Affiliation:
1. Department of Botany and Microbiology and Institute for Energy and the Environment
2. Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
3. Institute of Life Sciences and Moshe Shilo Minerva Center for Marine Biogeochemistry, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel
4. Department of Geology and Geophysics, University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma 73019
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The archaeal community in a sulfide- and sulfur-rich spring with a stream water salinity of 0.7 to 1.0% in southwestern Oklahoma was studied by cloning and sequencing of 16S rRNA genes. Two clone libraries were constructed from sediments obtained at the hydrocarbon-exposed source of the spring and the microbial mats underlying the water flowing from the spring source. Analysis of 113 clones from the source library and 65 clones from the mat library revealed that the majority of clones belonged to the kingdom
Euryarchaeota
, while
Crenarchaeota
represented less than 10% of clones. Euryarchaeotal clones belonged to the orders
Methanomicrobiales
,
Methanosarcinales
, and
Halobacteriales
, as well as several previously described lineages with no pure-culture representatives. Those within the
Halobacteriales
represented 36% of the mat library and 4% of the source library. All cultivated members of this order are obligately aerobic halophiles. The majority of halobacterial clones encountered were not affiliated with any of the currently described genera of the family
Halobacteriaceae
. Measurement of the salinity at various locations at the spring, as well as along vertical gradients, revealed that soils adjacent to spring mats have a much higher salinity (NaCl concentrations as high as 32%) and a lower moisture content than the spring water, presumably due to evaporation. By use of a high-salt-plus-antibiotic medium, several halobacterial isolates were obtained from the microbial mats. Analysis of 16S rRNA genes indicated that all the isolates were members of the genus
Haloferax
. All isolates obtained grew at a wide range of salt concentrations, ranging from 6% to saturation, and all were able to reduce elemental sulfur to sulfide. We reason that the unexpected abundance of halophilic
Archaea
in such a low-salt, highly reduced environment could be explained by their relatively low salt requirement, which could be satisfied in specific locations of the shallow spring via evaporation, and their ability to grow under the prevalent anaerobic conditions in the spring, utilizing zero-valent sulfur compounds as electron acceptors. This study demonstrates that members of the
Halobacteriales
are not restricted to their typical high-salt habitats, and we propose a role for the
Halobacteriales
in sulfur reduction in natural ecosystems.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
108 articles.
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