Applied and Environmental Microbiology, August 2005, p. 4619-4627, Vol. 71, No. 8
0099-2240/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.71.8.4619-4627.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
16S rRNA Sequences and Differences in Bacteria Isolated from the Muztag Ata Glacier at Increasing Depths
Shurong Xiang,1,2*
Tandong Yao,1,2
Lizhe An,2,3
Bingliang Xu,4 and
Junxia Wang2
Institute of Tibetan Plateau Research, Chinese Academy of Science, Beijing 100029, People's Republic of China,1
Key Laboratory of Cryosphere and Environment, Cold and Arid Regions Environment and Engineering Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Science, Lanzhou, Gansu 730000, People's Republic of China,2
School of Life Science, Lanzhou University, Lanzhou, Gansu 730000, People's Republic of China,3
Department of Plant Pathology, Gansu Agricultural University, Lanzhou, Gansu 730070, People's Republic of China4
Received 24 January 2005/
Accepted 7 March 2005
 |
ABSTRACT
|
|---|
Small subunit 16S rRNA sequences, growth temperatures, and phylogenetic relationships have been established for 129 bacterial isolates
recovered under aerobic growth conditions from different regions of a 22-m ice core from the Muztag Ata Mountain glacier on the Pamirs
Plateau (China). Only 11% were psychrophiles (grew at 2°C or 2°C up to
20°C), although the
majority (82%) were psychrotolerant (grew at 2°C or 2°C up to 37°C). The majority of the isolates
had 16S rRNA sequences similar to previously determined sequences, ranging from 85% to 100% identical to database sequences. Based on
their 16S rRNA sequences, 42.6% of the isolates were high-G+C (HGC) gram-positive bacteria, 23.3% were
-Proteobacteria, 14.7% were
-Proteobacteria, 14.7% were Flavobacteria,
and 4.7% were low-G+C (LGC) gram-positive bacteria. There were clear differences in the depth distribution, with
Proteobacteria, HGC/Cytophaga-Flavobacterium-Bacteroides
(CFB), Proteobacteria, LGC/CFB/HGC, Cryobacterium psychrophilum, HGC/CFB, Proteobacteria/HGC/CFB, and
HGC/CFB being the predominant isolates from ice that originated from 2.7 to 3.8, 6.2, 7.5, 8.3, 9.0, 9.7, 12.5, and 15.3 m below
the surface, respectively. This layered distribution of bacterial isolates presumably reflects both differences in bacteria inhabiting
the glacier's surface, differences in bacteria deposited serendipitously on the glacier's surface by wind and snowfall, and
nutrient availability within the ice.
 |
INTRODUCTION
|
|---|
Previous studies have recovered bacteria from ice cores
retrieved from polar and low-middle-altitude mountain
glaciers. For example, Proteobacteria, low-G+C (LGC)
and high-G+C (HGC) gram-positive bacteria,
Marinobacter, Flectobacillus, and
Flavobacterium were recovered from the Malan and Guliya ice
core from the Tibetan Plateau
(7,
9,
42,
51) and members of the
Proteobacteria, HGC, LGC, and Flavobacterium were
also predominantly isolated from polar glacial ice
(7,
8,
9,
11,
20,
25). Anaerobic
Proteobacteria together with members of the Thermus,
Bacteroides, Eubacterium, and Clostridium
genera were isolated from the lowest region of the GISP 2 ice core
drilled from the Greenland glacier
(30). Based on their 16S
rRNA sequences, most of the ice core isolates have close relatives in
other terrestrial and marine environments, particularly in sea ice,
permafrost soil, and cold deep marine sediments
(7,
11,
43,
51). This observation
suggests that there may be bacterial species that are ubiquitous in
cold environments and predominant in glacial ice, but this has not been
established. Few studies have addressed the variation in bacterial
species that might be isolated from one glacial location at different
depths within an ice core. To survive, the bacteria isolated from a
glacial ice core have to overcome extreme cold, desiccation, and
minimal nutrient availability. With increasing depth, the difference in
the phylum of bacteria recovered may help understand the bacterial
activities and their roles within the overall glacial
environment.
The Muztag Ata glacier, located on the far western
margin of China and east of the Pamirs Plateau, has a summit elevation
of 7,546 m above sea level (a.s.l.). The mean annual air temperature is
approximately 20°C at 6,300 m a.s.l.; however, in some
regions, perennial glacial ice extends downwards to 4,300 m a.s.l. The
Muztag Ata glacier is one of the world's most stable freshwater-ice
environments with well-documented paleo-environmental records. Here we
report the diversity of bacteria that were isolated from different
depths within the Muztag Ata glacier. Previous studies related the
microbial populations isolated from Arctic and Antarctic glaciers to
past climate changes, and we also observed a correlation between high
bacterial input, via atmospheric transport, and cold climate conditions
revealed by
-18O measurements in the Malan ice core
drilled from the Tibetan plateau
(47). But we did not
determine if there were changes in the recoverable population of
bacteria at different depths from within the ice core. We undertook
this study to know what are the main bacteria isolated from the ice
samples, identify our isolates, and present their characteristics, such
as their growth temperatures and phylogenetic relatedness to each other
and to known microbes. The results obtained revealed that the
membership of the bacterial population that is recovered changes at
different depths within the Muztag Ata
glacier.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS
|
|---|
Extraction of the ice core.
