Energetic and hydrogen limitations of thermophilic and hyperthermophilic methanogens
Abstract
Deep-sea hydrothermal vents are a unique ecosystem, based ultimately not on photosynthesis but chemosynthetic primary production. This makes them an excellent analog environment for the early Earth, and for potential extraterrestrial habitable environments, such as those on Mars and Europa. The habitability of given vent systems for chemoautotrophic prokaryotes can be modeled energetically by estimating the available Gibbs energy for specific modes of chemoautotrophy, using geochemical data and mixing models for hydrothermal fluids and seawater (McCollom and Shock, 1997). However, modeling to date has largely not taken into account variation in organisms' energy demands in these environments. Controls on maintenance energies are widely assumed to be temperature-dependent, rising with increasing temperature optima (Tijhuis et al., 1993), and species-independent. The impacts of other environmental stressors and particular energy-gathering strategies on maintenance energies have not been investigated. We have undertaken culture-based studies of growth and maintenance energies in thermophilic and hyperthermophilic methanogenic (hydrogenotrophic) archaea from deep-sea hydrothermal vents to investigate potential controls on energy demands in hydrothermal vent microbes, and to quantify their growth and maintenance energies for future bioenergetic modeling. We have investigated trends in their growth energies over their full temperature range and a range of nitrogen concentrations, and in their maintenance energies at different hydrogen concentrations. Growth energies in these organisms appear to rise with temperature, but do not vary between hyperthermophilic and thermophilic methanogens. Nitrogen availability at tested levels (40μM - 9.4 mM) does not appear to affect growth energies in all but one tested organism. In continuous chemostat culture, specific methane production varied with hydrogen availability but was similar between a thermophilic and a hyperthermophilic methanogen. These results reflect our observational data from our field site, the Juan de Fuca Ridge hydrothermal vent systems (JdFR), where methanogen presence and abundance was closely correlated to hydrogen concentration in vent fluid. The long-term goal of this project is to model the growth of thermophilic and hyperthermophilic methanogens in hydrothermal vents at the JdFR using physical and chemical constraints from those sites, and use this data to refine our habitability models for the early Earth and extraterrestrial hydrothermal systems.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2013
- Bibcode:
- 2013AGUFM.B13C0478S
- Keywords:
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- 0465 BIOGEOSCIENCES Microbiology: ecology;
- physiology and genomics;
- 0406 BIOGEOSCIENCES Astrobiology and extraterrestrial materials;
- 0450 BIOGEOSCIENCES Hydrothermal systems