Cyanobacterial Ecotypes in Different Optical Microenvironments of a 68°C Hot Spring Mat Community Revealed by 16S-23S rRNA Internal Transcribed Spacer Region Variation
Mike J. Ferris, Michael Kühl, Andrea Wieland, and David M. Ward
Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 2003
Abstract
We examined the population of unicellular cyanobacteria (Synechococcus) in the upper 3-mm vertical interval
of a 68°C region of a microbial mat in a hot spring effluent channel (Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming).
Fluorescence microscopy and microsensor measurements of O2 and oxygenic photosynthesis demonstrated the
existence of physiologically distinct Synechococcus populations at different depths along a light gradient
quantified by scalar irradiance microprobes. Molecular methods were used to evaluate whether physiologically
distinct populations could be correlated with genetically distinct populations over the vertical interval. We were
unable to identify patterns in genetic variation in Synechococcus 16S rRNA sequences that correlate with
different vertically distributed populations. However, patterns of variation at the internal transcribed spacer
locus separating 16S and 23S rRNA genes suggested the existence of closely related but genetically distinct
populations corresponding to different functional populations occurring at different depths.
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