Artículo de revista
Atacama Database: a platform of the microbiome of the Atacama Desert
Fecha
2020Registro en:
Antonie van Leeuwenhoek (2020) 113:185–195
10.1007/s10482-019-01328-x
Autor
Contador, Carolina A.
Veas Castillo, Luis
Tapia, Emilio
Antipán, Marcela
Miranda, Noemí
Ruiz Tagle, Benjamín
García Araya, Jonathan
Andrews, Barbara
Marín, Mauricio
Dorador, Cristina
Asenjo de Leuze, Juan
Institución
Resumen
The Atacama Desert is one of the oldest and driest places on Earth. In the last decade, microbial richness and diversity has been acknowledged as an important biological resource of this region. Owing to the value of the microbial diversity apparent in potential biotechnology applications and conservation purposes, it is necessary to catalogue these microbial communities to promote research activities and help to preserve the wide range of ecological niches of the Atacama region. A prototype Atacama Database has been designed and it provides a description of the rich microbial diversity of the Atacama Desert, and helps to visualise available literature resources. Data has been collected, curated, and organised into several categories to generate a single record for each organism in the database that covers classification, isolation metadata, morphology, physiology, genome and metabolism information. The current version of Atacama Database contains 2302 microorganisms and includes cultured and uncultured organisms retrieved from different environments within the desert between 1984 and 2016. These organisms are distributed in bacterial, archaeal or eukaryotic domains, along with those that are unclassified taxonomically. The initial prototype of the Atacama Database includes a basic search and taxonomic and advanced search tools to allow identification and comparison of microbial populations, and space distribution within this biome. A geolocation search was implemented to visualise the microbial diversity of the ecological niches defined by sectors and extract general information of the sampling sites. This effort will aid understanding of the microbial ecology of the desert, microbial population dynamics, seasonal behaviour, impact of climate change over time, and reveal further biotechnological applications of these microorganisms.