Seasonality Is the Main Determinant of Microbial Diversity Associated to Snow/Ice around Concordia Station on the Antarctic Polar Plateau

The French–Italian Concordia Research Station, situated on the Antarctic Polar Plateau at an elevation of 3233 m above sea level, offers a unique opportunity to study the presence and variation of microbes introduced by abiotic or biotic vectors and, consequently, appraise the amplitude of human imp...

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Published in:Biology
Main Authors: Gerardo A. Stoppiello, Claudia Coleine, Ralf Moeller, Caterina Ripa, Daniela Billi, Laura Selbmann
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/biology12091193
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spelling ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/2079-7737/12/9/1193/ 2023-10-01T03:52:05+02:00 Seasonality Is the Main Determinant of Microbial Diversity Associated to Snow/Ice around Concordia Station on the Antarctic Polar Plateau Gerardo A. Stoppiello Claudia Coleine Ralf Moeller Caterina Ripa Daniela Billi Laura Selbmann agris 2023-08-31 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.3390/biology12091193 eng eng Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute Microbiology https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biology12091193 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Biology Volume 12 Issue 9 Pages: 1193 Antarctic Polar Plateau extremophiles life detection fungi bacteria amplicon sequencing extraterrestrial analogue Text 2023 ftmdpi https://doi.org/10.3390/biology12091193 2023-09-03T23:54:54Z The French–Italian Concordia Research Station, situated on the Antarctic Polar Plateau at an elevation of 3233 m above sea level, offers a unique opportunity to study the presence and variation of microbes introduced by abiotic or biotic vectors and, consequently, appraise the amplitude of human impact in such a pristine environment. This research built upon a previous work, which explored microbial diversity in the surface snow surrounding the Concordia Research Station. While that study successfully characterized the bacterial assemblage, detecting fungal diversity was hampered by the low DNA content. To address this knowledge gap, in the present study, we optimized the sampling by increasing ice/snow collected to leverage the final DNA yield. The V4 variable region of the 16S rDNA and Internal Transcribed Spacer (ITS1) rDNA was used to evaluate bacterial and fungal diversity. From the sequencing, we obtained 3,352,661 and 4,433,595 reads clustered in 930 and 3182 amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) for fungi and bacteria, respectively. Amplicon sequencing revealed a predominance of Basidiomycota (49%) and Ascomycota (42%) in the fungal component; Bacteroidota (65.8%) is the main representative among the bacterial phyla. Basidiomycetes are almost exclusively represented by yeast-like fungi. Our findings provide the first comprehensive overview of both fungal and bacterial diversity in the Antarctic Polar Plateau’s surface snow/ice near Concordia Station and to identify seasonality as the main driver of microbial diversity; we also detected the most sensitive microorganisms to these factors, which could serve as indicators of human impact in this pristine environment and aid in planetary protection for future exploration missions. Text Antarc* Antarctic MDPI Open Access Publishing Antarctic The Antarctic Concordia Station ENVELOPE(123.333,123.333,-75.100,-75.100) Polar Plateau ENVELOPE(0.000,0.000,-90.000,-90.000) Biology 12 9 1193
institution Open Polar
collection MDPI Open Access Publishing
op_collection_id ftmdpi
language English
topic Antarctic Polar Plateau
extremophiles
life detection
fungi
bacteria
amplicon sequencing
extraterrestrial analogue
spellingShingle Antarctic Polar Plateau
extremophiles
life detection
fungi
bacteria
amplicon sequencing
extraterrestrial analogue
Gerardo A. Stoppiello
Claudia Coleine
Ralf Moeller
Caterina Ripa
Daniela Billi
Laura Selbmann
Seasonality Is the Main Determinant of Microbial Diversity Associated to Snow/Ice around Concordia Station on the Antarctic Polar Plateau
topic_facet Antarctic Polar Plateau
extremophiles
life detection
fungi
bacteria
amplicon sequencing
extraterrestrial analogue
description The French–Italian Concordia Research Station, situated on the Antarctic Polar Plateau at an elevation of 3233 m above sea level, offers a unique opportunity to study the presence and variation of microbes introduced by abiotic or biotic vectors and, consequently, appraise the amplitude of human impact in such a pristine environment. This research built upon a previous work, which explored microbial diversity in the surface snow surrounding the Concordia Research Station. While that study successfully characterized the bacterial assemblage, detecting fungal diversity was hampered by the low DNA content. To address this knowledge gap, in the present study, we optimized the sampling by increasing ice/snow collected to leverage the final DNA yield. The V4 variable region of the 16S rDNA and Internal Transcribed Spacer (ITS1) rDNA was used to evaluate bacterial and fungal diversity. From the sequencing, we obtained 3,352,661 and 4,433,595 reads clustered in 930 and 3182 amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) for fungi and bacteria, respectively. Amplicon sequencing revealed a predominance of Basidiomycota (49%) and Ascomycota (42%) in the fungal component; Bacteroidota (65.8%) is the main representative among the bacterial phyla. Basidiomycetes are almost exclusively represented by yeast-like fungi. Our findings provide the first comprehensive overview of both fungal and bacterial diversity in the Antarctic Polar Plateau’s surface snow/ice near Concordia Station and to identify seasonality as the main driver of microbial diversity; we also detected the most sensitive microorganisms to these factors, which could serve as indicators of human impact in this pristine environment and aid in planetary protection for future exploration missions.
format Text
author Gerardo A. Stoppiello
Claudia Coleine
Ralf Moeller
Caterina Ripa
Daniela Billi
Laura Selbmann
author_facet Gerardo A. Stoppiello
Claudia Coleine
Ralf Moeller
Caterina Ripa
Daniela Billi
Laura Selbmann
author_sort Gerardo A. Stoppiello
title Seasonality Is the Main Determinant of Microbial Diversity Associated to Snow/Ice around Concordia Station on the Antarctic Polar Plateau
title_short Seasonality Is the Main Determinant of Microbial Diversity Associated to Snow/Ice around Concordia Station on the Antarctic Polar Plateau
title_full Seasonality Is the Main Determinant of Microbial Diversity Associated to Snow/Ice around Concordia Station on the Antarctic Polar Plateau
title_fullStr Seasonality Is the Main Determinant of Microbial Diversity Associated to Snow/Ice around Concordia Station on the Antarctic Polar Plateau
title_full_unstemmed Seasonality Is the Main Determinant of Microbial Diversity Associated to Snow/Ice around Concordia Station on the Antarctic Polar Plateau
title_sort seasonality is the main determinant of microbial diversity associated to snow/ice around concordia station on the antarctic polar plateau
publisher Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
publishDate 2023
url https://doi.org/10.3390/biology12091193
op_coverage agris
long_lat ENVELOPE(123.333,123.333,-75.100,-75.100)
ENVELOPE(0.000,0.000,-90.000,-90.000)
geographic Antarctic
The Antarctic
Concordia Station
Polar Plateau
geographic_facet Antarctic
The Antarctic
Concordia Station
Polar Plateau
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
op_source Biology
Volume 12
Issue 9
Pages: 1193
op_relation Microbiology
https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biology12091193
op_rights https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3390/biology12091193
container_title Biology
container_volume 12
container_issue 9
container_start_page 1193
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