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Archaea dominate the microbial community in an ecosystem with low-to-moderate temperature and extreme acidity. / Korzhenkov, Aleksei A.; Toshchakov, Stepan V.; Bargiela, Rafael et al.
In: Microbiome, Vol. 7, No. 1, 11, 28.01.2019.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Korzhenkov, AA, Toshchakov, SV, Bargiela, R, Gibbard, H, Ferrer, M, Teplyuk, AV, Jones, DL, Kublanov, IV, Golyshin, P & Golyshina, O 2019, 'Archaea dominate the microbial community in an ecosystem with low-to-moderate temperature and extreme acidity', Microbiome, vol. 7, no. 1, 11. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40168-019-0623-8

APA

Korzhenkov, A. A., Toshchakov, S. V., Bargiela, R., Gibbard, H., Ferrer, M., Teplyuk, A. V., Jones, D. L., Kublanov, I. V., Golyshin, P., & Golyshina, O. (2019). Archaea dominate the microbial community in an ecosystem with low-to-moderate temperature and extreme acidity. Microbiome, 7(1), Article 11. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40168-019-0623-8

CBE

Korzhenkov AA, Toshchakov SV, Bargiela R, Gibbard H, Ferrer M, Teplyuk AV, Jones DL, Kublanov IV, Golyshin P, Golyshina O. 2019. Archaea dominate the microbial community in an ecosystem with low-to-moderate temperature and extreme acidity. Microbiome. 7(1):Article 11. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40168-019-0623-8

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Korzhenkov AA, Toshchakov SV, Bargiela R, Gibbard H, Ferrer M, Teplyuk AV et al. Archaea dominate the microbial community in an ecosystem with low-to-moderate temperature and extreme acidity. Microbiome. 2019 Jan 28;7(1):11. doi: 10.1186/s40168-019-0623-8

Author

Korzhenkov, Aleksei A. ; Toshchakov, Stepan V. ; Bargiela, Rafael et al. / Archaea dominate the microbial community in an ecosystem with low-to-moderate temperature and extreme acidity. In: Microbiome. 2019 ; Vol. 7, No. 1.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Archaea dominate the microbial community in an ecosystem with low-to-moderate temperature and extreme acidity

AU - Korzhenkov, Aleksei A.

AU - Toshchakov, Stepan V.

AU - Bargiela, Rafael

AU - Gibbard, Huw

AU - Ferrer, Manuel

AU - Teplyuk, Alina V.

AU - Jones, Davey L.

AU - Kublanov, Ilya V.

AU - Golyshin, Peter

AU - Golyshina, Olga

PY - 2019/1/28

Y1 - 2019/1/28

N2 - BACKGROUND: The current view suggests that in low-temperature acidic environments, archaea are significantly less abundant than bacteria. Thus, this study of the microbiome of Parys Mountain (Anglesey, UK) sheds light on the generality of this current assumption. Parys Mountain is a historically important copper mine and its acid mine drainage (AMD) water streams are characterised by constant moderate temperatures (8-18 °C), extremely low pH (1.7) and high concentrations of soluble iron and other metal cations.RESULTS: Metagenomic and SSU rRNA amplicon sequencing of DNA from Parys Mountain revealed a significant proportion of archaea affiliated with Euryarchaeota, which accounted for ca. 67% of the community. Within this phylum, potentially new clades of Thermoplasmata were overrepresented (58%), with the most predominant group being "E-plasma", alongside low-abundant Cuniculiplasmataceae, 'Ca. Micrarchaeota' and 'Terrestrial Miscellaneous Euryarchaeal Group' (TMEG) archaea, which were phylogenetically close to Methanomassilicoccales and clustered with counterparts from acidic/moderately acidic settings. In the sediment, archaea and Thermoplasmata contributed the highest numbers in V3-V4 amplicon reads, in contrast with the water body community, where Proteobacteria, Nitrospirae, Acidobacteria and Actinobacteria outnumbered archaea. Cultivation efforts revealed the abundance of archaeal sequences closely related to Cuniculiplasma divulgatum in an enrichment culture established from the filterable fraction of the water sample. Enrichment cultures with unfiltered samples showed the presence of Ferrimicrobium acidiphilum, C. divulgatum, 'Ca. Mancarchaeum acidiphilum Mia14', 'Ca. Micrarchaeota'-related and diverse minor (< 2%) bacterial metagenomic reads.CONCLUSION: Contrary to expectation, our study showed a high abundance of archaea in this extremely acidic mine-impacted environment. Further, archaeal populations were dominated by one particular group, suggesting that they are functionally important. The prevalence of archaea over bacteria in these microbiomes and their spatial distribution patterns represents a novel and important advance in our understanding of acidophile ecology. We also demonstrated a procedure for the specific enrichment of cell wall-deficient members of the archaeal component of this community, although the large fraction of archaeal taxa remained unculturable. Lastly, we identified a separate clustering of globally occurring acidophilic members of TMEG that collectively belong to a distinct order within Thermoplasmata with yet unclear functional roles in the ecosystem.

