Introduction
The Arctic environment is characterized by an extremely cold climate, short growing season, and limited nutrient supply [22]. For the last few decades, the arctic environment has been undergoing large changes because of increase in temperature caused by global warming, increased human activity and a wide-range of transport pollutants [14]. The temperatures in the Arctic have increased twice as much as the global average over the past 100 years, resulting in thawing glacier and exposure of glacier forelands that have long been covered by ice [6, 10, 30]. The forelands exposed after glacial retreat present new habitats for microorganisms that then play important roles in biogeochemical cycles, soil development, heterotrophic activities and their associated plant growth [29]. Therefore, the soil microbial communities in the glacier foreland could be key determinants of ecosystem stability and function in the newly exposed region. However, fundamental knowledge regarding microbial communities in the glacier foreland has been insufficient to understand their ecosystems, resulting in the need for studies of microbial diversity and composition in these Arctic environments [9, 29].
Our knowledge regarding microbial diversity has been greatly extended by molecular analysis of certain marker genes including 16S rRNA, rpoB (β subunit of RNA polymerase), and gyrB (structural gene for the DNA gyrase β subunit) that enable investigation of microbial community structure by providing valuable phylogenetic information in the environmental samples [25, 32]. Since development of the PCR-based 16S rRNA gene cloning technique, various culture-independent approaches targeting effective marker genes or gene regions have been developed and successively applied to assessment of the microbial community structure, including fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), rRNA slot-blot hybridization, denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE), and terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP) [16, 24, 26, 27]. However, the aforementioned molecular methods are not adequate to reveal overall microbial communities of certain environments because the techniques are still time-consuming, expensive and unreliable, since analysis of subdominant microbial groups and species provide results with low resolutions [32]. To overcome these limitations, various next-generation sequencing (NGS) platforms have recently been applied to the field of microbial ecology, permitting in-depth sequencing and determination of microbial community dynamics in various types of environments with high taxonomic resolution [20, 38]. These NGS platforms include: 1) 454 sequencing systems as a pyrosequencing-based high-throughput sequencing system, 2) SOLiD and Illumina second-generation sequencing systems based on the oligonucleotide ligation technique, 3) the Ion Torrent Personal Genome Machine (PGM) platform based on semiconductor technology [36]. Since the Ion Torrent PGM was most recently introduced and takes a different approach to sequencing than the other methods, several recent studies have investigated analysis of microbial community dynamics using this platform [34].
Since the end of the Little Ice Age, the glacier has decreased and a new terrestrial ecosystem has appeared in the Midtre Lovénbreen foreland in Svalbard [18]. To date, although vegetation and bacterial succession related to the ecosystem in this area have been studied [10, 15, 21, 25], we still lack detailed information regarding variations in members of the microbial community such as archaea and eukaryotic microorganisms. Therefore, the present study was conducted to investigate microbial communities in Arctic soil samples (ML4 and ML7) of Midtre Lovénbreen in Svalbard by employing the Ion Torrent PGM as NGS platform. The ML4 site was recently exposed from the ice and now contains sparsely distributed plant species. On the contrary, the ML7 site was exposed before the Little Ice Age and contained several plants species growing with a coverage of 40% [13]. Our results will provide suitable application of a scalable and high-throughput Ion Torrent PGM platform for metagenomic analysis of the microbial community structure.
Materials and Methods
Sampling site description
Soil samples (0−5 cm depth) were collected from two regions (ML4 and ML7) on the glacier foreland of Midtre Lovénbreen, Svalbard (78.9°N, 12.0°E) [13]. The two groups can be described as follows: the average age of ML4 is 33 years since the glacial retreat, and ML7 is outside the glacier moraine before the Little Ice Age. The physical and chemical properties of soil samples taken from ML4 and ML7 differed from each other. Soil pH of ML4 (pH 8.3) was slightly higher than that of ML7 (pH 7.6). Soil from ML4 was classified as sandy loam, but soil from ML7 was classified as loam. ML7 showed higher soil organic carbon concentration (2.80 ± 0.58%) than ML4 (0.44 ± 0.33%). Saxifraga oppositifolia was observed first, and its coverage was 10% in ML4, but diverse vascular plants such as Salix polaris and Silene acaulis covered 40% of the ground in ML7 [13].
