Publications by authors named "Rudolf I Amann"

This article summarises the activities of the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses Bacterial Viruses Subcommittee, detailing developments in the classification of bacterial viruses. We provide here an overview of all new, abolished, moved and renamed taxa proposed in 2024, approved by the Executive Committee, and ratified by membership vote in 2025. Through the collective efforts of 74 international contributors of taxonomy proposals in this round, 43 ratified proposals have led to the creation of one new phylum, one class, four orders, 33 families, 14 subfamilies, 194 genera and 995 species.

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Laminarin is a cytosolic storage polysaccharide of phytoplankton and macroalgae and accounts for over 10% of the world's annually fixed carbon dioxide. Algal disruption, for example, by viral lysis releases laminarin. The soluble sugar is rapidly utilized by free-living planktonic bacteria, in which sugar transporters and the degrading enzymes are frequently encoded in polysaccharide utilization loci.

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Phytoplankton blooms provoke bacterioplankton blooms, from which bacterial biomass (necromass) is released via increased zooplankton grazing and viral lysis. While bacterial consumption of algal biomass during blooms is well-studied, little is known about the concurrent recycling of these substantial amounts of bacterial necromass. We demonstrate that bacterial biomass, such as bacterial alpha-glucan storage polysaccharides, generated from the consumption of algal organic matter, is reused and thus itself a major bacterial carbon source in vitro and during a diatom-dominated bloom.

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Arabinose and galactose are major, rapidly metabolized components of marine particulate and dissolved organic matter. In this study, we observed for the first time large microbiomes for the degradation of arabinogalactan and report a detailed investigation of arabinogalactan utilization by the flavobacterium Maribacter sp. MAR_2009_72.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Marine microalgae, or phytoplankton, are crucial in global carbon cycling as they fix nearly half of the world's carbon dioxide through photosynthesis, especially during significant blooms where their biomass is composed mainly of polysaccharides.
  • - A study analyzed polysaccharide-degrading bacteria during a phytoplankton bloom, revealing distinct groups of bacteria based on size: smaller free-living bacteria and larger particle-attached ones, with the latter showing greater diversity and adaptive changes over time.
  • - The research produced 305 species-level genomes, including 152 from particle-attached bacteria, many of which were novel to the area; these genomes indicated a greater capacity for utilizing a wider range of polysaccharides, showcasing their
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Background: Macroalgal epiphytic microbial communities constitute a rich resource for novel enzymes and compounds, but studies so far largely focused on tag-based microbial diversity analyses or limited metagenome sequencing of single macroalgal species.

Results: We sampled epiphytic bacteria from specimens of Ulva sp. (green algae), Saccharina sp.

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Article Synopsis
  • Marine microalgae blooms are crucial for global carbon cycling, significantly affecting how carbon is processed in the ocean.
  • A study conducted in the German Bight analyzed 90 days of planktonic bacterial samples, revealing key bacterial metabolisms involved in breaking down algal polysaccharides, notably β-glucans and α-glucans.
  • The findings suggest that both the presence and the breakdown of these polysaccharides shape the community structure of bacterioplankton during blooms, influenced by both algal and bacterial processes.
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Article Synopsis
  • Microbial glycan degradation plays a crucial role in global carbon cycling, with the marine bacterium Salegentibacter sp. Hel_I_6 showing potential in breaking down α-mannan, a component sourced from fungi.
  • The bacterium's gene cluster includes an endo-α-1,6-mannanase enzyme (ShGH76) that functions similarly to enzymes found in human gut bacteria, indicating a shared ability to digest fungal material.
  • Research findings show that ShGH76 has unique structural characteristics and demonstrates strong activity on α-mannan substrates, hinting at the presence of previously unidentified fungal α-1,6-mannans in marine ecosystems, particularly during periods of microalgae blooms.
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Gene clusters rich in carbohydrate-active enzymes within Flavobacteriia genera provide a competitiveness for their hosts to degrade diatom-derived polysaccharides. One such widely distributed polysaccharide is glucuronomannan, a main cell wall component of diatoms. A conserved gene cluster putatively degrading glucuronomannan was found previously among various flavobacterial taxa in marine metagenomes.

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Marine algae annually sequester petagrams of carbon dioxide into polysaccharides, which are a central metabolic fuel for marine carbon cycling. Diatom microalgae produce sulfated polysaccharides containing methyl pentoses that are challenging to degrade for bacteria compared to other monomers, implicating these sugars as a potential carbon sink. Free-living bacteria occurring in phytoplankton blooms that specialise on consuming microalgal sugars, containing fucose and rhamnose remain unknown.

