Microbiome analysis and bacterial isolation from Lejía Lake soil in Atacama Desert
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Mandakovic, Dinka
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Microbiome analysis and bacterial isolation from Lejía Lake soil in Atacama Desert
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Abstract
As a consequence of the severe climatic change afecting our entire world, many lakes in the Andes Cordillera are likely to
disappear within a few decades. One of these lakes is Lejía Lake, located in the central Atacama Desert. The objectives of
this study were: (1) to characterize the bacterial community from Lejía Lake shore soil (LLS) using 16S rRNA sequencing
and (2) to test a culture-based approach using a soil extract medium (SEM) to recover soil bacteria. This extreme ecosystem
was dominated by three phyla: Bacteroidetes, Proteobacteria, and Firmicutes with 29.2, 28.2 and 28.1% of the relative
abundance, respectively. Using SEM, we recovered 7.4% of the operational taxonomic units from LLS, all of which belonged
to the same three dominant phyla from LLS (6.9% of Bacteroidetes, 77.6% of Proteobacteria, and 15.3% of Firmicutes). In
addition, we used SEM to recover isolates from LLS and supplemented the culture medium with increasing salt concentrations to isolate microbial representatives of salt tolerance (Halomonas spp.). The results of this study complement the list
of microbial taxa diversity from the Atacama Desert and assess a pipeline to isolate selective bacteria that could represent
useful elements for biotechnological approaches.
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Artículo de publicación SCOPUS Artículo de publicación WoS
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/155738
DOI: 10.1007/s00792-018-1027-6
ISSN: 14334909
14310651
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Extremophiles (2018) 22:665–673
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