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Environmental Microbiology and Microbial Ecology Commons™
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Articles 1 - 10 of 10
Full-Text Articles in Environmental Microbiology and Microbial Ecology
Extracting Detailed Metabolic Information And Connections From Mammalian Gut Microbiomes Via Metaproteomics, Jose A. Blakeley-Ruiz
Extracting Detailed Metabolic Information And Connections From Mammalian Gut Microbiomes Via Metaproteomics, Jose A. Blakeley-Ruiz
Doctoral Dissertations
A diverse community of bacteria populates the mammalian gastrointestinal tract. These populations exist in a balance with the host assisting with key functions, particularly metabolism of intractable fibers and immune modulation. Disruption of this balance can lead to diseases such as infection, inflammatory bowel syndrome, and obesity. Common symptoms include chronic pain, chronic inflammation, and altered metabolism. Several taxonomic classifications of bacteria have been associated with these diseases, but Recent studies have indicated that these finding are not always statistically valid. An explanation for this is that microbial communities between individuals and even across time can vary substantially even when …
More Than The Sum Of Their Parts: Building A Framework For Understanding Host-Microbe Interactions In Medicago Sativa, Katherine Mackenzie Moccia
More Than The Sum Of Their Parts: Building A Framework For Understanding Host-Microbe Interactions In Medicago Sativa, Katherine Mackenzie Moccia
Doctoral Dissertations
This dissertation seeks to understand plant-microbe interactions in the agriculturally relevant plant Medicago sativa from three distinct vantage points within microbiology. Within the plant microbiome, we examine how primer usage and the application of peptide nucleic acids impacts 16S and 18S rRNA gene sequencing. In doing so, we design a novel peptide nucleic acid, PNA, and test its impact using multiple primers and sequencing protocols. Once microbial sequencing methodology is established, we generate a synthetic consortium of bacterial isolates from M. sativa leaves and modulate nitrogen levels to better understand microbial structure. Drop out communities, where we remove one member …
Approaches To Studying Bacterial Biofilms In The Bioeconomy With Nanofabrication Techniques And Engineered Platforms., Michelle Caroline Halsted
Approaches To Studying Bacterial Biofilms In The Bioeconomy With Nanofabrication Techniques And Engineered Platforms., Michelle Caroline Halsted
Doctoral Dissertations
Studies that estimate more than 90% of bacteria subsist in a biofilm state to survive environmental stressors. These biofilms persist on man-made and natural surfaces, and examples of the rich biofilm diversity extends from the roots of bioenergy crops to electroactive biofilms in bioelectrochemical reactors. Efforts to optimize microbial systems in the bioeconomy will benefit from an improved fundamental understanding of bacterial biofilms. An understanding of these microbial systems shows promise to increase crop yields with precision agriculture (e.g. biosynthetic fertilizer, microbial pesticides, and soil remediation) and increase commodity production yields in bioreactors. Yet conventional laboratory methods investigate these micron-scale …
Soil Moisture Sensitivity Of Microbial Processing Of Soil Organic Carbon, Shikha Singh
Soil Moisture Sensitivity Of Microbial Processing Of Soil Organic Carbon, Shikha Singh
Doctoral Dissertations
Soil organic carbon (SOC) is the largest terrestrial C pool and understanding SOC decomposition in response to environmental factors is critical for accurate predictions of climatic change. Soil moisture is one of the most important, yet less explored, environmental factors controlling soil microbial respiration. The relationship between soil moisture and respiration also varies with soil texture. Currently, it is difficult to predict feedbacks to climatic changes from changes in soil moisture, as most earth system models lack site-specific, experimentally-derived parameters to represent soil moisture-texture-respiration relationships. The overarching goals of this dissertation are to gain a fundamental understanding of the interactive …
Carbon Metabolism In Cave Subaerial Biofilms, Victoria E. Frazier
Carbon Metabolism In Cave Subaerial Biofilms, Victoria E. Frazier
Masters Theses
Subaerial biofilms (SABs) grow at the interface between the atmosphere and rock surfaces in terrestrial and subterranean environments around the world. Multi-colored SABs colonizing relatively dry and nutrient-limited cave surfaces are known to contain microbes putatively involved in chemolithoautotrophic processes using inorganic carbon like carbon dioxide (CO2) or methane (CH4). However, the importance of CO2 and CH4 to SAB biomass production has not been quantified, the environmental conditions influencing biomass production and diversity have not been thoroughly evaluated, and stable carbon and nitrogen isotope compositions have yet to be determined from epigenic cave SABs. …
