Abstract

ABSTRACTIt is a challenge to quantitatively distinguish active from dormant microbial populations in environmental samples. Here we present an approach for estimating the abundance of dormant sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB), present as viable endospores in environmental samples. This is achieved by inducing endospores to germinate and grow exponentially. We demonstrate this approach for thermophilic SRB in temperate sediment from Aarhus Bay, Denmark. The approach is based on measuring bulk sulfate reduction rates (SRRs) in pasteurized sediment and calculating associated cell-specific SRRs based on average values for SRB growth yield and cell size known from exponentially growing pure cultures. The method presented is a faster bioassay than most probable number enumerations and has the potential to distinguish between slow- and fast-growing SRB populations in the same sample. This bioassay is attractive given the challenges posed by endospores with respect to cell permeabilization and lysis, which are prerequisite in quantitative microscopy- and nucleic acid extraction-based strategies. These molecular approaches additionally rely on designing target-appropriate oligonucleotide probes, whereas the method presented here considers the trait of interest more broadly. This strategy thus presents a useful complement to other methods in ecological investigations of microbial biogeography and for specific industrial applications such as reservoir souring and corrosion risk assessments in the oil and gas sector.

Highlights

  • Many bacteria form resting stages, which have a strongly reduced endogenous metabolism and do not contribute to biogeochemical processes in the surrounding environment

  • Marine sediment was sampled in January 2009 from 560602000N, 102704800E in Slurries of Aarhus Bay surface sediment were incubated at 50C with and without organic substrate amendment

  • Two separate exponential increases in sulfate reduction rates (SRRs) were measured within 120 h (Figure 1A and 1C)

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Summary

Introduction

Many bacteria form resting stages, which have a strongly reduced endogenous metabolism and do not contribute to biogeochemical processes in the surrounding environment. We present an alternative method to estimate the abundance of endospores of thermophilic SRB that germinate and grow in experimentally heated marine sediment.

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