Microorganisms (Bacteria 16S; Eukaryota 18S) from soil crusts in polar (Arctic and Antarctic) ecosystems

Dernière version Publié par SCAR - Microbial Antarctic Resource System le mars 19, 2019 SCAR - Microbial Antarctic Resource System
Date de publication:
19 mars 2019
Licence:
CC-BY 4.0

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Description

Amplicon sequencing dataset (Illumina MiSeq) of Bacteria and Eukaryotes in Soil crusts on Svalbard and Antarctica

Versions

Le tableau ci-dessous n'affiche que les versions publiées de la ressource accessibles publiquement.

Comment citer

Les chercheurs doivent citer cette ressource comme suit:

Rippin M, Lange S, Sausen N, Becker B (2019): Microorganisms (Bacteria 16S; Eukaryota 18S) from soil crusts in polar (Arctic and Antarctic) ecosystems. v1.1. SCAR - Microbial Antarctic Resource System. Dataset/Metadata. https://ipt.biodiversity.aq/resource?r=microorganisms_polar_biological_soil_crusts&v=1.1

Droits

Les chercheurs doivent respecter la déclaration de droits suivante:

L’éditeur et détenteur des droits de cette ressource est SCAR - Microbial Antarctic Resource System. Ce travail est sous licence Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) 4.0.

Enregistrement GBIF

Cette ressource a été enregistrée sur le portail GBIF, et possède l'UUID GBIF suivante : a9a93a1e-4470-49c3-a98c-72f36c382090.  SCAR - Microbial Antarctic Resource System publie cette ressource, et est enregistré dans le GBIF comme éditeur de données avec l'approbation du Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research.

Mots-clé

Metadata

Contacts

Martin Rippin
  • Créateur
  • Personne De Contact
University of Cologne
Cologne
DE
Sebastian Lange
  • Créateur
University of Cologne
Cologne
DE
Nicole Sausen
  • Créateur
University of Cologne
Cologne
DE
Burkhard Becker
  • Créateur
  • Personne De Contact
University of Cologne
Cologne
DE
Maxime Sweetlove
  • Fournisseur Des Métadonnées
  • Research assistent
Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences
  • Rue Vautier 29
Brussels
BE

Couverture géographique

Biological crusts were sampled in Antarctica at the Spanish Juan Carlos I Antarctic Base, and on Svalbard at Breinosa Gruve 7, Endalen, Ny-Alesund and Todalen

Enveloppe géographique Sud Ouest [-62,665, -60,395], Nord Est [78,923, 15,761]

Couverture taxonomique

Bacteria were targeted by sequencing the 16S ssu rRNA gene (v2-v3 region)

Domain Bacteria (Bacteria)

Eukaryotes were targeted by sequencing the 18S ssu rRNA gene (v4 region)

Domain Eukaryota (Eukaryotes)

Couverture temporelle

Date de début / Date de fin 2014-08-24 / 2015-02-05

Données sur le projet

Pas de description disponible

Titre Polarcrust
Financement This study was funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) within the project ‘Polarcrust’ (BE1779/18-1) which is part of the Priority Program 1158 ‘Antarctic Research’.

Les personnes impliquées dans le projet:

Martin Rippin

Méthodes d'échantillonnage

The nucleic acid content of the samples was preserved using the LifeGuard Soil Preservation Solution (MO BIO Laboratories, Carlsbad, CA, USA) according to the manufacturer's instructions and stored at −80°C.

Etendue de l'étude Biological soil crust samples were collected from the Arctic Svalbard, Norway and Livingston Island, Antarctic Peninsula, in August 2014 and January 2015, respectively.