Ion Torrent PGM sequencing
Total genomic DNA was extracted using a commercially available DNA extraction kit (FDS-FastDNA SPIN Kit for soil; MP Biomedicals) [33]. The extracted genomic DNA was stored at −20℃. Library preparation was conducted using the Thermo ScientificTM Museek Library Preparation Kit for Ion TorrentTM with 100 ng of extracted genomic DNAs according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Each sample was replicated three times (technical replicates). MuA transposase enzyme catalyzes the fragmentation of DNA and tags the fragments. Platform specific adaptors were added and amplified using a High-Fidelity DNA polymerase. Products of 400 bp to 450 bp were obtained using the E-Gel SizeSelectTM 2% Agarose Gel. The libraries were quantified using an Agilent 2100 Bioanalyzer with High Sensitivity DNA chips following the manufacturer’s protocol. Emulsion PCR was performed using an Ion OneTouch 400 Template Kit (Life Technologies, CA, USA) and run on the Ion OneTouch 2 platform. Emulsion PCR products were enriched for templated Ion Sphere™ Particles (ISPs) using the OneTouch ES instrument (Life Technologies) according to the manufacturer's recommendations. Sequencing was performed on the Ion PGM™ System and 318v2 chip using the Ion PGM™ Sequencing 400 Kit (Ion Torrent™, Thermo Fisher) following the manufacturer’s recommendations.
Statistical analysis
Taxonomic profiles of the metagenomic reads obtained from Ion Torrent PGM sequencing were assigned using Metagenome Rapid Annotation with the Subsystem Technology (MG-RAST) server (http://metagenomics.nmpdr.org/) [17]. The abundance data were identified via the lowest common ancestor using 1e-05 as the maximum e-value, a minimum identify of 60%, and a minimum alignment length of 15 as a cutoff. Statistical analysis for distinct taxonomic levels from the MG-RAST server was conducted using the Statistical Analyses of Metagenomic Profiles (STAMP) software v2.0 [23]. To analyze the phylotype diversity, the richness estimators, Chao_1, and Shannon and Simpson diversity indices were calculated using the Species Prediction and Diversity Estimation (SPADE) software [5].
Results and Discussion
Data characteristics
The microbial communities from Arctic soil samples (ML4 and ML7) in the Midtre Lovénbreen, Svalbard were investigated using a metagenome sequencing method. A total of 2,798,108 and 1,691,859 reads with average lengths of 147 and 125 bp were finally obtained after sequence quality control steps (a predicted error rate of one percent, Q20) from ML4 and ML7 samples, respectively. After quality control, 1,768,300 and 793,906 reads of each sample were successively assigned to bacteria, archaea and eukaryotes in the database of the MG-RAST server (Table 1). When microbial communities were analyzed, higher bacterial abundance and diversity were found than that of archaeal or eukaryotic diversity in both sites. At the domain level, the following numbers of bacterial reads 1,526,336 and 692,532 were found to be dominant for ML4 and ML7, respectively. The minor distributions consisted of archaea (11,489 for ML4 and 4,825 for ML7) and eukaryotes (16,990 and 9,257). Although the numbers of reads for each domain in both samples were uneven, comparison among the communities of three domains via diversity indices revealed that the bacterial abundance was higher than that of archaea and eukaryotes, showing that the high operational taxonomic units (OTUs) phylotype richness of bacteria affected the richness estimator, Chao_1 (Table 2). The diversity indices also exhibited consistent patterns with species richness, regardless of sample sites, with the bacterial communities to showing the greatest diversity (Shannon, 6.26 and 6.22; Simpson, 0.00 and 0.00) and archaea showing the lowest diversity (Shannon, 4.31 and 4.28; Simpson, 0.02 and 0.02). This significant difference in diversity between bacterial and other communities was consistent with the results of previously studies [12, 31].
