Metagenomic survey of the microbiome of ancient Siberian permafrost and modern Kamchatkan cryosols.

microLife Pub Date : 2022-01-01 DOI:10.1093/femsml/uqac003
Sofia Rigou, Eugène Christo-Foroux, Sébastien Santini, Artemiy Goncharov, Jens Strauss, Guido Grosse, Alexander N Fedorov, Karine Labadie, Chantal Abergel, Jean-Michel Claverie
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

In the context of global warming, the melting of Arctic permafrost raises the threat of a reemergence of microorganisms some of which were shown to remain viable in ancient frozen soils for up to half a million years. In order to evaluate this risk, it is of interest to acquire a better knowledge of the composition of the microbial communities found in this understudied environment. Here, we present a metagenomic analysis of 12 soil samples from Russian Arctic and subarctic pristine areas: Chukotka, Yakutia and Kamchatka, including nine permafrost samples collected at various depths. These large datasets (9.2 × 1011 total bp) were assembled (525 313 contigs > 5 kb), their encoded protein contents predicted, and then used to perform taxonomical assignments of bacterial, archaeal and eukaryotic organisms, as well as DNA viruses. The various samples exhibited variable DNA contents and highly diverse taxonomic profiles showing no obvious relationship with their locations, depths or deposit ages. Bacteria represented the largely dominant DNA fraction (95%) in all samples, followed by archaea (3.2%), surprisingly little eukaryotes (0.5%), and viruses (0.4%). Although no common taxonomic pattern was identified, the samples shared unexpected high frequencies of β-lactamase genes, almost 0.9 copy/bacterial genome. In addition to known environmental threats, the particularly intense warming of the Arctic might thus enhance the spread of bacterial antibiotic resistances, today's major challenge in public health. β-Lactamases were also observed at high frequency in other types of soils, suggesting their general role in the regulation of bacterial populations.

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古西伯利亚永久冻土带和现代堪察加冻土微生物组的宏基因组研究。
在全球变暖的背景下,北极永久冻土的融化增加了微生物重新出现的威胁,其中一些微生物已被证明在古代冻土中存活长达50万年。为了评估这种风险,有必要更好地了解在这种未充分研究的环境中发现的微生物群落的组成。在这里,我们展示了来自俄罗斯北极和亚北极原始地区(楚科奇、雅库特和堪察加)的12个土壤样本的宏基因组分析,包括在不同深度收集的9个永久冻土样本。这些大数据集(9.2 × 1011总bp)被组装(525 313个contigs > 5 kb),它们编码的蛋白质含量预测,然后用于进行细菌、古细菌和真核生物以及DNA病毒的分类分配。不同样品的DNA含量差异较大,分类特征差异较大,与位置、深度和沉积年龄没有明显关系。在所有样本中,细菌占据了大部分优势的DNA部分(95%),其次是古细菌(3.2%),令人惊讶的是真核生物(0.5%)和病毒(0.4%)。虽然没有确定共同的分类模式,但样品具有意想不到的高频率β-内酰胺酶基因,几乎为0.9拷贝/细菌基因组。除了已知的环境威胁外,北极特别剧烈的变暖可能因此加剧细菌抗生素耐药性的传播,这是当今公共卫生的主要挑战。在其他类型的土壤中也观察到高频率的β-内酰胺酶,这表明它们在调节细菌种群方面的一般作用。
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