Refine
Has Fulltext
- no (3)
Document Type
- Doctoral Thesis (3)
Language
- English (3)
Is part of the Bibliography
- yes (3)
Keywords
- Antibiotikaresistenz (1)
- Arctic (1)
- Arktis (1)
- Bakterien (1)
- Herschel Island Qikiqtaruk (1)
- Hämolyse (1)
- Klimawandel (1)
- Krankheitserreger (1)
- Permafrost carbon feedback (1)
- Pilze (1)
Institute
This thesis investigates how the permafrost microbiota responds to global warming. In detail, the constraints behind methane production in thawing permafrost were linked to methanogenic activity, abundance and composition. Furthermore, this thesis offers new insights into microbial adaptions to the changing environmental conditions during global warming. This was assesed by investigating the potential ecological relevant functions encoded by plasmid DNA within the permafrost microbiota. Permafrost of both interglacial and glacial origin spanning the Holocene to the late Pleistocene, including Eemian, were studied during long-term thaw incubations. Furthermore, several permafrost cores of different stratigraphy, soil type and vegetation cover were used to target the main constraints behind methane production during short-term thaw simulations. Short- and long-term incubations simulating thaw with and without the addition of substrate were combined with activity measurements, amplicon and metagenomic sequencing of permanently frozen and seasonally thawed active layer. Combined, it allowed to address the following questions. i) What constraints methane production when permafrost thaws and how is this linked to methanogenic activity, abundance and composition? ii) How does the methanogenic community composition change during long-term thawing conditions? iii) Which potential ecological relevant functions are encoded by plasmid DNA in active layer soils?
The major outcomes of this thesis are as follows. i) Methane production from permafrost after long-term thaw simulation was found to be constrained mainly by the abundance of methanogens and the archaeal community composition. Deposits formed during periods of warmer temperatures and increased precipitation, (here represented by deposits from the Late Pleistocene of both interstadial and interglacial periods) were found to respond strongest to thawing conditions and to contain an archaeal community dominated by methanogenic archaea (40% and 100% of all detected archaea). Methanogenic population size and carbon density were identified as main predictors for potential methane production in thawing permafrost in short-term incubations when substrate was sufficiently available.
ii) Besides determining the methanogenic activity after long-term thaw, the paleoenvironmental conditions were also found to influence the response of the methanogenic community composition. Substantial shifts within methanogenic community structure and a drop in diversity were observed in deposits formed during warmer periods, but not in deposits from stadials, when colder and drier conditions occurred. Overall, a shift towards a dominance of hydrogenotrophic methanogens was observed in all samples, except for the oldest interglacial deposits from the Eemian, which displayed a potential dominance of acetoclastic methanogens. The Eemian, which is discussed to serve as an analogue to current climate conditions, contained highly active methanogenic communities. However, all potential limitation of methane production after permafrost thaw, it means methanogenic community structure, methanogenic population size, and substrate pool might be overcome after permafrost had thawed on the long-term. iii) Enrichments with soil from the seasonally thawed active layer revealed that its plasmid DNA (‘metaplasmidome’) carries stress-response genes. In particular it encoded antibiotic resistance genes, heavy metal resistance genes, cold shock proteins and genes encoding UV-protection. Those are functions that are directly involved in the adaptation of microbial communities to stresses in polar environments. It was further found that metaplasmidomes from the Siberian active layer originate mainly from Gammaproteobacteria. By applying enrichment cultures followed by plasmid DNA extraction it was possible to obtain a higher average contigs length and significantly higher recovery of plasmid sequences than from extracting plasmid sequences from metagenomes. The approach of analyzing ‘metaplasmidomes’ established in this thesis is therefore suitable for studying the ecological role of plasmids in polar environments in general.
This thesis emphasizes that including microbial community dynamics have the potential to improve permafrost-carbon projections. Microbially mediated methane release from permafrost environments may significantly impact future climate change. This thesis identified drivers of methanogenic composition, abundance and activity in thawing permafrost landscapes. Finally, this thesis underlines the importance to study how the current warming Arctic affects microbial communities in order to gain more insight into microbial response and adaptation strategies.
