, and with a few exceptions (58), most 16S rRNA gene sequences affiliated with this physiological group have been recovered primarily from environments with oxygen present. Thermophilic archaea, many of which utilize hydrogen-based metabolisms, have temperature requirements that preclude their survival and growth in more moderate environments. Other archaeal physiological groups include acidophiles, which thrive in acidic and mostly high-temperature environments, the obligate anaerobic methanogens, which are capable of competing with Bacteria when more energetically favorable electron acceptors are not available (i.e., sulfate), and methane-oxidizing archaea, which require methane for energy production. Recent work on several Crenarchaeota isolates points to nitrification as their primary energy metabolism, but these organisms have been detected in cold, predominantly aerobic environments, such as open ocean waters and soil (47), and in hyperthermophilic environments (24).Several archaeal groups identified using only 16S rRNA genes, for which no current isolates exist, have been detected in anaerobic sediments of the marine subsurface (6), estuaries (42), freshwater (46), and salt lakes (29). While their physiology and catabolism remain a source of speculation, the environmental distribution patterns of these mesophilic, presumably anaerobic, groups seemingly exclude the physiological and catabolic types outlined above. That is, the persistence of diverse archaeal populations in anoxic sediments at moderate temperature and salinity and at circumneutral pH with only trace levels of methane strongly suggests that alternative metabolic or physiological activities must characterize these populations.Saline lakes are ubiquitous and can be found on all continents. Although many saline lakes are labeled “extreme” environments, microbial diversity within their sediments is often equivalent to that reported for studies of freshwater and marine systems (28). Most studies of the microbial ecology within saline lakes have focused on gradients within the water column, with very few studies on patterns within the sediments. Specifically, these studies have examined how changes in water column salinity lead to shifts in microbial productivity and diversity (8). However, particle-associated microbial communities are known to differ fundamentally from water column or free-living populations (1, 18). These observed differences could be explained by the type and strength of environmental gradients that microbial communities in sediments experience, as opposed to those encountered by pelagic communities.Sediments contain strong environmental gradients, such as time (e.g., sediment age at depth), nutrient and carbon availability, and the dominant terminal electron-accepting process (TEAP) resulting from the sequential use of available oxidants by the microbial community (41). These gradients can lead to changes in the dominant microbial groups (i.e., a shift from sulfate reducers to methanogens with depth and age). Many saline lakes are highly productive and shallow and experience large fluctuations in water level due to climatic changes or to changes in inflows due to urban and agricultural activities. Changes in lake level can lead to dramatic shifts in mixing regimens, nutrient cycling, and water chemistry. Historic fluctuations in water column salinity are often recorded within the sediments in the form of evaporite deposits, which may act as additional sources of ionic loading of the water column (62). These sedimentary salinity gradients may modulate the metabolic activity of some microbial groups. For example, Oren (44) proposed bioenergetic constraints as a possible explanation for the reduced activity or absence of some microbial groups within high-salinity environments. Thus, saline lake sediments are excellent natural laboratories in which to study changes and adaptations of microbial communities due to large-scale changes in environmental gradients.The Salton Sea is a large (980 km2), eutrophic, moderately hypersaline (48 to 50 g liter−1), terminal lake located 69 m below sea level in the Salton Basin, CA. Several large lakes have formed in the Salton Basin over geologic history, the most recent of which was Lake Cahuilla ca. 300 years ago (7). The current lake was unintentionally created in 1905-1907, when the Colorado River flooded the Salton Basin for a period of 16 months. Profundal sediments are highly sulfidic, and sulfate reduction is suspected to be the dominant TEAP within these sediments (54). Based on elemental analysis (51) and 137Cs activity (37) of sediment layers, a depth of ∼22 cm marks the point when flooding of the Salton Basin occurred. Sediment above this depth represents the ca. 102 years of historical change within the Salton Sea, including a shift from a water column salinity of 35 g liter−1 to the hypersaline conditions that currently exist. Sediments below this depth consist of low-carbon, gypsum-rich evaporite deposits that were present on the older dry lake bed prior to the formation of the current lake. A previous study reported several strong geochemical gradients within pore water across this relatively small depth range (62).In this work, a suite of cultivation-independent techniques and geochemical analyses was utilized to correlate shifts in abundance, community structure, and diversity of Archaea and Bacteria in Salton Sea sediments with changes in environmental gradients. Large differences in abundance and community structure patterns of Archaea and Bacteria were found along the gradients. In addition, the majority of archaeal sequences retrieved were affiliated with previously described but as yet uncultivated groups identified from various marine sedimentary environments. This indicates that these groups are able to tolerate the higher salinity and anaerobic conditions characteristic of Salton Sea sediments. Fundamental differences between the metabolic capacities and ecologies of Archaea and Bacteria are discussed to explain these patterns.  相似文献   

