4.8 Article

Glacier ice archives nearly 15,000-year-old microbes and phages

期刊

MICROBIOME
卷 9, 期 1, 页码 -

出版社

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s40168-021-01106-w

关键词

Guliya ice cap; Mountain glacier ice; Surface decontamination; Ice microbes; Ice viruses; Methylobacterium; Sphingomonas; Janthinobacterium

资金

  1. National Science Foundation's Paleoclimate Program award [1502919]
  2. Chinese Academy of Sciences
  3. Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation Investigator Award [3790]
  4. NSF's Paleoclimate Program award [1502919]
  5. BPCRC Postdoctoral Program
  6. Ohio State Center of Microbiome Science summer fellowship
  7. Office of Science of the US Department of Energy [DE-AC02-05CH11231]
  8. Directorate For Geosciences
  9. Div Atmospheric & Geospace Sciences [1502919] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Glacier ice contains valuable microbial and viral information that can reveal past climate histories and predict future climate change. By using innovative sampling methods and metagenomic approaches, researchers have identified novel viral communities in ancient glacier environments, providing insights into the interactions between ice-abundant bacteria and viruses, and their potential roles in nutrient acquisition and methane cycling. These findings contribute to a better understanding of microbial diversity and the impact of viruses in glacier ice, with implications for studying climate change on a global scale.
Background: Glacier ice archives information, including microbiology, that helps reveal paleoclimate histories and predict future climate change. Though glacier-ice microbes are studied using culture or amplicon approaches, more challenging metagenomic approaches, which provide access to functional, genome-resolved information and viruses, are under-utilized, partly due to low biomass and potential contamination. Results: We expand existing clean sampling procedures using controlled artificial ice-core experiments and adapted previously established low-biomass metagenomic approaches to study glacier-ice viruses. Controlled sampling experiments drastically reduced mock contaminants including bacteria, viruses, and free DNA to background levels. Amplicon sequencing from eight depths of two Tibetan Plateau ice cores revealed common glacier-ice lineages including Janthinobacterium, Polaromonas, Herminiimonas, Flavobacterium, Sphingomonas, and Methylobacterium as the dominant genera, while microbial communities were significantly different between two ice cores, associating with different climate conditions during deposition. Separately, similar to 355- and similar to 14,400-year-old ice were subject to viral enrichment and low-input quantitative sequencing, yielding genomic sequences for 33 vOTUs. These were virtually all unique to this study, representing 28 novel genera and not a single species shared with 225 environmentally diverse viromes. Further, 42.4% of the vOTUs were identifiable temperate, which is significantly higher than that in gut, soil, and marine viromes, and indicates that temperate phages are possibly favored in glacier-ice environments before being frozen. In silico host predictions linked 18 vOTUs to co-occurring abundant bacteria (Methylobacterium, Sphingomonas, and Janthinobacterium), indicating that these phages infected ice-abundant bacterial groups before being archived. Functional genome annotation revealed four virus-encoded auxiliary metabolic genes, particularly two motility genes suggest viruses potentially facilitate nutrient acquisition for their hosts. Finally, given their possible importance to methane cycling in ice, we focused on Methylobacterium viruses by contextualizing our ice-observed viruses against 123 viromes and prophages extracted from 131 Methylobacterium genomes, revealing that the archived viruses might originate from soil or plants. Conclusions: Together, these efforts further microbial and viral sampling procedures for glacier ice and provide a first window into viral communities and functions in ancient glacier environments. Such methods and datasets can potentially enable researchers to contextualize new discoveries and begin to incorporate glacier-ice microbes and their viruses relative to past and present climate change in geographically diverse regions globally.

作者

我是这篇论文的作者
点击您的名字以认领此论文并将其添加到您的个人资料中。

评论

主要评分

4.8
评分不足

次要评分

新颖性
-
重要性
-
科学严谨性
-
评价这篇论文

推荐

暂无数据
暂无数据