Project description:This study evaluates whether different pre-treatments (+Pi, -Pi and +Phi) influences the phosphate starvation transcriptional response triggered by a bacterial synthetic community in Arabidopsis seedlings.
2017-03-20 | GSE87337 | GEO
Project description:Bacterial community composition in household waste composting sample
| PRJNA390889 | ENA
Project description:Microbial community assembly under different migration treatments
| PRJNA761777 | ENA
Project description:Bacterial community under different pavements
Project description:Functional redundancy in bacterial communities is expected to allow microbial assemblages to survive perturbation by allowing continuity in function despite compositional changes in communities. Recent evidence suggests, however, that microbial communities change both composition and function as a result of disturbance. We present evidence for a third response: resistance. We examined microbial community response to perturbation caused by nutrient enrichment in salt marsh sediments using deep pyrosequencing of 16S rRNA and functional gene microarrays targeting the nirS gene. Composition of the microbial community, as demonstrated by both genes, was unaffected by significant variations in external nutrient supply, despite demonstrable and diverse nutrient–induced changes in many aspects of marsh ecology. The lack of response to external forcing demonstrates a remarkable uncoupling between microbial composition and ecosystem-level biogeochemical processes and suggests that sediment microbial communities are able to resist some forms of perturbation. nirS gene diversity from two salt marsh experiments, GSM (4 treatments, 8 samples, duplicate arrays, four replicate blocks per array, 8 arrays per slide) and PIE (2 treatments, 16 samples, duplicate arrays four replicate blocks per array, 8 arrays per slide)
Project description:Organic matter recycling in marine systems is largely driven by microbial processes, particularly in the Arctic where primary production and inputs can be temporally offset from upper trophic level consumption. This study followed bacterial dynamics in the chlorophyll maximum of the Bering Strait and sediment-water interface of the Chukchi Sea using metaproteomic and 16S rRNA methods to measure cellular function and taxonomic composition under low and high marine-derived particulate organic matter (POM) treatments at 0°C. Parallel analysis of major organic components (lipids and amino acids) allowed a comparison of microbial-POM interactions. Over the 10 day experimental period, bacteria under both treatments showed rapid community responses and changes in proteomic expression, accompanied by small changes in the concentration and distributions of organic components. In the Bering Strait community, protein translation was an important immediate cellular response under both POM scenarios while specific metabolic processes were more distinct between treatments. For example, under both conditions, evidence for carboxylic acid metabolism increased at day 6 while carbohydrate utilization as an energy source showed unique patterns as the experiments progressed. With POM additions to the Bering Strait community, nitrogen transport and regulation went up, including nitrogen fixation and ammonia assimilation, by day 6. In addition, a number of vitamin enzymatic cofactors were enriched by this day, providing evidence for an increase in C1 metabolism at that time. Low POM conditions stimulated the cycling and synthesis of amino acids, which was not as pronounced under the high POM treatment. In the Chukchi Sea community, nitrate reduction and substrate-specific transporter activity was statistically higher than in the Bering Strait, especially under low POM conditions. Taxonomic inference revealed that a wide range of bacterial classes were associated with the shifting cellular functions, but that Alphaproteobacteria, Gammaproteobacteria and Flavobacteria controlled most of these protein abundances. Activities of all classes were highly variable, with less dominant bacterial groups exhibiting a particularly strong degree of niche separation.
2019-02-18 | PXD008780 | Pride
Project description:Diversity of bacterial composition under different fertilization conditions