Reactivation of deep subsurface microbial community in response to methane or methanol amendment

Reactivation of deep subsurface microbial community in response to methane or methanol amendment

Year of publication

2017

Authors

Rajala, Pauliina; Bomberg, Malin

Abstract

Microbial communities in deep subsurface environments comprise a large portion of Earth's biomass, but the microbial activity in these habitats is largely unknown. Here, we studied how microorganisms from two isolated groundwater fractures at 180 and 500 m depths of the Outokumpu Deep Drillhole (Finland) responded to methane or methanol amendment, in the presence or absence of sulfate as an additional electron acceptor. Methane is a plausible intermediate in the deep subsurface carbon cycle, and electron acceptors such as sulfate are critical components for oxidation processes. In fact, the majority of the available carbon in the Outokumpu deep biosphere is present as methane. Methanol is an intermediate of methane oxidation, but may also be produced through degradation of organic matter. The fracture fluid samples were incubated in vitro with methane or methanol in the presence or absence of sulfate as electron acceptor. The metabolic response of microbial communities was measured by staining the microbial cells with fluorescent redox sensitive dye combined with flow cytometry, and DNA or cDNA-derived amplicon sequencing. The microbial community of the fracture zone at the 180 m depth was originally considerably more respiratory active and 10-fold more numerous (105 cells ml<sup>-1</sup> at 180 m depth and 10<sup>4</sup> cells ml<sup>-1</sup> at 500 m depth) than the community of the fracture zone at the 500 m. However, the dormant microbial community at the 500 m depth rapidly reactivated their transcription and respiration systems in the presence of methane or methanol, whereas in the shallower fracture zone only a small sub-population was able to utilize the newly available carbon source. In addition, the composition of substrate activated microbial communities differed at both depths from original microbial communities. The results demonstrate that OTUs representing minor groups of the total microbial communities play an important role when microbial communities face changes in environmental conditions.
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Organizations and authors

VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland Ltd

Bomberg Malin Orcid -palvelun logo

Rajala Pauliina Orcid -palvelun logo

Publication type

Publication format

Article

Parent publication type

Journal

Article type

Original article

Audience

Scientific

Peer-reviewed

Peer-Reviewed

MINEDU's publication type classification code

A1 Journal article (refereed), original research

Publication channel information

Volume

8

Issue

March

Article number

431

​Publication forum

70489

​Publication forum level

1

Open access

Open access in the publisher’s service

Yes

Open access of publication channel

Fully open publication channel

License of the publisher’s version

CC BY

Self-archived

No

Article processing fee (EUR)

1058

Year of payment for the open publication fee

2017

Other information

Fields of science

Plant biology, microbiology, virology; Biomedicine

Language

English

International co-publication

No

Co-publication with a company

No

DOI

10.3389/fmicb.2017.00431

The publication is included in the Ministry of Education and Culture’s Publication data collection

Yes

Reactivation of deep subsurface microbial community in response to methane or methanol amendment - Research.fi