Project: An Integrated Study of Energy Metabolism, Carbon Fixation, and Colonization Mechanisms in Chemosynthetic Microbial Communities at Deep-Sea Vents

Acronym/Short Name:Microbial Communities at Deep-Sea Vents
Project Duration:2011-10 - 2014-09

Description

Deep-sea hydrothermal vents, first discovered in 1977, are poster child ecosystems where microbial chemosynthesis rather than photosynthesis is the primary source of organic carbon. Significant gaps remain in our understanding of the underlying microbiology and biogeochemistry of these fascinating ecosystems. Missing are the identification of specific microorganisms mediating critical reactions in various geothermal systems, metabolic pathways used by the microbes, rates of the catalyzed reactions, amounts of organic carbon being produced, and the larger role of these ecosystems in global biogeochemical cycles. To fill these gaps, the investigators will conduct a 3-year interdisciplinary, international hypothesis-driven research program to understand microbial processes and their quantitative importance at deep-sea vents. Specifically, the investigators will address the following objectives: 1. Determine key relationships between the taxonomic, genetic and functional diversity, as well as the mechanisms of energy and carbon transfer, in deep-sea hydrothermal vent microbial communities. 2. Identify the predominant metabolic pathways and thus the main energy sources driving chemoautotrophic production in high and low temperature diffuse flow vents. 3. Determine energy conservation efficiency and rates of aerobic and anaerobic chemosynthetic primary productivity in high and low temperature diffuse flow vents. 4. Determine gene expression patterns in diffuse-flow vent microbial communities during attachment to substrates and the development of biofilms.

Integration: To address these objectives and to characterize the complexity of microbially-catalyzed processes at deep-sea vents at a qualitatively new level, we will pursue an integrated approach that couples an assessment of taxonomic diversity using cultivation-dependent and -independent approaches with methodologies that address genetic diversity, including a) metagenomics (genetic potential and diversity of community), b) single cell genomics (genetic potential and diversity of uncultured single cells), c) meta-transcriptomics and -proteomics (identification and function of active community members, realized potential of the community). To assess function and response to the environment, these approaches will be combined with 1) measurement of in situ rates of chemoautotrophic production, 2) geochemical characterization of microbial habitats, and 3) shipboard incubations under simulated in situ conditions (hypothesis testing under controlled physicochemical conditions). Network approaches and mathematical simulation will be used to reconstruct the metabolic network of the natural communities. A 3-day long project meeting towards the end of the second year will take place in Woods Hole. This Data Integration and Synthesis meeting will allow for progress reports and presentations from each PI, postdoc, and/or student, with the aim of synthesizing data generated to facilitate the preparation of manuscripts.

Intellectual Merit. Combining the community expression profile with diversity and metagenomic analyses as well as process and habitat characterization will be unique to hydrothermal vent microbiology. The approach will provide new insights into the functioning of deep-sea vent microbial communities and the constraints regulating the interactions between the microbes and their abiotic and biotic environment, ultimately enabling us to put these systems into a quantitative framework and thus a larger global context.

Broader Impacts. This is an interdisciplinary and collaborative effort between 4 US and 4 foreign institutions, creating unique opportunities for networking and fostering international collaborations. This will also benefit the involved students (2 graduate, several undergraduate) and 2 postdoctoral associates. This project will directly contribute to many educational and public outreach activities of the involved PIs, including the WHOI Dive & Discover program; single cell genomics workshops and Cafe Scientifique (Bigelow); REU (WHOI, Bigelow, CIW); COSEE and RIOS (Rutgers), and others. The proposed research fits with the focus of a number of multidisciplinary and international initiatives, in which PIs are active members (SCOR working group on Hydrothermal energy and the ocean carbon cycle, http://www.scorint. org/Working_Groups/wg135.htm; Deep Carbon Observatory at CIW, https://dco.gl.ciw.edu/; Global Biogeochemical Flux (GBF) component of the Ocean Observatories Initiative (OOI), http://www.whoi.edu/GBF-OOI/page.do?pid=41475)


DatasetLatest Version DateCurrent State
GenBank accession numbers for microbial 16S rRNA sequences collected at the East Pacific Rise by DSV/Alvin during R/V Atlantis research cruises (Jan. 2004 - June 2006) (Microbial Communities at Deep-Sea Vents project)2017-04-20Final no updates expected
Results from shipboard high-pressure incubations of diffuse flow vent fluids collected from the Crab Spa and Alvinella sites at East Pacific Rise during the AT26-10 expedition, Jan. 2014 (Microbial Communities at Deep-Sea Vents project)2017-02-07Final no updates expected
Vent fluid chemistry from R/V Atlantis AT26-10 and AT26-23 in the East Pacific Rise, Pacific Ocean from 2013-2014 (Microbial Communities at Deep-Sea Vents project)2017-01-13Final no updates expected
Single amplified genomes (SAGs) of microbial cells isolated from deep-sea hydrothermal vent 'Crab Spa', East Pacific Rise, Pacific Ocean from R/V Atlantis AT15-38 and AT26-10, 2008 and 2014 (Microbial Communities at Deep-Sea Vents project)2016-10-05Final no updates expected
Sample log from Jason-II dives for Sievert collected from the R/V Atlantis (AT26-10) in the East Pacific Rise, Pacific Ocean (Microbial Communities at Deep-Sea Vents project)2015-05-26Final no updates expected
Samples sequenced from chemosynthetic biofilm communities in deep-sea hydrothermal vents collected on the R/V Atlantis AT26-10 in the East Pacific Rise, Pacific Ocean from 2013 - 2014 (Microbial Communities at Deep-Sea Vents project)2015-02-10Final no updates expected
Chemical composition of diffuse flow vent fluids collected from the Crab Spa site at East Pacific Rise during the AT26-10 oceanographic expedition, Jan. 2014 (Microbial Communities at Deep-Sea Vents project)2014-10-01Final no updates expected

People

Lead Principal Investigator: Stefan M. Sievert
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI)

Principal Investigator: Dionysis Foustoukos
Carnegie Institution for Science (CIS)

Principal Investigator: Dr Ramunas Stepanauskas
Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences

Principal Investigator: Costantino Vetriani
Rutgers University

International Collaborator: Dr Nadine Le Bris
Laboratoire d'Écogéochimie des Environnements Benthiques (LECOB)

International Collaborator: Dr Niculina Musat
Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology (MPI)

International Collaborator: Dr Thomas Schweder
University of Greifswald

Co-Principal Investigator: Jeffrey S. Seewald
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI)

Co-Principal Investigator: Dr Craig Taylor
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI)

International Collaborator: Dr FengPing Wang
Shanghai Jiao Tong University (SJTU)


Programs

Dimensions of Biodiversity [Dimensions of Biodiversity]

Center for Dark Energy Biosphere Investigations [C-DEBI]