Table_1_Divergent Genomic Adaptations in the Microbiomes of Arctic Subzero Sea-Ice and Cryopeg Brines.XLSX

Subzero hypersaline brines are liquid microbial habitats within otherwise frozen environments, where concentrated dissolved salts prevent freezing. Such extreme conditions presumably require unique microbial adaptations, and possibly altered ecologies, but specific strategies remain largely unknown....

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Josephine Z. Rapp (5235602), Matthew B. Sullivan (7419248), Jody W. Deming (234155)
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Ice
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2021.701186.s002
id ftsmithonian:oai:figshare.com:article/15034203
record_format openpolar
spelling ftsmithonian:oai:figshare.com:article/15034203 2023-05-15T15:12:31+02:00 Table_1_Divergent Genomic Adaptations in the Microbiomes of Arctic Subzero Sea-Ice and Cryopeg Brines.XLSX Josephine Z. Rapp (5235602) Matthew B. Sullivan (7419248) Jody W. Deming (234155) 2021-07-22T05:28:35Z https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2021.701186.s002 unknown https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Table_1_Divergent_Genomic_Adaptations_in_the_Microbiomes_of_Arctic_Subzero_Sea-Ice_and_Cryopeg_Brines_XLSX/15034203 doi:10.3389/fmicb.2021.701186.s002 CC BY 4.0 CC-BY Microbiology Microbial Genetics Microbial Ecology Mycology cryopeg sea ice metagenomics metatranscriptomics hypersalinity subzero temperature cryosphere Dataset 2021 ftsmithonian https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2021.701186.s002 2021-07-25T16:34:19Z Subzero hypersaline brines are liquid microbial habitats within otherwise frozen environments, where concentrated dissolved salts prevent freezing. Such extreme conditions presumably require unique microbial adaptations, and possibly altered ecologies, but specific strategies remain largely unknown. Here we examined prokaryotic taxonomic and functional diversity in two seawater-derived subzero hypersaline brines: first-year sea ice, subject to seasonally fluctuating conditions; and ancient cryopeg, under relatively stable conditions geophysically isolated in permafrost. Overall, both taxonomic composition and functional potential were starkly different. Taxonomically, sea-ice brine communities (∼10 5 cells mL –1 ) had greater richness, more diversity and were dominated by bacterial genera, including Polaribacter, Paraglaciecola, Colwellia, and Glaciecola, whereas the more densely inhabited cryopeg brines (∼10 8 cells mL –1 ) lacked these genera and instead were dominated by Marinobacter. Functionally, however, sea ice encoded fewer accessory traits and lower average genomic copy numbers for shared traits, though DNA replication and repair were elevated; in contrast, microbes in cryopeg brines had greater genetic versatility with elevated abundances of accessory traits involved in sensing, responding to environmental cues, transport, mobile elements (transposases and plasmids), toxin-antitoxin systems, and type VI secretion systems. Together these genomic features suggest adaptations and capabilities of sea-ice communities manifesting at the community level through seasonal ecological succession, whereas the denser cryopeg communities appear adapted to intense bacterial competition, leaving fewer genera to dominate with brine-specific adaptations and social interactions that sacrifice some members for the benefit of others. Such cryopeg genomic traits provide insight into how long-term environmental stability may enable life to survive extreme conditions. Dataset Arctic Ice permafrost Sea ice Unknown Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id ftsmithonian
language unknown
topic Microbiology
Microbial Genetics
Microbial Ecology
Mycology
cryopeg
sea ice
metagenomics
metatranscriptomics
hypersalinity
subzero temperature
cryosphere
spellingShingle Microbiology
Microbial Genetics
Microbial Ecology
Mycology
cryopeg
sea ice
metagenomics
metatranscriptomics
hypersalinity
subzero temperature
cryosphere
Josephine Z. Rapp (5235602)
Matthew B. Sullivan (7419248)
Jody W. Deming (234155)
Table_1_Divergent Genomic Adaptations in the Microbiomes of Arctic Subzero Sea-Ice and Cryopeg Brines.XLSX
topic_facet Microbiology
Microbial Genetics
Microbial Ecology
Mycology
cryopeg
sea ice
metagenomics
metatranscriptomics
hypersalinity
subzero temperature
cryosphere
description Subzero hypersaline brines are liquid microbial habitats within otherwise frozen environments, where concentrated dissolved salts prevent freezing. Such extreme conditions presumably require unique microbial adaptations, and possibly altered ecologies, but specific strategies remain largely unknown. Here we examined prokaryotic taxonomic and functional diversity in two seawater-derived subzero hypersaline brines: first-year sea ice, subject to seasonally fluctuating conditions; and ancient cryopeg, under relatively stable conditions geophysically isolated in permafrost. Overall, both taxonomic composition and functional potential were starkly different. Taxonomically, sea-ice brine communities (∼10 5 cells mL –1 ) had greater richness, more diversity and were dominated by bacterial genera, including Polaribacter, Paraglaciecola, Colwellia, and Glaciecola, whereas the more densely inhabited cryopeg brines (∼10 8 cells mL –1 ) lacked these genera and instead were dominated by Marinobacter. Functionally, however, sea ice encoded fewer accessory traits and lower average genomic copy numbers for shared traits, though DNA replication and repair were elevated; in contrast, microbes in cryopeg brines had greater genetic versatility with elevated abundances of accessory traits involved in sensing, responding to environmental cues, transport, mobile elements (transposases and plasmids), toxin-antitoxin systems, and type VI secretion systems. Together these genomic features suggest adaptations and capabilities of sea-ice communities manifesting at the community level through seasonal ecological succession, whereas the denser cryopeg communities appear adapted to intense bacterial competition, leaving fewer genera to dominate with brine-specific adaptations and social interactions that sacrifice some members for the benefit of others. Such cryopeg genomic traits provide insight into how long-term environmental stability may enable life to survive extreme conditions.
format Dataset
author Josephine Z. Rapp (5235602)
Matthew B. Sullivan (7419248)
Jody W. Deming (234155)
author_facet Josephine Z. Rapp (5235602)
Matthew B. Sullivan (7419248)
Jody W. Deming (234155)
author_sort Josephine Z. Rapp (5235602)
title Table_1_Divergent Genomic Adaptations in the Microbiomes of Arctic Subzero Sea-Ice and Cryopeg Brines.XLSX
title_short Table_1_Divergent Genomic Adaptations in the Microbiomes of Arctic Subzero Sea-Ice and Cryopeg Brines.XLSX
title_full Table_1_Divergent Genomic Adaptations in the Microbiomes of Arctic Subzero Sea-Ice and Cryopeg Brines.XLSX
title_fullStr Table_1_Divergent Genomic Adaptations in the Microbiomes of Arctic Subzero Sea-Ice and Cryopeg Brines.XLSX
title_full_unstemmed Table_1_Divergent Genomic Adaptations in the Microbiomes of Arctic Subzero Sea-Ice and Cryopeg Brines.XLSX
title_sort table_1_divergent genomic adaptations in the microbiomes of arctic subzero sea-ice and cryopeg brines.xlsx
publishDate 2021
url https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2021.701186.s002
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Ice
permafrost
Sea ice
genre_facet Arctic
Ice
permafrost
Sea ice
op_relation https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Table_1_Divergent_Genomic_Adaptations_in_the_Microbiomes_of_Arctic_Subzero_Sea-Ice_and_Cryopeg_Brines_XLSX/15034203
doi:10.3389/fmicb.2021.701186.s002
op_rights CC BY 4.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2021.701186.s002
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