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Chaudhari , DS and Dhotre, DP and Jani, K and Sharma, A and Singh, Y and Shouche, YS and Rahi, P (2020) Bacterial Communities Associated with the Biofilms Formed in High-Altitude Brackish Water Pangong Tso Located in the Himalayan Plateau. Current Microbiology , 77 (12). pp. 4072-4084.

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Abstract

Pangong Tso is a long and narrow lake situated at an altitude of ~ 4266 m amsl in the Himalayan Plateau on the side of the India/China border. Biofilm has been observed in a small area near the shore of Pangong Tso. Bacterial communities of the lake sediment, water and biofilms were studied using amplicon sequencing of V3-V4 region of the 16S rRNA gene. The standard QIIME pipeline was used for analysis. The metabolic potential of the community was predicted using functional prediction tool Tax4Fun. Bacterial phyla Proteobacteria, followed by Bacteroidetes, Acidobacteria, Planctomycetes, Actinobacteria, and Firmicutes, were found to be dominant across these samples. Shannon’s and Simpson’s alpha diversity analysis revealed that sediment communities are the most diverse, and water communities are the least diverse. Principal Coordinates based beta diversity analysis showed significant variation in the bacterial communities of the water, sediment and biofilm samples. Bacterial phyla Verrucomicrobia, Deinococcus-Thermus and Cyanobacteria were explicitly enriched in the biofilm samples. Predictive functional profiling of these bacterial communities showed a higher abundance of genes involved in photosynthesis, biosynthesis of secondary metabolites, carbon fixation in photosynthetic organisms and glyoxylate and dicarboxylate metabolism in the biofilm sample. In conclusion, the Pangong Tso bacterial communities are quite similar to other saline and low-temperature lakes in the Tibetan Plateau. Bacterial community structure of the biofilm samples was significantly different from that of the water and sediment samples and enrichment of saprophytic communities was observed in the biofilm samples, indicating an important succession event in this high-altitude lake.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Insect Molecular Biology
Depositing User: Mr. Rameshwar Nema
Date Deposited: 18 Apr 2021 13:15
Last Modified: 18 Apr 2021 13:15
URI: http://nccs.sciencecentral.in/id/eprint/911

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