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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, March 2007, p. 1532-1543, Vol. 73, No. 5
0099-2240/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.01729-06
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Department of Natural Resource Sciences, McGill University, Montreal, Canada,1 National Research Council CanadaBiotechnology Research Institute, Montreal, Canada,2 SETI Institute, Mountain View, California,3 Department of Geography, McGill University, Montreal, Canada4
Received 21 July 2006/ Accepted 22 November 2006
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FIG. 1. Location
of the perennial springs on Axel Heiberg Island, Canada. (Reprinted
from reference 4 with
permission of the
publisher.)
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It has been hypothesized that the springs originate from subpermafrost salt aquifers and rise to the surface through the permafrost (4); they are not associated with volcanic activity; the heat is provided through the local geothermal gradient. Similar low-temperature hydrosystems might occur or have occurred on Mars. Mars Global Surveyor images indicated the presence of gully-like landforms that occur primarily at high latitudes, providing evidence of recent fluvial activity (38). These features appear to be geologically young enough to have been formed under the present climatic conditions that include mean surface temperatures of 60°C and extensive permafrost. Given the absence of any association between these flow features and obvious geothermal heat sources (e.g., volcanic features), eutectic brines present in the Martian subsurface have been suggested as the likely fluid that formed these features (26). These two sets of Arctic springs represent useful terrestrial analogues with which to study the requisites that would have enabled life to develop and be maintained in Martian hydrosystems.
Previous studies have explored the microbiota of sulfur springs, but most of them focused on hot springs (6, 27) and deep-sea hydrothermal vents (25, 58). The cold Ancaster sulfur spring in Ontario (14) and the mesophilic spring of Zodletone Mountain in Oklahoma (16) were shown to host rich and complex microbial communities with abundant microbial mats at the spring sources and at their channels. In these systems, sulfide supports a diversity of phototrophic microorganisms (cyanobacteria, purple and green sulfur bacteria, and Chloroflexi spp.). The microbial characterization of cold sulfidic springs in Germany revealed a novel string-of-pearls community comprised of novel Archaea organisms in close association with a sulfide-oxidizing bacteria related to the genus Thiothrix (40).
In 1999, a preliminary investigation of the microbial composition of a biofilm formed on a glass slide placed in a channel within the spring flow at one Colour Peak discharge site detected sulfur-metabolizing phylotypes (3). In this study, molecular phylogenetic approaches (denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis [DGGE] and 16S rRNA clone library analyses) were used to examine the bacterial and archaeal composition of the microbial communities in the sediments of seven springs at Gypsum Hill and Colour Peak.
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Physicochemical analyses of spring waters and sediments.
Various physicochemical parameters
were recorded in July of 2004 and 2005. Temperatures were measured with
a digital thermometer (Fisher Scientific Ltd., Nepean, Ontario,
Canada). Total soluble sulfide and dissolved oxygen measurements were
conducted with colorimetric assays (CHEMetrics, Calverton, VA).
Oxidoreduction potential and pH were measured with a Hanna HI 9025
portable meter (Hanna Instruments, Laval, Quebec, Canada). Salinity,
conductivity, and total dissolved solids were measured with a sensION5
meter (Hach, Loveland, CO) after a 1:1 dilution of spring waters in
distilled water for the Gypsum Hill springs and a 1:2 dilution for the
Colour Peak springs. Major cations, anions, total Kjeldahl nitrogen,
and carbon content from the GH-4 and CP-2 sediments were determined at
Maxxam Analytique, Inc. (Lachine, Quebec,
Canada).
Sampling and DNA extraction.
In July 2004,
50 ml of composite spring sediments (top 10 cm) were aseptically
collected from the seven springs for molecular analyses. Samples were
processed at the McGill High Arctic Research Station within
12 h to minimize changes in microbial populations. Total
community DNA was extracted from 5 g of each sediment sample
with an UltraClean soil DNA isolation kit (Mo Bio Laboratories, Solana
Beach, CA). The bead beating time (performed with a Mo Bio vortex
adapter) was optimized to obtain DNA of suitable quality for
phylogenetic studies and to avoid chimera production during PCR, as
follows: bead beating times ranging from 30 s to 10 min were
tested, and the quantity and quality of the total DNA recovered were
checked by electrophoresis on precast E-Gels (0.8% agarose) using an
E-Gel PowerBase (Invitrogen Canada, Burlington, ON) with Lambda/HindIII
as the molecular weight DNA ladder. Two-minute vortexing gave an
intense band of high-molecular-weight DNA (
23 kb) with no
visible shearing; this vortexing time was chosen for subsequent
extractions. The DNA was eluted in TE (10 mM Tris-HCl, 1 mM EDTA [pH
8.0]) instead of the 10 mM Tris provided with the kit and kept at
4°C.
