Diversity and Functional Analysis of Bacterial Communities Associated with Natural Hydrocarbon Seeps in Acidic Soils at Rainbow Springs, Yellowstone National Park
Natsuko Hamamura, Sarah H. Olson, David M. Ward, and William P. Inskeep
Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 2005
Abstract
In this paper we describe the bacterial communities associated with natural hydrocarbon seeps in nonthermal
soils at Rainbow Springs, Yellowstone National Park. Soil chemical analysis revealed high sulfate concentrations
and low pH values (pH 2.8 to 3.8), which are characteristic of acid-sulfate geothermal activity. The
hydrocarbon composition of the seep soils consisted almost entirely of saturated, acyclic alkanes (e.g., n-alkanes
with chain lengths of C15 to C30, as well as branched alkanes, predominately pristane and phytane).
Bacterial populations present in the seep soils were phylogenetically characterized by 16S rRNA gene clone
library analysis. The majority of the sequences recovered (>75%) were related to sequences of heterotrophic
acidophilic bacteria, including Acidisphaera spp. and Acidiphilium spp. of the α-Proteobacteria. Clones related
to the iron- and sulfur-oxidizing chemolithotroph Acidithiobacillus spp. were also recovered from one of the seep
soils. Hydrocarbon-amended soil-sand mixtures were established to examine [14C]hexadecane mineralization
and corresponding changes in the bacterial populations using denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE)
of 16S rRNA gene fragments. Approximately 50% of the [14C]hexadecane added was recovered as 14CO2 during
an 80-day incubation, and this was accompanied by detection of heterotrophic acidophile-related sequences as
dominant DGGE bands. An alkane-degrading isolate was cultivated, whose 16S rRNA gene sequence was
identical to the sequence of a dominant DGGE band in the soil-sand mixture, as well as the clone sequence
recovered most frequently from the original soil. This and the presence of an alkB gene homolog in this isolate
confirmed the alkane degradation capability of one population indigenous to acidic hydrocarbon seep soils.
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