Lichens are presently regarded as stable biotopes, small ecosystems providing a safe haven for the development of a diverse and numerous microbiome. In this study, we conducted a functional diversity assessment of the microbial community residing on the surface and within the thalli of Leptogium puberulum, a eurytopic cyanolichen endemic to Antarctica, employing the widely used Biolog EcoPlates which test the catabolism of 31 carbon compounds in a colorimetric respiration assay. Lichen thalli occupying moraine ridges of differing age within a proglacial chronosequence, as well as those growing in sites of contrasting nutrient concentrations, were procured from the diverse landscape of the western shore of Admiralty Bay in Maritime Antarctica. The L. puberulum bacterial community catabolized photobiont- (glucose-containing carbohydrates) and mycobiont-specific carbon compounds (d-Mannitol). The bacteria also had the ability to process degradation products of lichen thalli components (d-cellobiose and N-acetyl-d-glucosamine). Lichen thalli growth site characteristics had an impact on metabolic diversity and respiration intensity of the bacterial communities. While high nutrient contents in lichen specimens from “young” proglacial locations and in those from nitrogen enriched sites stimulated bacterial catabolic activity, in old proglacial locations and in nutrient-lacking sites, a metabolic activity restriction was apparent, presumably due to lichen-specific microbial control mechanisms.
Recently, lichens came once more into the scientific spotlight due to their unique relations with Prokaryotes. Several temperate region lichen species have been thoroughly explored in this regard yet, the information on Antarctic lichens and their associated bacteriobiomes is somewhat lacking. In this paper we assessed the phylogenetic structure of the whole and active fractions of bacterial communities housed by Antarctic lichens growing in different environmental conditions by targeted 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing. Bacterial communities associated with lichens procured from a nitrogen enriched site were very distinct from the communities isolated from lichens of a nitrogen depleted site. The former were characterized by substantial contributions of Bacteroidetes phylum members and the elusive Armatimonadetes. At the nutrient-poor site the lichen-associated bacteriobiome structure was unique for each lichen species, with chlorolichens being occupied largely by Proteobacteria. Lichen species with a pronounced discrepancy in diversity between the whole and active fractions of their bacterial communities had the widest ecological amplitude, hinting that the non-active part of the community is a reservoir of latent stress coping mechanisms. This is the first investigation to make use of targeted metatranscriptomics to infer the bacterial biodiversity in Antarctic lichens.
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