PCR amplification of the 16S rRNA gene.
The 16S rRNA
gene analyses were performed in order to assess the prokaryotic
phylogenetic composition of the spring sediments. A
590-bp
fragment of the 16S rRNA gene, corresponding to variable regions V3,
V4, and V5, of the Escherichia coli 16S rRNA gene, was
amplified by PCR with community DNA as template, and the resulting
amplicons were used for DGGE analysis and the construction of clone
libraries. The combinations of the Bacteria-specific forward
primer E341F
(5'-CCTACGGGIGGCIGCA-3') and
universal reverse primer U926
(5'-CCGTCAATTCCTTTRAGTTT-3') and
of the Archaea-specific forward primer A344F
(5'-ACGGGGTGCAGCAGGCGCGA-3') and
reverse primer A934R
(5'-GTGCTCCCCCGCCAATTCCT-3') were
used to amplify the 16S rRNA genes of Bacteria and
Archaea, respectively. The forward primers used for DGGE
possessed a GC clamp
(5'-GCGGGCGGGGCGGGGGCACGGGGGGCGCGGCGGGCGGGGCGGGGG-3')
at the 5' end. For additional information on the primers used
in this study, refer to Baker et al.
(5). Each 50-µl
PCR mixture contained
5 ng of template DNA, 25 pmol of each of
the forward and reverse primers, 200 µM of each
deoxynucleoside triphosphate (dNTP), 1 mM MgCl2, 1x
PCR buffer, and 2.5 units of DNA polymerase. The DNA polymerases used
for PCR were the rTaq polymerase (Amersham Biosciences, Baie
d'Urfe, Qc, Canada) used to generate amplicons for DGGE and Easy-A
cloning enzyme (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA) for cloning. PCR negative
controls were prepared by replacing the template DNA with sterile
water. After the initial denaturation (95°C for 5 min), DNA
polymerase was added to the reaction mixture at a temperature of
80°C.
DGGE analyses.
The 16S rRNA gene amplicons from six
to eight PCRs were combined for each sediment sample and concentrated
by ethanol precipitation for DGGE analysis. To increase the specificity
of the amplification and to reduce the formation of spurious
by-products, a touchdown PCR
(12) was performed as
follows: the annealing temperature was set to 60°C (for
archaeal PCR) or 65°C (for bacterial PCR) and decreased by
1°C at every cycle for 10 cycles, and then 20 additional cycles
were performed. Denaturation was carried out at 94°C for 1 min,
the annealing time was 1 min, and the primer extension was 72°C
for 3 min. A final extension at 72°C for 30 min was added to
avoid the generation of double bands on the DGGE gel
(28). For each sample,
350 ng of archaeal amplicons and 600 ng of bacterial amplicons were
applied to an 8% (wt/vol) acrylamide gel containing a 40 to 70%
(archaeal) or 40 to 60% (bacterial) denaturing gradient: the 100%
denaturant consisted of 7 M urea and 40% formamide. Gels were run at
60°C for 16 h at 80 V in 1x Tris-acetate-EDTA
(TAE) buffer using a Bio-Rad Dcode universal mutation detection system
(Bio-Rad Laboratories, Mississauga, ON, Canada). Gels were stained for
30 min in 1x TAE containing a 1:10,000 dilution of Vistra Green
(Amersham Biosciences), destained for 30 min in 1x TAE, and
visualized with a FluorImager System model 595 (Molecular Dynamics,
Sunnyvale, CA). Selected DGGE bands were excised from the gels and
eluted in 60 µl of water at 37°C overnight. One
microliter of DNA was reamplified with the appropriate corresponding
Bacteria or Archaea primers without the GC clamps as
follows: an initial denaturation of 5 min at 95°C, followed by
25 to 28 cycles of 94°C for 30 s, 55°C for
30 s, and 72°C for 45 s. Sequencing and
phylogenetic analysis were performed as described
below.
Clone libraries of 16S rRNA genes and restriction fragment length polymorphism.
