EAGER: ANT LIA: Persist or Perish: Records of Microbial Survival and Long-term Persistence from the West Antarctic Ice Sheet

Information

  • NSF Award
  • 2228257
Owner
  • Award Id
    2228257
  • Award Effective Date
    8/15/2022 - 3 years ago
  • Award Expiration Date
    7/31/2024 - a year ago
  • Award Amount
    $ 263,460.00
  • Award Instrument
    Standard Grant

EAGER: ANT LIA: Persist or Perish: Records of Microbial Survival and Long-term Persistence from the West Antarctic Ice Sheet

Ice cores from glaciers and ice sheets provide detailed archives of past environmental conditions, furthering our understanding of Earth’s climate. Microorganisms in the West Antarctic Ice Sheet are buried over glaciological time and form a stratigraphy record providing the opportunity of analysis of the order and position of layers of geological events, with potential links to Southern Hemisphere climate. However, microbial cells that land on the ice sheet are subject to the stresses of changing habitat conditions due to burial and conditions associated with long-term isolation in ice. These processes may lead to a loss of fidelity within the stratigraphic record of microbial cells. We know little about how and if microorganisms survive burial and remain alive over glacial-interglacial time periods within an ice sheet. This analysis will identify the viable and preserved community of microorganisms and core genomic adaptation that permit cell viability, which will advance knowledge in the areas of microbiology and glaciology while increasing fidelity of ice core measurements relevant to past climate and potential future global climate impacts. This exploratory endeavor has the potential to be a transformative step toward understanding the ecology of one of the most understudied environments on Earth. The project will partner with the Museum of Science, Boston, to increase public scientific literacy via education and outreach. Additionally, this project will support two early-career scientists and two undergraduates in interdisciplinary research at the intersection of microbiology and climate science. <br/><br/>Results from this project will provide the first DNA data based on single-cell whole genomic sequencing from the Antarctic Ice Sheet and inform whether post-depositional processes impact the interpretations of paleoenvironmental conditions from microbes. The goals to determine the taxonomic identity of viable and preserved microbial cells, and decode the genetic repertoire that confers survival of burial and long-term viability within glacial ice, will be achieved by utilizing subsamples from a ~60,000 year old record of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet Divide (WD) Ice Core. WD samples will be melted using the Desert Research Institute’s ice core melting system that is optimized for glaciobiological sampling. Microbial cells from the meltwater will be sorted using fluorescence-activated cell sorting, and individually sorted cells will have their genomes sequenced. The fluorescence-based methods will discern the viable (metabolically active) cells from those cells that are non-viable but preserved in the ice (DNA-containing). The genomic analysis will identify the taxonomy of each cell, presence of known genes that confer survival in permanently frozen environments, and comparatively analyze genomes to determine the core set of genes required by viable cells to persist in an ice sheet. The outcomes of this work will expand the potential for biological measurements and contamination control from archived ice cores.<br/><br/>This award reflects NSF's statutory mission and has been deemed worthy of support through evaluation using the Foundation's intellectual merit and broader impacts review criteria.

  • Program Officer
    Maria Vernetmvernet@nsf.gov7032925308
  • Min Amd Letter Date
    8/8/2022 - 3 years ago
  • Max Amd Letter Date
    8/8/2022 - 3 years ago
  • ARRA Amount

Institutions

  • Name
    Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences
  • City
    EAST BOOTHBAY
  • State
    ME
  • Country
    United States
  • Address
    60 BIGELOW DRIVE
  • Postal Code
    04544
  • Phone Number
    2073152567

Investigators

  • First Name
    Dominic
  • Last Name
    Winski
  • Email Address
    dominic.winski@maine.edu
  • Start Date
    8/8/2022 12:00:00 AM
  • First Name
    Alexander
  • Last Name
    Michaud
  • Email Address
    amichaud@bigelow.org
  • Start Date
    8/8/2022 12:00:00 AM

Program Element

  • Text
    ANT Organisms & Ecosystems
  • Code
    5111
  • Text
    ANT Glaciology
  • Code
    5116
  • Text
    ANT Integrated System Science
  • Code
    5292

Program Reference

  • Text
    LIA-Life in Antarctica
  • Text
    USGCRP
  • Code
    5294
  • Text
    EAGER
  • Code
    7916
  • Text
    UNDERGRADUATE EDUCATION
  • Code
    9178
  • Text
    GRADUATE INVOLVEMENT
  • Code
    9179