Snow (3 m) was removed from the
surface of the Muztag Ata glacier, and the ice core (10-cm diameter,
22 m long) was then drilled at 6,350 m a.s.l. on the Pamirs
Plateau (75°04'E, 38°17'N). The air
temperature (August 2002) ranged from 15°C to
0°C, but the temperature of the ice in the borehole was
20.85°C. Visual inspection of the recovered ice core
revealed many thin ice stratifications but no meltwater features
consistent with particulates, including bacteria, being held
permanently in position after immurement. The 22.4-m-long ice core
should therefore provide a valuable chronological resource for
climatological and microbiological
studies.
Ice core sampling.
The ice core was split lengthwise
into four sections, one of which was consumed for this study. The ice
core contained both firn (granular, compacted snow) and ice and was
therefore processed by a modification of the procedure described by
Priscu et al. (25).
Sterile gloves, clean laboratory clothing, and hair coverings were worn
at all times during the ice core handling procedures, which were always
undertaken at temperatures below 20°C within a sterile,
positive-pressure laminar flow hood. An annulus (10 mm) was cut
successively three times from the surface of each core sample using
three clean, sterilized saw-tooth knifes. The remaining inner core was
washed, and samples were allowed to melt at 4°C in covered,
autoclaved containers. A control core was generated using frozen
autoclaved water that was then exposed to all the storage and handling
procedures. Plating water samples melted from this control core
demonstrated that the level of contamination introduced during handling
was below that detectable by the cultivation procedures
employed.
Bacterial isolation.
The particulates in samples of
meltwater (
100 ml) were collected by filtration using
0.2-µm-pore-size filters over a period of 1 to 2 h
and then resuspended in 4 ml of phosphate-buffered physiological
saline. Aliquots (200 µl) of the suspensions generated were
spread on the surface of agar-solidified low-nutrient peptone, yeast
extract, glucose, and vitamin medium
(38), as used previously
to isolate bacteria from cold Antarctic soils and rocks
(31,
32). The plates were
incubated for 2 or 15 weeks at 4°C. To obtain pure cultures,
isolates that formed colonies with visually different morphologies were
restreaked on peptone, yeast extract, glucose, and vitamin medium and
LB (0.2x concentration) agar plates. A total of 129 isolates
were obtained in pure culture from samples of the Muztag Ata glacial
ice. Cells generated in L broth cultures of each isolate were
concentrated by centrifugation, frozen, and stored at
70°C in L broth containing 7% (vol/vol) dimethyl
sulfoxide for use in inoculations in later
studies.
Growth at different temperatures.
The ability
of each isolate to grow and form colonies on the plates containing
0.2x L medium incubated at 2°C, 4°C,
15°C, 25°C, 37°C, and 45°C was
determined. The growth of representative isolates at each temperature
in liquid culture was also determined. Cultures were grown, with
shaking (100 rpm), in side arm flasks incubated in a
temperature-regulated water bath, with the optical density at 600 nm
(OD600) measured at regular
intervals.
Amplification of small subunit 16S rRNA genes.
Genomic DNA was isolated using the chloroform-isoamyl alcohol extraction procedure (12) from the cells grown in 1.5 ml L broth cultures of each isolate. 16S rRNA genes were PCR
amplified from 20-ng aliquots of this genomic DNA using the protocols described by Voytek and Ward
(39) in 25-µl reaction mixtures with the universal bacterial primers 8f
(5'-AGAGTTTGATCATGGCTCAG) and 1492 (5'-CGGTTACCTTGTTACGACTT) (16,
40), which correspond to regions 8 through 27, and 1492 through 1511, of the Escherichia
coli 16S rRNA molecule, respectively (5).
ARDRA.
Amplified rRNA restriction analysis (ARDRA) was used to evaluate the overall diversity of the isolates. A 1.5-kbp region of 16S rRNA gene was amplified and subjected to HaeIII
(TakaRa, Japan) digestion (15 U HaeIII/200 to 400 ng for 3 h at 37°C). The restriction fragments generated were separated by
electrophoresis through 1% agarose gels, stained with ethidium bromide, and visualized by UV irradiation.
Sequencing of PCR products and phylogenetic analysis.
PCR products were passed through PCR purification columns (TakaRa) and ligated into pMD-T (TakaRa), and the
resulting plasmids were transformed into competent E. coli
JM109 cells and partially sequenced directly using primer 8f with an
ABI PRISM 377-96 sequencer. To evaluate diversity, 4 to 10 isolates
from each ARDRA pattern were sequenced. All sequences were validated
using the CHECK-CHIMERA software of the Ribosomal Database Project
(18). For further
phylogenetic analyses, the 16S rRNA sequences (650 to 800 bases) of the
isolates were matched with those in the National Center for
Biotechnology Information nucleotide database by using BLAST searching
(1) and were assigned to
major groups (
-Proteobacteria,
-Proteobacteria, and everything else)
(2). The most similar
reference sequences were downloaded and aligned with the isolate
sequences using the Clustal X
(36). The multiple
alignments were used in maximum-parsimony and distance analyses
utilizing the Mega (Molecular Evolutionary Genetics Analysis, 1.01)
(14) package.
