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      Ecology and microbial structures of archaeal/bacterial strings-of-pearls communities and archaeal relatives thriving in cold sulfidic springs.

      Fems Microbiology Ecology
      Archaea, classification, genetics, isolation & purification, Bacteria, Biodiversity, Cluster Analysis, Cold Temperature, DNA, Archaeal, chemistry, DNA, Bacterial, DNA, Ribosomal, Genes, rRNA, Germany, Molecular Sequence Data, Phylogeny, RNA, Archaeal, RNA, Bacterial, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid, Turkey, Water Microbiology, Wetlands

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          Abstract

          Recently, a unique microbial community, growing in a whitish, macroscopically visible strings-of-pearls-like structure was discovered in the cold, sulfidic marsh water of the Sippenauer Moor near Regensburg, Bavaria, Germany. The pearls interior is predominated by microcolonies of the non-methanogenic SM1 euryarchaeon; the outer part of the pearls is mainly composed of Thiothrix. To screen sulfidic ecosystems for the distribution of such unique microbial communities, comparative microbial and geochemical analyses of cold, sulfidic springs of three geographically distinct locations in Bavaria, Germany, and Dalyan, Turkey, were performed. Here, we report on the discovery and study of another type of strings-of-pearls revealing a new microbial community structure. While the SM1 euryarchaeon is again the predominant archaeal constituent, the bacterial partner is the so-called IMB1 eta-proteobacterium. Due to the predominance of the IMB1 eta-proteobacterium, the strings-of-pearls reveal a fluffy and greyish macroscopical appearance. The phylogenetic survey revealed SM1 euryarchaeal relatives, designated as SM1 group, in all sites studied, indicating a widespread distribution of these archaea in terrestrial ecosystems.

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