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Background

Soil microbial communities are in constant change at many different temporal and spatial scales. However, the importance of these changes to the turnover of the soil microbial communities has been rarely studied simultaneously in space and time.

Methodology/Principal Findings

In this study, we explored the temporal and spatial responses of soil bacterial, archaeal and fungal β-diversities to abiotic parameters. Taking into account data from a 3-year sampling period, we analyzed the abundances and community structures of Archaea, Bacteria and Fungi along with key soil chemical parameters. We questioned how these abiotic variables influence the turnover of bacterial, archaeal and fungal communities and how they impact the long-term patterns of changes of the aforementioned soil communities. Interestingly, we found that the bacterial and fungal β-diversities are quite stable over time, whereas archaeal diversity showed significantly higher fluctuations. These fluctuations were reflected in temporal turnover caused by soil management through addition of N-fertilizers.

Conclusions

Our study showed that management practices applied to agricultural soils might not significantly affect the bacterial and fungal communities, but cause slow and long-term changes in the abundance and structure of the archaeal community. Moreover, the results suggest that, to different extents, abiotic and biotic factors determine the community assembly of archaeal, bacterial and fungal communities.  相似文献   

11.
While the contribution of Bacteria to bioremediation of oil-contaminated shorelines is well established, the response of Archaea to spilled oil and bioremediation treatments is unknown. The relationship between archaeal community structure and oil spill bioremediation was examined in laboratory microcosms and in a bioremediation field trial. 16S rRNA gene-based PCR and denaturing gradient gel analysis revealed that the archaeal community in oil-free laboratory microcosms was stable for 26 days. In contrast, in oil-polluted microcosms a dramatic decrease in the ability to detect Archaea was observed, and it was not possible to amplify fragments of archaeal 16S rRNA genes from samples taken from microcosms treated with oil. This was the case irrespective of whether a bioremediation treatment (addition of inorganic nutrients) was applied. Since rapid oil biodegradation occurred in nutrient-treated microcosms, we concluded that Archaea are unlikely to play a role in oil degradation in beach ecosystems. A clear-cut relationship between the presence of oil and the absence of Archaea was not apparent in the field experiment. This may have been related to continuous inoculation of beach sediments in the field with Archaea from seawater or invertebrates and shows that the reestablishment of Archaea following bioremediation cannot be used as a determinant of ecosystem recovery following bioremediation. Comparative 16S rRNA sequence analysis showed that the majority of the Archaea detected (94%) belonged to a novel, distinct cluster of group II uncultured Euryarchaeota, which exhibited less than 87% identity to previously described sequences. A minor contribution of group I uncultured Crenarchaeota was observed.  相似文献   

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Bacterial and archaeal diversity was examined in a sediment core from Lake Bonney, Antarctica. Members of the Archaea showed both low abundance and diversity, whereas bacterial diversity was moderately high and some phyla were fairly abundant, even in geologically old samples. Microbial diversity correlated with sample texture and differed in silty and coarse samples.  相似文献   