Phylogenetic relationships of the sequences were constructed by using
the maximum-parsimony method (heuristic search) and the distance method
(neighbor-joining algorithm
[28] and p-distance model
in the Mega package), with bootstrap analysis (100 replicates)
performed by using the p-distance model
(13) in the Mega package
(14) for the last method.
The sequence of the Halobacterium salinarum 16S rRNA gene
AB074299 was used as an out-group. The previous reports showed that the
phylogenetic assignments obtained from the partial and full-length
sequences were very similar
(3,
15,
19,
29). Since we were
interested only in determining the dominant groups of glacial bacteria,
a partial sequence analysis was
justified.
Nucleotide sequence accession number.
The sequences
obtained have been deposited in the GenBank nucleotide sequence
database under accession numbers
AY526633
to
AY526716.
 |
RESULTS
|
|---|
Effects of temperature on growth.
During the initial isolation, colonies
were observed on some plates after 2 weeks at 4°C, but in most
cases, colonies were first visible
1 month after plating.
There were, however, some plates on which colonies were never observed
(or where these samples had microbial biomasses too low for detection
by using this method) even after extended periods of incubation at
4°C. A total of 129 isolates were chosen for further study that
originated from ice from 2.89 to 15.59, 17.99, 21.38, and 21.64 m below
the surface (mbs). Most of these (82%) grew well at all temperatures
from 2°C (or 2°C) to 37°C, consistent
with psychrotolerant species, 14 (11%) grew at temperatures up to
20°C, consistent with psychrophilic species, and 9
isolates (7%) grew at temperatures ranging up to 45°C,
representing mesophiles (Table
1).
Clustering isolates by ARDRA.
Fifty-five isolates were related to the
HGC gram-positive bacteria, although this cluster exhibited 29
different ARDRA patterns. The second (30 isolates) and third (19 and 19
isolates) largest clusters of isolates were related to the
-
and
-Proteobacteria and
Cytophaga-Flavobacterium-Bacteroides (CFB)
group, respectively. A small number of LGC gram-positive bacteria were
also isolated.
16S rRNA-based phylogenetic relationships.
Many isolates
with the same HaeIII-generated ARDRA pattern had sufficiently different
16S rRNA sequences that phylogenetic analyses placed them in different
evolutionary lineages (Fig.
1 to 3). For example, the
16S rRNA sequences obtained from the cluster of isolates represented by
strain Acinetobacter sp. strain ANT9054 (GenBankaccession no.
AY16723)
placed many on separate branches within the
-Proteobacteria lineage. To explore and document this
diversity, 16S rRNA sequences were obtained from 4 to 10 different
isolates that had the same HaeIII-generated ARDRA pattern.

View larger version (43K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 3. Neighbor-joining
tree indicating phylogenetic relationships of the HGC isolates from the
Muztag Ata ice core and their nearest relatives based on GenBank 16S
rRNA sequences. Bootstrap values of >50% (of 100 iterations)
were obtained by maximum-parsimony analysis for bootstrap sampling of
100. Scale bars indicate p distances. Additional similar isolates
(shown in boldface in parentheses) had the same ARDRA patterns as those
sequences of the representative strains, but the 16S rRNA sequences
were not
determined.
|
|
The
most frequently recovered cluster of isolates (30 in total; 23.3% of
all isolates) was the member of the
-Proteobacteria
(Fig. 1; Table
1). They were distributed
throughout the ice core section (Table
1) and were subdivided
into 22 isolates related to Acinetobacter species, 7 isolates
related to Pseudomonas species, and 1 isolate (E61) not
closely related to previously established species. Of the 22
Acinetobacter-related isolates, 17 were most closely related
to strain ANT9054 from polar sea ice (AY167273), and 5 were related to
an anoxic Acinetobacter species and to strain ARK10033 from
Arctic sea ice. The 7 Pseudomonas isolates were most closely
related to Pseudomonas oryzihabitans strain HAMB12374 and a
Pseudomonas species from Antarctic sea ice.
The second
most frequently recovered cluster of isolates (19 in total; 14.7% of
all isolates) were members of the
-Proteobacteria
(Fig. 1; Table
1). These isolates were
also distributed throughout the ice core, 4 of which had 16S rRNA
sequences almost identical to those reported previously for
Sphingomonas species. Isolates Muzt-I02 and J11 had 16S rRNA
sequences identical to that reported for Sphingomonas strain
pfB21 (GenBank accession no.
AY336550),
and isolates Muzt-B33 and J22 had 16S rRNA sequences 99% identical to
that of Sphingobium yanoikuyae (GenBank accession no.
AY047219).
Furthermore, all four 16S rRNA sequences were very similar to the 16S
rRNA sequence determined from the Antarctic isolate Sphingomonas
aurantiaca strain MA405 (EMBL accession no.
AJ429238).
Fourteen of the
-Proteobacteria isolates, with
Muzt-D63, E73, and F5 represented by Muzt-D42, Muzt-C92 represented by
Muzt-B22, and Muzt-D2 represented by Muzt-C6, grouped with
Brevundimonas vesicularis (GenBank accession no.
AY169433),
which was isolated from a Greenland glacier. Isolate Muzt-B4 grouped
with Sphingomonas and Brevundimonas in the
-Proteobacteria (Fig.
1).
As illustrated
in Fig.
