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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, December 2004, p. 7053-7065, Vol. 70, No. 12
0099-2240/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.70.12.7053-7065.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
and
Charles R. Lovell1*
Department of Biological Sciences, University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina,1 Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Engineer Research and Development Center, Hanover, New Hampshire2
Received 11 December 2003/ Accepted 13 July 2004
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Stable, sharply defined sediment stratification, as described above, is often transient in nearshore marine systems due to intense physical and biological disturbance (31, 86). Although sediment mixing may have negative effects on some bacteria, exposing obligate anaerobes to oxygen and physically disrupting microbial consortia (66), it may also stimulate the growth and activity of other bacteria by introducing solutes, including oxygen, into anoxic sediments (28, 36, 45). Enhanced solute exchange is also an important property of macroinfaunal tubes and burrows (6, 38, 49, 78). The dwellings of marine infauna vary greatly in structure, ranging from simple tubes composed of loosely packed sediment lined with mucopolysaccharides (e.g., Amphitrite ornata [4]) to structurally cohesive tubes constructed from polysaccharides and proteins (e.g., Diopatra cuprea [64]). Large burrow complexes can be constructed by burrowing crustaceans and may have packed sediment walls (e.g., Upogebia affinis [5]). These burrow and tube structures increase the surface area across which solutes can diffuse into or out of the sediments and provide a more stable physical environment compared to surficial sediments.
When infaunal host organisms irrigate their burrows or tubes with seawater, oxygen and other solutes are introduced into formerly anoxic sediments (29, 38, 48), and potentially inhibitory compounds are removed (47). Radial chemoclines, analogous to the planar chemoclines found in undisturbed surficial sediments, are thus extended vertically into the sediments (2, 3, 4, 12, 60). These stable burrow structures with their radial chemoclines of potential electron donors and acceptors support microbial activity and biomass at levels that are elevated relative to those in the surrounding bulk sediments (3, 6, 48, 49, 78).
Sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) are key participants in the biogeochemical cycling of sulfur and carbon in marine sediments and are responsible for as much as 50% of the total carbon oxidation in shallow-water coastal marine sediments (40). It is believed that the tubes and burrows of marine infauna may be significant foci of sulfate reduction. For example, the sulfate reduction rates in the irrigated burrows of the marine polychaete A. ornata were estimated to be higher than those in the surrounding anoxic sediment (4). SRB have been detected in the burrows of several species of marine infauna by using phospholipid fatty acid (PLFA) analysis (24, 78). This method allows detection of some SRB groups on the basis of specific signature biomarker PLFAs (26, 44, 82), but not all SRB groups have specific biomarker PLFAs and PLFA analysis does not provide detailed, phylogenetically based information on the types of SRB that may be present in burrows.
D. cuprea (referred to as Diopatra below) actively irrigates its tubes, and the irrigation rates are as high as 52 ml g (fresh weight) of worm1 h1 (58). Oxygen from incurrent seawater diffuses through the tube wall and into the surrounding sediment, as indicated by orange to light brown oxidized bands of sediment around the tubes. Diopatra tubes found within the intertidal zone are exposed at low tide, during which irrigation activity ceases, and oxygen in the burrow water is rapidly depleted and remains depleted until the incoming high tide. PLFA analysis of several other common marine infaunal tubes and burrows has shown that SRB are present in these structures (78), but some of the animals are relatively sluggish irrigators and oxygenation of the burrow water may not be very efficient. Previous work by Phillips and Lovell (68) showed that Diopatra tubes support large and highly active bacterial communities. Whether SRB can occur in tubes of an active irrigator, such as Diopatra, and, if so, what types of SRB occur there have not been determined.
We examined the diversity of the bacterial community, specifically the SRB, in the tubes of Diopatra and in surrounding sediments by 16S rRNA gene sequence recovery and analysis, employing clonal library construction, denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE), and DNA-DNA hybridization methods. PLFA analysis was also conducted to provide a more inclusive view of the composition and physiological status of the bacterial community inhabiting Diopatra tubes. The goals of this study were to determine the types of SRB present in Diopatra tubes and to examine whether the texture of the sediment around the Diopatra tubes influences the types of bacteria (specifically, SRB) present in the tubes.
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Characteristics of the Diopatra tubes.
