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Molecular phylogenetic and chemical analyses of the microbial mats in deep-sea cold seep sediments at the northeastern Japan Sea
Authors:Shizuka Arakawa  Takako Sato  Rumi Sato  Jing Zhang  Toshitaka Gamo  Urumu Tsunogai  Akinari Hirota  Yasuhiko Yoshida  Ron Usami  Fumio Inagaki  Chiaki Kato
Institution:(1) Department of Applied Chemistry, Faculty of Engineering, Toyo University, Kawagoe 350-0815, Japan;(2) Extremobiosphere Research Center, Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology, 2-15 Natsushima-cho, Yokosuka 237-0061, Japan;(3) Faculty of Science, Toyama University, Toyama-shi 930-8555, Japan;(4) Division of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Hokkaido University, Sapporo 060-0810, Japan;(5) Present address: Oceanography Research Institute, The University of Tokyo, Nakano-ku, Tokyo 164-8639, Japan
Abstract:Microbial communities inhabiting deep-sea cold seep sediments at the northeastern Japan Sea were characterized by molecular phylogenetic and chemical analyses. White patchy microbial mats were observed along the fault offshore the Hokkaido Island and sediment samples were collected from two stations at the southern foot of the Shiribeshi seamount (M1 site at a depth of 2,961 m on the active fault) and off the Motta Cape site (M2 site at a depth of 3,064 m off the active fault). The phylogenetic and terminal-restriction fragment polymorphism analyses of PCR-amplified 16S rRNA genes revealed that microbial community structures were different between two sampling stations. The members of ANME-2 archaea and diverse bacterial components including sulfate reducers within Deltaproteobacteria were detected from M1 site, indicating the occurrence of biologically mediated anaerobic oxidation of methane, while microbial community at M2 site was predominantly composed of members of Marine Crenarchaeota group I, sulfate reducers of Deltaproteobacteria, and sulfur oxidizers of Epsilonproteobacteria. Chemical analyses of seawater above microbial mats suggested that concentrations of sulfate and methane at M1 site were largely decreased relative to those at M2 site and carbon isotopic composition of methane at M1 site shifted heavier (13C-enriched), the results of which are consistent with molecular analyses. These results suggest that the mat microbial communities in deep-sea cold seep sediments at the northeastern Japan Sea are significantly responsible for sulfur and carbon circulations and the geological activity associated with plate movements serves unique microbial habitats in deep-sea environments.
Keywords:ANME  AOM  Cold seep  Deep-sea  Deltaproteobacteria  Japan Sea  Microbial diversity  Microbial mat
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