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Microbial Diversity of a Sulfide Black Smoker in Main Endeavour Hydrothermal Vent Field, Juan de Fuca Ridge
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  • Microbial Diversity of a Sulfide Black Smoker in Main Endeavour Hydrothermal Vent Field, Juan de Fuca Ridge
  • Microbial Diversity of a Sulfide Black Smoker in Main Endeavour Hydrothermal Vent Field, Juan de Fuca Ridge
저자명
Zhou. Huaiyang,Li. Jiangtao,Peng. Xiaotong,Meng. Jun,Wang. Fengping,Ai. Yuncan
간행물명
The journal of microbiology
권/호정보
2009년|47권 3호|pp.235-247 (13 pages)
발행정보
한국미생물학회
파일정보
정기간행물|ENG|
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이 논문은 한국과학기술정보연구원과 논문 연계를 통해 무료로 제공되는 원문입니다.
서지반출

기타언어초록

Submarine hydrothermal vents are among the least-understood habitats on Earth but have been the intense focus of research in the past 30 years. An active hydrothermal sulfide chimney collected from the Dudley site in the Main Endeavour vent Field (MEF) of Juan de Fuca Ridge was investigated using mineralogical and molecular approaches. Mineral analysis indicated that the chimney was composed mainly of Fe-, Zn- and Cu-rich sulfides. According to phylogenetic analysis, within the Crenarchaeota, clones of the order Desulfurococcales predominated, comprising nearly 50% of archaeal clones. Euryarchaeota were composed mainly of clones belonging to Thermococcales and deep-sea hydrothermal vent Euryarchaeota (DHVE), each of which accounted for about 20% of all clones. Thermophilic or hyperthermophilic physiologies were common to the predominant archaeal groups. More than half of bacterial clones belonged to ${varepsilon}$-Proteobacteria, which confirmed their prevalence in hydrothermal vent environments. Clones of Proteobacteria (${gamma}-,;{delta}-,;{eta}-$), Cytophaga-Flavobacterium-Bacteroides (CFB) and Deinococcus-Thermus occurred as well. It was remarkable that methanogens and methanotrophs were not detected in our 16S rRNA gene library. Our results indicated that sulfur-related metabolism, which included sulfur-reducing activity carried out by thermophilic archaea and sulfur-oxidizing by mesophilic bacteria, was common and crucial to the vent ecosystem in Dudley hydrothermal site.