Metagenomic Analysis Of Microbial Community Compositions And Functions In Perennially Ice-Covered Lake Ecosystems In East Antarctica

The perennially ice-covered lakes of the Antarctic continent are considered to be the ideal extreme ecosystems to study growth, sustenance, and evolution of microbial mats without any direct influence by higher organisms and other external environmental factors. This dissertation research utilized N...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Koo, Hyunmin
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: UAB Digital Commons 2018
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Online Access:https://digitalcommons.library.uab.edu/etd-collection/2175
https://digitalcommons.library.uab.edu/context/etd-collection/article/3167/viewcontent/Koo_uab_0005D_12393.pdf
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Summary:The perennially ice-covered lakes of the Antarctic continent are considered to be the ideal extreme ecosystems to study growth, sustenance, and evolution of microbial mats without any direct influence by higher organisms and other external environmental factors. This dissertation research utilized Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) technology and bioinformatics tools to study the microbial composition and metabolic potential of the microbial mats in permanently ice-covered freshwater Lake Untersee, Lake Obersee and their surrounding ecosystems in East Antarctica. Overall, the microbial communities in the microbial mats of Lake Untersee were distinct in regard to their compositions, shared taxa and metabolic potential as compared to those in their surrounding waters. Microbiologically, the large conical mats, found only in Lake Untersee, differed from the pinnacle and flat mats by having a higher abundance of Cyanobacteria, particularly Phormidium. Further investigation of the top three laminae of these conical mats revealed high abundances of Phormidium, Leptolyngbya, and Pseudanabaena in the top lamina, whereas the middle and the inner laminae had high abundances of heterotrophic bacteria. Unlike Lake Untersee, the mats in Lake Obersee showed high abundances of genes associated with heterotrophic bacterial activities. Furthermore, distinct microbial communities were found in the lithobiont communities collected from Lake Untersee and Lake Obersee shorelines above the ice-sheet. Predicted functional attributes of these microbial communities showed genes necessary for survival in nutritionally poor environments and high solar UV radiation. In addition, comparison of cold-adaptation and general cold-associated stress genes in the microbial community metagenomes of Lake Untersee with other Antarctic lake and soil metagenomes revealed that a common trend of the distribution of these genetic traits across all Antarctic metagenomes. The whole genome sequencing of pure cultures of Janthinobacterium sp. and Hymenobacter ...