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Analysis of rumen microbial community structure based on small-subunit rRNA marker genes in metagenomic DNA samples provides important insights into the dominant taxa present in the rumen and allows assessment of community differences between individuals or in response to treatments applied to ruminants. However, natural animal-to-animal variation in rumen microbial community composition can limit the power of a study considerably, especially when only subtle differences are expected between treatment groups. Thus, trials with large numbers of animals may be necessary to overcome this variation. Because ruminants pass large amounts of rumen material to their oral cavities when they chew their cud, oral samples may contain good representations of the rumen microbiota and be useful in lieu of rumen samples to study rumen microbial communities. We compared bacterial, archaeal, and eukaryotic community structures in DNAs extracted from buccal swabs to those in DNAs from samples collected directly from the rumen by use of a stomach tube for sheep on four different diets. After bioinformatic depletion of potential oral taxa from libraries of samples collected via buccal swabs, bacterial communities showed significant clustering by diet (R = 0.37; analysis of similarity [ANOSIM]) rather than by sampling method (R = 0.07). Archaeal, ciliate protozoal, and anaerobic fungal communities also showed significant clustering by diet rather than by sampling method, even without adjustment for potentially orally associated microorganisms. These findings indicate that buccal swabs may in future allow quick and noninvasive sampling for analysis of rumen microbial communities in large numbers of ruminants.  相似文献   

14.
Diversity and abundance of ammonia-oxidizing Betaproteobacteria (β-AOB) and archaea (AOA) were investigated in a New England salt marsh at sites dominated by short or tall Spartina alterniflora (SAS and SAT sites, respectively) or Spartina patens (SP site). AOA amoA gene richness was higher than β-AOB amoA richness at SAT and SP, but AOA and β-AOB richness were similar at SAS. β-AOB amoA clone libraries were composed exclusively of Nitrosospira-like amoA genes. AOA amoA genes at SAT and SP were equally distributed between the water column/sediment and soil/sediment clades, while AOA amoA sequences at SAS were primarily affiliated with the water column/sediment clade. At all three site types, AOA were always more abundant than β-AOB based on quantitative PCR of amoA genes. At some sites, we detected 109 AOA amoA gene copies g of sediment−1. Ratios of AOA to β-AOB varied over 2 orders of magnitude among sites and sampling dates. Nevertheless, abundances of AOA and β-AOB amoA genes were highly correlated. Abundance of 16S rRNA genes affiliated with Nitrosopumilus maritimus, Crenarchaeota group I.1b, and pSL12 were positively correlated with AOA amoA abundance, but ratios of amoA to 16S rRNA genes varied among sites. We also observed a significant effect of pH on AOA abundance and a significant salinity effect on both AOA and β-ΑΟΒ abundance. Our results expand the distribution of AOA to salt marshes, and the high numbers of AOA at some sites suggest that salt marsh sediments serve as an important habitat for AOA.Nitrification, the sequential oxidation of ammonia to nitrite and nitrate, is a critical step in the nitrogen cycle and is mediated by a suite of phylogenetically and physiologically distinct microorganisms. The recent discovery of ammonia oxidation among Archaea (17, 38) has led to a dramatic shift in the current model of nitrification and to new questions of niche differentiation between putative ammonia-oxidizing Archaea (AOA) and the more-well-studied ammonia-oxidizing Betaproteobacteria (β-AOB). Based on surveys of 16S rRNA genes and archaeal amoA genes, it is evident that AOA occupy a wide range of niches (10), suggesting a physiologically diverse group of Archaea. Additionally, in studies where AOA and β-AOB were both targeted, AOA were typically more abundant than their bacterial counterparts (19, 21, 42). However, there are reports of β-AOB outnumbering AOA in estuarine systems (6, 33), suggesting a possible shift in competitive dominance under certain conditions.Patterns of β-AOB diversity in estuaries have been well characterized and appear to be regulated by similar mechanisms within geographically disparate systems (4, 11, 32). However, AOA distribution and their role in nitrification relative to β-AOB remain to be determined. A few studies have begun to address this question in different estuaries, but no unifying patterns or mechanisms have emerged. Although β-AOB have been well studied along estuarine salinity gradients (1, 3, 4, 7, 11, 13, 22, 33, 39) and recent studies have begun to address AOA in estuaries (1, 6, 22, 32, 33), few have investigated β-AOB in salt marshes (9), and none has included AOA.In this study, we investigated the distribution and abundance of AOA and β-AOB based on the distribution and abundance of amoA genes in salt marsh sediments dominated by different types of vegetation. Although we equate the presence of archaeal amoA genes with the genetic potential to oxidize ammonia, we acknowledge the possibility that all Archaea that have amoA genes may not all represent functional ammonia oxidizers. Vegetation patterns of New England salt marshes are strongly correlated with marsh elevation and are controlled by a combination of interspecific competition and tolerance to physico-chemical stress (28). The dominant grasses of New England salt marshes are Spartina alterniflora and Spartina patens, which typically grow as pure stands. S. alterniflora is found in two phenotypically distinct but genetically identical forms, a tall and a short growth form (34). The tall S. alterniflora grows to heights of 1 to 2 m and is typically found at the edges of the marsh and along creek banks (SAT sites), while the short-form S. alterniflora may reach heights of only 30 cm and is found in sites (SAS sites) slightly higher on the marsh where soil drainage is limited and conditions are more reduced compared to SAT sites (14). Conversely, S. patens, due to its lower tolerance of salt and more reduced conditions, is found in sites (SP sites) highest on the marsh, in areas that receive less flooding (5). Because the marsh is subjected to daily tidal fluctuations, most sites experience periods of anoxia, the degree of which depends on the marsh elevation. We hypothesized that ammonia-oxidizing communities in areas dominated by different marsh grasses would reflect the different edaphic conditions associated with each type of grass, due to differences in vertical zonation in the marsh.  相似文献   