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The multiple interactions of phytoplankton and bacterioplankton are central for our understanding of aquatic environments. A prominent example of those is the consistent association of diatoms with of the order . These photoheterotrophic bacteria have traditionally been described as generalists that scavenge dissolved organic matter.

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Seawater contains free-living and particle-attached bacteria. Only a small fraction is cultivable on plates. As free-living and particle-associated bacteria differ in their physiological traits, their cultivability on plates may coincide with particle association.

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Marine heterotrophic microorganisms remineralize about half of the annual primary production, with the microbiomes on and around algae and particles having a major contribution. These microbiomes specifically include free-living chemotactic and particle-attached bacteria, which are often difficult to analyze individually, as the standard method of size-selective filtration only gives access to particle-attached bacteria. In this study, we demonstrated that particle collection in Imhoff sedimentation cones enriches microbiomes that included free-living chemotactic bacteria and were distinct from particle microbiomes obtained by filtration or centrifugation.

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Algal blooms produce large quantities of organic matter that is subsequently remineralised by bacterial heterotrophs. Polysaccharide is a primary component of algal biomass. It has been hypothesised that individual bacterial heterotrophic niches during algal blooms are in part determined by the available polysaccharide substrates present.

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The assembly of single-amplified genomes (SAGs) and metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) has led to a surge in genome-based discoveries of members affiliated with Archaea and Bacteria, bringing with it a need to develop guidelines for nomenclature of uncultivated microorganisms. The International Code of Nomenclature of Prokaryotes (ICNP) only recognizes cultures as 'type material', thereby preventing the naming of uncultivated organisms. In this Consensus Statement, we propose two potential paths to solve this nomenclatural conundrum.

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Seamounts, often rising hundreds of metres above surrounding seafloor, obstruct the flow of deep-ocean water. While the retention of deep-water by seamounts is predicted from ocean circulation models, its empirical validation has been hampered by large scale and slow rate of the interaction. To overcome these limitations we use the growth of planktonic bacteria to assess the retention time of deep-ocean water by a seamount.

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Massive releases of organic substrates during marine algal blooms trigger growth of many clades of heterotrophic bacteria. Algal polysaccharides represent the most diverse and structurally complex class of these substrates, yet their role in shaping the microbial community composition is poorly understood. We investigated, whether polysaccharide utilization capabilities contribute to niche differentiation of Polaribacter spp.

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One of the most abundant sources of organic carbon in the ocean is glycolate, the secretion of which by marine phytoplankton results in an estimated annual flux of one petagram of glycolate in marine environments. Although it is generally accepted that glycolate is oxidized to glyoxylate by marine bacteria, the further fate of this C metabolite is not well understood. Here we show that ubiquitous marine Proteobacteria are able to assimilate glyoxylate via the β-hydroxyaspartate cycle (BHAC) that was originally proposed 56 years ago.

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Since the discovery of archaeoplankton in 1992, the euryarchaeotal Marine Group II (MGII) remains uncultured and less understood than other planktonic archaea. We characterized the seasonal dynamics of MGII populations in the southern North Sea on a genomic and microscopic level over the course of four years. We recovered 34 metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) of MGIIa and MGIIb that corroborated proteorhodopsin-based photoheterotrophic lifestyles.

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We investigated Bacteroidetes during spring algae blooms in the southern North Sea in 2010-2012 using a time series of 38 deeply sequenced metagenomes. Initial partitioning yielded 6455 bins, from which we extracted 3101 metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) including 1286 Bacteroidetes MAGs covering ~120 mostly uncultivated species. We identified 13 dominant, recurrent Bacteroidetes clades carrying a restricted set of conserved polysaccharide utilization loci (PULs) that likely mediate the bulk of bacteroidetal algal polysaccharide degradation.

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Marine microscopic algae carry out about half of the global carbon dioxide fixation into organic matter. They provide organic substrates for marine microbes such as members of the Bacteroidetes that degrade algal polysaccharides using carbohydrate-active enzymes (CAZymes). In Bacteroidetes genomes CAZyme encoding genes are mostly grouped in distinct regions termed polysaccharide utilization loci (PULs).

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Microbial degradation of algal biomass following spring phytoplankton blooms has been characterised as a concerted effort among multiple clades of heterotrophic bacteria. Despite their significance to overall carbon turnover, many of these clades have resisted cultivation. One clade known from 16S rRNA gene sequencing surveys at Helgoland in the North Sea, was formerly identified as belonging to the genus Ulvibacter.

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