Tracing long-distance electron transfer and cable bacteria in freshwater sediments by agar pillar gradient columns.
Corinna SachsDheeraj KanaparthiSusanne KublikAnna Roza SzalayMichael SchloterLars Riis DamgaardAndreas SchrammTillmann LüdersPublished in: FEMS microbiology ecology (2022)
Cable bacteria (CB) perform electrogenic sulfur oxidation (e-SOx) by spatially separating redox half reactions over centimetre distances. For freshwater systems, the ecology of CB is not yet well understood, partly because they proved difficult to cultivate. This study introduces a new 'agar pillar' approach to selectively enrich and investigate CB populations. Within sediment columns, a central agar pillar is embedded, providing a sediment-free gradient system in equilibrium with the surrounding sediment. We incubated freshwater sediments from a streambed, a sulfidic lake and a hydrocarbon-polluted aquifer in such agar pillar columns. Microprofiling revealed typical patterns of e-SOx, such as the development of a suboxic zone and the establishment of electric potentials. The bacterial communities in the sediments and agar pillars were analysed over depth by PacBio near-full-length 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing, allowing for a precise phylogenetic placement of taxa detected. The selective niche of the agar pillar was preferentially colonized by CB related to Candidatus Electronema for surface water sediments, including several potentially novel species, but not for putative groundwater CB affiliated with Desulfurivibrio spp. The presence of CB was seemingly linked to co-enriched fermenters, hinting at a possible role of e-SOx populations as an electron sink for heterotrophic microbes. These findings add to our current understanding of the diversity and ecology of CB in freshwater systems, and to a discrimination of CB from surface and groundwater sediments. The agar pillar approach provides a new strategy that may facilitate the cultivation of redox gradient-dependent microorganisms, including previously unrecognized CB populations.
Keyphrases
- heavy metals
- polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
- health risk assessment
- risk assessment
- health risk
- electron transfer
- organic matter
- stem cells
- transcription factor
- liquid chromatography
- genetic diversity
- gene expression
- genome wide
- copy number
- dna methylation
- molecular dynamics
- drinking water
- drug induced
- hydrogen peroxide