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| Enlarge ImageA COMPLEX TREE OF LIFEMicrobes are living archives of Earth's evolutionary history. The discovery of a great variety of deep-sea microorganisms (using diverse metabolic strategies to live in diverse habitats) indicates that they evolved along different evolutionary pathways. Using genetic analyses, scientists can trace these pathways to reconstruct when various microbial biochemical and metabolic machinery developed, diverged, or intermingled in the three major domains of life: bacteria, archaea, and eukaryotes. (Illustration by Jayne Doucette, WHOI) |
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| Enlarge ImageMICROBES IN MANY COLORSScientists have found a multitude of deep-sea microorganisms using a variety of chemical compounds to live. Yellow bacterial mats atop sediments in the Guaymas Basin in the Sea of California (top) are evidence of microbes that oxidize sulfide; the sediments underneath harbor methane-oxidizing archaea. The orange mats (above) are made by microbes that live off iron in seafloor rocks off Hawaii. (Top photo courtesy of Katrina Edwards, WHOI. Bottom photo by Terry Kirby, University of Hawaii) |
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By Andreas Teske, Associate Professor
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
and Katrina Edwards, Associate Scientist
Marine Chemistry & Geochemistry Dept.
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution At the helm of the British ship Endeavor, James Cook departed
England in 1768. He rounded Cape Horn in January 1769, entering the
vast, unexplored Pacific and Southern Oceans and opening up an entirely
new vista on the world. Cook “added a hemisphere” to the body of
European knowledge, said the naturalist Charles Darwin. He discovered
new Pacific islands and Australia. He found never-seen-before animal
species and more than 1,000 exotic species of plants. In the 1830s, Darwin himself sailed aboard the Beagle
to the GalÁpagos Islands. The observations he made there of animal life
spurred his theory of natural selection, which revolutionized our
understanding of the origin and evolution of species. Centuries
after these classical voyages, we are making discoveries that are
similarly shaking and expanding prevailing ideas about life on our
planet. Once again we have embarked on voyages to explore remote,
unknown areas of our planetthis time in, rather than on, the oceans. Wherever
we have looked in the oceans, we have found previously unknown
microorganisms. We have often found them living in conditions once
thought to be incompatible with life, using unfamiliar physiologic and
metabolic adaptations. These discoveries have radically changed our
thinking about where and how life may have originated and evolved on
this planet, and where it might exist on others. The seafloor
and the rocky regions below it offer boundless new potential habitats
to explore. With research submersibles, robotic vehicles, and new
sampling tools and techniques, marine microbiologists are making
discoveries at an unprecedented rate. We are opening a wide window onto
the immense, unexplored realm of the smallest, least-known, but most
important life forms. We have entered the classical age of
microbiology. Recent discoveries Without
microorganisms, there would be no other life on Earth. Unseen,
ubiquitous, and unicellular, microorganisms nevertheless keep the
planet running. Photosynthesizing plankton form the base of the marine
food chain and keep the biosphere well oxygenated. At the other end of
the cycle, other microbes decompose organic molecules for reuse. It
was not until 1977 that we discovered cyanobacteria in the open ocean,
which turn out to be among the most abundant and important bacteria on
Earth. These bacteria were the photosynthetic pioneers responsible 3
billion years ago for infusing our planet’s atmosphere with
oxygen.undefined As recently as the mid-1970s, scientists
believed there were only two domains of life on Earth: prokaryotes
(single-celled bacteria, without nuclei or complex cellular structures)
and eukaryotes (organisms made of cells with nuclei, ranging from
single-celled amoebae to all multicellular life, including fungi,
plants, reptiles, and mammals). Then in 1977, Carl Woese of the
University of Illinois identified a wholly new domain of single-celled
life forms, called archaea, which are as genetically different from
bacteria as bacteria are from trees and people. Archaea, or
“ancient ones,” have existed for billions of years on Earth. Many are
extremophiles that thrive in hot, cold, salty, acidic, oxygen-deprived,
or other extreme environments. Such conditions prevailed on an
adolescent Earth, before cyanobacteria evolved and fundamentally
changed Earth’s atmosphere. Life in unexpected places In
the late 1970s, we also discovered microbial communities in the dark
and high-pressure depths of the seafloorliving on superheated, acidic,
sulfide-rich fluids emanating from hydrothermal vents. Since then, we
have found microbes that thrive in polar ice; on ocean floor lava;
buried beneath seafloor sediments; and in the rocky nooks beneath the
seafloor. They exploit a wide range of chemical reactions, using
hydrogen sulfide, iron compounds, nitrites, methane, and other chemical
compounds to obtain energy and resources to grow. (See Revealing the Ocean’s Invisible Abundance and Is Life Thriving Deep Beneath the Seafloor? ) This
great variety of habitats and metabolic strategies indicates that
microbes have taken a diversity of evolutionary pathways in the past.
Ancient microbial lineages, which had their origin (and possible
heyday) when different biogeochemical conditions prevailed on Earth,
can survive today in diverse habitats that still exist in the mostly
unknown deep subsurface of oceans. These microbes are living archives
of Earth’s evolutionary history. The novel microbial lineages we
are finding on Earth are also expanding and guiding our search for life
that may exist in the extreme environments on other planetary bodies.