A total of four 16S rRNA
gene clone libraries were constructed, one bacterial and one archaeal
from two spring sites. For each library, three PCRs were combined to
minimize bias. PCR conditions were as follows: 25 cycles of
94°C for 1 min, 55°C (archaeal) or 45°C
(bacterial) for 1 min, and 72°C for 2 min, and a final
extension at 72°C for 10 min. The PCR products were purified
with a MinElute PCR purification kit (QIAGEN, Mississauga, ON, Canada)
and cloned using a QIAGEN PCR cloning kit at an insert:vector ratio of
3:1. The ligations were transformed by electroporation into
Escherichia coli strain DH10B (Invitrogen). Transformants were
selected on Luria-Bertani medium supplemented with ampicillin (100 mg
liter1),
5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-beta-D-galactopyranoside (X-Gal;
80 mg liter1), and
isopropyl-beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG; 50
µM). Between 155 and 174 randomly selected colonies from each
library were screened by restriction fragment length polymorphism
(RFLP) analysis with MspI and HhaI restriction endonucleases (New
England Biolabs, Ipswich, MA) as described previously
(29). Clones with
identical patterns were visually regrouped, and one to five
representatives of each RFLP pattern were selected for sequencing of
both strands. Sequencing was performed at the McGill University Genome
Quebec Innovation Centre using a model 3730XL DNA analyzer system
(Applied Biosystems, Foster City,
CA).
Phylogenetic and cluster analyses.
The 16S rRNA gene
sequences were submitted for comparison to the GenBank databases using
the BLAST algorithm (2).
Sequences having
98% similarity and matching the same GenBank
sequence were assigned to the same phylotype. The sequences were
checked against the contaminant sequences commonly found in 16S rRNA
gene clone libraries
(59). The occurrence of
chimeric sequences was determined manually and with the
CHECK_CHIMERA function from the Ribosomal Database Project-II
release 8.1
(http://wdcm.nig.ac.jp/RDP/cgis/chimera).
The remaining sequences were then aligned with their closest relatives
using ClustalW. Phylogenetic trees (neighbor-joining algorithm with
Jukes-Cantor corrections) were constructed using a MacVector 7.2
software package (Accelrys). The robustness of inferred topologies was
tested by 1,000 bootstrap resamplings of the neighbor-joining data. In
addition, phylogenetic classification was inferred by submitting the
sequences to the RDP Classifier from the Ribosomal Database Project-II
release 9(http://rdp.cme.msu.edu/classifier).
Comparisons of the microbial community compositions from the seven
springs sampled were performed by cluster analysis of the DGGE banding
patterns using Dendron 2.4 software (Solltech Inc., Oakdale, LA).
Dendrograms were constructed by the unweighted pair group method with
arithmetic mean (UPGMA) groupings with a similarity coefficient
(SAB) matrix. The stability of the dendrograms was
evaluated by randomizing the sample order 100 times and recalculating
the dendrograms with 95% background
noise.
Diversity indices and statistical analysis.
Rarefaction analysis was
performed and diversity indices were calculated to characterize the
bacterial and archaeal diversity of the spring sediment samples. The
rarefaction curves were constructed using Analytic Rarefaction
1.3(http://www.uga.edu/
strata/software/index.html).
The coverage of the libraries was calculated as defined by Good
(23), with the following
formula: C = (1 n1/N)
x 100, where n1 is the number of phylotypes appearing
only once in a library and N is the library size. The Shannon
index (H') of diversity, the reciprocal of Simpson's
index (1/D) of dominance, and the Chao1 estimator of total
species richness (9) were
determined with EstimateS 7.5
(http://viceroy.eeb.uconn.edu/estimateS)
(10). Evenness (the
relative abundance of each phylotype) was calculated with the formula
E =
eH'/N, where
H' is the Shannon index of diversity and N is
the total number of phylotypes
(35). The phylotype
compositions of the clone libraries were compared using the Sorensen
index, S = 2 x c/(a
+ b), where c is the number of
phylotypes found in both sample A and sample B and a is the
number of phylotypes in sample A and b is the number of
phylotypes in sample B
(37). The LIBSHUFF
program (50)
(http://libshuff.mib.uga.edu)
was used to evaluate the significance of differences between the clone
libraries. The sequences of each clone, deduced by their RFLP patterns,
were aligned using ClustalX
(63), and the DNADIST
program of PHYLIP (version 3.65) software
(http://evolution.genetics.washington.edu/phylip.html)
was used (with the Jukes-Cantor model) to generate the distance matrix
submitted to LIBSHUFF.
