Potential microbial contamination from drilling lubricants into subseafloor rock cores

<p>International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Expedition 357: “Serpentinization and Life” drilled shallow cores into the Atlantis Massif near the Mid-Atlantic Ridge in October 2015 using seabed drills. Serpentinization and other geochemical processes occurring within the Atlantis Massif rele...

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Main Authors: H. L. Pendleton, K. I. Twing, S. Motamedi, W. J. Brazelton
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2021-04-01
Series:Scientific Drilling
Online Access:https://sd.copernicus.org/articles/29/49/2021/sd-29-49-2021.pdf
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spelling doaj-fe8f6b8f78c74356b9a848753a61eeea2021-04-26T08:07:08ZengCopernicus PublicationsScientific Drilling 1816-89571816-34592021-04-0129495710.5194/sd-29-49-2021Potential microbial contamination from drilling lubricants into subseafloor rock coresH. L. Pendleton0K. I. Twing1K. I. Twing2S. Motamedi3W. J. Brazelton4School of Biological Sciences, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, 84112 USASchool of Biological Sciences, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, 84112 USAcurrent address: Department of Microbiology, Weber State University, Ogden, 84408 USASchool of Biological Sciences, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, 84112 USASchool of Biological Sciences, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, 84112 USA<p>International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Expedition 357: “Serpentinization and Life” drilled shallow cores into the Atlantis Massif near the Mid-Atlantic Ridge in October 2015 using seabed drills. Serpentinization and other geochemical processes occurring within the Atlantis Massif release hydrogen, methane, and other chemicals that can potentially fuel microorganisms through chemosynthesis. The subseafloor rock cores collected during IODP Exp. 357 are the first of their kind, meaning the analysis and interpretation of these samples required new methodologies, including a specialized approach for distinguishing endemic subsurface inhabitants from potential contaminants from various sources. Background samples of various potential contamination sources were collected during sampling: 109 samples of seawater collected before, during, and after drilling; 20 samples of greases and oils associated with the drilling equipment; and samples of the laboratory's ambient air. Despite the widespread usage of drilling lubricants and the importance of controlling contamination in drill-core samples for microbiological analyses, no studies to date have looked at DNA in drilling greases and oils. In this study, drilling lubricants were analyzed as possible sources of microbial contamination of subseafloor rock core samples by environmental sequencing of 16S rRNA genes. We find that microbial signatures from drilling lubricants are only found in low abundance in seafloor samples (at most a few percent of total sequence counts), with laboratory contaminants being a greater source of contamination.</p>https://sd.copernicus.org/articles/29/49/2021/sd-29-49-2021.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author H. L. Pendleton
K. I. Twing
K. I. Twing
S. Motamedi
W. J. Brazelton
spellingShingle H. L. Pendleton
K. I. Twing
K. I. Twing
S. Motamedi
W. J. Brazelton
Potential microbial contamination from drilling lubricants into subseafloor rock cores
Scientific Drilling
author_facet H. L. Pendleton
K. I. Twing
K. I. Twing
S. Motamedi
W. J. Brazelton
author_sort H. L. Pendleton
title Potential microbial contamination from drilling lubricants into subseafloor rock cores
title_short Potential microbial contamination from drilling lubricants into subseafloor rock cores
title_full Potential microbial contamination from drilling lubricants into subseafloor rock cores
title_fullStr Potential microbial contamination from drilling lubricants into subseafloor rock cores
title_full_unstemmed Potential microbial contamination from drilling lubricants into subseafloor rock cores
title_sort potential microbial contamination from drilling lubricants into subseafloor rock cores
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Scientific Drilling
issn 1816-8957
1816-3459
publishDate 2021-04-01
description <p>International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Expedition 357: “Serpentinization and Life” drilled shallow cores into the Atlantis Massif near the Mid-Atlantic Ridge in October 2015 using seabed drills. Serpentinization and other geochemical processes occurring within the Atlantis Massif release hydrogen, methane, and other chemicals that can potentially fuel microorganisms through chemosynthesis. The subseafloor rock cores collected during IODP Exp. 357 are the first of their kind, meaning the analysis and interpretation of these samples required new methodologies, including a specialized approach for distinguishing endemic subsurface inhabitants from potential contaminants from various sources. Background samples of various potential contamination sources were collected during sampling: 109 samples of seawater collected before, during, and after drilling; 20 samples of greases and oils associated with the drilling equipment; and samples of the laboratory's ambient air. Despite the widespread usage of drilling lubricants and the importance of controlling contamination in drill-core samples for microbiological analyses, no studies to date have looked at DNA in drilling greases and oils. In this study, drilling lubricants were analyzed as possible sources of microbial contamination of subseafloor rock core samples by environmental sequencing of 16S rRNA genes. We find that microbial signatures from drilling lubricants are only found in low abundance in seafloor samples (at most a few percent of total sequence counts), with laboratory contaminants being a greater source of contamination.</p>
url https://sd.copernicus.org/articles/29/49/2021/sd-29-49-2021.pdf
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