With our eyes opened wider to more possibilities, we can look for life
in previously unsuspected places: in the iron-rich rocks of the red
planet, Mars; beneath of ice-covered surface of Jupiter’s volcanic
moon, Europa; or on Titan, Saturn’s moon, which now shows evidence of
having liquid-methane lakes to go along with its methane-rich
atmosphere. Portals into microspace Like
Cook and Darwin, today’s scientists collect specimens in remote places,
but studying microorganisms presents a new set of challenges. To study
microbes, scientists need to keep them alive, but it is often hard to
reproduce undersea conditions in the laboratory, and only some
microbial species have been successfully cultured. Instead,
microbiologists have exploited modern genetic techniques to search for,
identify, and study newly found microbes. They examine samples from
deep-sea environments containing unknown species of microbes, locate
gene sequences within them, and compare these sequences with those of
known, cultured microbial species. An unknown organism in the
wild can be identifiedon the basis of how similar gene sequences are
to those of known microbeswithout scientists ever having to grow it in
the laboratory. Fully half of the bacterial branches known today have
never been cultured and have been identified only by gene sequences. Genomic investigations Gene
sequences also allow scientists to trace microorganisms’ evolutionary
history. All microorganisms share some common genetic equipment,
including certain genes, known as “conserved genes,” which are the
blueprints for basic biochemical functions. Mutations that change gene
sequences accumulate in genes over evolutionary time, but this process
occurs at a far slower rate in conserved genes than in other genes.
Thus, conserved genes are similar in closely related organisms and less
similar in distantly related ones. The greater the differences in
conserved genes shared by two organisms, the further back in time they
diverged in evolutionary history. By analyzing the DNA of
conserved genes, scientists can place microorganisms in evolutionary
trees that encompass deep evolutionary time and chronicle when various
microbial biochemical and metabolic machinery developed and diverged.
Surveying samples from marine environments, microbiologists are finding
novel gene sequences from unknown organisms and accumulating libraries
of gene sequences to reference newer discoveries. Little microbes that could At
the same time, microbiologists are also extracting nucleic acids from
microbes to determine what protein products the nucleic acids code for.
By these means, we can find out something about what compounds and
biochemical mechanisms the microorganisms use to obtain energy and
carbon to live and grow. In addition, microbiologists are
analyzing isotopes of elements incorporated into microbes during their
metabolic processes. These not only provide more clues to learn about
the microbes’ biochemical machinery, they also reveal how the microbes
affect the rocks they live in, seawater chemistry, and even the
atmosphere. In 2000, for example, we found new species of
microbes that live directly off minerals in seafloor rock. They oxidize
iron in the rocks to obtain energy and convert carbon dioxide in
seawater into organic matter to grow. (See Living Large in Microscopic Nooks) If
these previously unknown bacteria turn out to be as abundant as they
seem to be, they may play a longstanding, important role in Earth’s
climate by extracting huge amounts of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide
from seawater and keeping it out of the atmosphere (while producing up
to a million tons of biomass). They may have changed the geology of the
seafloor by changing the chemical composition of seafloor rocks. They
may have been evolutionary pioneers on an iron-rich, oxygen-poor early
Earth, or inhabitants of iron-rich, oxygen-poor planets today, such as
Mars.
No oxygen, no problem Over the past
few years, for example, we have sampled and analyzed sediments in the
Guaymas Basin in the Gulf of California, where hundreds of meters of
sediments have piled on top of hydrothermal vents. We had expected to
find the molecular signs of archaea adapted to high heat
(hyperthermophiles), which are well known at hydrothermal vents. But
instead we found something completely differenta major new type of
archaea, related to known methane-producing archaea, or methanogens. We
believe that the high geothermal heat emanating from the hydrothermal
vent site is breaking down organic matter in the sediments into
short-chain fatty acids, ammonia, and more methane. Some of these
compounds percolate upward and are released from the sediments into the
oceanbut not all of them. In the sediments we also found isotopic and
gene sequence signatures that reveal archaeal populations that use
methane to grow in oxygen-free environments, such as those beneath the
Guaymas sediments. The discovery of these anaerobic methanotrophs
fills a large gap in our knowledge of Earth’s microbial and geochemical
cycles. Microbes that generate methane, and others that consume it,
play crucial roles in minimizing how much methanea greenhouse gas more
potent than carbon dioxideis released from the ocean to the atmosphere. These
microorganisms complete a subsurface methane cycle that allows life to
flourish at the seafloor, not only in the microbial oases of
hydrothermal vent sites, but also in deep marine sediments and the
subsurface biosphere. We are now exploring deep marine sediments in the
Pacific to investigate whether this phenomenon is global. Though
the pace of microbial discoveries has increased, history warns us that
we haven’t seen everything yet. The book on microbial life, on Earth
and elsewhere in the universe, is far from written.
Posted: March 8, 2005 [top] |