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
The 16S rRNA gene sequences
obtained in this study have been deposited in the GenBank
database under accession numbers DQ521089 to
DQ521211.
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15.6%) than at the GH springs (
7.6%). The spring
waters were shown to be rich in sulfur compounds, containing 25 to 100
ppm of sulfide (measured in this study) and 3,724 mg/liter (at GH-1)
and 2,300 mg/liter (at CP-1 and CP-2) of
SO42 as measured previously
(42). Spring sediment
samples contained high concentrations of salts and
SO42. The CP-2 sediment contained 20 to
24 g/kg of Na+, Cl,
Ca2+, and total Fe. The GH-4 sediment also had high
concentrations of Ca2+ and total Fe (
16
g/kg) but contained three to four times less Na+
(5.4 g/kg) and Cl (6.6 g/kg) than the CP-2
sediment. While the SO42 concentration
was higher in the GH water, its concentration was approximately three
times higher in the CP-2 sediment (6.7 g/kg) than in the GH-4 sediment
(1.9 g/kg). The total Kjeldahl nitrogen concentrations in the sediments
were 210 and 350 mg/kg, respectively, in GH-4 and CP-2. Previous
studies measured dissolved inorganic carbon at 13.1 to 17.2 mg/liter
(42) and found
undetectable dissolved organic carbon
(3). In the GH-4 sediment,
total organic carbon was 3,700 mg/kg and total inorganic carbon was
3,900 mg/kg, while in the CP-2 sediment, total organic carbon was 8,300
mg/kg and total inorganic carbon was 4,500
mg/kg. |
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TABLE 1. Field
measurements of physicochemical parameters of the spring waters from
Gypsum Hill and Colour Peak
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FIG. 2. Clusteranalysis of DGGE banding patterns based on position of bands using
unweighted pair groupings of an SAB matrix. (a)
Dendrogram for DGGE Bacteria; (b) dendrogram for DGGE
Archaea. Phylogenetic affiliations of the sequenced DGGE bands
are shown on the right, with the percentage of
similarity.
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590-bp sequences were
analyzed to determine their phylogenetic affiliations. Phylogenetic
trees illustrating affiliations and the occurrence of each phylotype
are presented in Fig.
3 through Fig.
6. Grouping of the
bacterial sequences into different phyla using the RDP Classifier was
generally in agreement with the phylogenetic tree
branching.
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FIG. 3. Phylogenetic
relationships of the 46 bacterial 16S rRNA gene sequences obtained from
the GH-4 clone library. The tree was inferred by neighbor-joining
analysis of 558 homologous positions of sequence from each organism or
clone. Aquifex pyrophilus was used as the outgroup. Numbers on
the nodes are the bootstrap values (percentages) based on 1,000
replicates. The scale bar indicates the estimated number of base
changes per nucleotide sequence position. Bold type indicates GH-4
clones, with their prevalence in the clone
library.
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FIG. 6. Phylogenetic
relationships of the 29 archaeal 16S rRNA gene sequences obtained from
the CP-1 clone library. The tree was inferred by neighbor-joining
analysis of 402 homologous positions of sequence from each organism or
clone. Aquifex pyrophilus was used as the outgroup. Numbers on
the nodes are the bootstrap values (percent) based on 1,000 replicates.
Scale bar indicates the estimated number of base changes per nucleotide
sequence position. Bold type indicates CP-1 clones, with their
prevalence in the clone
library.
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The CP-1 bacterial library was composed of 174 clones that grouped into 30 phylotypes (Fig. 4). The phylotypes could be divided into six phyla (Proteobacteria [82%], Firmicutes [9%], Bacteroidetes [6%], Actinobacteria [<1%], and Cyanobacteria [<1%] and the candidate division TM7 [<1%]). The Proteobacteria were highly dominant, comprising 19 different phylotypes with representatives from all five subclasses (Alpha-, Beta-, Delta-, Epsilon-, and Gammaproteobacteria). The Gammaproteobacteria dominance (74%) was largely due to the high proportions of phylotype C44 (98% identical to Thiomicrospira psychrophila), which alone represented 45% of the clone library, and of phylotypes C36/C38 (related to Thiobacillus sp. strain EBD bloom) (23%). The two deltaproteobacterial phylotypes were related to the sulfur-reducing bacterium Desulfuromonas thiophila and the sulfate-reducing bacterium Desulfobulbus mediterraneus.
