Abstract

The characterization of metabolically active fungal isolates within the deep marine subsurface will alter current ecosystem models and living biomass estimates that are limited to bacterial and archaeal populations. Although marine fungi have been studied for over fifty years, a detailed description of fungal populations within the deep subsurface is lacking. Fungi possess metabolic pathways capable of utilizing previously considered non-bioavailable energy reserves. Therefore, metabolically active fungi would occupy a unique niche within subsurface ecosystems, with the potential to provide an organic carbon source for heterotrophic prokaryotic populations from the transformation of non-bioavailable energy into substrates, as well as from the fungal necromass itself. These organic carbon sources are not currently being considered in subsurface energy budgets. Sediments from South Pacific Gyre subsurface, one of the most energy-limited environments on Earth, were collected during the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Expedition 329. Anoxic and oxic sediment slurry enrichments using fresh sediment were used to isolate multiple fungal strains in media types that varied in organic carbon substrates and concentration. Metabolically active and dormant fungal populations were also determined from nucleic acids extracted from in situ cryopreserved South Pacific Gyre sediments. For further characterization of physical growth parameters, two isolates were chosen based on their representation of the whole South Pacific Gyre fungal community. Results from this study show that fungi have adapted to be metabolically active and key community members in South Pacific Gyre sediments and potentially within global biogeochemical cycles.

Highlights

  • Fungi can utilize a range of mechanisms to cope within extreme habitats and in those with limited sources of organic carbon and nutrients

  • Osmotic stress selected fungal spores can survive at a water activity just above 0.55, when most organisms are desiccated at a water activity of around 0.996 (Pugh et al, 1983)

  • The objective of this study was to characterize fungal populations from subsurface South Pacific Gyre (SPG) sediments collected during Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) Expedition 329 (D’Hondt et al, 2013)

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Summary

Introduction

Fungi can utilize a range of mechanisms to cope within extreme habitats and in those with limited sources of organic carbon and nutrients. Many marine fungi use nitrate as their sole nitrogen source, converting it to ammonium by the enzymes nitrate reductase and nitrite reductase (Griffin, 1996; Cathrine and Raghukumar, 2009; Mouton et al, 2012; Stief et al, 2014). These fungal survival strategies of stress selection, combativeness, and sporulation warrant the investigation of metabolically active fungi in the deep subsurface

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