Root Phosphomonoesterase As A Vital Component Of Increasing Phosphorus Availability In Tropical Forests, Kristine Grace Manno Cabugao
Root Phosphomonoesterase As A Vital Component Of Increasing Phosphorus Availability In Tropical Forests, Kristine Grace Manno Cabugao
Doctoral Dissertations
Tropical forests, relative to other terrestrial ecosystems, exchange the largest amount of carbon with the atmosphere and also constitute a significant carbon sink. However, nutrient limitation, particularly of phosphorus (P), could limit growth of tropical forests and their function with the global carbon cycle. Thus, understanding root mechanisms to acquire P is necessary to representing the P cycle and corresponding interactions with plant growth. A large portion of total soil P in tropical forests occurs in organic forms, only accessible through root and microbial production of phosphatase enzymes. These phosphatase enzymes mineralize organic P into orthophosphate, the form of P …
Theoretical And Quantitative Methods Connecting Characterizing Micoribal Metabolism Diversity: Implciations From Phylogenetics, Community Diversity, And Organic Geochemistry, Taylor Royalty
Doctoral Dissertations
Biogeochemistry is controlled by microorganisms obtaining nutrients and energy. Thus, microbial metabolisms directly link microbial ecology and geochemistry. The extent that microbial ecology and geochemistry microbial ecology and geochemistry affects the other requires constraint on the spatiotemporal distribution and abundance of microbial metabolisms with respect to geochemistry, or the microbial niches. Elucidating microbial metabolisms was challenging prior to the advent of ‘omics sequencing technologies, as most microbial lineages lack cultured representatives. Although revolutionizing microbial ecology, challenges still exist in fully leveraging information derived from ‘omics technologies. This dissertation attempts to address a small subset of these challenges that include quantifying …
Needles In A Haystack Of Protein Diversity: Interrogation Of Complex Biological Samples Through Specialized Strategies In Bottom-Up Proteomics Uncover Peptides Of Interest For Diverse Applications, Manuel I. Villalobos Solis
Needles In A Haystack Of Protein Diversity: Interrogation Of Complex Biological Samples Through Specialized Strategies In Bottom-Up Proteomics Uncover Peptides Of Interest For Diverse Applications, Manuel I. Villalobos Solis
Doctoral Dissertations
Peptide identification is at the core of bottom-up proteomics measurements. However, even with state-of the-art mass spectrometric instrumentation, peptide level information is still lost or missing in these types of experiments. Reasons behind missing peptide identifications in bottom-up proteomics include variable peptide ionization efficiencies, ion suppression effects, as well as the occurrence of chimeric spectra that can lower the efficacy of database search strategies. Peptides derived from naturally abundant proteins in a biological system also have better chances of being identified in comparison to the ones produced from less abundant proteins, at least in regular discovery-based proteomics experiments. This dissertation …
From Genes To Ecosystems: Resource Availability And Dna Methylation Drive The Diversity And Abundance Of Restriction Modification Systems In Prokaryotes, Spiridon E. Papoulis
From Genes To Ecosystems: Resource Availability And Dna Methylation Drive The Diversity And Abundance Of Restriction Modification Systems In Prokaryotes, Spiridon E. Papoulis
Doctoral Dissertations
Together, prokaryotic hosts and their viruses numerically dominate the planet and are engaged in an eternal struggle of hosts evading viral predation and viruses overcoming defensive mechanisms employed by their hosts. Prokaryotic hosts have been found to carry several viral defense systems in recent years with Restriction Modification systems (RMs) were the first discovered in the 1950s. While we have biochemically elucidated many of these systems in the last 70 years, we still struggle to understand what drives their gain and loss in prokaryotic genomes. In this work, we take a computational approach to understand the underlying evolutionary drivers of …
Changes In Antibiotic Resistance Of Soil Microbes During Human Decomposition, Victoria N. Beard
Changes In Antibiotic Resistance Of Soil Microbes During Human Decomposition, Victoria N. Beard
Chancellor’s Honors Program Projects
No abstract provided.