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Taxonomic and functional metagenomic profiling of the microbial community in the anoxic sediment of a sub-saline Shallow Lake (Laguna de Carrizo, Central Spain)

Authors :
Alejandro Acosta
Ana Suárez-Suárez
Yamal Al-Ramahi
Olga Genilloud
Juan L. Ramos
Jennifer Solano
Pablo Yarza
Carmen Gómez Guerrero
Nieves López-Cortés
Manuel Ferrer
Eduardo Santero
Virginia Martínez
Michael Richter
Fernando Rojo
Julián Pérez-Pérez
María-Eugenia Guazzaroni
Laura I. de Eugenio
María Alcaide
Ramon Rosselló-Móra
Silvia Marqués
María Antonia Molina-Henares
Adela García-Salamanca
Pieter van Dillewijn
Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (España)
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España)
European Commission
Source :
Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC, instname
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Springer, 2011.

Abstract

The phylogenetic and functional structure of the microbial community residing in a Ca2+-rich anoxic sediment of a sub-saline shallow lake (Laguna de Carrizo, initially operated as a gypsum (CaSO4 × 2 H2O) mine) was estimated by analyzing the diversity of 16S rRNA amplicons and a 3.1 Mb of consensus metagenome sequence. The lake has about half the salinity of seawater and possesses an unusual relative concentration of ions, with Ca2+ and SO 4 2- being dominant. The 16S rRNA sequences revealed a diverse community with about 22% of the bacterial rRNAs being less than 94.5% similar to any rRNA currently deposited in GenBank. In addition to this, about 79% of the archaeal rRNA genes were mostly related to uncultured Euryarchaeota of the CCA47 group, which are often associated with marine and oxygen-depleted sites. Sequence analysis of assembled genes revealed that 23% of the open reading frames of the metagenome library had no hits in the database. Among annotated genes, functions related to (thio) sulfate and (thio) sulfonate-reduction and iron-oxidation, sulfur-oxidation, denitrification, synthrophism, and phototrophic sulfur metabolism were found as predominant. Phylogenetic and biochemical analyses indicate that the inherent physical–chemical characteristics of this habitat coupled with adaptation to anthropogenic activities have resulted in a highly efficient community for the assimilation of polysulfides, sulfoxides, and organosulfonates together with nitro-, nitrile-, and cyanide-substituted compounds. We discuss that the relevant microbial composition and metabolic capacities at Laguna de Carrizo, likely developed as an adaptation to thrive in the presence of moderate salinity conditions and potential toxic bio-molecules, in contrast with the properties of previously known anoxic sediments of shallow lakes.<br />This research was supported by the Spanish CSD2007-00005 project and FEDER funds. M-E.G. thanks the CSIC for a JAE fellowship.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC, instname
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7cda299e2b9e377fa1637db5c86773d8