Detection and Isolation of Ultrasmall Microorganisms from a 120,000-Year-Old Greenland Glacier Ice Core
Open Access
- 1 December 2005
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Applied and Environmental Microbiology
- Vol. 71 (12) , 7806-7818
- https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.71.12.7806-7818.2005
Abstract
The abundant microbial population in a 3,043-m-deep Greenland glacier ice core was dominated by ultrasmall cells (3 ) that may represent intrinsically small organisms or starved, minute forms of normal-sized microbes. In order to examine their diversity and obtain isolates, we enriched for ultrasmall psychrophiles by filtering melted ice through filters with different pore sizes, inoculating anaerobic low-nutrient liquid media, and performing successive rounds of filtrations and recultivations at 5°C. Melted ice filtrates, cultures, and isolates were analyzed by scanning electron microscopy, flow cytometry, cultivation, and molecular methods. The results confirmed that numerous cells passed through 0.4-μm, 0.2-μm, and even 0.1-μm filters. Interestingly, filtration increased cell culturability from the melted ice, yielding many isolates related to high-G+C gram-positive bacteria. Comparisons between parallel filtered and nonfiltered cultures showed that (i) the proportion of 0.2-μm-filterable cells was higher in the filtered cultures after short incubations but this difference diminished after several months, (ii) more isolates were obtained from filtered (1,290 isolates) than from nonfiltered (447 isolates) cultures, and (iii) the filtration and liquid medium cultivation increased isolate diversity ( Proteobacteria ; Cytophaga-Flavobacteria-Bacteroides ; high-G+C gram-positive; and spore-forming, low-G+C gram-positive bacteria). Many isolates maintained their small cell sizes after recultivation and were phylogenetically novel or related to other ultramicrobacteria. Our filtration-cultivation procedure, combined with long incubations, enriched for novel ultrasmall-cell isolates, which is useful for studies of their metabolic properties and mechanisms for long-term survival under extreme conditions.Keywords
This publication has 45 references indexed in Scilit:
- The filtration–acclimatization method for isolation of an important fraction of the not readily cultivable bacteriaJournal of Microbiological Methods, 2004
- Cultivation and Growth Characteristics of a Diverse Group of Oligotrophic Marine GammaproteobacteriaApplied and Environmental Microbiology, 2004
- Bacterial recovery from ancient glacial iceEnvironmental Microbiology, 2003
- Phylogenetic Analysis of Anaerobic Psychrophilic Enrichment Cultures Obtained from a Greenland Glacier Ice CoreApplied and Environmental Microbiology, 2003
- Cultivation of the ubiquitous SAR11 marine bacterioplankton cladeNature, 2002
- Investigation of 0.2 μm filterable bacteria from the Western Mediterranean Sea using a molecular approach: dominance of potential starvation formsFEMS Microbiology Ecology, 2000
- Janthinobacterium agaricidamnosum sp. nov., a soft rot pathogen of Agaricus bisporusInternational Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology, 1999
- Random and repetitive primer amplified polymorphic DNA analysis ofBacillus sphaericusJournal of Applied Microbiology, 1999
- Cryobacterium psychrophilum gen. nov., sp. nov., nom. rev., comb. nov., an Obligately Psychrophilic Actinomycete To Accommodate "Curtobacterium psychrophilum" Inoue and Komagata 1976International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology, 1997
- The relationship between cell size and viability of soil bacteriaMicrobial Ecology, 1987