Abstract

The diversity and abundance of sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) were investigated in Lake Suigetsu, a meromictic lake in Japan characterized by a permanent oxycline at a depth between 3 and 8 m separating the aerobic freshwater epilimnion from the anaerobic, saline, sulfidogenic hypolimnion. A quantitative competitive PCR targeting the gene coding for a portion of the α-subunit of dissimilatory sulfite reductase (dsrA) was used to assess the distribution of the SRB in the stratified water column and the surface sediments. The diversity of the SRB communities was assessed using a sequence analysis of the differing dsrA isomers. The dsrA gene copy numbers of SRB in the hypolimnic waters were from 9.6 × 103 to 7.5 × 105 copies ml−1, whereas higher dsrA copy numbers of SRB were observed in surface sediments, ranging from 1.8–8.1 × 107 copies ml−1 as estimated by competitive PCR. Phylogenetic analysis of the dsrA sequences retrieved from the surface sediments shows most belong to a deeply branching lineage of diverse dsrA sequences not related to any cultured SRB group. In contrast, dsrA sequences found in the oxycline waters were related to sequences of members of the genera Desulfonema, Desulfosarcina, and Dusulfococcus and to sequences of the incomplete oxidizers from the Desulfobulbaceae family. Diversity and abundance of dsrA genes significantly differed between the samples from the oxycline waters and the surface sediments of Lake Suigetsu, indicating habitat-specific SRB communities may contribute to the biogeochemical cycling of carbon and sulfur.

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