PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

Biogeochemical signals from deep microbial life in terrestrial crust.

  • Yohey Suzuki,
  • Uta Konno,
  • Akari Fukuda,
  • Daisuke D Komatsu,
  • Akinari Hirota,
  • Katsuaki Watanabe,
  • Yoko Togo,
  • Noritoshi Morikawa,
  • Hiroki Hagiwara,
  • Daisuke Aosai,
  • Teruki Iwatsuki,
  • Urumu Tsunogai,
  • Seiya Nagao,
  • Kazumasa Ito,
  • Takashi Mizuno

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0113063
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 12
p. e113063

Abstract

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In contrast to the deep subseafloor biosphere, a volumetrically vast and stable habitat for microbial life in the terrestrial crust remains poorly explored. For the long-term sustainability of a crustal biome, high-energy fluxes derived from hydrothermal circulation and water radiolysis in uranium-enriched rocks are seemingly essential. However, the crustal habitability depending on a low supply of energy is unknown. We present multi-isotopic evidence of microbially mediated sulfate reduction in a granitic aquifer, a representative of the terrestrial crust habitat. Deep meteoric groundwater was collected from underground boreholes drilled into Cretaceous Toki granite (central Japan). A large sulfur isotopic fractionation of 20-60‰ diagnostic to microbial sulfate reduction is associated with the investigated groundwater containing sulfate below 0.2 mM. In contrast, a small carbon isotopic fractionation (<30‰) is not indicative of methanogenesis. Except for 2011, the concentrations of H2 ranged mostly from 1 to 5 nM, which is also consistent with an aquifer where a terminal electron accepting process is dominantly controlled by ongoing sulfate reduction. High isotopic ratios of mantle-derived 3He relative to radiogenic 4He in groundwater and the flux of H2 along adjacent faults suggest that, in addition to low concentrations of organic matter (<70 µM), H2 from deeper sources might partly fuel metabolic activities. Our results demonstrate that the deep biosphere in the terrestrial crust is metabolically active and playing a crucial role in the formation of reducing groundwater even under low-energy fluxes.