Akari Fukuda
Japan Atomic Energy Agency
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Publication
Featured researches published by Akari Fukuda.
Microbial Ecology | 2010
Akari Fukuda; Hiroki Hagiwara; Toyoho Ishimura; Mariko Kouduka; Seiichiro Ioka; Yuki Amano; Urumu Tsunogai; Yohey Suzuki; Takashi Mizuno
Although deep subterranean crystalline rocks are known to harbor microbial ecosystems, geochemical factors that constrain the biomass, diversity, and metabolic activities of microorganisms remain to be clearly defined. To better understand the geochemical and microbiological relationships, we characterized granitic groundwater collected from a 1,148- to 1,169-m-deep borehole interval at the Mizunami Underground Research Laboratory site, Japan, in 2005 and 2008. Geochemical analyses of the groundwater samples indicated that major electron acceptors, such as NO3− and SO42−, were not abundant, while dissolved organic carbon (not including organic acids), CH4 and H2, was moderately rich in the groundwater sample collected in 2008. The total number of acridine orange-stained cells in groundwater samples collected in 2005 and 2008 were 1.1 × 104 and 5.2 × 104 cells/mL, respectively. In 2005 and 2008, the most common phylotypes determined by 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis were both related to Thauera spp., the cultivated members of which can utilize minor electron donors, such as aromatic and aliphatic hydrocarbons. After a 3–5-week incubation period with potential electron donors (organic acids or CH4 + H2) and with/without electron acceptors (O2 or NO3−), dominant microbial populations shifted to Brevundimonas spp. These geomicrobiological results suggest that deep granitic groundwater has been stably colonized by Thauera spp. probably owing to the limitation of O2, NO3−, and organic acids.
PLOS ONE | 2014
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
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.
Environmental Microbiology Reports | 2016
Kohei Ino; Uta Konno; Mariko Kouduka; Akinari Hirota; Yoko Togo; Akari Fukuda; Daisuke D. Komatsu; Urumu Tsunogai; Akihumi S. Tanabe; Satoshi Yamamoto; Teruki Iwatsuki; Takashi Mizuno; Kazumasa Ito; Yohey Suzuki
Deep granitic aquifer is one of the largest, but least understood, microbial habitats. To avoid contamination from the surface biosphere, underground drilling was conducted for 300 m deep granitic rocks at the Mizunami underground research laboratory (URL), Japan. Slightly alkaline groundwater was characterized by low concentrations of dissolved organic matter and sulfate and the presence of > 100 nM H2 . The initial biomass was the highest (∼10(5) cells ml(-1) ) with the dominance of Hydrogenophaga spp., whereas the phylum Nitrospirae became predominant after 3 years with decreasing biomass (∼10(4) cells ml(-1) ). One week incubation of groundwater microbes after 3 years with (13) C-labelled bicarbonate and 1% H2 and subsequent single-cell imaging with nanometer-scale secondary ion mass spectrometry demonstrated that microbial cells were metabolically active. Pyrosequencing of microbial communities in groundwater retrieved at 3-4 years after drilling at the Mizunami URL and at 14 and 25 years after the drilling at the Grimsel Test Site, Switzerland, revealed the occurrence of common Nitrospirae lineages at the geographically distinct sites. As the close relatives of the Nitrospirae lineages were exclusively detected from deep groundwaters and terrestrial hot springs, it suggests that these bacteria are indigenous and potentially adapted to the deep terrestrial subsurface.
The ISME Journal | 2018
Kohei Ino; Alex W Hernsdorf; Uta Konno; Mariko Kouduka; Katsunori Yanagawa; Shingo Kato; Michinari Sunamura; Akinari Hirota; Yoko Togo; Kazumasa Ito; Akari Fukuda; Teruki Iwatsuki; Takashi Mizuno; Daisuke D. Komatsu; Urumu Tsunogai; Toyoho Ishimura; Yuki Amano; Brian C. Thomas; Jillian F. Banfield; Yohey Suzuki
Recent single-gene-based surveys of deep continental aquifers demonstrated the widespread occurrence of archaea related to Candidatus Methanoperedens nitroreducens (ANME-2d) known to mediate anaerobic oxidation of methane (AOM). However, it is unclear whether ANME-2d mediates AOM in the deep continental biosphere. In this study, we found the dominance of ANME-2d in groundwater enriched in sulfate and methane from a 300-m deep underground borehole in granitic rock. A near-complete genome of one representative species of the ANME-2d obtained from the underground borehole has most of functional genes required for AOM and assimilatory sulfate reduction. The genome of the subsurface ANME-2d is different from those of other members of ANME-2d by lacking functional genes encoding nitrate and nitrite reductases and multiheme cytochromes. In addition, the subsurface ANME-2d genome contains a membrane-bound NiFe hydrogenase gene putatively involved in respiratory H2 oxidation, which is different from those of other methanotrophic archaea. Short-term incubation of microbial cells collected from the granitic groundwater with 13C-labeled methane also demonstrates that AOM is linked to microbial sulfate reduction. Given the prominence of granitic continental crust and sulfate and methane in terrestrial subsurface fluids, we conclude that AOM may be widespread in the deep continental biosphere.
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2008
Yoshihisa Ohko; Yuri Nakamura; Akari Fukuda; Sadao Matsuzawa; Koji Takeuchi
Microbial Ecology | 2013
Uta Konno; Mariko Kouduka; Daisuke D. Komatsu; Kousuke Ishii; Akari Fukuda; Urumu Tsunogai; Kazumasa Ito; Yohey Suzuki
Microbes and Environments | 2009
Yoshihisa Ohko; Yasuhiko Nagao; Kunihiro Okano; Norio Sugiura; Akari Fukuda; Yingnan Yang; Nobuaki Negishi; Mio Takeuchi; Satoshi Hanada
Atomic Energy Society of Japan | 2013
Takashi Mizuno; Daisuke Aosai; Shinya Shingu; Hiroki Hagiwara; Yuhei Yamamoto; Akari Fukuda
Physics and Chemistry of The Earth | 2013
Takeshi Suko; Mariko Kouduka; Akari Fukuda; Kenji Nanba; Manabu Takahashi; Kazumasa Ito; Yohey Suzuki
Japan Geoscience Union | 2016
Akari Fukuda; Hideki Numanami; Yohey Suzuki; Ryo Matsumoto
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National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
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