AB - BACKGROUND: The current view suggests that in low-temperature acidic environments, archaea are significantly less abundant than bacteria. Thus, this study of the microbiome of Parys Mountain (Anglesey, UK) sheds light on the generality of this current assumption. Parys Mountain is a historically important copper mine and its acid mine drainage (AMD) water streams are characterised by constant moderate temperatures (8-18 °C), extremely low pH (1.7) and high concentrations of soluble iron and other metal cations.RESULTS: Metagenomic and SSU rRNA amplicon sequencing of DNA from Parys Mountain revealed a significant proportion of archaea affiliated with Euryarchaeota, which accounted for ca. 67% of the community. Within this phylum, potentially new clades of Thermoplasmata were overrepresented (58%), with the most predominant group being "E-plasma", alongside low-abundant Cuniculiplasmataceae, 'Ca. Micrarchaeota' and 'Terrestrial Miscellaneous Euryarchaeal Group' (TMEG) archaea, which were phylogenetically close to Methanomassilicoccales and clustered with counterparts from acidic/moderately acidic settings. In the sediment, archaea and Thermoplasmata contributed the highest numbers in V3-V4 amplicon reads, in contrast with the water body community, where Proteobacteria, Nitrospirae, Acidobacteria and Actinobacteria outnumbered archaea. Cultivation efforts revealed the abundance of archaeal sequences closely related to Cuniculiplasma divulgatum in an enrichment culture established from the filterable fraction of the water sample. Enrichment cultures with unfiltered samples showed the presence of Ferrimicrobium acidiphilum, C. divulgatum, 'Ca. Mancarchaeum acidiphilum Mia14', 'Ca. Micrarchaeota'-related and diverse minor (< 2%) bacterial metagenomic reads.CONCLUSION: Contrary to expectation, our study showed a high abundance of archaea in this extremely acidic mine-impacted environment. Further, archaeal populations were dominated by one particular group, suggesting that they are functionally important. The prevalence of archaea over bacteria in these microbiomes and their spatial distribution patterns represents a novel and important advance in our understanding of acidophile ecology. We also demonstrated a procedure for the specific enrichment of cell wall-deficient members of the archaeal component of this community, although the large fraction of archaeal taxa remained unculturable. Lastly, we identified a separate clustering of globally occurring acidophilic members of TMEG that collectively belong to a distinct order within Thermoplasmata with yet unclear functional roles in the ecosystem.

KW - Acids/metabolism

KW - Archaea/classification

KW - Bacteria/classification

KW - Cold Temperature

KW - Ecosystem

KW - Geologic Sediments/microbiology

KW - Metagenome/genetics

KW - Microbiota/physiology

KW - RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/genetics

KW - Wales

U2 - 10.1186/s40168-019-0623-8

DO - 10.1186/s40168-019-0623-8

M3 - Article

C2 - 30691532

VL - 7

JO - Microbiome

JF - Microbiome

SN - 2049-2618

IS - 1

M1 - 11

ER -