Abstract Extremely cold microbial habitats on Earth
(those below -30 °C) are rare and have not been surveyed
for microbes as extensively as environments in the 0 to
-20 °C range. Using cryoprotected growth media incubated
at -5 °C, we enriched a cold-active Pseudomonas
species from -50 °C ice collected from a utility tunnel
for wastewater pipes under Amundsen–Scott South Pole
Station, Antarctica. The isolate, strain UC-1, is related to
other cold-active Pseudomonas species, most notably P.
psychrophila, and grew at -5 °C to +34–37 °C; growth
of UC-1 at +3 °C was significantly faster than at +34 °C.
Strain UC-1 synthesized a surface exopolymer and high
levels of unsaturated fatty acids under cold growth conditions.
A 16S rRNA gene diversity screen of the ice sample that yielded strain UC-1 revealed over 1200 operational
taxonomic units (OTUs) distributed across eight major
classes of Bacteria. Many of the OTUs were Clostridia and
Bacteriodia and some of these were probably of wastewater
origin. However, a significant fraction of the OTUs were
Proteobacteria and Actinobacteria of likely environmental
origin. Our results shed light on the lower temperature limits
to life and the possible existence of functional microbial
communities in ultra-cold environments.
Revised: February 19, 2020 |
Published: September 1, 2017
Citation
Madigan M.T., M.L. Kempher, K.S. Bender, P. Sullivan, W. Sattley, A. Dohnalkova, and S.B. Joye. 2017.Characterization of a cold-active bacterium isolated from the South Pole "Ice Tunnel".Extremophiles 21, no. 5:891-901.PNNL-SA-129520.doi:10.1007/s00792-017-0950-2