Table 1.Abundance of microbial communities about domain levels in ML4 and ML7 samples.
Table 2.Summary of OUT counts, richness and diversity estimates for the bacteria, archaea and eukaryotes in ML4 and ML7 samples.
Bacterial community structure
The bacterial community compositions of the ML4 and ML7 samples were similar and classified into 28 different phyla including Proteobacteria, Actinobacteria, Planctomycetes, Firmicutes, Verrucomicrobia, Acidobacteria, Cyanobacteria, Bacteroidetes, Chloroflexi, and other 19 candidates (Fig. 1). The dominant phyla were revealed to be Proteobacteria (40.3% and 43.3%) and Actinobacteria (22.9% and 24.9%). These two predominant phyla accounted for more than half of the total bacterial sequences. The bacterial community structure exhibited good consistency with the findings of previous studies showed that Proteobacteria and Actinobacteria were the dominant bacterial groups in Arctic soil samples [22, 35]. DGGE analysis of an active layer from the Canadian high Arctic also showed that the dominant bands corresponded to Proteobacteria and Actinobacteria [31]. A few previous studies reported that the metabolically versatile Actinobacteria, oligotrophic Acidobacteria, and widely distributed Bacteroidetes were dominant in Arctic tundra soils [15, 22]. Several genera from the phylum Actinobacteria were detected in this study. Specifically, the detection of Nocardia, which is known to form mycelia, may be advantageous in oligotrophic environments as its hyphae can absorb water and nutrients. The bacterial community in this study also included Planctomycetes (6.4% and 6.0%), Acidobacteria (2.8% and 3.8%) and Bacteroidetes (4.5% and 3.1%), although these groups were less abundant than others. The abundance of the phylum Acidobacteria may reflect the low levels of nutrients present in high Arctic soils and the decrease in soil pH occurring along the chronosequence [11]. The abundance of the phylum Cyanobacteria (6.5% and 3.7%) indicates that it is as an essential ecosystem engineer related to the nitrogen fixation process particularly in oligotrophic environments such as glacial foreland in Arctic cryoconite communities [7, 8, 27, 28]. While analyzing the methane-oxidizing bacteria within the Proteobacteria group, Beijerinckiaceae (0.2% and 0.3%) and Methylocystaceae (0.1% and 0.2%) were detected as Alphaproteobacteria and Methylococcaceae (0.2% and 0.2%) as Gammaproteobacteria which was in accordance with the results of another investigation of the Midtre Lovénbreen soil of Svalbard, Arctic [13].
Fig. 1.Relative abundance of phylum (A) and class levels (B) in bacterial community based on OTUs distribution in ML4 and ML7 Arctic soil samples. The combined distribution of minor phyla and classes except those represented as majors was represented to be “Others”.
Archaeal community structure
In the case of archaeal community structure, ML4 and ML7 samples exhibited a similar composition. When compared to the bacterial community structure, the archaeal community structure was relatively simple, consisting Euryarchaeota (84.4% and 81.1%), followed by Crenarchaeota (10.6% and 13.1%), an unclassified group (2.6% and 3.1%), Thaumarchaeota (1.8% and 2.3%) and minor groups including Korarchaeota and Nanoarchaeota (Fig. 2). This order of community composition is strongly comparable to that of the subarctic Alaskan tundra based on 454 pyrosequencing [22]. A previous study of the archaeal community structure of the active layer soil from Resolute in the Canadian High Arctic also supported our results, with Euryarchaeota acting as the major archaea group [12]. In addition, the relatively high levels of Crenarchaeota and Thaumarchaeota were comparable to the results of other studies of the archaeal community structure in the Canadian High Arctic [31]. Thaumarchaeota is known to play a major role in geochemical cycles of bioelements including carbon and nitrogen in nature [3, 19].