The tubes of Diopatra are built by solitary onuphid polychaetes and are composed of sulfated polysaccharide mucus that is secreted from glands and hardens upon contact with seawater (64). Each tube has two structurally different portions. The unreinforced portion of the tube is built below the sediment surface by secretion of mucus as the worm burrows vertically through the sediment. The tube cap, which is in the form of an inverted hook, is reinforced with debris that is cemented to the exterior of the tube wall. It is typically found above the sediment surface, but it may extend below the surface, particularly when the sediment is frequently disturbed. The lengths of the cap and the portion of the reinforced tube section that extends into the sediment depend upon erosion and deposition of sediment (64).
Sample collection.
Only the unreinforced portions of the tubes were used for analysis as debris cemented onto the outside of the reinforced portions of Diopatra tubes made them unsuitable. The tubes were exhumed until 20 to 25 cm of unreinforced tube was exposed. Branched tubes, tubes having subsurface reinforced sections longer than 10 cm, and tubes with subsurface reinforced sections interspersed with unreinforced sections were excluded from the analysis. The tube cap and reinforced tube associated with it were removed, and 12 to 16 cm of unreinforced tube was collected for analysis. Tube samples were placed in sterile disposable 50-ml screw-cap polypropylene tubes containing seawater. Sediment samples were collected by using cut-off 10-ml syringes (interior diameter, 1.4 cm; length, 8.5 cm) from the top 8 cm of sediment and from 8 to 16 cm below the surface for analysis of sediment physical characteristics, for bacterial cell counting, and for genomic DNA extraction. Sediment samples collected for cell counting were fixed in filtered 2.5% formaldehyde in sterile 50-ml tubes. Sediment and tube samples were transported to Columbia, S.C., on ice for processing. Diopatra tubes for PLFA analysis were collected from site C as described above, transferred to sterile WhirlPak bags (Nasco, Fort Atkinson, Wis.), and immediately frozen on dry ice in the field. These samples were stored at 70°C pending shipment to the Waterway Experiment Station for processing.
Sediment analysis and bacterial cell counting.
The sediment grain size distribution and organic matter content for sample site C have been presented previously (56). Sediment samples from sites A and B were collected and dried to constant weight at 55°C. The sediment was then dry sieved through a Wentworth series of sieves by using a mechanical shaker to facilitate size fractionation. Porosity was calculated from the water loss after drying of the sediment. The organic matter content of the sediment was determined by determining the ash-free dry weight after combustion at 500°C in a muffle furnace for 4 h. Bacterial cell numbers were determined by using the epifluorescence direct count method of Hobbie et al. (37), as modified for use with sediments (77, 87), and by using Sytox Green (Molecular Probes, Eugene, Oreg.) instead of acridine orange (68).
Amplification, cloning, and amplified ribosomal DNA (rDNA) restriction analysis of 16S rRNA genes.
Genomic DNA was purified from sediment and Diopatra tube samples by using the methods of Lovell and Piceno (56), as modified by Piceno et al. (69). Nearly full-length 16S rRNA gene sequences were then PCR amplified by using the domain Bacteria-specific oligonucleotide primers 27F (forward primer) and 1492R (reverse primer) designed by Lane (53) (Table 1). The PCR system consisted of the following: 1 ng of template DNA µl1, 0.025 U of Expand High Fidelity DNA polymerase (Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis, Ind.) µl1, 1x Expand High Fidelity PCR buffer, 1.5 mM MgCl2, each deoxynucleoside triphosphate at a concentration of 0.2 mM, and 0.25 pmol of each primer µl1 in a 25-µl (final volume) mixture. Amplification and screening of amplicons were performed as described by Dang and Lovell (19). Following amplification, PCR amplimers were purified by using a GENECLEAN kit (Bio 101, Vista, Calif.) and were cloned by using the pGEM-T vector system (Promega, Madison, Wis.).
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TABLE 1. Oligonucleotides used in this study
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16S rDNA sequencing.
Plasmid DNA was purified from each unique clone (QIAGEN), and plasmid quality and quantity were determined by agarose gel electrophoresis and fluorometry, respectively. The DNA insert was sequenced in both directions by using forward bacterial primer GM5F (Escherichia coli sequence positions 341 to 357) (62) and universal reverse primer 907R (E. coli sequence positions 907 to 928) (8) (Table 1). The sequences were determined by using a SequiTherm EXCEL II Long-Read LC DNA sequencing kit (Epicentre Technologies, Madison, Wis.) and a Li-Cor DNA4000LS sequencer (Li-Cor, Lincoln, Nebr.) or an ABI 3100 genetic analyzer (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, Calif.) with BigDye version 2.0 chemistry.
Analysis of 16S rDNA sequences.
