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Environmental Microbiology Reports
2015


Shifts in the meso- and bathypelagic archaea communities composition during recovery and short-term handling of decompressed deep-sea samples

Violetta La Cono, Francesco Smedile, Gina La Spada, Erika Arcadi, Maria Genovese, Gioacchino Ruggeri, Lucrezia Genovese, Laura Giuliano and Michail M. Yakimov

Institute for Coastal Marine Environment, CNR, Spianata S.Raineri 86, 98122 Messina, Italy.

Abstract

Dark ocean microbial communities are actively involved in chemoautotrophic and anaplerotic fixation of bicarbonate. Thus, aphotic pelagic realm of the ocean might represent a significant sink of CO2 and source of primary production. However, the estimated metabolic activities in the dark ocean are fraught with uncertainties. Typically, deep-sea samples are recovered to the sea surface for downstream processing on deck. Shifts in ambient settings, associated with such treatments, can likely change the metabolic activity and community structure of deep-sea adapted autochthonous microbial populations. To estimate influence of recovery and short-term handling of deep-sea samples, we monitored the succession of bathypelagic microbial community during its 3 days-long on deck incubation. We demonstrated that at the end of exposition, the deep-sea archaeal population decreased three fold, whereas the bacterial fraction doubled in size. As revealed by phylogenetic analyses of amoA gene transcripts, dominance of the active ammonium-oxidizing bathypelagic Thaumarchaeota groups shifted over time very fast. These findings demonstrated the simultaneous existence of various ‘deep-sea ecotypes’, differentially reacting to the sampling and downstream handling. Our study supports the hypothesis that metabolically active members of meso- and bathypelagic Thaumarchaeota possess the habitat-specific distribution, metabolic complexity and genetic divergence at subpopulation level.

 

 

 
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