Specific adaptations are selected in opposite sun exposed Antarctic cryptoendolithic communities as revealed by untargeted metabolomics

PLoS One. 2020 May 27;15(5):e0233805. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0233805. eCollection 2020.

Abstract

Antarctic cryptoendolithic communities are self-supporting borderline ecosystems spreading across the extreme conditions of the Antarctic desert and represent the predominant life-form in the ice-free areas of McMurdo Dry Valleys, accounted as the closest terrestrial Martian analogue. Components of these communities are highly adapted extremophiles and extreme-tolerant microorganisms, among the most resistant known to date. Recently, studies investigated biodiversity and community composition in these ecosystems but the metabolic activity of the metacommunity has never been investigated. Using an untargeted metabolomics, we explored stress-response of communities spreading in two sites of the same location, subjected to increasing environmental pressure due to opposite sun exposure, accounted as main factor influencing the diversity and composition of these ecosystems. Overall, 331 altered metabolites (206 and 125 unique for north and south, respectively), distinguished the two differently exposed communities. We also selected 10 metabolites and performed two-stage Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) analysis to test them as potential biomarkers. We further focused on melanin and allantoin as protective substances; their concentration was highly different in the community in the shadow or in the sun. These results clearly indicate that opposite insolation selected organisms in the communities with different adaptation strategies in terms of key metabolites produced.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Adaptation, Physiological*
  • Allantoin / metabolism
  • Antarctic Regions
  • Extreme Environments
  • Melanins / metabolism
  • Metabolome*
  • Microbiota*
  • Selection, Genetic
  • Stress, Physiological
  • Sunlight*

Substances

  • Melanins
  • Allantoin

Grants and funding

L.S. and C.C. wish to thank the Italian National Program for Antarctic Researches (PNRA) for funding sampling campaigns and researches in Italy in the frame of the PNRA projects. The Italian Antarctic National Museum (MNA) is kindly acknowledged for financial support to the Mycological Section on the MNA for preserving Antarctic rock samples, herein analysed, stored in the Culture Collection of Fungi from Extreme Environments (CCFEE), University of Tuscia, Italy. The authors wish to thank Italian Space Agency (ASI n. 2018-6-U0) for co-funding the BIOSIGN-Microfossils project.