Hess, Jaqueline Balasundaram, Sudhagar V Bakkemo, Renee I Drula, Elodie Henrissat, Bernard Högberg, Nils Eastwood, Daniel Skrede, Inger
Published in
The ISME journal
Ecological niche breadth and the mechanisms facilitating its evolution are fundamental to understanding adaptation to changing environments, persistence of generalist and specialist lineages and the formation of new species. Woody substrates are structurally complex resources utilized by organisms with specialized decay machinery. Wood-decaying fun...
Pereira, Olivier Hochart, Corentin Boeuf, Dominique Auguet, Jean Christophe Debroas, Didier Galand, Pierre E
Published in
The ISME journal
The Archaea Marine Group II (MGII) is widespread in the world's ocean where it plays an important role in the carbon cycle. Despite recent discoveries on the group's metabolisms, the ecology of this newly proposed order (Candidatus Poseidoniales) remains poorly understood. Here we used a combination of time-series metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs...
Okabe, Satoshi Shafdar, Amrini Amalia Kobayashi, Kanae Zhang, Lei Oshiki, Mamoru
Published in
The ISME journal
Presence of glycogen granules in anaerobic ammonium-oxidizing (anammox) bacteria has been reported so far. However, very little is known about their glycogen metabolism and the exact roles. Here, we studied the glycogen metabolism in "Ca. Brocadia sinica" growing in continuous retentostat cultures with bicarbonate as a carbon source. The effect of ...
Méheust, Raphaël Castelle, Cindy J Matheus Carnevali, Paula B Farag, Ibrahim F He, Christine Chen, Lin-Xing Amano, Yuki Hug, Laura A Banfield, Jillian F
Published in
The ISME journal
Currently described members of Elusimicrobia, a relatively recently defined phylum, are animal-associated and rely on fermentation. However, free-living Elusimicrobia have been detected in sediments, soils and groundwater, raising questions regarding their metabolic capacities and evolutionary relationship to animal-associated species. Here, we ana...
Yuan, Jun Wen, Tao Zhang, He Zhao, Mengli Penton, C Ryan Thomashow, Linda S Shen, Qirong
Published in
The ISME journal
Soil-borne plant diseases are increasingly causing devastating losses in agricultural production. The development of a more refined model for disease prediction can aid in reducing crop losses through the use of preventative control measures or soil fallowing for a planting season. The emergence of high-throughput DNA sequencing technology has prov...
Fones, Elizabeth M Colman, Daniel R Kraus, Emily A Stepanauskas, Ramunas Templeton, Alexis S Spear, John R Boyd, Eric S
Published in
The ISME journal
Metagenome assembled genomes (MAGs) and single amplified genomes (SAGs) affiliated with two distinct Methanobacterium lineages were recovered from subsurface fracture waters of the Samail Ophiolite, Sultanate of Oman. Lineage Type I was abundant in waters with circumneutral pH, whereas lineage Type II was abundant in hydrogen rich, hyperalkaline wa...
Lidbury, Ian D E A Borsetto, Chiara Murphy, Andrew R J Bottrill, Andrew Jones, Alexandra M E Bending, Gary D Hammond, John P Chen, Yin Wellington, Elizabeth M H Scanlan, David J
...
Published in
The ISME journal
Bacteroidetes are abundant pathogen-suppressing members of the plant microbiome that contribute prominently to rhizosphere phosphorus mobilisation, a frequent growth-limiting nutrient in this niche. However, the genetic traits underpinning their success in this niche remain largely unknown, particularly regarding their phosphorus acquisition strate...
Tobias-Hünefeldt, Sven P Wenley, Jess Baltar, Federico Morales, Sergio E
Published in
The ISME journal
Bottom-up selection has an important role in microbial community assembly but is unable to account for all observed variance. Other processes like top-down selection (e.g., predation) may be partially responsible for the unexplained variance. However, top-down processes and their interaction with bottom-up selective pressures often remain unexplore...
Graham, Elaina D Tully, Benjamin J
Published in
The ISME journal
The remineralization of organic material via heterotrophy in the marine environment is performed by a diverse and varied group of microorganisms that can specialize in the type of organic material degraded and the niche they occupy. The marine Dadabacteria are cosmopolitan in the marine environment and belong to a candidate phylum for which there h...
Altenburger, Andreas Cai, Huimin Li, Qiye Drumm, Kirstine Kim, Miran Zhu, Yuanzhen Garcia-Cuetos, Lydia Zhan, Xiaoyu Hansen, Per Juel John, Uwe
...
Published in
The ISME journal
The marine ciliate Mesodinium rubrum is famous for its ability to acquire and exploit chloroplasts and other cell organelles from some cryptophyte algal species. We sequenced genomes and transcriptomes of free-swimming Teleaulax amphioxeia, as well as well-fed and starved M. rubrum in order to understand cellular processes upon sequestration under ...