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FIG. 4. Phylogenetic
relationships of the 30 bacterial 16S rRNA gene sequences obtained from
the CP-1 clone library. The tree was inferred by neighbor-joining
analysis of 501 homologous positions of sequence from each organism or
clone. Aquifex pyrophilus was used as the outgroup. Numbers on
the nodes are the bootstrap values (percentages) based on 1,000
replicates. Scale bar indicates the estimated number of base changes
per nucleotide sequence position. Bold type indicates CP-1 clones, with
their prevalence in the clone
library.
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FIG. 5. Phylogenetic
relationships of the 18 archaeal 16S rRNA gene sequences obtained from
the GH-4 clone library. The tree was inferred by neighbor-joining
analysis of 402 homologous positions of sequence from each organism or
clone. Aquifex pyrophilus was used as the outgroup. Numbers on
the nodes are the bootstrap values (percentages) based on 1,000
replicates. Scale bar indicates the estimated number of base changes
per nucleotide sequence position. Bold type indicates GH-4 clones, with
their prevalence in the clone
library.
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Comparison and statistical analysis of the clone libraries.
The number of clones, phylotypes, and
biodiversity indices calculated for the four clone libraries are
summarized in Table
2. The coverage of the clone libraries was high, ranging from 84 to 96%,
suggesting that the major part of the microbial diversity was
identified in this study. The high coverage values are corroborated by
the rarefaction curves that reached a near plateau, except for the GH-4
bacterial libraries (data not shown). The rarefaction curves, supported
by the Shannon index and Chao1, indicated that the GH-4 bacterial
population was the most diverse, while the GH-4 archaeal population was
the least diverse. The diversity of the CP-1 bacterial and archaeal
libraries was similar in numbers of phylotypes, but the Shannon index,
Chao1, and Evenness (E) estimated that the archaeal diversity
was higher in both species richness and evenness.
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TABLE 2. Numbers
of clones and phylotypes analyzed for the four 16S rRNA gene clone
libraries and their diversity indices
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FIG. 7. Distribution
of the putative sulfur-metabolizing Proteobacteria of the
spring
sediments.
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Since there are known biases associated with DNA extraction and PCR amplification (39, 66), the abundance of a phylotype in a clone library does not necessarily reflect its abundance in the sample, and the corresponding ecological function cannot be inferred with certitude from the phylogenetic affiliation (1). Such assumptions should be made only when there is a high degree of sequence similarity between the phylotypes and known cultivated species. In this study, a number of phylotypes from nearly every phylogenetic group had sequence homology with cultivated microorganisms at the species or genus levels, allowing some prediction of ecological function within the spring sediments. Many phylotypes (56 to 76%) were from putative sulfur-metabolizing bacteria, suggesting that the utilization and cycling of sulfur compounds may play a major role in energy production and maintenance of microbial communities in these permanently cold saline environments.
A major metabolic process in both springs appeared to be the oxidation of reduced sulfur compounds. Sequences related to sulfur oxidizers were the most abundant and grouped into three subclasses of the Proteobacteria (Beta-, Epsilon-, and Gammaproteobacteria); the majority of these phylotypes were related to Thiomicrospira, especially T. psychrophila, and Thiobacillus, two genera frequently isolated from marine environments. T. psychrophila is a psychrophilic, obligately chemolithoautotrophic, sulfur-oxidizing bacterium that was initially isolated from marine Arctic sediments (33). The Epsilonproteobacteria group of sulfur oxidizers was related to the Sulfuricurvum and Sulfurimonas genera. Reduction of oxidized sulfur compounds, as part of the spring microbial metabolism, was exemplified by sequences of Deltaproteobacteria that were comprised of phylotypes closely related to diverse genera (Desulfuromusa, Desulfuromonas, Desulfobulbus, and Desulfobacula) of sulfur- and sulfate-reducing bacteria. A phylotype of Epsilonproteobacteria from CP-1 was related to the sulfur-reducing bacterium Sulfurospirillum arcachonense (19). Two additional Epsilonproteobacteria phylotypes were not related to any cultivated bacteria. While recent reports (41, 57) have demonstrated the metabolic diversity of cultivated Epsilonproteobacteria, their role in the S cycle as either reducing elemental sulfur to sulfide or oxidizing sulfide to sulfur has long been established (61, 67), so it is likely that these phylotypes participate in the cycling of S compounds in the GH and CP spring systems. Other detected phylotypes may be involved in the oxidoreduction of sulfur compounds. For example, a GH-4 phylotype was related to Loktanella fryxellensis, an Alphaproteobacteria sp. within the Rhodobacteraceae family (65). Some species of Rhodobacteraceae are capable of oxidizing reduced sulfur compounds under both oxic and anoxic conditions (32, 62). Phylotypes related to Marinobacter, Halomonas, and Cytophaga spp. were also detected in the spring sediments; representatives from these genera are capable of heterotrophic sulfur oxidation (22, 43, 53).
