Published 2021
| Version v1
Publication
Transition from unclassified Ktedonobacterales to Actinobacteria during amorphous silica precipitation in a quartzite cave environment.
Contributors
Description
The orthoquartzite Imawarì Yeuta cave hosts exceptional silica speleothems and represents a unique
model system to study the geomicrobiology associated to silica amorphization processes under
aphotic and stable physical–chemical conditions. In this study, three consecutive evolution steps in
the formation of a peculiar blackish coralloid silica speleothem were studied using a combination
of morphological, mineralogical/elemental and microbiological analyses. Microbial communities
were characterized using Illumina sequencing of 16S rRNA gene and clone library analysis of carbon
monoxide dehydrogenase (coxL) and hydrogenase (hypD) genes involved in atmospheric trace
gases utilization. The first stage of the silica amorphization process was dominated by members of
a still undescribed microbial lineage belonging to the Ktedonobacterales order, probably involved in
the pioneering colonization of quartzitic environments. Actinobacteria of the Pseudonocardiaceae
and Acidothermaceae families dominated the intermediate amorphous silica speleothem and
the final coralloid silica speleothem, respectively. The atmospheric trace gases oxidizers mostly
corresponded to the main bacterial taxa present in each speleothem stage. These results provide
novel understanding of the microbial community structure accompanying amorphization processes
and of coxL and hypD gene expression possibly driving atmospheric trace gases metabolism in dark
oligotrophic caves.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- http://hdl.handle.net/11567/1053318
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/1053318
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- UNIGE