Members of the Uncultured Taxon OP1 ("Acetothermia") Predominate in the Microbial Community of an Alkaline Hot Spring at East-Tuvinian Upland

Bibliographic Details
Parent link:Microbiology
Vol. 87, iss. 6.— 2018.— [P. 783–795]
Corporate Author: Национальный исследовательский Томский политехнический университет Институт природных ресурсов Кафедра гидрогеологии, инженерной геологии и гидрогеоэкологии Научно-образовательный центр "Вода" Проблемная научно-исследовательская лаборатория гидрогеохимии
Other Authors: Korzhenkov A. A., Teplyuk A. V., Lebedinskii A. V., Khvaschevskaya A. A. Albina Anatolievna, Kopylova Yu. G. Yuliya Grigorievna, Arakchaa K. D., Golyshin P. N. Peter, Lunev E. A., Golyshina O. V., Kublanov I. V. Ilya, Toshchakov S. V., Gavrilov S. N.
Summary:Title screen
The thermophilic microbial community of a hydrotherm at East-Tuvinian upland is described. High-throughput profiling of the 16S rRNA gene and sequencing of the complete metagenome were used to characterize the phylogenetic and metabolic diversity of the microbial community of the Dikij Arjaan alkaline thermal spring of Ush-Bel'dir mineral water deposit in Tyva, Russia. Members of the uncultured phylum "Acetothermia" (candidate division OP1) predominated in the microbial community of the spring. While this phylum has already been detected in many thermal ecosystems, it never formed the main component of their microbial communities. Apart from "Acetothermia", members of Nitrospirae and Chloroflexi comprised a significant part of the microbial community. Comparative analysis of our geochemical data on the spring and the previously published data on in silico reconstruction of "Acetothermia" metabolism led us to the suggestion that carbonate and bicarbonate can serve as the major carbon sources for the dominant bacterial group and that "Acetothermia" act as the primary producers in this ecosystem. Analysis of the functional genes also revealed the presence of physiological groups of denitrifyers, iron reducers, carboxydotrophs and diazotrophs. This is the first report on a thermophilic microbial community of a hydrotherm from the southwestern extremity of the Baikal rift zone. Moreover, microbial communities with predominance of uncultured "Acetothermia" have not been reported previously in terrestrial hydrotherms.
Режим доступа: по договору с организацией-держателем ресурса
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1134/S0026261718060115
Format: Electronic Book Chapter
KOHA link:https://koha.lib.tpu.ru/cgi-bin/koha/opac-detail.pl?biblionumber=663884