Evidence of a Putative Deep Sea Specific Microbiome in Marine Sponges

The microbiota of four individual deep water sponges, Lissodendoryx diversichela, Poecillastra compressa, Inflatella pellicula, and Stelletta normani, together with surrounding seawater were analysed by pyrosequencing of a region of the 16S rRNA gene common to Bacteria and Archaea. Due to sampling c...

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Main Authors: Kennedy, J., Flemer, B., Jackson, S., Morrissey, J., O'Gara, Fergal, Dobson, A.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Public Library of Science 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/36924
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author Kennedy, J.
Flemer, B.
Jackson, S.
Morrissey, J.
O'Gara, Fergal
Dobson, A.
author_facet Kennedy, J.
Flemer, B.
Jackson, S.
Morrissey, J.
O'Gara, Fergal
Dobson, A.
author_sort Kennedy, J.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The microbiota of four individual deep water sponges, Lissodendoryx diversichela, Poecillastra compressa, Inflatella pellicula, and Stelletta normani, together with surrounding seawater were analysed by pyrosequencing of a region of the 16S rRNA gene common to Bacteria and Archaea. Due to sampling constraints at depths below 700 m duplicate samples were not collected. The microbial communities of L. diversichela, P. compressa and I. pellicula were typical of low microbial abundance (LMA) sponges while S. normani had a community more typical of high microbial abundance (HMA) sponges. Analysis of the deep sea sponge microbiota revealed that the three LMA-like sponges shared a set of abundant OTUs that were distinct from those associated with sponges from shallow waters. Comparison of the pyrosequencing data with that from shallow water sponges revealed that the microbial communities of all sponges analysed have similar archaeal populations but that the bacterial populations of the deep sea sponges were distinct. Further analysis of the common and abundant OTUs from the three LMA-like sponges placed them within the groups of ammonia oxidising Archaea (Thaumarchaeota) and sulphur oxidising ?-Proteobacteria (Chromatiales). Reads from these two groups made up over 70% of all 16S rRNA genes detected from the three LMA-like sponge samples, providing evidence of a putative common microbial assemblage associated with deep sea LMA sponges.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-369242017-09-13T15:17:10Z Evidence of a Putative Deep Sea Specific Microbiome in Marine Sponges Kennedy, J. Flemer, B. Jackson, S. Morrissey, J. O'Gara, Fergal Dobson, A. shallow water sea water bacteria archaean biology ribosomal RNA sequence analysis deep sea sponges The microbiota of four individual deep water sponges, Lissodendoryx diversichela, Poecillastra compressa, Inflatella pellicula, and Stelletta normani, together with surrounding seawater were analysed by pyrosequencing of a region of the 16S rRNA gene common to Bacteria and Archaea. Due to sampling constraints at depths below 700 m duplicate samples were not collected. The microbial communities of L. diversichela, P. compressa and I. pellicula were typical of low microbial abundance (LMA) sponges while S. normani had a community more typical of high microbial abundance (HMA) sponges. Analysis of the deep sea sponge microbiota revealed that the three LMA-like sponges shared a set of abundant OTUs that were distinct from those associated with sponges from shallow waters. Comparison of the pyrosequencing data with that from shallow water sponges revealed that the microbial communities of all sponges analysed have similar archaeal populations but that the bacterial populations of the deep sea sponges were distinct. Further analysis of the common and abundant OTUs from the three LMA-like sponges placed them within the groups of ammonia oxidising Archaea (Thaumarchaeota) and sulphur oxidising ?-Proteobacteria (Chromatiales). Reads from these two groups made up over 70% of all 16S rRNA genes detected from the three LMA-like sponge samples, providing evidence of a putative common microbial assemblage associated with deep sea LMA sponges. 2014 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/36924 10.1371/journal.pone.0091092 Public Library of Science unknown
spellingShingle shallow water
sea water
bacteria
archaean biology
ribosomal RNA
sequence analysis
deep sea
sponges
Kennedy, J.
Flemer, B.
Jackson, S.
Morrissey, J.
O'Gara, Fergal
Dobson, A.
Evidence of a Putative Deep Sea Specific Microbiome in Marine Sponges
title Evidence of a Putative Deep Sea Specific Microbiome in Marine Sponges
title_full Evidence of a Putative Deep Sea Specific Microbiome in Marine Sponges
title_fullStr Evidence of a Putative Deep Sea Specific Microbiome in Marine Sponges
title_full_unstemmed Evidence of a Putative Deep Sea Specific Microbiome in Marine Sponges
title_short Evidence of a Putative Deep Sea Specific Microbiome in Marine Sponges
title_sort evidence of a putative deep sea specific microbiome in marine sponges
topic shallow water
sea water
bacteria
archaean biology
ribosomal RNA
sequence analysis
deep sea
sponges
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/36924