The spring archaeal populations are also likely to participate in the spring sulfur metabolism. Some haloarchaea can slowly reduce elemental sulfur (15, 64) and oxidize thiosulfate to tetrathionate (54). Elshahed et al. (15) retrieved haloarchaeal clones and isolated sulfur-reducing haloarchaea from an anoxic mesophilic sulfide- and sulfur-rich spring, suggesting that these microorganisms play a role in sulfur metabolism in sulfur-rich anaerobic ecosystems. Only one low-temperature crenarchaeote has been cultivated to date (34), but many hyperthermophilic crenarchaeotes isolated from sulfur-rich high-temperature environments are able to use oxidized or reduced sulfur compounds in their metabolic energy-yielding reactions (55). Given the similarities of some of the spring archaeal phylotypes with sequences from sulfur-rich environments (cold sulfidic spring and hydrothermal vents), at least some of the Crenarchaeota detected in the GH and CP spring sediments may rely on sulfur metabolism for their energy production.
Two lines of evidence suggest that methanogenesis may occur in the Expedition Fjord spring sediments. First, we detected low concentrations of methane in the spring waters at both the Gypsum Hill and Colour Peak sites (data not published). Second, the most abundant Euryarchaeota phylotype from both spring libraries was associated with the Methanosarcinales cluster in the phylogenetic trees, and one GH-4 phylotype was 99% identical to psychrotolerant methanogens (M. burtonii and M. alaskense) that can use methylamines for growth (20, 49). As sulfate reducers outcompete methanogens for most energy sources, the persistence of methanogens in saline environments where sulfate is not limiting is associated with the utilization of noncompetitive substrates such as methylamines.
Sulfide-rich springs, from all
ranges of temperature, are commonly sustained by the activity of
phototrophic bacteria
(14,
16,
51) that often form
abundant photosynthetic microbial mats. However, photosynthetic
prokaryotes do not seem to play an important role as the primary
producers in the GH and CP springs as we did not visually or
microscopically observe evidence of photosynthetic microorganisms,
prokaryotic or eukaryotic, in any of the spring outlets, and only one
phototrophic clone (cyanobacteria-related) was detected in CP-1.
Moreover, chlorophyll was not detected over the surface of the
carbonates from
100 spring locations using a pulse
amplitude modulation fluorometer
(3). Considering the high
sulfide concentrations and the 24-h light illumination during the
sampling period, anoxygenic phototrophs that use sulfide or other
reduced sulfur compounds as electron donors in photosynthesis were
unexpectedly not detected. The high salinity of the springs is not
likely to be the reason for this absence as anoxygenic phototrophs were
found in a hypersaline endoevaporitic microbial mat collected from a
pond with 20% salinity
(52). Based on these
observations, the sulfide emerging from the springs may support
populations of chemolithoautotrophic sulfur oxidizers that act as
primary producers in the spring systems. Sulfur-based chemolithotrophy,
mainly performed by Epsilonproteobacteria, can sustain
microbial ecosystems devoid of light such as hydrothermal
vents (30) and aphotic
(cave) sulfidic springs
(17,
18). This
nonphotosynthesis-based primary production could hypothetically sustain
the Axel Heiberg springs' microbial communities during the
3
months of total darkness that occur seasonally at high latitudes. This
would be of significant interest in astrobiology, particularly for the
search for life in subsurface waters which may exist on Mars
(4,
42).
The microbial phylotypes retrieved in this study are currently being used as guides to develop appropriate culturing methodologies for isolating novel indigenous bacteria for further characterization and to develop activity assays to identify microbial communities active under in situ conditions.
This work was supported by grants from NASA's Exobiology program (NAG5-12395) and the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC). Additional funding for student research was provided by the Department of Indian and Northern AffairsNorthern Scientific Training Program and the Fonds Québécois de la Recherche sur la Nature et les Technologies (FQRNT).
Published ahead of print on 12 January 2007. ![]()
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