Previously reported 16S rDNA gene sequences most similar to those determined in this study were identified by using Sequence_Match (version 2.7) via Ribosomal Database Project II (57) and the advanced BLAST search program (7) of the National Center for Biotechnology Information GenBank database (11). Sequences were aligned by using Clustal X (version 1.81) (81). Distance matrices were constructed by using Jukes-Cantor or Kimura models, and neighbor-joining trees (bootstrapped 1,000 times) and maximum-parsimony phylogenetic trees (utilizing the close-neighbor-interchange search method with a search level of 3, initial random addition trees with 10 replicates, and bootstrapping 1,000 times) were constructed from aligned sequences by using MEGA (version 2.1) (51). Maximum-likelihood trees were constructed by using Tree-puzzle (version 5.0) (79) with 1,000 puzzling steps and Jukes-Cantor and Kimura substitution models. The major microbial phyla and proposed phyla used for phylogenetic analyses are listed in Table 2.
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TABLE 2. Organisms used for phylogenetic analysis and their accession numbers
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DGGE was performed by using the D-Code universal mutation detection system (Bio-Rad, Hercules, Calif.) with 1-mm-thick, 8% polyacrylamide gels and a denaturing solution gradient of 40 to 60% urea-formamide (0% denaturing solution contained 20% [vol/vol] 40% acrylamide/bisacrylamide in 1x Tris-acetate-EDTA (TAE) buffer, and 100% denaturing solution contained 20% [vol/vol] 40% acrylamide/bisacrylamide, 40% formamide [deionized], and 42% [wt/vol] urea in 1x TAE buffer). The samples were electrophoresed in 1x TAE buffer at 60°C and a constant voltage of 100 V for 19 h. DGGE gels were stained with ethidium bromide, and digital images were collected by using an Alpha Imager gel documentation system (AlphaInnotech Corp., San Leandro, Calif.).
SRB probes.
DNA oligonucleotide probes were selected to provide coverage of SRB types known to occur in marine sediments, with particular emphasis on coverage of SRB sequences recovered from the clonal libraries. Probes were made and biotinylated by Integrated DNA Technologies, Inc. (Coralville, Iowa). Probe 804 hybridizes with the genera Desulfobacter, Desulfobacterium, Desulfobotulus, Desulfococcus, and Desulfosarcina (23). Probe DSS658 hybridizes with only Desulfosarcina (59). Probe 687 hybridizes with members of the genus Desulfovibrio (Table 1) (23).
Southern blotting and hybridization analysis of DGGE gels.
DGGE gels were electroblotted onto positively charged nylon membranes (Tropilon-plus; Tropix, Bedford, Maine) by using a GENIE electrophoretic transfer apparatus (Idea Scientific, Corvallis, Oreg.). DNA was transferred in 0.5x Tris-borate-EDTA at 6 V for 1 h and then denatured by washing the membrane with denaturing solution (0.4 M NaOH, 0.6 M NaCl) for 15 min. The membrane was transferred to neutralizing solution (0.5 M Tris-HCl [pH 8.0], 0.6 M NaCl) and washed twice for 10 min each time. It was then transferred to 5x SSC (1x SSC is 150 mM NaCl plus 15 mM sodium citrate) for 5 min. Following the washes, the membrane was thoroughly air dried and then baked under a vacuum at 80°C for 2 h. Hybridization and detection of SRB sequences were performed by using the Southern Lights hybridization and detection protocol (Tropix) for biotinylated probes, modified as follows: the membrane was prehybridized and hybridized at 49, 50.3, and 37°C for probes 804, DSS658, and 687, respectively. The biotinylated probe concentration was 2.5 pmol/ml, and the hybridization buffer (100 µl/cm2 of membrane) was amended with boiled salmon sperm DNA (23 ng/cm2 of membrane).
Purification and quantification of phospholipid fatty acids.
Solvents were obtained from Burdick & Jackson (Muskegon, Mich.) and were residue analysis grade (GC2). Standards and derivitizing reagents were purchased from Supelco Inc. (Bellefonte, Pa.), Nu Chek Prep (Elysian, Minn.), and Pierce Chemical Co. (Rockford, Ill.). The Diopatra tube samples were extracted, and PLFAs were recovered and derivitized for identification and quantification as described by White and Ringelberg (85). The resulting phospholipid fatty acid methyl esters were dissolved in hexane containing methyl nonadecanoate (50 pmol µl1) as an internal standard and were analyzed by using a gas chromatograph equipped with a DB-5MS capillary column (60 m by 0.25 mm [inside diameter]; film thickness, 0.1 µm; J&W Scientific, Folsom, Calif.) coupled to a mass selective detector (Hewlett-Packard GC6890-5973) by using electron impact ionization at 70 eV. The areas under the peaks were converted to concentrations, added, and then normalized to the weight of the sample extracted for biomass determinations. Fatty acid double bond positions and geometry were confirmed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis of the dimethyl disulfide adducts of the monounsaturated polar fatty acid methyl esters.
