Adaptive physiology and structuring of microbial communities in ephemeral Antarctic environments.

Antarctica hosts an expanse of ecological niches that approach the biophysical limits of life. Many landscape features, including sea ice, transient meltwater streams and ponds are defined by their impermanence. Instability within these systems is further complicated by the impingement of global cli...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Zoumplis, Angela
Other Authors: Allen, Andrew E
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/41n9n89v
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spelling ftcdlib:oai:escholarship.org:ark:/13030/qt41n9n89v 2024-04-28T08:01:26+00:00 Adaptive physiology and structuring of microbial communities in ephemeral Antarctic environments. Zoumplis, Angela Allen, Andrew E 2022-01-01 application/pdf https://escholarship.org/uc/item/41n9n89v en eng eScholarship, University of California qt41n9n89v https://escholarship.org/uc/item/41n9n89v public Ecology Antarctica Biodiversity McMurdo Dry Valleys Metatranscriptomics Microbial mats Sea ice etd 2022 ftcdlib 2024-04-09T23:39:14Z Antarctica hosts an expanse of ecological niches that approach the biophysical limits of life. Many landscape features, including sea ice, transient meltwater streams and ponds are defined by their impermanence. Instability within these systems is further complicated by the impingement of global climate change. Microbial communities flourishing within short-lived polar oases display a consortium of cold-thriving bacteria, eukaryotic algae, protists and micro-invertebrates. This thesis explores the diversity of these microbiota, the environmental drivers shaping biogeographical distribution patterns and the molecular underpinnings of responses to rapid physical and chemical fluctuations. In Chapter 1, we utilize meta-omics tools to characterize the diversity and functionality of microbial mats in the Antarctic Dry Valleys trainset streams over spatiotemporal gradients. Findings shed light on the rapid turnovers in community structure following high flow and desiccation periods. Results provide a new view of active intra-stream diversity, biotic interactions and alterations in ecosystem function over a natural hydrological regime. Additionally, we document novel antifreeze activity in several Dry Valleys endemic taxa. In Chapter 2, we conduct a broad survey of molecular diversity on aquatic habitats of Victoria land, Antarctica. This research identifies salinity as a major driver of microbial diversity and identifies a marine eukaryotic community assemblage at the base of the Taylor Glacier. In Chapter 3 we focus on understanding the adaptations and acclimation responses of polar and temperate diatoms to cold stress while exploring the functionality of ice-binding protein (IBP) coding sequences. Heterologous expression and targeted delivery of sea ice diatom antifreeze proteins into a temperate diatom resulted in a significant reduction of mortality upon exposure to freeze/thaw cycling. Data in this chapter emphasizes the efficacy and predicts the essentiality of this adaptation to cold-thriving organisms. Thesis Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica McMurdo Dry Valleys Sea ice Taylor Glacier Victoria Land University of California: eScholarship
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language English
topic Ecology
Antarctica
Biodiversity
McMurdo Dry Valleys
Metatranscriptomics
Microbial mats
Sea ice
spellingShingle Ecology
Antarctica
Biodiversity
McMurdo Dry Valleys
Metatranscriptomics
Microbial mats
Sea ice
Zoumplis, Angela
Adaptive physiology and structuring of microbial communities in ephemeral Antarctic environments.
topic_facet Ecology
Antarctica
Biodiversity
McMurdo Dry Valleys
Metatranscriptomics
Microbial mats
Sea ice
description Antarctica hosts an expanse of ecological niches that approach the biophysical limits of life. Many landscape features, including sea ice, transient meltwater streams and ponds are defined by their impermanence. Instability within these systems is further complicated by the impingement of global climate change. Microbial communities flourishing within short-lived polar oases display a consortium of cold-thriving bacteria, eukaryotic algae, protists and micro-invertebrates. This thesis explores the diversity of these microbiota, the environmental drivers shaping biogeographical distribution patterns and the molecular underpinnings of responses to rapid physical and chemical fluctuations. In Chapter 1, we utilize meta-omics tools to characterize the diversity and functionality of microbial mats in the Antarctic Dry Valleys trainset streams over spatiotemporal gradients. Findings shed light on the rapid turnovers in community structure following high flow and desiccation periods. Results provide a new view of active intra-stream diversity, biotic interactions and alterations in ecosystem function over a natural hydrological regime. Additionally, we document novel antifreeze activity in several Dry Valleys endemic taxa. In Chapter 2, we conduct a broad survey of molecular diversity on aquatic habitats of Victoria land, Antarctica. This research identifies salinity as a major driver of microbial diversity and identifies a marine eukaryotic community assemblage at the base of the Taylor Glacier. In Chapter 3 we focus on understanding the adaptations and acclimation responses of polar and temperate diatoms to cold stress while exploring the functionality of ice-binding protein (IBP) coding sequences. Heterologous expression and targeted delivery of sea ice diatom antifreeze proteins into a temperate diatom resulted in a significant reduction of mortality upon exposure to freeze/thaw cycling. Data in this chapter emphasizes the efficacy and predicts the essentiality of this adaptation to cold-thriving organisms.
author2 Allen, Andrew E
format Thesis
author Zoumplis, Angela
author_facet Zoumplis, Angela
author_sort Zoumplis, Angela
title Adaptive physiology and structuring of microbial communities in ephemeral Antarctic environments.
title_short Adaptive physiology and structuring of microbial communities in ephemeral Antarctic environments.
title_full Adaptive physiology and structuring of microbial communities in ephemeral Antarctic environments.
title_fullStr Adaptive physiology and structuring of microbial communities in ephemeral Antarctic environments.
title_full_unstemmed Adaptive physiology and structuring of microbial communities in ephemeral Antarctic environments.
title_sort adaptive physiology and structuring of microbial communities in ephemeral antarctic environments.
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2022
url https://escholarship.org/uc/item/41n9n89v
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
McMurdo Dry Valleys
Sea ice
Taylor Glacier
Victoria Land
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
McMurdo Dry Valleys
Sea ice
Taylor Glacier
Victoria Land
op_relation qt41n9n89v
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/41n9n89v
op_rights public
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