2, members of the low-G+C group of gram-positive bacteria were not
isolated from all sections of the ice core. Four isolates, Muzt-D5, C72
and E05, and Muzt-12, were recovered from ice from 5.53 to 5.69, 7.56
to 7.82, and 9.09 to 9.21 mbs, respectively. They have 16S rRNA
sequences identical to that reported for Planomicrobium
okeanokoites (DDBJ accession no.
D55729). Two
isolates, Muzt-D84 and G61, were isolated from 8.30 to 8.62 and 15.59
to 15.79 mbs, respectively, and have 16S rRNA sequences identical to
those of Staphylococcus equorum (EMBL accession no.
Z26895) and
strain ARK9973 (GenBank accession no.
AF468443)
isolated from Antarctic and Arctic sea ice,
respectively.

View larger version (42K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 2. Neighbor-joining
tree indicating phylogenetic relationships of the LGC and CFB isolates
from the Muztag Ata ice core and their nearest relatives based on
GenBank 16S rRNA sequences. Bootstrap values of >50% (of 100
iterations) were obtained by maximum-parsimony analysis for bootstrap
sampling of 100. Scale bars indicate p distances. Additional similar
isolates (shown in boldface in parentheses) had the same ARDRA patterns
as those sequences of the representative strains, but the 16S rRNA
sequences were not
determined.
|
|
Nineteen isolates (14.7% of total) (Fig.
2) were members of the CFB
group. Isolates Muzt-E01 and the similar isolate Muzt-D44 were most
closely related to Flavobacterium omnivorum from the China no.
1 glacier (GenBank accession no.
AF433174)
and strain FJS20 (GenBank accession no.
AY315160)
from an Antarctic glacier. The 16 remaining isolates grouped most
closely with, but positioned on separate phylogenetic branches from,
Flavobacterium species strain PF7 (GenBank accession no.
AF500323),
a phenylacetic acid-degrading soil isolate, and strain CanDirty14
(GenBank accession no.
AF479331)
from a southern hemisphere glacier.
High-G+C
gram-positive bacteria were isolated from all regions of the ice core
and formed eight clusters. The largest cluster was related to
Microbacterium represented by strain S10 (GenBank accession
no.
AF260714),
including 10 isolates, Muzt-B32, C91, and F14, etc. Within this largest
cluster, four isolates, Muzt-C12, C32, C73, and D93, grouped with
uncultured clones Q2-28C8 (GenBank accession no.
AY048893)
and
AY1981122
(Fig.
3). The second largest cluster was related to Arthrobacter and
formed two branches in cluster 8. One of the two branches was the two
isolates Muzt-B82 and D62 and their closest-related glacial bacterium
G50-TB7 AF49354. The other was the branch represented by glacial
bacterium G200-C1 AF479341, containing 12 isolates, Muzt-B34, C11, and
D82, etc. The third largest cluster was closely similar to the
Cryobacterium group, containing six isolates recovered from
ice layers from 4.72 to 4.99, and 8.30 to 9.09 and 9.47 to 9.7 mbs. All
6 had 16S rRNA sequences 100% identical to that of Cryobacterium
psychrophilum DSM 4854 (EMBL accession no.
AJ544063)
and that of Cryobacterium aff. psychrophilum (EMBL accession no.
AJ297438)
from Lake Fryxell in Antarctica (Fig.
3). The remaining five
clusters belonged to the Micrococcus, Kocuria,
Frigoribacterium, Brachybacterium, and
Clavibacter/Curtobacterium genera. One isolate,
Muzt-D01, contained sequences that grouped within cluster 2, with 100%
similarity to Micrococcus antarcticus (EMBL accession no.
AJ005932).
Cluster 4 was 99% to 100% related to Kocuria polaris from an
Antarctic pond (EMBL accession no.
AJ278868),
containing four isolate sequences, Muzt-B7, C8, E03, and G4, and four
additional similar isolates, Muzt-C5, E42, G11, and G22. Cluster 5 was
related to Frigoribacterium aff. (EMBL accession no.
AJ297441)
and the Antarctic bacterium R-9112 (EMBL accession no.
AJ441003)
and had three isolate sequences, Muzt-C13, D83, and E06, and three
additional similar isolates, Muzt-E06, E8, and G21. Muzt-D7 and the
similar Muzt-E92 belonged to Brachybacterium and were closely
related to R-8287 from an Antarctic lake (EMBL accession
no.
AJ440992).
Four isolates, Muzt-C4, F12, F32, and Muzt-F41, fell into the
Clavibacter/Curtobacterium group in cluster
7.
Vertical distribution of the most frequent isolates.
Members of different phylogenetic groups were predominantly isolated in ice from different core depths. Figure 4 shows the most frequently isolated bacterial phylotype, expressed as a
proportion of total number of isolates recovered at each depth. Proteobacteria predominated among the isolates from 2.7 to
3.80 mbs and from 6.2 to 7.5 mbs, HGC or CFB group bacteria predominated among isolates from 3.8 to 6.2 mbs and from 9.0 to 9.7
mbs, LGC, CFB group, or HGC bacteria predominated among the isolates from 7.5 to 8.3 mbs and from 9.4 to 9.7 mbs, Proteobacteria or
HGC bacteria predominated among the isolates from 9.7 to 12.5 mbs, and HGC bacteria, Proteobacteria, or CFB group bacteria were most
frequently isolated from 12.5 to 15.3 mbs. Cryobacterium psychrophilum was isolated only from ice from 8.3 to 9.0 mbs (Fig.
