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Full-Text Articles in Microbiology

Systems Biology Of Microcystis Blooms, Morgan Michelle Steffen Aug 2014

Systems Biology Of Microcystis Blooms, Morgan Michelle Steffen

Doctoral Dissertations

Cyanobacterial harmful algal blooms (cHABs) degrade freshwater lakes worldwide. Accumulation of nuisance biomass and production of noxious secondary metabolites can result in an expansive impact on both lake ecology and the surrounding communities. The cHAB forming organism Microcystis aeruginosa is known to produce the toxin microcystin, a compound nicknamed “fast death factor,” which has been implicated in animal poisonings and human liver failure and cancers. M. aeruginosa inhabits a wide range of freshwater lakes around the world, such as Lake Erie (USA/Canada) and Lake Tai (Taihu, China), and is often a dominant member of bloom communities. Such systems are well-studied …


Quantification And Ecological Perspectives On Cyanophage And Aquatic Viruses, Audrey Renee Matteson May 2011

Quantification And Ecological Perspectives On Cyanophage And Aquatic Viruses, Audrey Renee Matteson

Doctoral Dissertations

The field of viral ecology is still relatively new and many processes by which viruses influence hosts are still widely unknown. One problem is that there are few standardized techniques in virus ecology, making comparisons of data very difficult. To better understand the methodology, we first set out to make a video showing the process for the viral production assay using the “dilution and reoccurrence” method, which has become the standard to analyze production rates in aquatic ecosystems. Using this method, we also determined the production rates of viruses during a seasonal pelagic phytoplankton bloom during a cruise off the …


Actinorhodopsin Genes Discovered Diverse In Freshwater Habitats And Among Cultivated Actinobacteria, A.K. Sharma, K. Sommerfeld, G.S. Bullerjahn, A.R. Matteson, Steven Wilhelm, J. Jezbera, U. Brandt, W.F. Doolittle, M.W. Hahn Jan 2009

Actinorhodopsin Genes Discovered Diverse In Freshwater Habitats And Among Cultivated Actinobacteria, A.K. Sharma, K. Sommerfeld, G.S. Bullerjahn, A.R. Matteson, Steven Wilhelm, J. Jezbera, U. Brandt, W.F. Doolittle, M.W. Hahn

Microbiology Publications and Other Works

Microbial rhodopsins are membrane proteins that utilize a retinal chromophore to harvest sunlight for energetic and photosensory functions. Recently, a group of novel rhodopsin sequences named ‘actinorhodopsins’ (ActRs) was hypothesized to exist among uncultured planktonic Actinobacteria. ActRs were discovered by mining metagenomic data obtained during the Venter Institute’s Global Ocean Sampling expedition, from a hypersaline lagoon, two estuaries and a freshwater lake. On the basis of these findings, and many studies that show Actinobacteria are common inhabitants of lakes, we predicted that ActR genes would likely be present in other freshwater habitats and among the genomes of cultivated Actinobacteria …