4.5 Article

Microbial community composition along a 50 000-year lacustrine sediment sequence

Journal

FEMS MICROBIOLOGY ECOLOGY
Volume 94, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/femsec/fiy029

Keywords

lake sediment; deep biosphere; microbial communities; species selection; 16S rRNA gene high; throughput sequencing; Laguna Potrok Aike

Categories

Funding

  1. International Continent Scientific Drilling Program
  2. University of Geneva
  3. Swiss National Science Foundation, Switzerland [200020-119931/2, P2GEP2 148621]
  4. University of Bremen
  5. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, Germany (DFG Project) [OR 417/1-1, VU 94/1-1]
  6. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council, Canada
  7. University of Buenos Aires
  8. Argentinean Research Council (CONICET), Argentina
  9. Vetenskapsradet of Sweden
  10. GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences, Potsdam, Germany
  11. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [P2GEP2_148621] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

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For decades, microbial community composition in subseafloor sediments has been the focus of extensive studies. In deep lacustrine sediments, however, the taxonomic composition of microbial communities remains undercharacterized. Greater knowledge on microbial diversity in lacustrine sediments would improve our understanding of how environmental factors, and resulting selective pressures, shape subsurface biospheres in marine and freshwater sediments. Using high-throughput sequencing of 16S rRNA genes across high-resolution climate intervals covering the last 50 000 years in Laguna Potrok Aike, Argentina, we identified changes in microbial populations in response to both past environmental conditions and geochemical changes of the sediment during burial. Microbial communities in Holocene sediments were most diverse, reflecting a layering of taxa linked to electron acceptors availability. In deeper intervals, the data show that salinity, organic matter and the depositional conditions over the Last Glacial-interglacial cycle were all selective pressures in the deep lacustrine assemblage resulting in a genetically distinct biosphere from the surface dominated primarily by Bathyarchaeota and Atribacteria groups. However, similar to marine sediments, some dominant taxa in the shallow subsurface persisted into the subsurface as minor fraction of the community. The subsequent establishment of a deep subsurface community likely results from a combination of paleoenvironmental factors that have shaped the pool of available substrates, together with substrate depletion and/or reworking of organic matter with depth.

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