Microbial Diversity of Hydrothermal Sediments in the Guaymas Basin: Evidence for Anaerobic Methanotrophic Communities

DNA, Bacterial 0301 basic medicine Geologic Sediments 550 Bacteria Molecular Sequence Data Anaerobic methane oxidation 500 Sequence Analysis, DNA 15. Life on land Archaea DNA, Ribosomal Lipids 03 medical and health sciences DNA, Archaeal 13. Climate action RNA, Ribosomal, 16S Seawater Anaerobiosis Anaerobic methanotrophy Methane Oxidation-Reduction Phylogeny
DOI: 10.1128/aem.68.4.1994-2007.2002 Publication Date: 2002-07-27T09:59:40Z
ABSTRACT
ABSTRACT Microbial communities in hydrothermally active sediments of the Guaymas Basin (Gulf of California, Mexico) were studied by using 16S rRNA sequencing and carbon isotopic analysis of archaeal and bacterial lipids. The Guaymas sediments harbored uncultured euryarchaeota of two distinct phylogenetic lineages within the anaerobic methane oxidation 1 (ANME-1) group, ANME-1a and ANME-1b, and of the ANME-2c lineage within the Methanosarcinales , both previously assigned to the methanotrophic archaea. The archaeal lipids in the Guaymas Basin sediments included archaeol, diagnostic for nonthermophilic euryarchaeota, and sn -2-hydroxyarchaeol, with the latter compound being particularly abundant in cultured members of the Methanosarcinales . The concentrations of these compounds were among the highest observed so far in studies of methane seep environments. The δ- 13 C values of these lipids (δ- 13 C = −89 to −58‰) indicate an origin from anaerobic methanotrophic archaea. This molecular-isotopic signature was found not only in samples that yielded predominantly ANME-2 clones but also in samples that yielded exclusively ANME-1 clones. ANME-1 archaea therefore remain strong candidates for mediation of the anaerobic oxidation of methane. Based on 16S rRNA data, the Guaymas sediments harbor phylogenetically diverse bacterial populations, which show considerable overlap with bacterial populations of geothermal habitats and natural or anthropogenic hydrocarbon-rich sites. Consistent with earlier observations, our combined evidence from bacterial phylogeny and molecular-isotopic data indicates an important role of some novel deeply branching bacteria in anaerobic methanotrophy. Anaerobic methane oxidation likely represents a significant and widely occurring process in the trophic ecology of methane-rich hydrothermal vents. This study stresses a high diversity among communities capable of anaerobic oxidation of methane.
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