4).

View larger version (16K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 4. Predominant
bacteria isolated and their relative abundances at different depths
within the ice core. Pro., Proteobacteria;
Cry., Cryobacterium
psychrophilum.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION
|
|---|
Globally distributed ice core isolates and regional characteristics.
Overall, our results are very consistent with the results of previous bacterial isolation studies from glacial ice, although all of the most similar sequences in the
database were downloaded and used for phylogenetic analysis. Members of the
- and
-Proteobacteria and the LGC and
HGC bacterial lineages were similarly isolated from a Guliya (Tibet) ice core (9),
-
and ß-Proteobacteria, LGC, HGC, and CFB group bacteria were also isolated from a Vostok (Antarctica) ice core
(8), and 16S rRNA molecules that were amplified directly from melt water from the Dunde,
Puruogangri, Malan (Tibet), Sajama (Bolivia), Taylor Dome, and Siple (Antarctic) glaciers had sequences revealing origins from
-,
ß-,
-, and
-Proteobacteria, HGC, LGC, and CFB group bacteria
(7, 8,
9, 50). The majority of the
Muztag Ata ice core isolates have 16S rRNA sequences ranging from 85% similarity to 100% identity to database sequences (Table
1; Fig. 1 to
3), and the closest relatives of many of the Muztag Ata ice core isolates originated from
other glaciers or from sea ice. Most of the Muztag Ata ice isolates had temperature growth profiles consistent with adaptation to growth under
cold growth conditions and most likely were transferred by wind or snow from local ecosystems onto the glacier's surface (Table
1). The evidence suggests that cold environments favor the growth and survival of similar
organisms on a worldwide basis, given that very similar isolates are obtained from Arctic and Antarctic ice
(4, 7).
BLAST searches revealed that, in addition to isolates from cold environments, many of the Muztag Ata ice core isolates also have relatives that were isolated
from more temperate terrestrial and freshwater environments (Table 1; Fig.
1 to 3). Isolate Muzt-D62, for
example, has a 16S rRNA sequence identical to that from both a glacier isolate, bacterium G50-TB7 (GenBank accession no.
AF479354) and the epiphytic Arthrobacter sp. strain Fa21 (GenBank
accession no. AY131225).
The 10 isolates typified by Muzt-J12 have 16S rRNA sequences very similar to those of both the glacier isolate G500K-10 (GenBank
accession no. AF479329)
and Microbacterium strain VKM Ac-2050, a species also
typically associated with plant surfaces. This suggests the complicated
resources of glacial bacteria entrapped in ice or the global
distribution of these bacteria.
Based on the criterion that the
bacteria with 16S rRNA sequences that are 93 to 97% identical should be
considered members of the same genus
(21,
33), some of the Muztag
Ata ice core isolates may belong to new genera. For example, Muzt-C13,
C21, and D91 loosely grouped with the known bacterial species (Fig.
3), the sequences of which
had 84% to 91% similarity to those for reported species. This was also
the case in other studies with members of several new genera isolated
from glacial and sea ice from Puruogangri, Tunde, and Malan ice cores
(43,
50) and other ice samples
(6,
11,
17,
20,
21,
26,
30). Moreover, most
isolates obtained from different regions of the Muztag Ata ice core
grouped together more closely than with the reported sequences from
different environments (Fig.
1 to
3). This is consistent
with the suggestion that a substantial percentage of the bacteria
endemic to these remote cold environments are unique to these
environments (10,
22,
41).
Relationship of differences in bacterial isolates at different ice core depths to climate and environment changes.
There were very clear differences in
the bacteria isolated from different regions of the Muztag Ata ice
core. Acinetobacter species (members of the
-Proteobacteria) were isolated from 17 segments of
ice core section but not from all sections (Fig.
1).
Flavobacterium species were also found at many, but not all,
locations throughout the length of the core (Fig.
2). Many members of the
CFB group have the capacity to degrade complex organic substrates
(2,
21,
24), and such compounds
were detected in Himalayan Dasuopu glacial ice
(44), consistent with
particle-borne and/or volatilized organics being trapped and providing
nutrients to CFB-related species immured in ice.
Brevundimonas, Sphingomonas, Pseudomonas,
Microbacterium, and Arthrobacter species dominated at
some depths. However, all six isolates belonging to the phylum
Cryobacterium originated from a continuous ice layer at 8.30
to 9.09 mbs (Fig. 3). This
may have resulted from the specific source and environmental conditions
during their deposition on the surface of the glacier. The
Cryobacterium isolates from the ice core grew well at
temperatures below 25°C, making them psychrophiles, which was
favorable for their survival in ice. This specific source and
physiological property of the Cryobacterium isolates found in
ice may be the main reasons for their occurrence at specific ice depth
ranges.
There were clear differences in the predominant aerobes
isolated at different depths from the Muztag Ata ice core (Fig.
4), implying that there
were differences in the bacteria deposited and/or that survived on the
ice surface under different past climate conditions. Yoshimura et al.
(48,
49) and Takeuchi et al.
