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"Dumont, Marc"
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Microbial Diversity in Hummock and Hollow Soils of Three Wetlands on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau Revealed by 16S rRNA Pyrosequencing
2014
The wetlands of the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau are believed to play an important role in global nutrient cycling, but the composition and diversity of microorganisms in this ecosystem are poorly characterized. An understanding of the effects of geography and microtopography on microbial populations will provide clues to the underlying mechanisms that structure microbial communities. In this study, we used pyrosequencing-based analysis of 16S rRNA gene sequences to assess and compare the composition of soil microbial communities present in hummock and hollow soils from three wetlands (Dangxiong, Hongyuan and Maduo) on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau, the world's highest plateau. A total of 36 bacterial phyla were detected. Proteobacteria (34.5% average relative abundance), Actinobacteria (17.3%) and Bacteroidetes (11%) had the highest relative abundances across all sites. Chloroflexi, Acidobacteria, Verrucomicrobia, Firmicutes, and Planctomycetes were also relatively abundant (1-10%). In addition, archaeal sequences belonging to Euryarchaea, Crenarchaea and Thaumarchaea were detected. Alphaproteobacteria sequences, especially of the order Rhodospirillales, were significantly more abundant in Maduo than Hongyuan and Dangxiong wetlands. Compared with Hongyuan soils, Dangxiong and Maduo had significantly higher relative abundances of Gammaproteobacteria sequences (mainly order Xanthomonadales). Hongyuan wetland had a relatively high abundance of methanogens (mainly genera Methanobacterium, Methanosarcina and Methanosaeta) and methanotrophs (mainly Methylocystis) compared with the other two wetlands. Principal coordinate analysis (PCoA) indicated that the microbial community structure differed between locations and microtopographies and canonical correspondence analysis indicated an association between microbial community structure and soil properties or geography. These insights into the microbial community structure and the main controlling factors in wetlands of the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau provide a valuable background for further studies on biogeochemical processes in this distinct ecosystem.
Journal Article
Ammonia oxidation coupled to CO₂ fixation by archaea and bacteria in an agricultural soil
by
Dumont, Marc G
,
Pratscher, Jennifer
,
Conrad, Ralf
in
Acid soils
,
Agricultural soils
,
Agriculture
2011
Ammonia oxidation is an essential part of the global nitrogen cycling and was long thought to be driven only by bacteria. Recent findings expanded this pathway also to the archaea. However, most questions concerning the metabolism of ammonia-oxidizing archaea, such as ammonia oxidation and potential CO₂ fixation, remain open, especially for terrestrial environments. Here, we investigated the activity of ammonia-oxidizing archaea and bacteria in an agricultural soil by comparison of RNA- and DNA-stable isotope probing (SIP). RNA-SIP demonstrated a highly dynamic and diverse community involved in CO₂ fixation and carbon assimilation coupled to ammonia oxidation. DNA-SIP showed growth of the ammonia-oxidizing bacteria but not of archaea. Furthermore, the analysis of labeled RNA found transcripts of the archaeal acetyl-CoA/propionyl-CoA carboxylase (accA/pccB) to be expressed and labeled. These findings strongly suggest that ammonia-oxidizing archaeal groups in soil autotrophically fix CO₂ using the 3-hydroxypropionate-4-hydroxybutyrate cycle, one of the two pathways recently identified for CO₂ fixation in CRENARCHAEOTA: Catalyzed reporter deposition (CARD)-FISH targeting the gene encoding subunit A of ammonia monooxygenase (amoA) mRNA and 16S rRNA of archaea also revealed ammonia-oxidizing archaea to be numerically relevant among the archaea in this soil. Our results demonstrate a diverse and dynamic contribution of ammonia-oxidizing archaea in soil to nitrification and CO₂ assimilation and that their importance to the overall archaeal community might be larger than previously thought.
