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Biomineralization in Cave Bacteria—Popcorn and Soda Straw Crystal Formations, Morphologies, and Potential Metabolic Pathways

Caves are extreme, often oligotrophic, environments that house diverse groups of microorganisms. Many of these microbes can perform microbiologically induced carbonate precipitation (MICP) to form crystalline secondary cave deposits known as speleothems. The urease family is a group of enzymes invol...

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Autores principales: Koning, Keegan, McFarlane, Richenda, Gosse, Jessica T., Lawrence, Sara, Carr, Lynnea, Horne, Derrick, Van Wagoner, Nancy, Boddy, Christopher N., Cheeptham, Naowarat
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9283089/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35847116
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2022.933388
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author Koning, Keegan
McFarlane, Richenda
Gosse, Jessica T.
Lawrence, Sara
Carr, Lynnea
Horne, Derrick
Van Wagoner, Nancy
Boddy, Christopher N.
Cheeptham, Naowarat
author_facet Koning, Keegan
McFarlane, Richenda
Gosse, Jessica T.
Lawrence, Sara
Carr, Lynnea
Horne, Derrick
Van Wagoner, Nancy
Boddy, Christopher N.
Cheeptham, Naowarat
author_sort Koning, Keegan
collection PubMed
description Caves are extreme, often oligotrophic, environments that house diverse groups of microorganisms. Many of these microbes can perform microbiologically induced carbonate precipitation (MICP) to form crystalline secondary cave deposits known as speleothems. The urease family is a group of enzymes involved in MICP that catalyze the breakdown of urea, which is a source of energy, into ammonia and carbonate. Carbonate anions are effluxed to the extracellular surface of the bacterium where it then binds to environmental calcium to form calcium carbonate which then continues to grow in crystal form. Here, we studied bacterial communities from speleothems collected from the Iron Curtain Cave (ICC) in Chilliwack, B.C., Canada, to characterize these organisms and determine whether urease-positive (U+) bacteria were present in the cave and their potential impact on speleothem formation. The ICC is a carbonate cave located on the northside of Chipmunk Ridge, presenting a unique environment with high iron content sediment and limestone structures throughout. With six pools of water throughout the cave, the environment is highly humid, with temperatures ranging between 4 and 12°C depending on the time of year. Ninety-nine bacterial strains were isolated from popcorn (PCS) and soda straw (SSS) speleothems. These isolates were screened for urease enzymatic activity, with 11 candidates found to be urease-positive. After incubation, species-specific crystal morphologies were observed. Popcorn speleothem provided more bacterial diversity overall when compared to soda straw speleothem when examined under a culture-based method. Nearly twice as many U+ isolates were isolated from popcorn speleothems compared to soda straw speleothems. The U+ candidates were identified to the genus level by 16S rRNA analysis, and two isolates underwent whole-genome sequencing. Two novel species were identified as Sphingobacterium sp. PCS056 and Pseudarthrobacter sp. SSS035. Both isolates demonstrated the most crystal production as well as the most morphologically dissimilar crystal shapes in broth culture and were found to produce crystals as previously observed in both agar and broth media. The results from this study are consistent with the involvement of urease-positive bacteria isolated from the ICC in the formation of cave speleothems. 16S rRNA sequencing revealed a diverse set of microbes inhabiting the speleothems that have urease activity. Whole-genome sequencing of the two chosen isolates confirmed the presence of urease pathways, while revealing differences in urease pathway structure and number. This research contributes to understanding microbial-associated cave formation and degradation, with applications to cave conservation, microbiota composition, and their role in shaping the cave environment.