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The distribution and activity of communities of sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) and methanogenic archaea in two contrasting Antarctic sediments were investigated. Methanogenesis dominated in freshwater Lake Heywood, while sulfate reduction dominated in marine Shallow Bay. Slurry experiments indicated that 90% of the methanogenesis in Lake Heywood was acetoclastic. This finding was supported by the limited diversity of clones detected in a Lake Heywood archaeal clone library, in which most clones were closely related to the obligate acetate-utilizing Methanosaeta concilii. The Shallow Bay archaeal clone library contained clones related to the C1-utilizing Methanolobus and Methanococcoides and the H2-utilizing Methanogenium. Oligonucleotide probing of RNA extracted directly from sediment indicated that archaea represented 34% of the total prokaryotic signal in Lake Heywood and that Methanosaeta was a major component (13.2%) of this signal. Archaea represented only 0.2% of the total prokaryotic signal in RNA extracted from Shallow Bay sediments. In the Shallow Bay bacterial clone library, 10.3% of the clones were SRB-like, related to Desulfotalea/Desulforhopalus, Desulfofaba, Desulfosarcina, and Desulfobacter as well as to the sulfur and metal oxidizers comprising the Desulfuromonas cluster. Oligonucleotide probes for specific SRB clusters indicated that SRB represented 14.7% of the total prokaryotic signal, with Desulfotalea/Desulforhopalus being the dominant SRB group (10.7% of the total prokaryotic signal) in the Shallow Bay sediments; these results support previous results obtained for Arctic sediments. Methanosaeta and Desulfotalea/Desulforhopalus appear to be important in Lake Heywood and Shallow Bay, respectively, and may be globally important in permanently low-temperature sediments.  相似文献   

