Altering environmental conditions induce shifts in simulated deep terrestrial subsurface bacterial communities—Secretion of primary and secondary metabolites

  • Merja Herzig*
  • , Tuulia Hyötyläinen
  • , Gianni F. Vettese
  • , Gareth T.W. Law
  • , Taavi Vierinen
  • , Malin Bomberg
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

Abstract

The deep terrestrial subsurface (DTS) harbours a striking diversity of microorganisms. However, systematic research on microbial metabolism, and how varying groundwater composition affects the bacterial communities and metabolites in these environments is lacking. In this study, DTS groundwater bacterial consortia from two Fennoscandian Shield sites were enriched and studied. We found that the enriched communities from the two sites consisted of distinct bacterial taxa, and alterations in the growth medium composition induced changes in cell counts. The lack of an exogenous organic carbon source (ECS) caused a notable increase in lipid metabolism in one community, while in the other, carbon starvation resulted in low overall metabolism, suggesting a dormant state. ECS supplementation increased CO2 production and SO42− utilisation, suggesting activation of a dissimilatory sulphate reduction pathway and sulphate-reducer-dominated total metabolism. However, both communities shared common universal metabolic features, most probably involving pathways needed for the maintenance of cell homeostasis (e.g., mevalonic acid pathway). Collectively, our findings indicate that the most important metabolites related to microbial reactions under varying growth conditions in enriched DTS communities include, but are not limited to, those linked to cell homeostasis, osmoregulation, lipid biosynthesis and degradation, dissimilatory sulphate reduction and isoprenoid production.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere16552
JournalEnvironmental Microbiology
Volume26
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2024
MoE publication typeA1 Journal article-refereed

Funding

This work was supported by the Finnish Research Programme on Nuclear Waste Management (KYT2022). We thank Posiva Oy for providing the Olkiluoto groundwater samples for bacterial enrichment cultivations.

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