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spelling pubmed-92830892022-07-16 Biomineralization in Cave Bacteria—Popcorn and Soda Straw Crystal Formations, Morphologies, and Potential Metabolic Pathways Koning, Keegan McFarlane, Richenda Gosse, Jessica T. Lawrence, Sara Carr, Lynnea Horne, Derrick Van Wagoner, Nancy Boddy, Christopher N. Cheeptham, Naowarat Front Microbiol Microbiology Caves are extreme, often oligotrophic, environments that house diverse groups of microorganisms. Many of these microbes can perform microbiologically induced carbonate precipitation (MICP) to form crystalline secondary cave deposits known as speleothems. The urease family is a group of enzymes involved in MICP that catalyze the breakdown of urea, which is a source of energy, into ammonia and carbonate. Carbonate anions are effluxed to the extracellular surface of the bacterium where it then binds to environmental calcium to form calcium carbonate which then continues to grow in crystal form. Here, we studied bacterial communities from speleothems collected from the Iron Curtain Cave (ICC) in Chilliwack, B.C., Canada, to characterize these organisms and determine whether urease-positive (U+) bacteria were present in the cave and their potential impact on speleothem formation. The ICC is a carbonate cave located on the northside of Chipmunk Ridge, presenting a unique environment with high iron content sediment and limestone structures throughout. With six pools of water throughout the cave, the environment is highly humid, with temperatures ranging between 4 and 12°C depending on the time of year. Ninety-nine bacterial strains were isolated from popcorn (PCS) and soda straw (SSS) speleothems. These isolates were screened for urease enzymatic activity, with 11 candidates found to be urease-positive. After incubation, species-specific crystal morphologies were observed. Popcorn speleothem provided more bacterial diversity overall when compared to soda straw speleothem when examined under a culture-based method. Nearly twice as many U+ isolates were isolated from popcorn speleothems compared to soda straw speleothems. The U+ candidates were identified to the genus level by 16S rRNA analysis, and two isolates underwent whole-genome sequencing. Two novel species were identified as Sphingobacterium sp. PCS056 and Pseudarthrobacter sp. SSS035. Both isolates demonstrated the most crystal production as well as the most morphologically dissimilar crystal shapes in broth culture and were found to produce crystals as previously observed in both agar and broth media. The results from this study are consistent with the involvement of urease-positive bacteria isolated from the ICC in the formation of cave speleothems. 16S rRNA sequencing revealed a diverse set of microbes inhabiting the speleothems that have urease activity. Whole-genome sequencing of the two chosen isolates confirmed the presence of urease pathways, while revealing differences in urease pathway structure and number. This research contributes to understanding microbial-associated cave formation and degradation, with applications to cave conservation, microbiota composition, and their role in shaping the cave environment. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-07-01 /pmc/articles/PMC9283089/ /pubmed/35847116 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2022.933388 Text en Copyright © 2022 Koning, McFarlane, Gosse, Lawrence, Carr, Horne, Van Wagoner, Boddy and Cheeptham. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Microbiology
Koning, Keegan
McFarlane, Richenda
Gosse, Jessica T.
Lawrence, Sara
Carr, Lynnea
Horne, Derrick
Van Wagoner, Nancy
Boddy, Christopher N.
Cheeptham, Naowarat
Biomineralization in Cave Bacteria—Popcorn and Soda Straw Crystal Formations, Morphologies, and Potential Metabolic Pathways
title Biomineralization in Cave Bacteria—Popcorn and Soda Straw Crystal Formations, Morphologies, and Potential Metabolic Pathways
title_full Biomineralization in Cave Bacteria—Popcorn and Soda Straw Crystal Formations, Morphologies, and Potential Metabolic Pathways
title_fullStr Biomineralization in Cave Bacteria—Popcorn and Soda Straw Crystal Formations, Morphologies, and Potential Metabolic Pathways
title_full_unstemmed Biomineralization in Cave Bacteria—Popcorn and Soda Straw Crystal Formations, Morphologies, and Potential Metabolic Pathways
title_short Biomineralization in Cave Bacteria—Popcorn and Soda Straw Crystal Formations, Morphologies, and Potential Metabolic Pathways
title_sort biomineralization in cave bacteria—popcorn and soda straw crystal formations, morphologies, and potential metabolic pathways
topic Microbiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9283089/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35847116
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2022.933388
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