16.
Meromictic Lake Kivu is renowned for its enormous quantity of methane dissolved in the hypolimnion. The methane is primarily of biological origin, and its concentration has been increasing in the past half-century. Insight into the origin of methane production in Lake Kivu has become relevant with the recent commercial extraction of methane from the hypolimnion. This study provides the first culture-independent approach to identifying the archaeal communities present in Lake Kivu sediments at the sediment-water interface. Terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis suggests considerable heterogeneity in the archaeal community composition at varying sample locations. This diversity reflects changes in the geochemical conditions in the sediment and the overlying water, which are an effect of local groundwater inflows. A more in-depth look at the archaeal community composition by clone library analysis revealed diverse phylogenies of Euryarchaeota and Crenarachaeota. Many of the sequences in the clone libraries belonged to globally distributed archaeal clades such as the rice cluster V and Lake Dagow sediment environmental clusters. Several of the determined clades were previously thought to be rare among freshwater sediment Archaea (e.g., sequences related to the SAGMEG-1 clade). Surprisingly, there was no observed relation of clones to known hydrogentrophic methanogens and less than 2 % of clones were related to acetoclastic methanogens. The local variability, diversity, and novelty of the archaeal community structure in Lake Kivu should be considered when making assumptions on the biogeochemical functioning of its sediments.  相似文献   

17.
Sediment dredging is an effective engineering measure to reduce the negative effects of PAHs pollution on water environment. The dredging depth is a key parameter in environmental dredging engineering. A guidance of environmental dredging depth needed to reduce the toxicity risk was developed which was specifically designed for the removal of river sediments contaminated by PAHs based on the mean effect range median quotients (mean-ERM-q). The dredging depths for removing river sediments were calculated based on the vertical profile of PAHs content and the quality guidelines of sediment. Pinghu water system was carried out to determine the dredging depths of sediments from nine rivers by the proposed method. Each sediment core was collected from different river. The results showed the profiles of PAHs in sediment cores were irregular and diverse due to river dredging events and human activities in different periods. The risk assessment of PAHs toxicity showed one of nine cores with moderate-high probability, 4 of nine cores with low-moderate probability and the others with low toxicity risk. The achievement can offer a reference to the dredging engineering in other similar river systems.  相似文献   

18.
The microbial community structure and spatial distribution of microorganisms and their in situ activities in anaerobic granules were investigated by 16S rRNA gene-based molecular techniques and microsensors for CH4, H2, pH, and the oxidation-reduction potential (ORP). The 16S rRNA gene-cloning analysis revealed that the clones related to the phyla Alphaproteobacteria (detection frequency, 51%), Firmicutes (20%), Chloroflexi (9%), and Betaproteobacteria (8%) dominated the bacterial clone library, and the predominant clones in the archaeal clone library were affiliated with Methanosaeta (73%). In situ hybridization with oligonucleotide probes at the phylum level revealed that these microorganisms were numerically abundant in the granule. A layered structure of microorganisms was found in the granule, where Chloroflexi and Betaproteobacteria were present in the outer shell of the granule, Firmicutes were found in the middle layer, and aceticlastic Archaea were restricted to the inner layer. Microsensor measurements for CH4, H2, pH, and ORP revealed that acid and H2 production occurred in the upper part of the granule, below which H2 consumption and CH4 production were detected. Direct comparison of the in situ activity distribution with the spatial distribution of the microorganisms implied that Chloroflexi contributed to the degradation of complex organic compounds in the outermost layer, H2 was produced mainly by Firmicutes in the middle layer, and Methanosaeta produced CH4 in the inner layer. We determined the effective diffusion coefficient for H2 in the anaerobic granules to be 2.66 × 10−5 cm2 s−1, which was 57% in water.  相似文献   

