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Shifts in archaeal communities associated with lithological and geochemical variations in subsurface Cretaceous rock
Authors:Takai Ken  Mormile Melanie R  McKinley James P  Brockman Fred J  Holben William E  Kovacik William P  Fredrickson Jim K
Institution:Deep-sea Microorganisms Research Group, Japan Marine Science and Technology Center, Yokosuka 237–0061 Japan.; Department of Biological Sciences, University of Missouri-Rolla, Rolla, Missouri 65409, USA.; Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, PO Box 999, Mailstop P7-50, Richland, Washington 99352, USA.; Division of Biological Sciences, The University of Montana, Missoula, MT 59812, USA.
Abstract:Subsurface microbial community structure in relation to geochemical gradients and lithology was investigated using a combination of molecular phylogenetic and geochemical analyses. Discreet groundwater and substratum samples were obtained from depths ranging from 182 to 190 m beneath the surface at approximately 10-cm intervals using a multilevel sampler (MLS) that straddled Cretaceous shale and sandstone formations at a site in the southern San Juan Basin in New Mexico. DNA and RNA were extracted directly from quartzite sand substratum loaded into individual cells of the MLS and colonized in situ. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-mediated T-RFLP analysis of archaeal rRNA genes (rDNA) in conjunction with partial sequencing analysis of archaeal rDNA libraries and quantitative RNA hybridization with oligonucleotide probes were used to probe community structure and function. Although total microbial populations remained relatively constant over the entire depth interval sampled, significant shifts in archaeal populations, predominantly methanogens, were observed. These shifts coincided with the geochemical transition from relatively high methane (26 mM), low sulphate (< 3 mg l(-1)) conditions in the region adjacent to the organic matter-rich shale to relatively low-methane (< 0.5 mM), high-sulphate (48 mg l(-1)) conditions in the organic-poor sandstone beneath the shale. These results indicated that active, phylogenetically diverse archaeal communities were present in the subsurface Cretaceous rock environment at this site and that major archaeal clades shifted dramatically over scales of tens of centimetres, corresponding to changes in the lithology and geochemical gradients.
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