(34,
35) demonstrated that the
membership of the snow algal community changed with environmental
conditions on the Yala, AX010 (Himalaya), and Gulkana (Alaska)
glaciers, and annual layers of algal growth were apparent in a shallow
ice core from the Yala glacier. Our earlier studies similarly revealed
a layered distribution of bacteria in a Malan (Tibet) ice core
(43), and it seems likely
that differences in the microorganisms recovered reflect the
differences in climate, local and possibly remote environments
(23,
37,
45,
46), and the nutrients
trapped within the ice. Given this explanation, the layered
distribution of bacteria recovered from the Muztag Ata ice core
reflects the effect of the climatic and environmental changes on the
microbial distribution in the glacier. Rutter and Nedwell
(27) obtained results
that indicate that bacterial survival reflects a competition between
psychrophiles and psychrotolerant species, and this could help explain
these features of the bacteria isolated from the Muztag Ata glacier. It
is not, however, clear how well the surviving microbial community
correlates with climate and environmental conditions rather than
properties of specific bacteria, as the fate of microorganisms trapped
intentionally in glacial ice sheets has yet to be investigated.
Experiments to differentiate between these parameters are needed. We
need to determine the survival and subsequent recovery of
well-characterized bacteria, intentionally inoculated on the surface of
a glacier, over time and at increasing depths within a
glacier.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
|
|---|
We thank John N. Reeve at
the Department of Microbiology of the Ohio State University for work on
the improvement of language. We thank Nozomu Takeuchi from Research
Institute for Humanity and Nature (Japan) for helpful comments on this
paper. We also thank Z. Li, G. J. Wu, B. Q. Xu, and
other members of the Muztag Ata glacial expedition for help in the
recovery of the ice core used in this study.
This study was
supported by grant no. 2001CCB00300, 2001CB711001, 40471025,
KZCX2-SW-118, 40121101, and
90102005.
 |
FOOTNOTES
|
|---|
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Cold and Arid Regions Environment and Engineering Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Science, Lanzhou, Gansu 730000, People's Republic of China. Phone: 86 931 827 7541. Fax: 86 931 827 6345. E-mail: srxiang{at}ns.lzb.ac.cn or xsrwty{at}public.lz.gs.cn. 
 |
REFERENCES
|
|---|
- Altschul,
S. F., W. Gish, W. Miller, E. W. Myers, and
D. J. Lipman. 1990. Basic local alignment
search tool. J. Mol. Biol.
215:403-410.[CrossRef][Medline]
- Bano,
N., and J. T. Hollibaugh. 2002. Phylogenetic
composition of bacterioplankton assemblages from the Arctic Ocean.Appl. Environ. Microbiol.
68:505-518.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Borneman,
J., P. W. Skroch, K. M. O'Sullivan, J. A.
Palus, N. G. Rumjanek, J. L. Jansen, and J.
Nienhuis. 1996. Molecular microbial diversity of an
agricultural soil in Wisconsin. Appl. Environ.
Microbiol.
62:1935-1943.[Abstract]
- Brinkmeyer,
R., K. Knittel, J. Jürgens, H. Weyland, R. Amann, and E.
Helmke. 2003. Diversity and structure of bacterial
communities in arctic versus Antarctic pack ice. Appl. Environ.
Microbiol.
69:6610-6619.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Brosius,
J., M. L. Palmer, P. J. Kennedy, and H.
R. Noller. 1978. Complete nucleotide sequence of a 16S
ribosomal RNA gene from Escherichia coli. Proc. Natl.
Acad. Sci. USA
7:4801-4805.
- Busse,
H. J., E. B. Denner, S. Buczolits, M.
Salkinoja-Salonen, A. Bennasar, and P. Kampfer. 2003.
Sphingomonas aurantiaca sp. nov., Sphingomonas
aerolata sp. nov., and Sphingomonas faeni sp. nov., air-
and dustborne and Antarctic, orange-pigmented, psychrotolerant
bacteria, and emended description of the genus Sphingomonas.Int. J. Syst. Evol. Microbiol.
53:1253-1260.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Christner,
B. C., E. Mosley-Thompson, L. G. Thompson, V.
Zagorodnov, K. Sandman, and J. N. Reeve.2000
. Recovery and identification of viable bacteria
immured in glacier ice. Icarus
144:479-485.
- Christner,
B. C., E. Mosley-Thompson, L. G. Thompson, and
J. N. Reeve. 2001. Isolation of bacteria and
16S rDNAs from lake Vostok accretion ice. Environ.
Microbiol.
3:570-577.[CrossRef][Medline]
- Christner,
B. C., E. Mosley-Thompson, L. G. Thompson, and
J. N. Reeve. 2003. Bacterial recovery from
ancient glacial ice. Environ. Microbiol.
5:433-436.[CrossRef][Medline]
- Fenchel,
T. 2003. Biogeography for bacteria.Science
301:925-926.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Foght,
J., J. Aislabie, S. Turner, C. E. Brown, J. Ryburn,
D. J. Saul, W. Lawson. 2004. Culturable
bacteria in subglacial sediments and ice from two southern hemisphere
glaciers. Microb. Ecol.
47:329-340.[Medline]
- Johnson,
J. L. 1981. Genetic characterization, p.450
-472. In R.
G. E. Murray, R. N. Costilow, E. W.
Nester, W. A. Wood, N. R. Krieg, and G.
B. Phillips, (ed.), Manual of methods for general
bacteriology. American Society for Microbiology, Washington,
D.C.
- Jukes,
T. H., and C. R. Cantor. 1969.
Evolution of protein molecules, p.21
-132. In H. N.