The Arctic environments constitute rich and dynamic ecosystems, dominated by microorganisms extremely well adapted to survive and function under severe conditions. A range of physiological adaptations allow the microbiota in these habitats to withstand low temperatures, low water and nutrient availability, high levels of UV radiation, etc. In addition, other adaptations of clear competitive nature are directed at not only surviving but thriving in these environments, by disrupting the metabolism of neighboring cells and affecting intermicrobial communication. Since Arctic microbes are bioindicators which amplify climate alterations in the environment, the Arctic region presents the opportunity to study local microbiota and carry out research about interesting, potentially virulent phenotypes that could be dispersed into other habitats around the globe as a consequence of accelerating climate change. In this context, exploration of Arctic habitats as well as descriptions of the microbes inhabiting them are abundant but microbial competitive strategies commonly associated with virulence and pathogens are rarely reported. In this project, environmental samples from the Arctic region were collected and microorganisms (bacteria and fungi) were isolated. The clinical relevance of these microorganisms was assessed by observing the following virulence markers: ability to grow at a range of temperatures, expression of antimicrobial resistance and production of hemolysins. The aim of this project is to determine the frequency and relevance of these characteristics in an effort to understand microbial adaptations in habitats threatened by climate change. The isolates obtained and described here were able to grow at a range of temperatures, in some cases more than 30 °C higher than their original isolation temperature. A considerable number of them consistently expressed compounds capable of lysing sheep and bovine erythrocytes on blood agar at different incubation temperatures. Ethanolic extracts of these bacteria were able to cause rapid and complete lysis of erythrocyte suspensions and might even be hemolytic when assayed on human blood. In silico analyses showed a variety of resistance elements, some of them novel, against natural and synthetic antimicrobial compounds. In vitro experiments against a number of antimicrobial compounds showed resistance phenotypes belonging to wild-type populations and some non-wild type which clearly denote human influence in the acquisition of antimicrobial resistance. The results of this project demonstrate the presence of virulence-associated factors expressed by microorganisms of natural, non-clinical environments. This study contains some of the first reports, to the best of our knowledge, of hemolytic microbes isolated from the Arctic region. In addition, it provides additional information about the presence and expression of intrinsic and acquired antimicrobial resistance in environmental isolates, contributing to the understanding of the evolution of relevant pathogenic species and opportunistic pathogens. Finally, this study highlights some of the potential risks associated with changes in the polar regions (habitat melting and destruction, ecosystem transition and re-colonization) as important indirect consequences of global warming and altered climatic conditions around the planet.
Past and present biodiversity in northeastern Siberia inferred from sedimentary DNA metabarcoding
(2021)
The arctic-boreal treeline is a transition zone from taiga to tundra covering a vast area in Siberia. It often features large environmental gradients and reacts sensitively to changes in the environment. For example, the expansion of shrubs and a northward movement of the treeline are observable in Siberia as a response to the warming climate. The changes in vegetation across the treeline are known to influence the water chemistry in the lakes. This causes further alteration to the composition and diversity of sensitive aquatic organisms such as diatoms and macrophytes. Despite the rising awareness of the complex climate-feedback mechanisms of terrestrial plants, the understanding of their assembly rules and about responses of aquatic biomes in the surrounding treeline lakes is still limited. The goal of this thesis is to examine the previous and present biodiversity of terrestrial and freshwater biomes from the Siberian treeline ecotone, as well as their reactions to environmental changes. In particular, this thesis attempts to examine the performance of applying sedimentary DNA metabarcoding in terrestrial plants, aquatic macrophytes and diatoms, their spatial patterns along the environmental gradients and their temporal patterns throughout the climate transition from the late Pleistocene to Holocene. Sedimentary DNA metabarcoding combined with next-generation sequencing is applied as a primary tool to explore the composition and diversity of terrestrial plants, diatoms and aquatic macrophytes. The main study area is located in Chukotka of northeastern Siberia in the Arctic, a biodiversity hotspot due to its continental location and the diverse habitats of the glacial refugium. The modern diatom diversity was assessed with a specific diatom metabarcoding marker and morphological identification. Both approaches agree to a dominance of Fragilariaceae and Aulacoseiraceae, as well as on the environmental influential indicators of the diatom community. The high diversity of Fragilariaceae identified in the thermokarst lakes is found to follow the vegetation gradient along the treeline, suggesting that diatom metabarcoding can decipher relationships between diatom assemblage shifts and the relevant environmental changes. In particular, the metabarcoding approach detects diversification of fragilarioids in glacial lakes which is not visible using morphology. Sedimentary ancient DNA records indicate a vegetation mosaic of forb-dominated steppe-tundra during 28-19 ka, followed by a shift to dwarf-shrub tundra during 19-14 ka. During the most recent 14 thousand years, the vegetation consists of deciduous shrublands, then a change to boreal forest is observed. Investigations on the alpha diversity of the vegetation show that species richness is unexpectedly highest during pre-LGM, which is likely related to the extensive area that allows for more taxa. The optimum Holocene warming during 9-6 ka is not accompanied by a high richness as widely believed, but with an evenly distributed community by the fulfilment of erect shrubs. Furthermore, changes in taxonomic and phylogenetic diversity show complementary results in understanding community diversity. The composition and richness in the modern macrophytes community from Siberian Arctic and Chinese alpine are best co-influenced by July temperature and electrical conductivity.. Past macrophyte turnover during the late Pleistocene-Holocene is less noticeable in Siberia, whereas a pronounced community change from emergent to submerged plants is detected from Chinese alpine regions at about 14 ka due to increasing temperature and varying water conductivity. Finally, sedimentary DNA metabarcoding is a cost-effective and powerful proxy for ecological application, whereas completeness of the reference library, coverage and resolution of the metabarcoding marker are the major limitations of sedimentary DNA based diversity monitoring. The composition and richness in modern vegetation and macrophytes across broad spatial gradients is constrained by environmental variables, suggesting a potential usage for environmental monitoring. Diatom distributions are driven by different water variables along the treeline. Past records indicate that the shrub coverage has a noticeable influence on the assemblies of both terrestrial plants and aquatic macrophytes, though the shift in macrophyte community is relatively minor in the past 28 thousand years. In the long-term, the shrub expansion may eventually result in a genetically more diverse vegetation community but reduced species richness. When exceeding the optimal temperatures, further warming may lead to a decrease and putative loss of macrophytes and diatoms.