11:00 AM - 1:00 PM
[BBG01-P04] Diverse phosphorus sources in serpentinized ecosystem
Keywords:Serpentinization, phosphorus source, carbon cycle
Phosphorus is an essential element of many biomolecules that control biological functions, including nucleic acids (DNA, RNA), which are responsible for the transmission of genetic information in life, ATP, which is the currency of energy, and phospholipids, which are major components of cell membranes. Although phosphorus is an essential nutrient for life, it is often depleted in many serpentinizing aquifers due to the reaction with divalent cations (e.g. Mg and Ca) . Under this situation, how does life make a living? As for the carbon cases, while bioavailable inorganic carbons (CO2 gas or bicarbonate ion) are also depleted in serpentinizing aquifer at highly alkaline environment, it could be converted to various carbon species in the reductive environment created by the rock-water reactions, as described above. That suggests that the microbes living there uses those carbon speces as the energy and carbon source.
One interesting feature was found in the studies of Serpentinimonas species which are hyperalkaliphilic microorganisms, isolated from serpentinization sites, that fix inorganic carbon using hydrogen as an energy source. Available carbon species for the Serpentinimonas revealed that mineral calcite (CaCO3) is also the major carbon source, which indicate that solid inorganic carbon also can be an important carbon source for those organisms. Here, we investigated the availability of various phosphorus species that could be present in serpentinized water systems using Serpentinomonas and showed that the Serpentinomonas species utilize a wide variety of different phosphorus species. These results indicate that unique life strategies in extreme environments and further suggest that phosphorus reuqired life may exist even in ocean planet where phosphorus cannot be easily detected in the seawater.