Munro (ed.), Mammalian protein metabolism. Academic
Press, New York,
N.Y.
- Kumar, S.,
and K. M. N. Tamura. 1993. MEGA
molecular evolutionary genetics analysis, version 1.01. Pennsylvania
State University, University
Park.
- Lane,
D. J., B. Pace, G. J. Olsen, D. A. Stahl,
M. L. Sogin, and N. R. Pace. 1985.
Rapid determination of 16S ribosomal RNA sequences for phylogenetic
analyses. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
82:6955-6959.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Lane,
D. J. 1991. 16S/23S rRNA sequencing, p.115
-175. In E. Stackebrandt
and M. Goodfellow (ed.), Nucleic acid techniques in bacterial
systematics. Academic Press, Chichester,
England.
- Liu,
H., Y. Xu, Y. Ma, and P. Zhou. 2000. Characterization
of Micrococcus antarcticus sp. nov., a psychrophilic bacterium
from Antarctica. Int. J. Syst. Evol. Microbiol.
50:715-719.[Abstract]
- Maidak,
B. L., G. J. Olsen, N. Larsen, R. Overbeek,
M. J. McCaughey, and C. R. Woese.1996
. The ribosomal database project (RDP). Nucleic
Acids Res.
24:82-85.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Massana,
R., A. E. Murray, C. M. Preston, and E.
F. Delong. 1997. Vertical distribution and
phylogenetic characterization of marine planktonic Archaea in
the Santa Barbara channel. Appl. Environ. Microbiol.
63:50-56.[Abstract]
- Miteva,
V. I., P. P. Sheridan, and J. E Brenchley.2004
. Phylogenetic and physiological diversity of
microorganisms isolated from a deep Greenland glacier ice core.Appl. Environ. Microbiol.
70:202-213.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Mullins,
T. D., T. B. Britschgi, R. L. Krest, and
S. J. Giovannoni. 1995. Genetic comparisons
reveal the same unknown bacterial lineages in Atlantic and Pacific
bacterioplankton communities. Limnol. Oceanogr.
40:148-158.
- Papke,
R. T., N. B. Ramsing, M. M. Bateson, and
D. M. Ward. 2003. Geographical isolation in
hot spring cyanobacteria. Environ. Microbiol.
5:650-659.[CrossRef][Medline]
- Petit,
J. R., J. Jouzel, D. Raynaud, N. I. Barkov,
J. M. Barnola, I. Basile, M. Benders, J.
Chappellaz, M. Davis, G. Delaygue, M. Delmotte, V. M.
Kotlyakov, M. Legrand, V. Y. Lipenkov, C. Lorius, L. Pepin,
C. Ritz, E. Saltzman, and M. Stievenard. 1999. Climate
and atmospheric history of the past 420,000 years from the Vostock ice
core, Antarctica. Nature
399:429-436.[CrossRef]
- Pinhassi,
J., F. Azam, J. Hempälä, R. A. Long, J.
Martinez, U. L. Zweifel, and Å. Hagström.1999
. Coupling between bacterioplankton species
composition, population dynamics, and organic matter degradation.Aquat. Microb. Ecol.
17:13-26.
- Priscu,
J. C., E. E. Adams, W. B. Lyons,
M. A. Voytek, D. W. Mogk, R. L. Brown,
C. P. McKay, C. D. Takacs, K. A. Welch,
C. F. Wolf, J. D. Kirshtein, and R. Avci.1999
. Geomicrobiology of subglacial ice above lake Vostok,
Antarctica. Science
286:2141-2144.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Reddy,
G. S., J. S. Prakash, V. Prabahar, G. I.
Matsumoto, E. Stackebrandt, and S. Shivaji. 2003.
Kocuria polaris sp. nov., an orange-pigmented psychrophilic
bacterium isolated from an Antarctic cyanobacterial mat sample.Int. J. Syst. Evol. Microbiol.
53:183-187.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Rutter,
M., and D. B. Nedwell. 1994. Influence of
changing temperature on growth rate and competition between two
psychrotolerant Antarctic bacteria: competition and survival in
non-steady-state temperature environments. Appl. Environ.
Microbiol.
60:1993-2002.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Saitou,
N., and M. Nei. 1987. The neighbor-joining method: a
new method for constructing phylogenetic trees. Mol. Biol.
Evol.
4:406-425.[Abstract]
- Schmidt,
T. M., E. F. DeLong, and N. R. Pace.1991
. Analysis of a marine phytoplankton community by 16S
rRNA gene cloning and sequencing. J. Bacteriol.
173:4371-4378.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Sheridan,
P. P., V. I. Miteva, and J. E.
Brenchley. 2003. Phylogenetic analysis of anaerobic
psychrophilic enrichment cultures obtained from a Greenland glacier ice
core. Appl. Environ. Microbiol.
69:2153-2160.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Shi,
T., R. H. Reeves, D. A. Gilichinsky, and
E. I. Friedmann. 1997. Characterization of
viable bacteria from Siberian permafrost by 16S rDNA sequencing.Microb. Ecol.
33:169-179.[CrossRef][Medline]
- Siebert,
J., and P. Hirsch. 1988. Characterization of 15
selected coccal bacteria isolated from Antarctic rock and soil samples
from the McMurdo-Dry Valleys (southern Victoria Land). Polar
Biol.
