Project description:We established simple synthetic microbial communities in a microcosm model system to determine the mechanisms that underlay cross-feeding in microbial methane-consuming communities. Co-occurring strains from Lake Washington sediment were used that are involved in methane consumption, a methanotroph and two non-methanotrophic methylotrophs.
Project description:Analysis of microbial gene expression in response to physical and chemical gradients forming in the Columbia River, estuary, plume and coastal ocean was done in the context of the environmental data base. Gene expression was analyzed for 2,234 individual genes that were selected from fully sequenced genomes of 246 prokaryotic species (bacteria and archaea) as related to the nitrogen metabolism and carbon fixation. Seasonal molecular portraits of differential gene expression in prokaryotic communities during river-to-ocean transition were created using freshwater baseline samples (268, 270, 347, 002, 006, 207, 212).
Project description:Maider J. Echeveste Medrano and colleagues characterized the physiological and metabolic response of freshwater methanotrophic archaea to salt stress. The study performed metaproteomics, gene expression profiles and dedicated metabolomics to identify the pathways involved in the salt stress response and the osmolyte present in anaerobic methanotrophic archaea. Correspondence to Cornelia U. Welte c.welte@science.ru.nl