Biogeochemical Cycles & Geobiology

The Microbial Ecology of Serpentinites

By Keith Cowing
Status Report
biorxiv.org
November 14, 2024
Filed under , , , , , , , , , , , ,
The Microbial Ecology of Serpentinites
Global distribution of serpentinization-influenced environments that have been1412 investigated microbiologically and those that hosted 70 publicly available shotgun1413 metagenomes used in the meta-analysis of this review. Geologic systems are indicated by1414 points and abbreviations on the map, with those in green hosting metagenomes that were used in1415 the meta-analysis of this review. Bottom left insert shows the pH distribution of water samples1416 from which the metagenomes were derived, as reported by the original publication. Additional1417 information for metagenomes is shown in Supplementary Table 1. Abbreviations are defined as1418 follows (and further identified in Supplementary Table 1). NEY: Ney Springs; CED: The1419 Cedars; CROMO: Coast Range Ophiolite Microbial Observatory; SEO: Santa Elena Ophiolite;1420 TBL: Tablelands Ophiolite; RHF: Rainbow Hydrothermal Field; LCHF: Lost City Hydrothermal1421 Field; LVF: Logatchev Vent Field; AVF: Ashadze Vent Field; AUR: Aurora Seamount; LEKA:1422 Leka Ophiolite; CDV: Cabeço de Vide; VOL: Voltri Massif; YAN: Yanartaş; ALL: Allas1423 Springs; SAM: Samail Ophiolite; KMR: Khalilovsky Massif; KHF: Karei Hydrothermal Field;1424 OCHF: Old City Hydrothermal Field; HHS: Hakuba Happo Hot Springs; MAN: Manleluag1425 Spring; LCR: La Crouen Spring; PBHF: Prony Bay Hydrothermal Field. — biorxiv.org

Serpentinization, the collective set of geochemical reactions initiated by the hydration of ultramafic rock, has occurred throughout Earth history and is inferred to occur on several planets and moons in our solar system.

These reactions generate highly reducing conditions that can drive organic synthesis reactions potentially conducive to the emergence of life, while concomitantly generating fluids that are challenging for life owing to hyperalkalinity and limited inorganic carbon (and oxidant) availability.

Consequently, serpentinite-hosted biospheres offer insights into the earliest life, the habitable limits for life, and the potential for life on other planets.

However, the ability of serpentinites to support abundant microbial communities was only recognized ~20 years ago with the discovery of deep-sea hydrothermal vents emanating serpentinized fluids.

Here, we review the microbial ecology of marine and continental serpentinite-hosted biospheres in conjunction with a comparison of publicly available metagenomic sequence data from these communities to provide a global perspective of serpentinite ecology.

Synthesis of observations across global systems reveal consistent themes in the diversity, ecology, and functioning of communities. Nevertheless, individual systems exhibit nuances due to local geology, hydrology, and input of oxidized, near-surface/seawater fluids.

Further, several new (and old) questions remain including the provenance of carbon to support biomass synthesis, the physical and chemical limits of life in serpentinites, the mode and tempo of in situ evolution, and the extent to which modern serpentinites serve as analogs for those on early Earth.

These topics are explored herein from a microbial perspective to outline key knowledge-gaps that should be a focus of future research.

Taxonomic composition of 70 community metagenomes from serpentinization-1428 influenced environments. Each row represents a metagenome organized by site and by1429 increasing pH from top to bottom (within each site). Each column represents a taxonomic group1430 that was identified in >1% relative abundance in at least one of the metagenomes. Metagenomic1431 data and publicly available accession information is provided in Supplementary Table 1.1432 Community composition was evaluated from raw reads using the SingleM pipeline (described in Supplementary Methods). Taxonomic groups are defined as in the Genome Tree Database1434 (GTDB) at various taxonomic levels: p: phylum; c: class; o: order; f: family; g: genus. Sub-1435 phylum level taxa that are discussed in the manuscript are specifically included. Circles are1436 colored by their corresponding system and sized according to their estimated relative abundance,1437 as indicated by the legend on the bottom left. — biorxiv.org

The Microbial Ecology of Serpentinites, biorxiv.org

Daniel R. Colman, Eric S. Boyd, Alexis S. Templeton, John R. Spear doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.11.10.622848

Astrobiology,

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) 🖖🏻