9:37-44.[CrossRef][Medline]
- Stackebrandt,
E., and B. M. Goebel. 1994. Taxonomic note:
a place for DNA-DNA reassociation and 16S rRNA sequence analysis in the
present species definition in bacteriology. Int. J. Syst.
Bacteriol.
44:846-849.[Abstract]
- Takeuchi,
N., S. Kohshima, and K. Fujita. 1998. Snow algae
community on a Himalayan glacier, glacier AX010 East Nepal:
relationship with glacier summer mass balance. Bull. Glacier.
Res.
16:43-50.
- Takeuchi,
N. 2001. The altitudinal distribution of snow algae on
an Alaska glacier (Gulkana Glacier in the Alaska Range). Hydrol.
Process.
15:3447-3459.[CrossRef]
- Thompson,
J. D., T. J. Gibson, F. Plewniak, F. Jeanmougin,
and D. G. Higgins. 1997. The CLUSTAL-X
Windows interfaceflexible strategies for multiple sequence
alignment aided by quality analysis tools. Nucleic Acids
Res.
24:4876-4882.
- Thompson,
L. G., T. Yao, E. Mosley-Thompson, M. E. Davis, K.
A Henderson, and P. N. Lin. 2000. A
high-resolution millennial record of the South Asian monsoon from
Himalayan ice cores. Science
289:1916-1919.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Van,
E. M., and J. T. Staley. 1971.
Gas-vacuolated strains of Microcyclus aquaticus. J.
Bacteriol.
108:236-240.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Voytek,
M. A., and B. B. Ward. 1995.
Detection of ammonium-oxidizing bacteria of the beta-subclass of the
class Proteobacteria in aquatic samples with the PCR.Appl. Environ. Microbiol.
61:2811.
- Weisenburg,
W. G., S. M. Barns, D. A. Pelletier, and
D. J. Lane. 1991. 16S ribosomal DNA
amplification for phylogenetic study. J. Bacteriol.
173:697-703.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Whitaker,
R. J., D. W. Grogan, and J. W.
Taylor. 2003. Geographic barriers isolate endemic
populations of hyperthermophilic Archaea. Science
301:976-978.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Xiang,
S. R., T. D. Yao, L. Z. An, B.
Q. Xu, Z. Li, G. J. Wu, Y. Q. Wang, S. Ma, and
X. R. Chen. 2004. Bacterial diversity in
Malan Ice Core from the Tibetan Plateau. Folia
Microbiol.
49:269-276.
- Xiang,
S. R., T. D. Yao, L. Z. An, Z. Li,
G. J. Wu, Y. Q. Wang, B. Q. Xu, and
J. X. Wang. 2004. Community change of
bacteria in the Malan Ice Core and its relation to climate and
environment. Chin. Sci. Bull.
49:1869-1875.[CrossRef]
- Xie,
S., T. D. Yao, S. Kang, B. Xu, K. Duan, and L. G.
Thompson. 2000. Geochemical analyses of a Himalayan
snowpit profile: implications for atmospheric pollution and climate.Org. Geochem.
31:15-23.
- Yao,
T., and L. G. Thompson. 1992. Trends and
features of climatic changes in the past 5000 years recorded by the
Dunde ice core. Ann. Glaciol.
16:21-24.
- Yao,
T., V. Masson, J. Jouzel, M. Stievenard, S. Weizhen, and J. Keqin.1999
. Relationships between
18O in
precipitation and surface air temperature in the Urumqi River Basin,
east Tianshan Mountains, China. Geophys. Res. Lett.
26:3473-3476.[CrossRef]
- Yao,
T. D., S. R. Xiang, X. J. Zhang, and
J. C. Pu. 2003. Microbiological
characteristics recorded by Manlan and Puruogangri ice core.Quaternary Sci.
23:193-199.
- Yoshimura,
Y., S. Kohshima, and S. Ohtani. 1997. A community of
snow algae on a Himalayan glacier: change of algal biomass and
community structure with altitude. Arct. Antarct. Alp.
Res.
29:126-137.
- Yoshimura,
Y., S. Kohshima, N. Takeuchi, K. Seko, and K. Fujita.2000
. Himalayan ice-core dating with snow algae. J.
Glaciol.
46:335-340.
- Zhang,
X. J. 2002. Diversity of microorganisms and
DNA entrapped in glacier ice of Qinghai-Tibet Plateau and its relation
with environment. Ph.D. thesis. Cold and Arid Regions Environmental
Engineering Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Science, Lanzhou,
China.
- Zhang,
X. J., X. J. Ma, T. D. Yao, and
G. S. Zhang. 2003. Diversity of 16S rDNA and
environmental factor affecting microorganisms in Malan ice core.Chin. Sci. Bull.
48:947-957.
Applied and Environmental Microbiology, August 2005, p. 4619-4627, Vol. 71, No. 8
0099-2240/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.71.8.4619-4627.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
This article has been cited by other articles:
-
Katayama, T., Tanaka, M., Moriizumi, J., Nakamura, T., Brouchkov, A., Douglas, T. A., Fukuda, M., Tomita, F., Asano, K.
(2007). Phylogenetic Analysis of Bacteria Preserved in a Permafrost Ice Wedge for 25,000 Years. Appl. Environ. Microbiol.
73: 2360-2363
[Abstract]
[Full Text]