Fig. 2.Relative abundance of phylum (A) and class levels (B) in archaeal community based on OTUs distribution in ML4 and ML7 Arctic soil samples. The combined distribution of minor phyla and classes except those represented as majors was represented to be “Others”.
The major class within the Euryarchaeota group was Methanomicrobia (34.2% and 34.9%) which is consistent with the results of other studies reporting that the class Methanomicrobia is abundant in subarctic Tundra soil [22]. In addition, most archaeal communities found in the active layer and permafrost of the Canadian High Arctic were reportedly composed of Methanomicrobia and Methanobacteria based on microarray analysis [37]. Among the Methanomicrobia class, the abundant genus was revealed to be Methanosarcina, followed by Methanospirillum, which may be a potentially large source of atmospheric methane [4, 12]. These results combined with the bacterial community structure that consists of methane-oxidizing bacteria strongly imply that the simultaneous production and consumption of methane is one of the key components of the carbon cycle in the Midtre Lovénbreen foreland in Svalbard.
Eukaryotic community structure
The eukaryotic community in ML4 and ML7 was found to be diverse, predominantly composed of Ascomycota (33.8% and 50.0%), Streptophyta (19.3% and 14.6%) and Chordata (14.0% and 12.9%) (Fig. 3). Although most studies have focused on analysis of bacterial and archaeal communities in Arctic environments, the fungal community composition in Svalbard was recently studied by cloning and sequencing the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) fragments. In that study, the major groups of Arctic Dryas octopetala root-associated fungal community were Basidiomycota (68.8%) and Ascomycota (30.7%) [1]. Another similar study showed that the Arctic Bistorta vivipara root-associated fungal community in Svalbard had the same major groups based on the 454 pyrosequencing approach [2]. Although Basidiomycota was a relatively minor group (2.8% and 3.3%) in our study, the major abundance of Ascomycota was comparable to that of previous studies. This incongruence might be due to the different methods of microbial community analysis, of which the sequence depth in the approaches using the sequencing of ITS fragments and pyrosequencing are insufficient to fully recover the diversity of microbial communities, resulting in the recovered taxonomic profile being incomplete. In another study, Saxifraga oppositifolia was regularly observed in the ML4 region, whereas vascular plants such as Salix polaris and Silene acaulis were diversely distributed in the ML7 region [13]. In addition, the Arctic Dryas octopetala was not observed in either region due to its growth condition as dry environments. Basidiomycota is represented by fungal biomass in the form of extraradical mycelium and thick ectomycorrhizal (ECM) mantles, whereas Ascomycota was found to have a sparse amount of external mycelium, thin mantles and endophytes [1]. A previous study of the phylogenetic relationship between arctic endophytes and plants living in the arctic Tundra in Nunavut, Canada showed that the Dothideomycetes, Sordariomycetes and Leotiomycetes support our findings, with the major class of Ascomycota being Sordariomycetes (12.3% and 12.9%), Leotiomycetes (3.2% and 3.0%), and Dothideomycetes (2.5% and 3.9%).
Fig. 3.Relative abundance of phylum (A) and class levels (B) in eukaryotic community based on OTUs distribution in ML4 and ML7 Arctic soil samples. The combined distribution of minor phyla and classes except those represented as majors was represented to be “Others”.
In summary, the bacterial, archaeal and eukaryotic communities in Arctic soil from the glacier foreland of Midtre Lovénbreen in Svalbard were examined with a high resolution by using the scalable and rapid NGS technologies, in particular, the Ion Torrent PGM platform. Analysis of soil microorganisms other than bacteria has been limited in this region due to the low mass of microorganisms; however, this NGS-based metagenomic approach could address this limitation, enabling analysis of the whole microbial community structures including bacteria, archaea and even eukaryotes more rapidly, than previously employed molecular methods such as PCR-based 16S rRNA gene cloning, DGGE and pyrosequencing. There have been many studies of the microbial community structures in Svalbard Arctic regions and it is difficult to characterize and compare microbial communities in Arctic soil samples. However, the results of the present study are concordant with those of other previous studies of microbial ecosystems in Arctic region.
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