Ancient DNA derived from alkenone-biosynthesizing haptophytes and other algae in Holocene sediments from the Black Sea
Publication date
2006
Authors
Coolen, M.J.L.
Boere, A.
Abbas, M.
Wakeham, S.G.
Sinninghe Damsté, J.S.
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DOI
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Article
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Abstract
Holocene sea surface temperatures (SST) of the Black Sea have been reconstructed using sedimentary C37
unsaturated alkenones assumed to be derived from the coccolithophorid haptophyte Emiliania huxleyi, whose
fossil coccoliths are an important constituent of the unit I sediments. However, alkenones can also be
biosynthesized by haptophyte species that do not produce microscopic recognizable coccoliths. A speciesspecific
identification of haptophytes is important in such U37
K0
-based past SST reconstructions since different
species have different alkenone-SST calibrations. We showed that 18S rDNA of E. huxleyi made up only a very
small percentage (less than 0.8%) of the total eukaryotic 18S rDNA within the up to 3600-year-old fossil record
obtained from the depocenter (>2000 m) of the Black Sea. The predominant fossil 18S rDNA was derived from
dinoflagellates (Gymnodinium spp.), which are predominant members of the summer phytoplankton bloom in
the modern Black Sea. Using a polymerase chain reaction/denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis method
selective for haptophytes, we recovered substantial numbers of a preserved 458-base-pair (bp)-long 18S rDNA
fragment of E. huxleyi from the Holocene Black Sea sediments. Additional fossil haptophyte sequences were not
detected, indicating that the E. huxleyi alkenone-SST calibration can be applied for at least the last 3600 years.
The ancient E. huxleyi DNA was well protected against degradation since the DNA/alkenone ratio did not
significantly decrease throughout the whole sediment core and 20% of 2700-year-old fossil E. huxleyi DNA
was still up to 23,000 base pairs long. We showed that fossil DNA offers great potential to study the Holocene
paleoecology and paleoenvironment of anoxic deep-sea settings in unprecedented detail.