19.
Microbial community samples were collected from the anoxic zone of the Cariaco Basin at depths of 320, 500, and 1,310 m on a November 1996 cruise and were used to construct 16S ribosomal DNA libraries. Of 60 nonchimeric sequences in the 320-m library, 56 belonged to the subdivision of the Proteobacteria (-Proteobacteria) and 53 were closely related to ectosymbionts of Rimicaris exoculata and Alvinella pompejana, which are referred to here as epsilon symbiont relatives (ESR). The 500-m library contained sequences affiliated with the fibrobacteria, the Flexibacter-Cytophaga-Bacteroides division, the division Verrucomicrobia, the division Proteobacteria, and the OP3 candidate division. The Proteobacteria included members of the γ, δ, and new candidate subdivisions, and γ-proteobacterial sequences were dominant (25.6%) among the proteobacterial sequences. As in the 320-m library, the majority of the -proteobacteria belonged to the ESR group. The genus Fibrobacter and its relatives were the second largest group in the library (23.6%), followed by the δ-proteobacteria and the -proteobacteria. The 1,310-m library had the greatest diversity; 59 nonchimeric clones in the library contained 30 unique sequences belonging to the planctomycetes, the fibrobacteria, the Flexibacter-Cytophaga-Bacteroides division, the Proteobacteria, and the OP3 and OP8 candidate divisions. The proteobacteria included members of new candidate subdivisions and the β, γ, δ, and -subdivisions. ESR sequences were still present in the 1,310-m library but in a much lower proportion (8.5%). One archaeal sequence was present in the 500-m library (2% of all microorganisms in the library), and eight archaeal sequences were present in the 1,310-m library (13.6%). All archaeal sequences fell into two groups; two clones in the 1,310-m library belonged to the kingdom Crenarchaeota and the remaining sequences in both libraries belonged to the kingdom Euryarchaeota. The latter group appears to be related to the Eel-TA1f2 sequence, which belongs to an archaeon suggested to be able to oxidize methane anaerobically. Based on phylogenetic inferences and measurements of dark CO2 fixation, we hypothesized that (i) the ESR are autotrophic anaerobic sulfide oxidizers, (ii) sulfate reduction and fermentative metabolism may be carried out by a large number of bacteria in the 500- and 1,310-m libraries, and (iii) members of the Euryarchaeota found in relatively large numbers in the 1,310-m library may be involved in anaerobic methane oxidation. Overall, the composition of microbial communities from the Cariaco Basin resembles the compositions of communities from several anaerobic sediments, supporting the hypothesis that the Cariaco Basin water column is similar to anaerobic sediments.  相似文献   

20.
Archaea and bacteria are important drivers for nutrient transformations in soils and catalyse the production and consumption of important greenhouse gases. In this study, we investigate changes in archaeal and bacterial communities of four Czech grassland soils affected by outdoor cattle husbandry. Two show short-term (3 years; STI) and long-term impact (17 years; LTI), one is regenerating from cattle impact (REG) and a control is unaffected by cattle (CON). Cattle manure (CMN), the source of allochthonous microbes, was collected from the same area. We used pyrosequencing of 16S rRNA genes to assess the composition of archaeal and bacterial communities in each soil type and CMN. Both short- and long- term cattle impact negatively altered archaeal and bacterial diversity, leading to increase of homogenization of microbial communities in overwintering soils over time. Moreover, strong shifts in the prokaryotic communities were observed in response to cattle overwintering, with the greatest impact on archaea. Oligotrophic and acidophilic microorganisms (e.g. Thaumarchaeota, Acidobacteria, and α-Proteobacteria) dominated in CON and expressed strong negative response to increased pH, total C and N. Whereas copiotrophic and alkalophilic microbes (e.g. methanogenic Euryarchaeota, Firmicutes, Chloroflexi, Actinobacteria, and Bacteroidetes) were common in LTI showing opposite trends. Crenarchaeota were also found in LTI, though their trophic interactions remain cryptic. Firmicutes, Bacteroidetes, Methanobacteriaceae, and Methanomicrobiaceae indicated the introduction and establishment of faecal microbes into the impacted soils, while Chloroflexi and Methanosarcinaceae suggested increased abundance of soil-borne microbes under altered environmental conditions. The observed changes in prokaryotic community composition may have driven corresponding changes in soil functioning.  相似文献   

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