Species-resolved, single-cell respiration rates reveal dominance of sulfate reduction in a deep continental subsurface ecosystem

Author:

Lindsay Melody R.1,D’Angelo Timothy1,Munson-McGee Jacob H.1,Saidi-Mehrabad Alireza2ORCID,Devlin Molly23,McGonigle Julia1,Goodell Elizabeth14,Herring Melissa15ORCID,Lubelczyk Laura C.1,Mascena Corianna1,Brown Julia M.1,Gavelis Greg1,Liu Jiarui6ORCID,Yousavich D. J.6ORCID,Hamilton-Brehm Scott D.7ORCID,Hedlund Brian P.3ORCID,Lang Susan8,Treude Tina69ORCID,Poulton Nicole J.1ORCID,Stepanauskas Ramunas1ORCID,Moser Duane P.2ORCID,Emerson David1,Orcutt Beth N.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences, East Boothbay, ME 04544

2. Division of Hydrologic Sciences, Desert Research Institute, Las Vegas, NV 89119

3. School of Life Sciences, University of Nevada Las Vegas, Las Vegas, NV 89154

4. Department of Geology, Oberlin College, Oberlin, OH 44074

5. Department of Marine and Environmental Sciences, Northeastern University, Boston, MA 02115

6. Department of Earth, Planetary, and Space Sciences, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA 90095

7. Department of Microbiology, Southern Illinois University Carbondale, Carbondale, IL 62901

8. School of the Earth, Ocean and Environment, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC 29208

9. Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA 90095

Abstract

Rates of microbial processes are fundamental to understanding the significance of microbial impacts on environmental chemical cycling. However, it is often difficult to quantify rates or to link processes to specific taxa or individual cells, especially in environments where there are few cultured representatives with known physiology. Here, we describe the use of the redox-enzyme-sensitive molecular probe RedoxSensor™ Green to measure rates of anaerobic electron transfer physiology (i.e., sulfate reduction and methanogenesis) in individual cells and link those measurements to genomic sequencing of the same single cells. We used this method to investigate microbial activity in hot, anoxic, low-biomass (~10 3 cells mL −1 ) groundwater of the Death Valley Regional Flow System, California. Combining this method with electron donor amendment experiments and metatranscriptomics confirmed that the abundant spore formers including Candidatus Desulforudis audaxviator were actively reducing sulfate in this environment, most likely with acetate and hydrogen as electron donors. Using this approach, we measured environmental sulfate reduction rates at 0.14 to 26.9 fmol cell −1 h −1 . Scaled to volume, this equates to a bulk environmental rate of ~10 3 pmol sulfate L −1 d −1 , similar to potential rates determined with radiotracer methods. Despite methane in the system, there was no evidence for active microbial methanogenesis at the time of sampling. Overall, this method is a powerful tool for estimating species-resolved, single-cell rates of anaerobic metabolism in low-biomass environments while simultaneously linking genomes to phenomes at the single-cell level. We reveal active elemental cycling conducted by several species, with a large portion attributable to Ca. Desulforudis audaxviator.

Funder

NSF | OD | Office of Integrative Activities

Rodney White Postdoctoral Fellowship

NV Space Grant Consortium Graduate Research Opportunity Fellowship

Nevada NASA EPSCoR Research Infrastructure Development Seed Grant

Nevada Space Grant Consortium Research Infrastructure Grant

NASA Postdoctoral Program Fellowship

NASA FINESST Fellowship

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

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