4.7 Article

Microbiome and ecology of a hot spring-microbialite system on the Trans-Himalayan Plateau

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SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
卷 10, 期 1, 页码 -

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-62797-z

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  1. Bose Institute
  2. Science and Engineering Research Board (SERB), Government of India (GoI) [SR/FT/LS-204/2009, EMR/2016/002703]
  3. University Grants Commission, GoI
  4. SERB, GoI
  5. Council of Scientific & Industrial Research, GoI
  6. Department of Science and Technology, GoI
  7. Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs (DAERA, Northern Ireland)

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Little is known about life in the boron-rich hot springs of Trans-Himalayas. Here, we explore the geomicrobiology of a 4438-m-high spring which emanates similar to 70 degrees C-water from a boratic microbialite called Shivlinga. Due to low atmospheric pressure, the vent-water is close to boiling point so can entropically destabilize biomacromolecular systems. Starting from the vent, Shivlinga's geomicrobiology was revealed along the thermal gradients of an outflow-channel and a progressively-drying mineral matrix that has no running water; ecosystem constraints were then considered in relation to those of entropically comparable environments. The spring-water chemistry and sinter mineralogy were dominated by borates, sodium, thiosulfate, sulfate, sulfite, sulfide, bicarbonate, and other macromolecule-stabilizing (kosmotropic) substances. Microbial diversity was high along both of the hydrothermal gradients. Bacteria, Eukarya and Archaea constituted >98%, similar to 1% and <1% of Shivlinga's microbiome, respectively. Temperature constrained the biodiversity at similar to 50 degrees C and similar to 60 degrees C, but not below 46 degrees C. Along each thermal gradient, in the vent-to-apron trajectory, communities were dominated by Aquificae/Deinococcus-Thermus, then Chlorobi/Chloroflexi/Cyanobacteria, and finally Bacteroidetes/Proteobacteria/Firmicutes. Interestingly, sites of >45 degrees C were inhabited by phylogenetic relatives of taxa for which laboratory growth is not known at >45 degrees C. Shivlinga's geomicrobiology highlights the possibility that the system's kosmotrope-dominated chemistry mitigates against the biomacromolecule-disordering effects of its thermal water.

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