Description des étapes de la méthode:

  1. Total nucleic acids were extracted from the samples (all in triplicates, except NA that was only one sample) using the cetyltrimethylammonium bromide protocol according to Rippin, Komsic-Buchmann and Becker (2016) with several modifications: The LifeGuard Soil Preservation Solution was not removed prior to the extraction and the aqueous phase, retained after the second chloroform washing step, was further processed using the peqGOLD Plant RNA Kit (peqlab/VWR International, Erlangen, Germany) according to the manufacturer's instructions.
  2. To obtain DNA, the extract was treated with RNase A (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA) as suggested in the manual and purified using the illustra MicroSpin S-400 HR Columns (GE Healthcare, Little Chalfont, UK). RNA-based metabarcoding was only performed for the samples NÅ and JC as the sampling sites are most comparable in terms of climate (seaside, similar precipitation patterns etc.). RNA was purified by DNA removal using DNase I (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA) according to the manufacturer's protocol. cDNA synthesis was performed using the Revert Aid H Minus First Strand cDNA Synthesis Kit (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA).
  3. The extraction of DNA from all cultivated algae except K. crenulatum was carried out using the DNeasy Plant Kit (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) following the manufacturer's protocol. The harvested filaments of K. crenulatum were processed using a modified version of the cetyltrimethylammonium bromide protocol described by Rippin, Komsic-Buchmann and Becker (2016). After the second chloroform washing step, the upper phase was collected. The DNA was precipitated with isopropanol at −20°C for at least 1 h. After a washing step with 75% ethanol, the DNA was eluted in RNase-free water.
  4. Amplicons were generated for all triplicates (for NA three technical replicates were produced) using the Kapa HiFi HotStart DNA Polymerase (Roche, Basel, Switzerland). To analyze the eukaryotic diversity, we targeted the ribosomal small subunit (SSU) V4 region with the universal eukaryotic primers TAReuk454FWD1 (5′-CCAGCASCYGCGGTAATTCC-3′) and TAReukREV3 (5′-ACTTTCGTTCTTGATYRA-3′) designed by Stoeck et al. (Stoeck et al. 2010) (Amplicon size ≈ 380 bp). Similarly, the prokaryotic 16S rRNA gene V2-V3 region was amplified using the universal primers 104F (5′-GGCGVACGGGTGMGTAA-3′) and 515R (5′-TTACCGCGGCKGCTGGCAC-3′) taken from Lange et al. (Lange et al. 2015) (Amplicon size ≈ 400 bp). The eukaryotic amplicons of the BSC samples were amplified employing the following protocol: an initial denaturation step at 95°C for 3 min and 25 3-step cycles at 98°C for 20 s, at 49°C for 15 s and 72°C for 35 s were followed by a final elongation at 72°C for 1 min. The prokaryotic target was amplified in a similar way; however, the 25 cycles included 20 s at 98°C, 10 s at 65°C and 15 s at 72°C. Each template was amplified three times (NA was amplified nine times) with each primer pair and these triplicates were pooled in an equimolar manner to minimize PCR bias. For the MC, the templates, obtained from the cultivated algae, the bryophyte Physcomitrella patens and the liverwort Marchantia polymorpha (both supplied by O. Artz, AG Höcker, Botanical Institute, University of Cologne), were only targeted with eukaryotic primers and the PCR protocol consisted of 30 cycles of 20 s at 98°C, 15 s at 51.8°C and 35 s at 72°C. All PCR products were purified using the Agencourt® AMPure® XP system (Beckman Coulter, Brea, CA, USA) according to the manufacturer's protocol.

Citations bibliographiques

  1. Rippin, M., Lange, S., Sausen, N., & Becker, B. (2018). Biodiversity of biological soil crusts from the Polar Regions revealed by metabarcoding. FEMS microbiology ecology, 94(4), fiy036. https://doi.org/10.1093/femsec/fiy036
  2. Williams, L., Borchhardt, N., Colesie, C., Baum, C., Komsic-Buchmann, K., Rippin, M., ... & Büdel, B. (2017). Biological soil crusts of Arctic Svalbard and of Livingston Island, Antarctica. Polar Biology, 40(2), 399-411.

Métadonnées additionnelles

Identifiants alternatifs a9a93a1e-4470-49c3-a98c-72f36c382090
https://ipt.biodiversity.aq/resource?r=microorganisms_polar_biological_soil_crusts