Bioenergetic characterization of a shallow-sea hydrothermal vent system: Milos Island, Greece

PLoS One. 2020 Jun 5;15(6):e0234175. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0234175. eCollection 2020.

Abstract

Shallow-sea hydrothermal systems, like their deep-sea and terrestrial counterparts, can serve as relatively accessible portals into the microbial ecology of subsurface environments. In this study, we determined the chemical composition of 47 sediment porewater samples along a transect from a diffuse shallow-sea hydrothermal vent to a non-thermal background area in Paleochori Bay, Milos Island, Greece. These geochemical data were combined with thermodynamic calculations to quantify potential sources of energy that may support in situ chemolithotrophy. The Gibbs energies (ΔGr) of 730 redox reactions involving 23 inorganic H-, O-, C-, N-, S-, Fe-, Mn-, and As-bearing compounds were calculated. Of these reactions, 379 were exergonic at one or more sampling locations. The greatest energy yields were from anaerobic CO oxidation with NO2- (-136 to -162 kJ/mol e-), followed by reactions in which the electron acceptor/donor pairs were O2/CO, NO3-/CO, and NO2-/H2S. When expressed as energy densities (where the concentration of the limiting reactant is taken into account), a different set of redox reactions are the most exergonic: in sediments affected by hydrothermal input, sulfide oxidation with a range of electron acceptors or nitrite reduction with different electron donors provide 85~245 J per kg of sediment, whereas in sediments less affected or unaffected by hydrothermal input, various S0 oxidation reactions and aerobic respiration reactions with several different electron donors are most energy-yielding (80~95 J per kg of sediment). A model that considers seawater mixing with hydrothermal fluids revealed that there is up to ~50 times more energy available for microorganisms that can use S0 or H2S as electron donors and NO2- or O2 as electron acceptors compared to other reactions. In addition to revealing likely metabolic pathways in the near-surface and subsurface mixing zones, thermodynamic calculations like these can help guide novel microbial cultivation efforts to isolate new species.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Energy Metabolism*
  • Greece
  • Hydrothermal Vents* / microbiology
  • Islands
  • Thermodynamics

Grants and funding

Financial assistance was provided by the NSF through grant awards MGG-1061476 (to DAF, JPA, GKD) and OCE-0939564 (to JPA) as well as the USC Zumberge Fund Individual Grant, the NASA Astrobiology Institute grant NNA13AA92A (to DEL and JPA), the NASA-NSF Origins of Life Ideas Lab program under grant NNN13D466T (to DEL) and grant 80NSSC20K0228 (to DEL and REP), the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation through the Deep Carbon Observatory (all to DEL), and the C-DEBI contribution number 529 to JPA. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.