Journal Article
Salinity Affects the Composition of the Aerobic Methanotroph Community in Alkaline Lake Sediments from the Tibetan Plateau
2017
Lakes are widely distributed on the Tibetan Plateau, which plays an important role in natural methane emission. Aerobic methanotrophs in lake sediments reduce the amount of methane released into the atmosphere. However, no study to date has analyzed the methanotroph community composition and their driving factors in sediments of these highaltitude lakes (> 4000 m). To provide new insights on this aspect, the abundance and composition in the sediments of six high-altitude alkaline lakes (including both freshwater and saline lakes) on the Tibetan Plateau were studied. The quantitative PCR, terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism, and 454-pyrosequencing methods were used to target the pmoA genes. The pmoA gene copies ranged 10⁴–10⁶ per gram fresh sediment. Type I methanotrophs predominated in Tibetan lake sediments, with Methylobacter and uncultivated type Ib methanotrophs being dominant in freshwater lakes and Methylomicrobium in saline lakes. Combining the pmoA-pyrosequencing data from Tibetan lakes with other published pmoA-sequencing data from lake sediments of other regions, a significant salinity and alkalinity effect (P = 0.001) was detected, especially salinity, which explained ~25% of methanotroph community variability. The main effect was Methylomicrobium being dominant (up to 100%) in saline lakes only. In freshwater lakes, however, methanotroph composition was relatively diverse, including Methylobacter, Methylocystis, and uncultured type Ib clusters. This study provides the first methanotroph data for high-altitude lake sediments (> 4000 m) and shows that salinity is a driving factor for the community composition of aerobic methanotrophs.
Journal Article
Microbial interactions between climate warming and antimicrobial resistance threaten soil carbon storage and global health
by
Hernández, Marcela
,
Bradley, James A
,
Dumont, Marc G
in
Anthropogenic factors
,
Antibiotics
,
Antimicrobial agents
2025
Anthropogenic activities are impacting the environment in ways that may intersect and have compounding effects. In soil, the spread of antibiotics and resistant microbes, and thereby antimicrobial resistance (AMR), can accelerate because of climate change and anthropogenic activities. Here we propose that the dual production and release of antimicrobial compounds to the environment, and the increase in global temperatures as a consequence of climate change, will have synergistic effects leading to both enhanced climate change and disease risk. We predict that an increase in AMR will reduce microbial carbon use efficiency (CUE) because interactions amongst microbes will lead to the allocation of available resources towards AMR and metabolism instead of growth. This reduction in CUE may lead to increased greenhouse gas release; however, the extent to which AMR can affect the stability of soil carbon by altering microbial CUE remains unknown. This concern is especially pertinent in the Arctic, which is warming faster than anywhere else on Earth and contains substantial soil carbon reservoirs.
Journal Article
Stable isotope probing — linking microbial identity to function
by
Dumont, Marc G.
,
Murrell, J. Colin
in
Bacteria - classification
,
Bacteria - genetics
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
2005
Stable isotope probing (SIP) is a technique that is used to identify the microorganisms in environmental samples that use a particular growth substrate. The method relies on the incorporation of a substrate that is highly enriched in a stable isotope, such as
13
C, and the identification of active microorganisms by the selective recovery and analysis of isotope-enriched cellular components. DNA and rRNA are the most informative taxonomic biomarkers and
13
C-labelled molecules can be purified from unlabelled nucleic acid by density-gradient centrifugation. The future holds great promise for SIP, particularly when combined with other emerging technologies such as microarrays and metagenomics.
Journal Article
Identification of active aerobic methanotrophs in plateau wetlands using DNA stable isotope probing
by
Dumont, Marc G.
,
Deng, Yongcui
,
Cui, Xiaoyong
in
Aerobiosis
,
Deoxyribonucleic acid
,
DNA, Bacterial - chemistry
2016
Sedge-dominated wetlands on the Qinghai–Tibetan Plateau are methane emission centers. Methanotrophs at these sites play a role in reducing methane emissions, but relatively little is known about the composition of active methanotrophs in these wetlands. Here, we used DNA stable isotope probing to identify the key active aerobic methanotrophs in three sedge-dominated wetlands on the plateau. We found that Methylocystis species were active in two peatlands, Hongyuan and Dangxiong. Methylobacter species were found to be active only in Dangxiong peat. Hongyuan peat had the highest methane oxidation rate, and cross-feeding of carbon from methanotrophs to methylotrophic Hyphomicrobium species was observed. Owing to a low methane oxidation rate during the incubation, the labeling of methanotrophs in Maduo wetland samples was not detected. Our results indicate that there are large differences in the activity of methanotrophs in the wetlands of this region.
Unique assemblages of CH4-assimilating populations in Qinghai–Tibetan Plateau wetlands.
Journal Article
Thrive or survive: prokaryotic life in hypersaline soils
by
Hernández, Marcela
,
Dumont, Marc G.
,
Vera-Gargallo, Blanca
in
Amplicon sequencing
,
Animal Genetics and Genomics
,
Bacteria
2023
Background
Soil services are central to life on the planet, with microorganisms as their main drivers. Thus, the evaluation of soil quality requires an understanding of the principles and factors governing microbial dynamics within it. High salt content is a constraint for life affecting more than 900 million hectares of land, a number predicted to rise at an alarming rate due to changing climate. Nevertheless, little is known about how microbial life unfolds in these habitats
.
