Behind the Scenes:
Caves Reveal Evolution of Ancient Microbes 
By _Lily Whiteman_ (mailto:) , NSF
posted: 20 March 2009 09:04 am ET 
 
 
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title=Caves+Reveal+Evolution+of+Ancient+Microbes&u=/animals/090320-bts-cave-ex
ploration.html)  (javascript:show_print();)  
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(http://del.icio.us/post?v=4&noui&jump=close&url=http://www.livescience.com/animals/090320-bts-cave-exploration.html&title=Caves+Reveal+Evolution+of+Ancien
t+Microbes) 
Penn State University  Ph.D. student Dan Jones (standing) and postdoctoral 
researcher Sharmishtha  Dattagupta collect microbial biofilms in the Frasassi 
cave system, central  Italy, on May 28, 2008. Credit: Ieva Perkons


 
 
 
_Full Size_ 
(http://www.livescience.com/php/multimedia/imagedisplay/img_display.php?s=animals&c=nsf&l=on&pic=090320-sharmishtha-02.jpg&cap=Penn+State+Univer
sity+Ph.D.+student+Dan+Jones+(standing)+and+postdoctoral+researcher+Sharmishth
a+Dattagupta+collect+microbial+biofilms+in+the+Frasassi+cave+system,+central+I
taly,+on+May+28,+2008.+Credit:+Ieva+Perkons&title=) 
  
Penn State University Ph.D. student Dan Jones  (standing) and postdoctoral 
researcher Sharmishtha Dattagupta collect microbial  biofilms in the Frasassi 
cave system, central Italy, on May 28, 2008. Credit:  Ieva Perkons 

 
(http://www.livescience.com/php/multimedia/imagedisplay/img_display.php?s=animals&c=nsf&l=on&pic=090320-macalady-02.jpg&cap=Penn+State+University+professor
+and+geomicrobiologist+Jennifer+Macalady+collecting+microbial+samples+in+the+F
rasassi+cave+system+on+June+5,+2008.
+Credit:+Jenn+Macalady,+Pennsylvania+State+University&title=) 
Penn State University professor and geomicrobiologist Jennifer Macalady  
collecting microbial samples in the Frasassi cave system on June 5, 2008.  
Credit: 
Jenn Macalady, Pennsylvania State University 

This Behind the Scenes article was provided to LiveScience in partnership  
with the National Science Foundation.  
Recently, caving expert Simone Cerioni guided Jenn Macalady of Pennsylvania  
State University and her team of scientists up a dark, steep slope in the  
Frasassi cave system in central Italy.  

While climbing up a  particularly difficult section, Cerioni turned around to 
check on the scientists  scrambling below him, and noticed that their facial 
expressions — spotlighted by  the narrow beams of their headlamps — seemed to 
ask him, "How do we get up this  part?" Cerioni responded in his best _Jedi  
English_ (http://www.space.com/php/multimedia/spacemovies/) , "Use the force 
...”  

Taking Simone's advice,  the scientists found their footing and climbed 
higher. Nevertheless, in other,  gnarlier sections of the _cave_ 
(http://www.livescience.com/history/081025-hawaii-cave.html) , Simone's 
encouragement of "the 
force" did not  suffice, and the expedition advanced only with the help of 
hardware, such as  ropes, harnesses and ascending gear.

Why were Macalady and the other  members of her research team negotiating 
such treacherous subterranean terrain?  Because like many scientists who study 
the _Earth's  history_ (http://www.livescience.com/topic/earth) , they dream of 
traveling back in time. But rather than  wanting to travel back to the popular 
age of dinosaurs, they want to travel back  to the Precambrian — a pivotal 
period which spanned from about 4.5 to 0.54  billion years ago. 

The Precambrian fascinates Macalady. "The  evolutionary success of 
single-celled microbes during the Precambrian brought  the Earth to life and 
set the 
stage for the evolution of multi-cellular  organisms that thrive today," she 
says, adding that during the Precambrian  microorganisms evolved the ability to 
produce oxygen from water through  photosynthesis, a development that 
eventually 
led to the irreversible  oxygenation of the Earth's surface. 

But because _microorganisms_ (http://www.livescience.com/topic/bacteria)  
leave poor fossil records, Macalady  doesn't use the fossil record to study the 
Earth's oxygen revolution and the  evolution of microbes. Instead, she studies 
these phenomena by analyzing modern  microbial examples from Earth's anoxic 
(oxygen-free), dark regions.   However, these organisms are rare and difficult 
to access, found only underwater  or in deep, dark underground environments (or 
combinations of the two) where  stagnant water or unusual chemical conditions 
prevent oxygen from  penetrating.   

