Mills, Heath J. et al. (2012): Characterization of microbial population shifts during sample storage

Leg/Site/Hole:
IODP 325
IODP 325 M0058
Identifier:
2013-048187
georefid

10.3389/fmicb.2012.00049
doi

Creator:
Mills, Heath J.
Texas A&M University, Department of Oceanography, College Station, TX, United States
author

Reese, Brandi Kiel
University of Southern California, United States
author

St. Peter, Cruz
author

Identification:
Characterization of microbial population shifts during sample storage
2012
Frontiers in Microbiology
Frontiers Research Foundation, Lausanne, Switzerland
3, Article 49
1-16
The objective of this study was to determine shifts in the microbial community structure and potential function based on standard Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) storage procedures for sediment cores. Standard long-term storage protocols maintain sediment temperature at 4 degrees C for mineralogy, geochemical, and/or geotechnical analysis whereas standard microbiological sampling immediately preserves sediments at -80 degrees C. Storage at 4 degrees C does not take into account populations may remain active over geologic time scales at temperatures similar to storage conditions. Identification of active populations within the stored core would suggest geochemical and geophysical conditions within the core change over time. To test this potential, the metabolically active fraction of the total microbial community was characterized from IODP Expedition 325 Great Barrier Reef sediment cores prior to and following a 3-month storage period. Total RNA was extracted from complementary 2, 20, and 40 m below sea floor sediment samples, reverse transcribed to complementary DNA and then sequenced using 454 FLX sequencing technology, yielding over 14,800 sequences from the six samples. Interestingly, 97.3% of the sequences detected were associated with lineages that changed in detection frequency during the storage period including key biogeochemically relevant lineages associated with nitrogen, iron, and sulfur cycling. These lineages have the potential to permanently alter the physical and chemical characteristics of the sediment promoting misleading conclusions about the in situ biogeochemical environment. In addition, the detection of new lineages after storage increases the potential for a wider range of viable lineages within the subsurface that may be underestimated during standard community characterizations.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:-17.0550
West:146.3521East: 146.3521
South:-17.0550

Environmental geology; communities; Coral Sea; cores; ecology; effects; Expedition 325; genetics; geochemistry; Great Barrier Reef; Great Barrier Reef Environmental Changes; hydrochemistry; Integrated Ocean Drilling Program; IODP Site M0058; marine sediments; microorganisms; nucleic acids; Pacific Ocean; phylogeny; pore water; RNA; sediments; South Pacific; Southwest Pacific; storage; variations; West Pacific;

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