Fatty acid nomenclature.
Fatty acids are designated below as follows: A:B
C, where A is the total number of carbon atoms, B is the number of double bonds, and C is the position of the double bond from the aliphatic end of the molecule. The geometry of this bond is indicated by c (for cis) or t (for trans). The prefixes i and a refer to iso- and anteisomethyl branching, respectively. Midchain methyl branches are designated by me preceded by the position of the methyl group from the acid end of the molecule. Cyclopropyl fatty acids are designated cy.
Statistical analysis.
Gel images and blots from hybridizations were analyzed by using Gel-Pro Analyzer 4.0 (MediaCybernetics, Carlsbad, Calif.). The resulting banding patterns were converted to binary data (presence or absence) and were compared by using the unweighted pair group method with arithmetic mean (UPGMA) with the simple matching coefficient in order to calculate similarities and to perform principal-component analysis (Multi-Variate Statistical Package 3.13g; Kovach Computing Services, Wales, United Kingdom).
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TABLE 3. Sediment characteristics at Skimmer Shoals sites A and B
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16S rDNA sequence analysis.
Skimmer Shoals site A clones yielded 15 valid sequences, and site B clones yielded 17 sequences. The other clones either could not be sequenced or contained chimeric sequences. All valid sequences were aligned, and their phylogenetic affiliations were determined. The majority of the sequences belonged to four major bacterial phyla or subdivisions. Three clones belonged to the Bacteroidetes, five clones belonged to the Verrucomicrobia, 10 clones belonged to the gamma-Proteobacteria, and six clones belonged to SRB in the delta-Proteobacteria. Three clones grouped with two proposed bacterial phyla; one clone grouped with OP11, and two clones grouped with OD1.
Clones from both sites were affiliated with the
-Proteobacteria,
-Proteobacteria, and Verrucomicrobiales. All clones affiliated with the Bacteroidetes were recovered from site B tubes, as were the clones falling into the proposed phyla OD1 and OP11. Two clones, A17 and B3, which were most similar to Chloroflexus (84.9 and 70.2% similar, respectively) failed to group with Chloroflexus aurantiacus in phylogenetic trees. Other clones that failed to group with known bacterial phyla or each other were B2 and B15 (most similar to the Acidobacteriaceae; 86.6 and 71.3% similar, respectively), B10 (Firmicutes; 74.3% similar), and A16 (Planctomycetales; 75.8% similar) (Fig. 1). PLFAs recovered from Diopatra tubes from both sites also indicated that there were diverse bacterial communities dominated by gram-negative bacteria, and there was a low level of eukaryote-specific PLFAs (Table 4).
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FIG. 1. Unrooted phylogenetic tree showing the affiliations of cloned sequences with bacterial phyla and subdivisions. Approximately 610 bp, comprising the region of 16S rDNA sequenced from cloned DNA, was used to construct the maximum-parsimony tree by utilizing the close-neighbor-interchange search method with a search level of 3, initial random addition trees with 10 replicates, and bootstrapping 1,000 times. Nodes supported above 50% are indicated. The Thermococcus celer 16S rDNA sequence was used as the outgroup.
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TABLE 4. PLFA values for five replicate D. cuprea tubes exhumed from site Ca
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FIG. 2. Unrooted phylogenetic tree showing the affiliations of sequences that were similar, as indicated by the results of BLAST searches, to sequences of known sulfate-reducing bacteria. Approximately 610 bp, comprising the region of 16S rDNA sequenced from cloned DNA, was used to construct the quartet puzzling maximum-likelihood tree. The Jukes-Cantor substitution model and 1,000 puzzling steps were employed in tree construction. Nodes supported above 50% are indicated. The Archaeoglobus fulgidus 16S rDNA sequence was used as the outgroup.
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FIG. 3. DGGE analysis of sediment and D. cuprea tube samples from Skimmer Shoals sites A and B. The approximate locations of bands that hybridized and the clones to which they corresponded are indicated. Unk indicates bands representing unknown but presumptive SRB.
