Effect of PAHs on nitrogen-fixing and sulfate-reducing microbial communities in seagrass Enhalus acoroides sediment

Author(s):  
Juan Ling ◽  
Weiguo Zhou ◽  
Qingsong Yang ◽  
Xiancheng Lin ◽  
Ying Zhang ◽  
...  
2004 ◽  
Vol 70 (12) ◽  
pp. 7053-7065 ◽  
Author(s):  
George Y. Matsui ◽  
David B. Ringelberg ◽  
Charles R. Lovell

ABSTRACT Marine infaunal burrows and tubes greatly enhance solute transport between sediments and the overlying water column and are sites of elevated microbial activity. Biotic and abiotic controls of the compositions and activities of burrow and tube microbial communities are poorly understood. The microbial communities in tubes of the marine infaunal polychaete Diopatria cuprea collected from two different sediment habitats were examined. The bacterial communities in the tubes from a sandy sediment differed from those in the tubes from a muddy sediment. The difference in community structure also extended to the sulfate-reducing bacterial (SRB) assemblage, although it was not as pronounced for this functional group of species. PCR-amplified 16S rRNA gene sequences recovered from Diopatra tube SRB by clonal library construction and screening were all related to the family Desulfobacteriaceae. This finding was supported by phospholipid fatty acid analysis and by hybridization of 16S rRNA probes specific for members of the genera Desulfosarcina, Desulfobacter, Desulfobacterium, Desulfobotulus, Desulfococcus, and Desulfovibrio and some members of the genera Desulfomonas, Desulfuromonas, and Desulfomicrobium with 16S rRNA gene sequences resolved by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis. Two of six SRB clones from the clone library were not detected in tubes from the sandy sediment. The habitat in which the D. cuprea tubes were constructed had a strong influence on the tube bacterial community as a whole, as well as on the SRB assemblage.


2017 ◽  
Vol 84 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael D. Lee ◽  
Eric A. Webb ◽  
Nathan G. Walworth ◽  
Fei-Xue Fu ◽  
Noelle A. Held ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTTrichodesmiumis a globally distributed cyanobacterium whose nitrogen-fixing capability fuels primary production in warm oligotrophic oceans. Like many photoautotrophs,Trichodesmiumserves as a host to various other microorganisms, yet little is known about how this associated community modulates fluxes of environmentally relevant chemical species into and out of the supraorganismal structure. Here, we utilized metatranscriptomics to examine gene expression activities of microbial communities associated withTrichodesmium erythraeum(strain IMS101) using laboratory-maintained enrichment cultures that have previously been shown to harbor microbial communities similar to those of natural populations. In enrichments maintained under two distinct CO2concentrations for ∼8 years, the community transcriptional profiles were found to be specific to the treatment, demonstrating a restructuring of overall gene expression had occurred. Some of this restructuring involved significant increases in community respiration-related transcripts under elevated CO2, potentially facilitating the corresponding measured increases in host nitrogen fixation rates. Particularly of note, in both treatments, community transcripts involved in the reduction of nitrate, nitrite, and nitrous oxide were detected, suggesting the associated organisms may play a role in colony-level nitrogen cycling. Lastly, a taxon-specific analysis revealed distinct ecological niches of consistently cooccurring major taxa that may enable, or even encourage, the stable cohabitation of a diverse community withinTrichodesmiumconsortia.IMPORTANCETrichodesmiumis a genus of globally distributed, nitrogen-fixing marine cyanobacteria. As a source of new nitrogen in otherwise nitrogen-deficient systems, these organisms help fuel carbon fixation carried out by other more abundant photoautotrophs and thereby have significant roles in global nitrogen and carbon cycling. Members of theTrichodesmiumgenus tend to form large macroscopic colonies that appear to perpetually host an association of diverse interacting microbes distinct from the surrounding seawater, potentially making the entire assemblage a unique miniature ecosystem. Since its first successful cultivation in the early 1990s, there have been questions about the potential interdependencies betweenTrichodesmiumand its associated microbial community and whether the host's seemingly enigmatic nitrogen fixation schema somehow involved or benefited from its epibionts. Here, we revisit these old questions with new technology and investigate gene expression activities of microbial communities living in association withTrichodesmium.


2013 ◽  
Vol 47 (14) ◽  
pp. 5316-5325 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emilie Lefèvre ◽  
Luciana P. Pereyra ◽  
Sage R. Hiibel ◽  
Elizabeth M. Perrault ◽  
Susan K. De Long ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 262 ◽  
pp. 638-642
Author(s):  
Tomas Hessler ◽  
Tynan Marais ◽  
Robert J. Huddy ◽  
Robert van Hille ◽  
Susan T.L. Harrison

Biological sulfate reduction represents an alternative and sustainable option to reduce the high sulfate load, precipitate heavy metals and neutralise the acidity associated with acid rock drainage (ARD). Sulfate-reducing enrichment cultures have been developed on simple and complex electron donors from several environmental samples and used to inoculate three reactor configurations, namely a continuous stirred tank bioreactor, up-flow anaerobic packed bed reactor and a linear flow channel reactor, with varying degrees of biomass retention provided by carbon microfibres and polyurethane foam. These matrices are included to enhance microbial attachment and colonisation, allowing for the decoupling of hydraulic retention time and biomass retention time. The bioreactor systems are operated under increasingly stringent conditions through the reduction in the hydraulic residence time. The biological sulfate reduction performance and the biomass concentration of planktonic, matrix-attached and matrix-associated communities are routinely monitored. This investigation makes use of biomass quantification of the planktonic community and, following detachment, the matrix-associated community to investigate the resultant microbial communities in these reactor systems. Evaluation of these mixed microbial communities, and their link to process performance, provides an opportunity to impact the design and operation of pilot- and industrial-scale bioprocesses.


2011 ◽  
Vol 75 (14) ◽  
pp. 3903-3914 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marjolijn C. Stam ◽  
Paul R.D. Mason ◽  
Anniet M. Laverman ◽  
Céline Pallud ◽  
Philippe Van Cappellen

1995 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 261-272 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lutgarde Raskin ◽  
Rudolf I. Amann ◽  
Lars K. Poulsen ◽  
Bruce E. Rittmann ◽  
David A. Stahl

The use of ribosomal RNA (rRNA) probe technology for the characterization of complex microbial communities is reviewed and illustrated by discussing the results of a long-term study of four anaerobic fixed-bed biofilm reactors. Two distinct approaches were used to characterize the microbial community structure in these biofilm reactors. The first used a collection of phylogenetically defined oligonucleotide rRNA probes for methanogens and sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) to quantify their populations. Population abundance was linked to the functional behavior of the biofilm reactor community by determining the effluent concentrations of the substrates, intermediates, and final products of microbial metabolism. This analysis indicated that the presence of SRB (especially Desulfovibrio-species) was not dependent upon the presence of sulfate. Methanobacteriales-species were the major competitors for hydrogen with these SRB in the absence of sulfate. The second approach involved selective amplification, cloning, sequencing, and whole cell hybridization to identify, visualize, and isolate a biofilm community member (strain PT-2). Subsequently, it was determined that the growth rate of strain PT-2 was significantly higher in young biofilms than in established biofilms.


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