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Deep sequencing of subseafloor eukaryotic rRNA reveals active fungi across marine subsurface provinces
Authors
A Dell'Anno
A Schippers
+52 more
A Schippers
A Schippers
A Schuesler
A Teske
AC Boere
BA Lomstein
BL Howes
C Corinaldesi
C Corinaldesi
DH Buckley
E Pacini
E Willerslev
F Inagaki
F Inagaki
G Mollenhauer
G Webster
H Schaefer
HA Gamper
HJ Mills
HJ Mills
J Kallmeyer
JC Gutierrez
Jennifer F. Biddle
JF Biddle
JF Biddle
JF Biddle
JG Caporaso
JS Lipp
LL Anderson-Carpenter
M Clement-Ziza
ME Nebel
MJ Coolen
MT Gilbert
N Hamlett
Purificación López-García
RJ Borneman J Hartin
RJ Parkes
S D'Hondt
S D'Hondt
S D'Hondt
SM Tiquia
SW Culman
T Goldhammer
T Karasawa
T Stoeck
Virginia Edgcomb
VP Edgcomb
W Ziebis
WB Whitman
William Orsi
X Liu
Y Dalpe
Publication date
1 January 2013
Publisher
'Public Library of Science (PLoS)'
Doi
Cite
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
© The Author(s), 2013. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in PLoS ONE 8 (2013): e56335, doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0056335.The deep marine subsurface is a vast habitat for microbial life where cells may live on geologic timescales. Because DNA in sediments may be preserved on long timescales, ribosomal RNA (rRNA) is suggested to be a proxy for the active fraction of a microbial community in the subsurface. During an investigation of eukaryotic 18S rRNA by amplicon pyrosequencing, unique profiles of Fungi were found across a range of marine subsurface provinces including ridge flanks, continental margins, and abyssal plains. Subseafloor fungal populations exhibit statistically significant correlations with total organic carbon (TOC), nitrate, sulfide, and dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC). These correlations are supported by terminal restriction length polymorphism (TRFLP) analyses of fungal rRNA. Geochemical correlations with fungal pyrosequencing and TRFLP data from this geographically broad sample set suggests environmental selection of active Fungi in the marine subsurface. Within the same dataset, ancient rRNA signatures were recovered from plants and diatoms in marine sediments ranging from 0.03 to 2.7 million years old, suggesting that rRNA from some eukaryotic taxa may be much more stable than previously considered in the marine subsurface.This work was performed with funding from the Center for Dark Energy Biosphere Investigations (C-DEBI) to William Orsi (OCE-0939564) and The Ocean Life Institute (WHOI) to Virginia Edgcomb (OLI-27071359)
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