Characterization of the Microbial Population Inhabiting a Solar Saltern Pond of the Odiel Marshlands (SW Spain)
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Abstract
The solar salterns located in the Odiel marshlands, in southwest Spain, are an excellent
example of a hypersaline environment inhabited by microbial populations specialized in thriving
under conditions of high salinity, which remains poorly explored. Traditional culture-dependent
taxonomic studies have usually under-estimated the biodiversity in saline environments due to the
difficulties that many of these species have to grow at laboratory conditions. Here we compare two
molecular methods to profile the microbial population present in the Odiel saltern hypersaline water
ponds (33% salinity). On the one hand, the construction and characterization of two clone PCR
amplified-16S rRNA libraries, and on the other, a high throughput 16S rRNA sequencing approach
based on the Illumina MiSeq platform. The results reveal that both methods are comparable for
the estimation of major genera, although massive sequencing provides more information about the
less abundant ones. The obtained data indicate that Salinibacter ruber is the most abundant genus,
followed by the archaea genera, Halorubrum and Haloquadratum. However, more than 100 additional
species can be detected by Next Generation Sequencing (NGS). In addition, a preliminary study to
test the biotechnological applications of this microbial population, based on its ability to produce and
excrete haloenzymes, is shown.
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Bibliographic citation
Gómez Villegas, P., Vigara Fernández, J., & León Bañares, R. (2018). Characterization of the Microbial Population Inhabiting a Solar Saltern Pond of the Odiel Marshlands (SW Spain). Marine Drugs, 16(9), 332. DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/md16090332














