Astrobiology (general)

Explore the "Rare Biosphere" with Julie Huber at the Oct 16 Director's Seminar

By Keith Cowing
September 20, 2006

Microbial Diversity in the Deep Sea and the Underexplored Rare Biosphere – Presenter: Julie Huber:
10/16/2006 11:00 AM PDT: The world’s oceans are teeming with microscopic life forms. The staining of cells with DNA-binding dyes (DAPI and acridine orange) coupled with epifluorescence microscopy demonstrated that nominal cell densities exceed 105/ml of sea water.

Extrapolations of these numbers predict that the oceans harbor 3.6 x 1029 microbial cells with cellular carbon of ~3 x 1017 grams. Given the enormous populations of microbes with seemingly unlimited metabolic diversity, the accumulation of mutations during the past 3.5 billion years should have led to very high levels of genetic diversity and phenotypic variation. By adopting a massively parallel 454 tag sequencing strategy, we show that bacterial communities of deep water masses of the North Atlantic and diffuse flow hydrothermal vents are one to two orders of magnitude more complex than previously reported for any microbial environment. A relatively small number of different populations dominate all samples, but thousands of low-abundance populations account for most of the observed phylogenetic diversity. This “rare biosphere” is very ancient and may represent a nearly inexhaustible source of genomic innovation. Members of the rare biosphere are highly divergent from each other and at different times in earth’s history may have had a profound impact on shaping planetary processes.

Join us at the Oct 16 seminar either in your team’s polycom room at via the web at: http://nai.arc.nasa.gov/seminars/seminar_detail.cfm?ID=91 [Source: NAI Newsletter]

Explorers Club Fellow, ex-NASA Space Station Payload manager/space biologist, Away Teams, Journalist, Lapsed climber, Synaesthete, Na’Vi-Jedi-Freman-Buddhist-mix, ASL, Devon Island and Everest Base Camp veteran, (he/him) 🖖🏻