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Identification of organic matter sources in sulfidic late Holocene Antarctic fjord sediments from fossil rDNA sequence analysis
Author(s) -
Coolen Marco J. L.,
Volkman John K.,
Abbas Ben,
Muyzer Gerard,
Schouten Stefan,
Sinninghe Damsté Jaap S.
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
paleoceanography
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1944-9186
pISSN - 0883-8305
DOI - 10.1029/2006pa001309
Subject(s) - navicula , diatom , temperature gradient gel electrophoresis , phylotype , biology , geology , holocene , biogenic silica , ribosomal dna , oceanography , paleontology , ecology , 16s ribosomal rna , phylogenetics , biochemistry , bacteria , gene
The 18S ribosomal DNA (rDNA) isolated from sulfidic Holocene sediments and particulate organic matter in the water column of the stratified Small Meromictic Basin (SMB) in Ellis Fjord (eastern Antarctica) was analyzed to identify possible biological sources of organic matter. Previous work had shown that the sediments contained numerous diatom frustules and high contents of a highly branched isoprenoid (HBI) C 25:2 alkene (which is a specific biomarker of certain species of the diatom genera Navicula , Haslea , Pleurosigma, or Rhizosolenia ), so we focused our search on preserved fossil 18S rDNA of diatoms using sensitive polymerase chain reaction (PCR) approaches. We did not find diatom‐derived fossil 18S rDNA using general eukaryotic primers, and even when we used primers selective for diatom 18S rDNA, we only identified a Chaetoceros phylotype, which is known to form cysts in the SMB but is not a likely source of the C 25:2 HBI. When we used PCR/denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis methods specific to phylotypes within the HBI‐biosynthesizing genera, we were able to identify three phylotypes in the sediments related to HBI‐producing strains of the genera Haslea and Navicula. The ancient DNA data thus provided a limited, but valuable, view of the diversity of late Holocene primary producers with a particular bias to specific components of the biota that were better preserved such as the Chaetoceros cysts. This use of paleogenetics also revealed unexpected possible sources of organic matter such as novel stramenopiles for which no specific lipid biomarkers are known and thus would not have been identified based on traditional lipid stratigraphy alone.

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