In this study, DNA stable-isotope probing (DNA-SIP) with
18
O-water was used to determine for the first time the taxa able to grow in hypersaline soil samples (EC
e
= 97.02 dS/m). We further evaluated the role of light on prokaryotes growth in this habitat.
Results
We detected growth of both archaea and bacteria, with taxon-specific growth patterns providing insights into the drivers of success in saline soils. Phylotypes related to extreme halophiles, including haloarchaea and
Salinibacter
, which share an energetically efficient mechanism for salt adaptation (
salt-in
strategy), dominated the active community. Bacteria related to moderately halophilic and halotolerant taxa, such as
Staphylococcus
,
Aliifodinibius
,
Bradymonadales
or
Chitinophagales
also grew during the incubations, but they incorporated less heavy isotope. Light did not stimulate prokaryotic photosynthesis but instead restricted the growth of most bacteria and reduced the diversity of archaea that grew.
Conclusions
The results of this study suggest that life in saline soils is energetically expensive and that soil heterogeneity and traits such as exopolysaccharide production or predation may support growth in hypersaline soils. The contribution of phototrophy to supporting the heterotrophic community in saline soils remains unclear. This study paves the way toward a more comprehensive understanding of the functioning of these environments, which is fundamental to their management. Furthermore, it illustrates the potential of further research in saline soils to deepen our understanding of the effect of salinity on microbial communities.
Journal Article
The response of methanotrophs to additions of either ammonium, nitrate or urea in alpine swamp meadow soil as revealed by stable isotope probing
2019
Different forms of nitrogen (N) are deposited on the Qinghai-Tibetan plateau (QTP), while their differential effects on soil methanotrophs and their activity remain elusive. We constructed microcosms amended with different N fertilizers (ammonia, nitrate and urea) using the soils sampled from a swamp meadow on the QTP. The responses of active methanotrophs to different forms of nitrogen were determined by stable isotope probing with 5% 13C-methane. At the early stage of incubation, all N fertilizers, especially urea, suppressed methane oxidation compared with the control. The methane oxidation rate increased during the incubation, suggesting an adaptation and stimulation of some methanotrophs to elevated methane. At the onset of the incubation, the type II methanotrophs Methylocystis were most abundant, but decreased during the incubation and were replaced by the type Ia methanotrophs Methylomonas. Ammonia and urea had similar effects on the methanotroph communities, both characterized by an elevation in the proportion of Methylobacter and more diverse methanotroph communities. Nitrate had less effect on the methanotroph community. Our results uncovered the active methanotrophs responding to different nitrogen forms, and suggested that urea-N might have large effects on methanotroph diversity and activity in swamp meadow soils on the QTP.
Journal Article
DNA stable-isotope probing
by
Murrell, J Colin
,
Vohra, Jyotsna
,
Dumont, Marc G
in
Analytical Chemistry
,
Biological Techniques
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
2007
Stable-isotope probing is a method used in microbial ecology that provides a means by which specific functional groups of organisms that incorporate particular substrates are identified without the prerequisite of cultivation. Stable-isotope-labeled carbon (
13
C) or nitrogen (
15
N) sources are assimilated into microbial biomass of environmental samples. Separation and molecular analysis of labeled nucleic acids (DNA or RNA) reveals phylogenetic and functional information about the microorganisms responsible for the metabolism of a particular substrate. Here, we highlight general guidelines for incubating environmental samples with labeled substrate and provide a detailed protocol for separating labeled DNA from unlabeled community DNA. The protocol includes a modification of existing published methods, which maximizes the recovery of labeled DNA from CsCl gradients. The separation of DNA and retrieval of unlabeled and labeled fractions can be performed in 4–5 days, with much of the time being committed to the ultracentrifugation step.
Journal Article
Methodological Considerations for the Use of Stable Isotope Probing in Microbial Ecology
2007
Stable isotope probing (SIP) is a method used for labeling uncultivated microorganisms in environmental samples or directly in field studies using substrate enriched with stable isotope (e.g., ¹³C). After consumption of the substrate, the cells of microorganisms that consumed the substrate become enriched in the isotope. Labeled biomarkers, such as phospholipid-derived fatty acid (PLFA), ribosomal RNA, and DNA can be analyzed with a range of molecular and analytical techniques, and used to identify and characterize the organisms that incorporated the substrate. The advantages and disadvantages of PLFA-SIP, RNA-SIP, and DNA-SIP are presented. Using examples from our laboratory and from the literature, we discuss important methodological considerations for a successful SIP experiment.
Journal Article