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  4. Diversity of bacteria and archaea from two shallow marine hydrothermal vents from Vulcano Island
 
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Diversity of bacteria and archaea from two shallow marine hydrothermal vents from Vulcano Island

Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Publikationsdatum
2017-07-01
Sprache
English
Author
Antranikian, Garabed 
Suleiman, Marcel 
Schäfers, Christian 
Adams, Michael W. W. 
Bartolucci, Simonetta 
Blamey, Jenny M. 
Birkeland, Nils Kåre 
Bonch-Osmolovskaya, Elizaveta 
da Costa, Milton S. 
Cowan, Don 
Danson, Michael 
Forterre, Patrick 
Kelly, Robert 
Ishino, Yoshizumi 
Littlechild, Jennifer 
Moracci, Marco 
Noll, Kenneth 
Oshima, Tairo 
Robb, Frank 
Rossi, Mosè 
Santos, Helena 
Schönheit, Peter 
Sterner, Reinhard 
Thauer, Rudolf 
Thomm, Michael 
Wiegel, Jürgen 
Stetter, Karl Otto 
Institut
Technische Mikrobiologie V-7 
TORE-URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11420/3903
Enthalten in
Extremophiles 
Volume
21
Issue
4
Start Page
733
End Page
742
Citation
Extremophiles 4 (21): 733-742 (2017-07-01)
Publisher DOI
10.1007/s00792-017-0938-y
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-85019131246
To obtain new insights into community compositions of hyperthermophilic microorganisms, defined as having optimal growth temperatures of 80 °C and above, sediment and water samples were taken from two shallow marine hydrothermal vents (I and II) with temperatures of 100 °C at Vulcano Island, Italy. A combinatorial approach of denaturant gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) and metagenomic sequencing was used for microbial community analyses of the samples. In addition, enrichment cultures, growing anaerobically on selected polysaccharides such as starch and cellulose, were also analyzed by the combinatorial approach. Our results showed a high abundance of hyperthermophilic archaea, especially in sample II, and a comparable diverse archaeal community composition in both samples. In particular, the strains of the hyperthermophilic anaerobic genera Staphylothermus and Thermococcus, and strains of the aerobic hyperthermophilic genus Aeropyrum, were abundant. Regarding the bacterial community, ε-Proteobacteria, especially the genera Sulfurimonas and Sulfurovum, were highly abundant. The microbial diversity of the enrichment cultures changed significantly by showing a high dominance of archaea, particularly the genera Thermococcus and Palaeococcus, depending on the carbon source and the selected temperature.
Schlagworte
Archaea
Diversity
Hydrothermal marine shallow vents
Hyperthermophiles
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