Caving worldwide

So how  does _Macalady_ 
(http://www.livescience.com/php/multimedia/imagedisplay/img_display.php?s=animals&c=nsf&l=on&pic=090320-macalady-02.jpg&cap=Penn+Sta
te+University+professor+and+geomicrobiologist+Jennifer+Macalady+collecting+mic
robial+samples+in+the+Frasassi+cave+system+on+June+5,+2008.
+Credit:+Jenn+Macalady,+Pennsylvania+State+University&title=)  manage to 
access such remote dangerous  environments? By collaborating with expert cavers 
and cave divers who guide her  and her colleagues to locations that would 
otherwise be beyond their reach and  sometimes collect samples of microbial 
communities on her behalf.  

So far, with funding from the National Science Foundation and  NASA, Macalady 
has managed research collaborations between scientists and caving  experts in 
dark, anoxic environments in Italy, Mexico, Florida and the Bahamas.  

To maximize the productivity of such collaborations, Macalady and  her fellow 
researchers continually hone their own caving skills. They also train  their 
caving guides to find and sample the types of environments that offer the  
most research potential and how to make critically important field  
observations.

Mysterious cave microbes

Why is  Macalady so dedicated to exploring deep, dark, dangerous caves? 
Because so  little is currently known about the _microbes that live in dark, 
anoxic 
environments_ 
(http://www.livescience.com/strangenews/061212_snottie_science.html) . "Every  
expedition offers the possibility of discovering previously 
unknown life forms  and important clues to the history of life," she says.

That day in the  Frasassi caves, Macalady and her research team profiled the 
geochemistry of a  remote, anoxic lake that was reached only after four hours 
of travel within the  cave system.  Once there, Ph.D. student Dan Jones and 
Italian cave explorer  Sandro Mariani donned dry suits, entered the 55-degree 
Fahrenheit lake water,  and lowered a geochemical probe into the lake's deep 
anoxic layer, which is  located about eight meters below the lake surface. This 
is standard operating  procedure: sometimes, Macalady's research team will even 
collect microbe samples  in other microbial environments from depths of 
dozens of meters. 

Once  back in the lab, Macalady's research team conducted laboratory analyses 
of the  gene sequences contained in their microbe samples. These analyses 
were designed  to reveal important information about the evolutionary 
relationships between  sampled microbes and other known microbe species, and 
information 
about  microbial activities.

Slow-growing slime

For  example, through these analyses, Macalady's post-doc, Sharmishtha 
Dattagupta,  identified a new animal-microbe relationship (or symbiosis) in the 
Frasassi cave  system that is based on chemical energy. Such symbiosis, which 
is 
common around  hydrothermal vents on the sea floor that spew hot water, had not 
previously been  known to occur outside of the oceans.  

In addition, Italian cave  divers discovered a slow-growing, anaerobic slime 
in the Frasassi cave waters;  this slime contains large populations of cells 
that produce energy through  novel methods that Macalady's research team is 
currently struggling to  understand.  

Macalady's team, which includes Ph.D. students Jones,  Kat Dawson, Heidi 
Albrecht, and Rebecca McCauley, is currently continuing to  conduct research in 
the Frasassi caves as well as in other Italian caves. This  work involves 
collaborations with a team of Italian colleagues that includes  geologists 
Alessandro Montanari, Sandro Galdenzi and Maurizio Mainiero, and cave  
explorers 
Mariani, Cerioni and others. 

In her latest effort, she is  researching collapsed, flooded caves in the 
Bahamas, a collaboration with expert  cave diver Kenneth Broad from the 
University of Miami funded by National  Geographic. Although the sinkholes hold 
fresh, 
oxygen-rich water near the  surface, they quickly become salty and anoxic with 
depth. Therefore, Macalady  suspects that these sinkholes, along with similar 
ones in Florida, may provide  additional clues to the Earth's earliest 
environments.  And that is just  the kind of time travel that keeps her 
exploring 
the Earth's depths.
 (http://www.livescience.com/animals/top10_species_success.html)    *   _10 
Species Success Stories_ 
(http://www.livescience.com/animals/top10_species_success.html)   
    *   _Gallery: Microscopic Images as Art_ 
(http://www.livescience.com/php/multimedia/imagegallery/igviewer.php?gid=1])   
    *   _Bacteria: News and Information_ 
(http://www.livescience.com/topic/bacteria)  
Editor's Note: This research was supported by the  National Science 
Foundation (_NSF_ (http://www.nsf.gov/) ), the federal agency charged with 
funding 
basic  research and education across all fields of science and engineering. See 
the _Behind the Scenes Archive_ 
(http://www.livescience.com/topic/behind-the-scenes) .  
_http://www.livescience.com/animals/090320-bts-cave-exploration.html_ 
(http://www.livescience.com/animals/090320-bts-cave-exploration.html) 

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