Project description:Microbial autotroph-heterotroph interactions influence biogeochemical cycles on a global scale, but the diversity and complexity of natural systems and their intractability to in situ manipulation make it challenging to elucidate the principles governing these interactions. The study of assembling phototrophic biofilm communities provides a robust means to identify such interactions and evaluate their contributions to the recruitment and maintenance of phylogenetic and functional diversity overtime. To examine primary succession in phototrophic communities, we isolated two unicyanobacterial consortia from the microbial mat in HotLake, Washington, characterizing the membership and metabolic function of each consortium. We then analyzed the spatial structures and quantified the community compositions of their assembling biofilms. The consortia retained the same suite of heterotrophic species, identified as abundant members of the mat and assigned to Alphaproteobacteria, Gammaproteobacteria, and Bacteroidetes. Autotroph growth rates dominated early in assembly, yielding to increasing heterotroph growth rates late in succession. The two consortia exhibited similar assembly patterns, with increasing relative abundances of members from Bacteroidetes and Alphaproteobacteria concurrent with decreasing relative abundances of those from Gamma proteobacteria. Despite these similarities at higher taxonomic levels, the relative abundances of individual heterotrophic species were substantially different in the developing consortial biofilms. This suggests that, although similar niches are created by the cyanobacterial metabolisms, the resulting webs of autotroph-heterotroph and heterotroph-heterotroph interactions are specific to each primary producer. The relative simplicity and tractability of the Hot Lake unicyanobacterial consortia make them useful model systems for deciphering interspecies interactions and assembly principles relevant to natural microbial communities.
Project description:This experiment aims on the identification of serine hydrolases from a complex thermophile community that live in a hot vent in Kamchatka Peninsula based on in vivo labelling with FP-alkyne directly in the hot spring and subsequent analysis using metagenomics/metaproteomics. To this end, sediment samples were collected and treated using the following three conditions. DMSO- treated control FP-alkyne labelled Samples for each condition were prepared in triplicate, resulting a total number of 6 samples per spring. Labelling was performed using 4 µM of the probe FP-alkyne and incubation for 2 h in the hot spring.
Project description:Hot spring phototrophic mat microbial communities from Mushroom Spring, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, United States - 20060911_MSe2 metagenome
Project description:Hot spring phototrophic mat microbial communities from Mushroom Spring, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, United States - 20040719_149 metagenome
Project description:Hot spring phototrophic mat microbial communities from Mushroom Spring, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, United States - 20050930_P4 metagenome