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FIG. 4. UPGMA dendrogram (A) and principal-component analysis (B) based on presence-absence data for banding patterns from denaturing gradient gels containing all D. cuprea tube samples from Skimmer Shoals sites A and B.
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TABLE 5. Results of hybridization of denaturing gradient gels of D. cuprea tube samples from sites A and B
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FIG. 5. UPGMA dendrogram constructed by using presence-absence data for banding patterns resulting from hybridization of probe 804 to denaturing gradient gels containing all D. cuprea tube samples from Skimmer Shoals sites A and B.
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7c and 17:1
6, respectively [67]) were found, there was substantially less of these phospholipids than of 10me16:0. No 16S rDNA sequences from Desulfovibrio or Desulfobulbus or related organisms were recovered or identified either by clonal library screening or by hybridization of probe 687 to DGGE gel blots.
Physiological status.
PLFA trans/cis ratios greater than 0.1 for the common membrane PLFAs 16:1
7 and 18:1
7 have been used as an indicator of physiological stress in bacteria (33). The Diopatra tube PLFAs had trans/cis ratios less than 0.1 but greater than the ratios determined for 16:1
7 and 18:1
7 from other infaunal worm tube and burrow microbiota (78). The cyclopropyl fatty acids and the ratios of cyclopropyl fatty acids to precursor monounsaturated fatty acids (cy17:0/16:1
7c and cy19:0/18:1
7c) have also been used as indicators of physiological changes due to stress or anoxia (32). The levels of cy17:0 and cy19:0 and the ratios of these acids to their precursors (cy17:0/16:1
7c and cy19:0/18:1
7c, respectively) were comparable to the levels and ratios found in structures of other infaunal species (78). The levels of these acids may reflect suboxic conditions in the burrow water of Diopatra tubes when they are collected at low tide, which is a period during which the worms do not ventilate their tubes (18).
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Members of the Desulfobacteriaceae were found in the tubes of Diopatra, which are actively irrigated with oxic seawater during periods of tidal submersion. The survival of a variety of cultured SRB under oxic to suboxic conditions has been explained on the basis of enzymes that may aid in reducing the impact of toxic oxygen species, such as superoxide and hydrogen peroxide. Several SRB possess catalase and superoxide dismutase activities (25, 34), as well as a variety of other enzymes and cofactors that may be involved in neutralizing toxic oxygen species (1, 54, 83, 84). The mechanisms by which sulfate reduction may occur in oxic environments are not as clear, although several possible mechanisms have been proposed.
SRB in nature often occur within biofilms or aggregates, which may promote the formation of reduced microniches. Aggregate formation has been demonstrated to be a response to oxygen stress by some SRB (74). Bianchi et al. (10) and Jørgensen (39) have shown that even relatively small bacterially colonized organic aggregates can maintain internal anoxic conditions and support sulfate reduction. Phillips and Lovell (68) found that the inner lining of the Diopatra tube was covered by a microbial biofilm having high cell densities and unusually high proportions of cells having intact, polarized membranes and thus the potential for metabolic activity. In many cases, these cells were arranged in microcolonies, some larger than 100,000 µm3 (68). Microcolonies such as these would be large enough to support the formation of anaerobic microniches (39). Aggregations of SRB with other bacteria have been demonstrated in bioreactor biofilms (59), and it certainly seems reasonable to hypothesize that they may be found in Diopatra tube biofilms. Growth of SRB in close association with other bacteria, including oxygen-consuming bacteria, may occur in burrow-lining biofilms and possibly even in intertidal sediments. If it does, this consortial mode of growth could provide the SRB with substantial protection from oxygen.
Consortial growth may not be necessary for SRB to produce reduced microniches in biofilms. Some anaerobic bacteria are capable of reducing their growth medium or milieu if the entry of oxygen is somewhat restricted (43). In addition, Cypionka et al. (16) suggested that chemical reduction of O2 by H2S may be a significant process at the oxic-anoxic interface in sediments. By this method, some SRB may be able to reduce their immediate environs. On the other hand, oxygen may be quite toxic to sulfate reducers and may limit their growth and activity in intermittently oxic environments. Although it has been shown that SRB are able to survive a wide range of oxygen tensions and sulfate reduction has been measured in aerobic habitats, neither sulfate reduction nor growth of SRB pure cultures has been demonstrated in the presence of oxygen to date (20, 46). It is possible that SRB are inactive and do not grow during periods of burrow ventilation and remain quiescent until conditions more suitable for sulfate reduction are present again.
