4.8 Article

Methyl-compound use and slow growth characterize microbial life in 2-km-deep subseafloor coal and shale beds

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1707525114

关键词

subseafloor life; coal bed biosphere; NanoSIMS; stable isotope probing; microbial generation time

资金

  1. Schlanger Ocean Drilling Fellowship
  2. JSPS [26251041, 15K14907, 24687004, 15H05608, 24651018, 2665169, 16K14817]
  3. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) Strategic Fund for Strengthening Leading-Edge Research and Development
  4. Center for Dark Energy Biosphere (C-DEBI)
  5. Post Expedition Award
  6. JSPS Funding Program for Next Generation World-Leading Researchers (NEXT Program) [GR102]
  7. Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation [GBMF3780]
  8. NASA Astrobiology-Life Underground (NAI-LU) [NNA13AA92A]
  9. Deep Life Cultivation Internship Program from the Deep Carbon Observatory (DCO)
  10. C-DEBI travel grant for sample processing at the JAMSTEC Kochi Institute for Core Sample Research
  11. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [17H03956, 16K14817, 24651018, 26251041, 15H05608, 15K14907, 24687004] Funding Source: KAKEN
  12. NASA [NNA13AA92A, 475664] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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The past decade of scientific ocean drilling has revealed seemingly ubiquitous, slow-growing microbial life within a range of deep biosphere habitats. Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Expedition 337 expanded these studies by successfully coring Miocene-aged coal beds 2 km below the seafloor hypothesized to be hot spots for microbial life. To characterize the activity of coal-associated microorganisms from this site, a series of stable isotope probing (SIP) experiments were conducted using intact pieces of coal and overlying shale incubated at in situ temperatures (45 degrees C). The 30-month SIP incubations were amended with deuterated water as a passive tracer for growth and different combinations of C-13- or N-15-labeled methanol, methylamine, and ammonium added at low (micromolar) concentrations to investigate methylotrophy in the deep subseafloor biosphere. Although the cell densities were low (50-2,000 cells per cubic centimeter), bulk geochemical measurements and single-cell-targeted nanometer-scale secondary ion mass spectrometry demonstrated active metabolism of methylated substrates by the thermally adapted microbial assemblage, with differing substrate utilization profiles between coal and shale incubations. The conversion of labeled methylamine and methanol was predominantly through heterotrophic processes, with only minor stimulation of methanogenesis. These findings were consistent with in situ and incubation 16S rRNA gene surveys. Microbial growth estimates in the incubations ranged from several months to over 100 y, representing some of the slowest direct measurements of environmental microbial biosynthesis rates. Collectively, these data highlight a small, but viable, deep coal bed biosphere characterized by extremely slow-growing heterotrophs that can utilize a diverse range of carbon and nitrogen substrates.

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