Microbial Composition of Near-Boiling Silica-Depositing Thermal Springs throughout Yellowstone National Park
Carrine E. Blank, Sherry L. Cady, and Norman R. Pace
Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 2002
Abstract
The extent of hyperthermophilic microbial diversity associated with siliceous sinter (geyserite) was characterized
in seven near-boiling silica-depositing springs throughout Yellowstone National Park using environmental
PCR amplification of small-subunit rRNA genes (SSU rDNA), large-subunit rDNA, and the internal
transcribed spacer (ITS). We found that Thermocrinis ruber, a member of the order Aquificales, is ubiquitous,
an indication that primary production in these springs is driven by hydrogen oxidation. Several other lineages
with no known close relatives were identified that branch among the hyperthermophilic bacteria. Although they
all branch deep in the bacterial tree, the precise phylogenetic placement of many of these lineages is unresolved
at this time. While some springs contained a fair amount of phylogenetic diversity, others did not. Within the
same spring, communities in the subaqueous environment were not appreciably different than those in the
splash zone at the edge of the pool, although a greater number of phylotypes was found along the pool’s edge.
Also, microbial community composition appeared to have little correlation with the type of sinter morphology.
The number of cell morphotypes identified by fluorescence in situ hybridization and scanning electron
microscopy was greater than the number of phylotypes in SSU clone libraries. Despite little variation in
Thermocrinis ruber SSU sequences, abundant variation was found in the hypervariable ITS region. The
distribution of ITS sequence types appeared to be correlated with distinct morphotypes of Thermocrinis ruber
in different pools. Therefore, species- or subspecies-level divergences are present but not detectable in highly
conserved SSU sequences.
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