Author:
Hinkle John E.,Chanton Jeffrey P.,Moynihan Molly A.,Ruff S. Emil,Teske Andreas
Abstract
AbstractHydrothermal sediments host phylogenetically diverse and physiologically complex microbial communities. Previous studies of microbial community structure in hydrothermal sediments have typically used short-read sequencing approaches. To improve on these approaches, we use LoopSeq, a high-throughput synthetic long-read sequencing method that has yielded promising results in analyses of microbial ecosystems, such as the human gut microbiome. In this study, LoopSeq is used to obtain near-full length (approximately 1400 - 1500 nucleotides) bacterial 16S rRNA gene sequences from hydrothermal sediments in Guaymas Basin. Based on these sequences, high-quality alignments and phylogenetic analyses provided new insights into previously unrecognized taxonomic diversity of sulfur-cycling microorganisms and their distribution along a lateral hydrothermal gradient. Detailed phylogenies for free-living and syntrophic sulfur-cycling bacterial lineages identified well-supported monophyletic clusters that have implications for the taxonomic classification of these groups. Particularly, we identify clusters withinCandidatusDesulfofervidus that represent unexplored physiological and genomic diversity. In general, LoopSeq-derived 16S rRNA gene sequences aligned consistently with reference sequences in GenBank; however, chimeras were prevalent in sequences as affiliated with the thermophilicCandidatusDesulfofervidus andThermodesulfobacterium, and in smaller numbers within the sulfur-oxidizing familyBeggiatoaceae. Our analysis of sediments along a well-documented thermal and geochemical gradient show how sulfur-cycling bacteria of different taxonomic groups persist as active catalysts of the sulfur cycle throughout surficial hydrothermal sediments in the Guaymas Basin.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory