蛇纹石生态系统的微生物生态学

Daniel R Colman, Alexis S Templeton, John R Spear, Eric S Boyd
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摘要

蛇纹石作用是由超镁铁质岩石水化作用引发的一系列地球化学反应,在整个地球历史上都有发生,据推测,在我们太阳系的几个行星和卫星上也发生过蛇纹石作用。这些反应产生了高度还原的条件,可以驱动有机合成反应,可能有利于生命的出现,同时由于高碱性和有限的无机碳(和氧化剂)可用性而产生挑战生命的流体。因此,以蛇纹岩为宿主的生物圈为了解最早的生命、生命的可居住极限以及其他行星上生命的可能性提供了洞见。然而,随着深海热液喷口喷出蛇纹岩流体的发现,大约20年前才认识到蛇纹岩支持丰富的微生物群落。在此,我们回顾了受海洋和大陆蛇纹石化影响的生态系统的微生物生态学,并比较了这些群落中公开可用的宏基因组序列数据,以提供蛇纹石微生物生态学的全球视角。综合全球系统的观察结果揭示了群落多样性、生态和功能方面的一致主题。然而,由于当地的地质、水文和氧化、近地表/海水流体的输入,单个系统表现出细微的差异。此外,一些新的(和旧的)问题仍然存在,包括支持生物量合成的碳的来源,蛇纹岩中生命的物理和化学极限,原地进化的模式和速度,以及现代蛇纹岩在多大程度上与早期地球上的蛇纹岩类似。这些主题从微生物的角度进行探讨,以概述未来研究的关键知识空白。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Microbial ecology of Serpentinite-hosted ecosystems
Serpentinization, the collective set of geochemical reactions initiated by the hydration of ultramafic rock, has occurred throughout Earth history and is inferred to occur on several planets and moons in our solar system. These reactions generate highly reducing conditions that can drive organic synthesis reactions potentially conducive to the emergence of life, while concomitantly generating fluids that challenge life owing to hyperalkalinity and limited inorganic carbon (and oxidant) availability. Consequently, the serpentinite-hosted biosphere offers insights into the earliest life, the habitable limits for life, and the potential for life on other planets. However, the support of abundant microbial communities by serpentinites was only recognized ~20 years ago with the discovery of deep-sea hydrothermal vents emanating serpentinized fluids. Here, we review the microbial ecology of both marine and continental serpentinization-influenced ecosystems in conjunction with a comparison of publicly available metagenomic sequence data from these communities to provide a global perspective of serpentinite microbial ecology. Synthesis of observations across global systems reveal consistent themes in the diversity, ecology, and functioning of communities. Nevertheless, individual systems exhibit nuances due to local geology, hydrology, and input of oxidized, near-surface/seawater fluids. Further, several new (and old) questions remain including the provenance of carbon to support biomass synthesis, the physical and chemical limits of life in serpentinites, the mode and tempo of in situ evolution, and the extent that modern serpentinites serve as analogs for those on early Earth. These topics are explored from a microbial perspective to outline key knowledge-gaps for future research.
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