TY - JOUR
T1 - Genomic resolution of a cold subsurface aquifer community provides metabolic insights for novel microbes adapted to high CO2 concentrations
AU - Probst, Alexander J.
AU - Castelle, Cindy J.
AU - Singh, Andrea
AU - Brown, Christopher T.
AU - Anantharaman, Karthik
AU - Sharon, Itai
AU - Hug, Laura A.
AU - Burstein, David
AU - Emerson, Joanne B.
AU - Thomas, Brian C.
AU - Banfield, Jillian F.
N1 - Funding Information:
JFB was supported as part of the Center for Nanoscale Controls on Geologic CO2 (NCGC), an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences under Award # DE-AC02-05CH11231. AJP was supported by the DFG grant PR 1603/1-1. We thank M. Cathryn Ryan and Bethany Ladd for scientific discussions about the Crystal Geyser system, particularly its hydrogeology and geochemistry. We thank Alex Hernsdorf for providing genomes of lineage ACD39 to improve phylogenetic reconstruction.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 Society for Applied Microbiology and John Wiley & Sons Ltd
PY - 2017/2
Y1 - 2017/2
N2 - As in many deep underground environments, the microbial communities in subsurface high-CO2 ecosystems remain relatively unexplored. Recent investigations based on single-gene assays revealed a remarkable variety of organisms from little studied phyla in Crystal Geyser (Utah, USA), a site where deeply sourced CO2-saturated fluids are erupted at the surface. To provide genomic resolution of the metabolisms of these organisms, we used a novel metagenomic approach to recover 227 high-quality genomes from 150 microbial species affiliated with 46 different phylum-level lineages. Bacteria from two novel phylum-level lineages have the capacity for CO2 fixation. Analyses of carbon fixation pathways in all studied organisms revealed that the Wood-Ljungdahl pathway and the Calvin-Benson-Bassham Cycle occurred with the highest frequency, whereas the reverse TCA cycle was little used. We infer that this, and selection for form II RuBisCOs, are adaptions to high CO2-concentrations. However, many autotrophs can also grow mixotrophically, a strategy that confers metabolic versatility. The assignment of 156 hydrogenases to 90 different organisms suggests that H2 is an important inter-species energy currency even under gaseous CO2-saturation. Overall, metabolic analyses at the organism level provided insight into the biochemical cycles that support subsurface life under the extreme condition of CO2 saturation.
AB - As in many deep underground environments, the microbial communities in subsurface high-CO2 ecosystems remain relatively unexplored. Recent investigations based on single-gene assays revealed a remarkable variety of organisms from little studied phyla in Crystal Geyser (Utah, USA), a site where deeply sourced CO2-saturated fluids are erupted at the surface. To provide genomic resolution of the metabolisms of these organisms, we used a novel metagenomic approach to recover 227 high-quality genomes from 150 microbial species affiliated with 46 different phylum-level lineages. Bacteria from two novel phylum-level lineages have the capacity for CO2 fixation. Analyses of carbon fixation pathways in all studied organisms revealed that the Wood-Ljungdahl pathway and the Calvin-Benson-Bassham Cycle occurred with the highest frequency, whereas the reverse TCA cycle was little used. We infer that this, and selection for form II RuBisCOs, are adaptions to high CO2-concentrations. However, many autotrophs can also grow mixotrophically, a strategy that confers metabolic versatility. The assignment of 156 hydrogenases to 90 different organisms suggests that H2 is an important inter-species energy currency even under gaseous CO2-saturation. Overall, metabolic analyses at the organism level provided insight into the biochemical cycles that support subsurface life under the extreme condition of CO2 saturation.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84978288634&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/1462-2920.13362
DO - 10.1111/1462-2920.13362
M3 - Article
C2 - 27112493
AN - SCOPUS:84978288634
SN - 1462-2912
VL - 19
SP - 459
EP - 474
JO - Environmental Microbiology
JF - Environmental Microbiology
IS - 2
ER -