The PLFA biomarker for Desulfobacter was found in substantially larger quantities than the PLFA biomarkers for Desulfovibrio or Desulfobulbus. Desulfosarcina-like 16S rRNA gene sequences were cloned and were detected by DNA-DNA hybridization analysis of Diopatra tube DNA from both sites. All 16S rRNA gene sequences belonging to SRB fell in the Desulfobacteriaceae, which is in agreement with the high level of the Desulfobacter biomarker. These results are consistent with those of Hines et al. (35), who found higher levels of 16S rRNA related to the Desulfobacteriaceae than of 16S rRNA related to Desulfovibrio in the rhizosphere of Spartina alterniflora. Lower levels of 16S rRNA of Desulfobulbus than of Desulfobacteriaceae 16S rRNA were found in most of the samples. The Desulfobulbus 16S rRNA concentrations were periodically higher than the concentrations of Desulfobacteriaceae 16S rRNA in the S. alterniflora rhizosphere and in the upper 2 cm of the salt marsh sediments (22, 35). Hines et al. (35) suggested that Desulfovibrio is not as well adapted to life in habitats likely to have steep chemical gradients, such as the burrows and tubes of marine infauna and the rhizosphere of S. alterniflora, and that these organisms may prefer habitats that are more anaerobic (or perhaps more consistently anaerobic) than those occupied by the Desulfobacteriaceae. However, members of the genus Desulfovibrio have been found on the intermittently oxic rhizoplane and within the root cortex of the sea grass Halodule wrightii (52). The metabolically diverse members of the Desulfobacteriaceae may also have a competitive advantage over members of the genus Desulfovibrio because of their ability to utilize a diverse array of electron donors (35). Raskin et al. (71) showed that members of the Desulfobacteriaceae were more competitive than other SRB under certain conditions and proposed that utilization of alternate metabolic pathways was responsible for this advantage. It is also possible that our failure to recover Desulfovibrio or Desulfobulbus 16S rRNA gene sequences may have been due to PCR biases, but the finding of low levels of these genera in the S. alterniflora rhizosphere by Hines et al. (35) did not result from a PCR analysis, nor did our finding of low levels of PLFA biomarkers of these organisms in Diopatra tubes. The exact conditions that are more advantageous for the growth of Desulfovibrio or Desulfobulbus than for the growth the Desulfobacteriaceae are not clear, but these conditions apparently did not occur in Diopatra tubes, while conditions which supported growth of the Desulfobacteriaceae did occur.
Study site A had coarser sediments, a lower organic matter content, and lower bacterial cell counts than site B. Oxygenated surface water more readily penetrates coarse sediments by advection and diffusion. In addition, the lower organic matter content of coarser sediment may reflect a poorer environment for bacterial activity than finer sediments, resulting in reduced growth. Surprisingly, there did not appear to be major differences in at least the most abundant members of the bacterial communities, as indicated by 16S rRNA gene sequence DGGE, between sites A and B or at different depths in the sediment. The bacterial assemblages within the Diopatra tubes were different at sites A and B. A greater diversity of clones was obtained from site B tubes, and many of these clones did not group with any known bacterial phylum. Only two clones from site A did not group with known phyla. Interestingly, two clones grouped with the proposed phylum OD1, which includes unidentified bacteria from very diverse habitats, such as deep-sea sediments (55) and forest soils (27). One clone grouped with OP11, a proposed phylum that includes bacteria isolated from Antarctic continental shelf sediment (13).
The SRB assemblages in site A and site B Diopatra tubes were also different. We propose that the SRB distributions in Diopatra tubes from different sediment habitats are strongly influenced by sediment characteristics, chiefly porosity and rates of solute (especially oxygen) transport and consumption. The irrigation rates of Diopatra tubes would not be expected to be different at the two the study sites. Also, the study sites were close to each other, and hence, the incurrent water should not have been very different at the two sites. However, the coarser sediment at site A is more conducive to oxygen penetration. The lower organic matter content of the coarser sediment may result in not only reduced growth but also lower rates of oxygen consumption by aerobic bacterial respiration. This may result in greater exposure of Diopatra tubes to oxygen. Further studies are required to determine the exact causes of the observed population differences and to examine the microscale distributions of specific SRB within Diopatra tubes.
This research was supported by National Science Foundation awards DEB-0108412 and MCB-0237854 to C.R.L. and by a Slocum-Lunz Foundation grant-in-aid of research to G.Y.M.
Present address: USCAE-CRREL, Hanover, NH 03755. ![]()
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