Abstract

The Naica Mine in northern Mexico is famous for its giant gypsum crystals, which may reach up to 11 m long and contain fluid inclusions that might have captured microorganisms during their formation. These crystals formed under particularly stable geochemical conditions in cavities filled by low salinity hydrothermal water at 54–58°C. We have explored the microbial diversity associated to these deep, saline hydrothermal waters collected in the deepest (ca. 700–760 m) mineshafts by amplifying, cloning and sequencing small-subunit ribosomal RNA genes using primers specific for archaea, bacteria, and eukaryotes. Eukaryotes were not detectable in the samples and the prokaryotic diversity identified was very low. Two archaeal operational taxonomic units (OTUs) were detected in one sample. They clustered with, respectively, basal Thaumarchaeota lineages and with a large clade of environmental sequences branching at the base of the Thermoplasmatales within the Euryarchaeota. Bacterial sequences belonged to the Candidate Division OP3, Firmicutes and the Alpha- and Beta-proteobacteria. Most of the lineages detected appear autochthonous to the Naica system, since they had as closest representatives environmental sequences retrieved from deep sediments or the deep subsurface. In addition, the high GC content of 16S rRNA gene sequences belonging to the archaea and to some OP3 OTUs suggests that at least these lineages are thermophilic. Attempts to amplify diagnostic functional genes for methanogenesis (mcrA) and sulfate reduction (dsrAB) were unsuccessful, suggesting that those activities, if present, are not important in the aquifer. By contrast, genes encoding archaeal ammonium monooxygenase (AamoA) were amplified, suggesting that Naica Thaumarchaeota are involved in nitrification. These organisms are likely thermophilic chemolithoautotrophs adapted to thrive in an extremely energy-limited environment.

Highlights

  • At the onset of the 1980s, the detection of living microorganisms in deep sediment cores revealed the occurrence of a hitherto unsuspected but vast subsurface ecosystem associated to deepsea sediments as well as continental and oceanic crusts (Ghiorse and Wilson, 1988; Gold, 1992; White et al, 1998; Whitman et al, 1998; Pedersen, 2000)

  • We have explored the microbial diversity associated to these deep, saline hydrothermal waters collected in the deepest mineshafts by amplifying, cloning and sequencing small-subunit ribosomal RNA genes using primers specific for archaea, bacteria, and eukaryotes

  • At the onset of the 1980s, the detection of living microorganisms in deep sediment cores revealed the occurrence of a hitherto unsuspected but vast subsurface ecosystem associated to deepsea sediments as well as continental and oceanic crusts (Ghiorse and Wilson, 1988; Gold, 1992; White et al, 1998; Whitman et al, 1998; Pedersen, 2000)

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Summary

Introduction

At the onset of the 1980s, the detection of living microorganisms in deep sediment cores revealed the occurrence of a hitherto unsuspected but vast subsurface ecosystem associated to deepsea sediments as well as continental and oceanic crusts (Ghiorse and Wilson, 1988; Gold, 1992; White et al, 1998; Whitman et al, 1998; Pedersen, 2000). We have explored the microbial diversity associated to these deep, saline hydrothermal waters collected in the deepest

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