Publications by authors named "Sarah P Esser"

Candidatus Altiarchaea are widespread across aquatic subsurface ecosystems and possess a highly conserved core genome, yet adaptations of this core genome to different biotic and abiotic factors based on gene expression remain unknown. Here, we investigated the metatranscriptome of two Ca. Altiarchaeum populations that thrive in two substantially different subsurface ecosystems.

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Oil reservoirs are society's primary source of hydrocarbons. While microbial communities in industrially exploited oil reservoirs have been investigated in the past, pristine microbial communities in untapped oil reservoirs are little explored, as are distribution patterns of respective genetic signatures. Here, we show that a pristine oil sample contains a complex community consisting of bacteria and fungi for the degradation of hydrocarbons.

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Article Synopsis
  • Gracilibacteria are a group of bacteria that are part of the candidate phyla radiation (CPR), characterized by small size and incomplete metabolic pathways, indicating a potential symbiotic lifestyle, and their roles in ecosystems, especially in groundwater, are still largely unknown.
  • The study utilized metagenomic and metaproteomic analyses over a 12-day period at a cold-water geyser in Germany to observe the activity and genetic expression of Gracilibacteria, identifying multiple genomes and their interactions with other microbial communities.
  • The findings revealed that Gracilibacteria possess genomic traits suggesting limited metabolic functions and a reliance on host organisms for survival, as indicated by a high number of genes related to cell interaction and motility.
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Background: The Andean Altiplano hosts a repertoire of high-altitude lakes with harsh conditions for life. These lakes are undergoing a process of desiccation caused by the current climate, leaving terraces exposed to extreme atmospheric conditions and serving as analogs to Martian paleolake basins. Microbiomes in Altiplano lake terraces have been poorly studied, enclosing uncultured lineages and a great opportunity to understand environmental adaptation and the limits of life on Earth.

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Ecosystems subject to mantle degassing are of particular interest for understanding global biogeochemistry, as their microbiomes are shaped by prolonged exposure to high CO and have recently been suggested to be highly active. While the genetic diversity of bacteria and archaea in these deep biosphere systems have been studied extensively, little is known about how viruses impact these microbial communities. Here, we show that the viral community in a high-CO cold-water geyser (Wallender Born, Germany) undergoes substantial fluctuations over a period of 12 days, although the corresponding prokaryotic community remains stable, indicating a newly observed "infect to keep in check" strategy that maintains prokaryotic community structure.

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Background: Microbial communities are important drivers of global biogeochemical cycles, xenobiotic detoxification, as well as organic matter decomposition. Their major metabolic role in ecosystem functioning is ensured by a unique set of enzymes, providing a tremendous yet mostly hidden enzymatic potential. Exploring this enzymatic repertoire is therefore not only relevant for a better understanding of how microorganisms function in their natural environment, and thus for ecological research, but further turns microbial communities, in particular from extreme habitats, into a valuable resource for the discovery of novel enzymes with potential applications in biotechnology.

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Article Synopsis
  • Marine viruses prevalent in seawater have been less studied regarding their movement from ocean surfaces to the atmosphere.
  • A study found that 6.2% of viruses could be found in both the air-sea interface and rainwater, indicating selective enrichment and transfer of viruses, particularly from the surface microlayer and sea foams to the atmosphere.
  • The presence of specific CRISPR matches suggests frequent interactions between marine prokaryotes and foreign viruses, supporting the idea that viruses can spread through the natural water cycle.
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CRISPR-Cas systems defend prokaryotic cells from invasive DNA of viruses, plasmids and other mobile genetic elements. Here, we show using metagenomics, metatranscriptomics and single-cell genomics that CRISPR systems of widespread, uncultivated archaea can also target chromosomal DNA of archaeal episymbionts of the DPANN superphylum. Using meta-omics datasets from Crystal Geyser and Horonobe Underground Research Laboratory, we find that CRISPR spacers of the hosts Candidatus Altiarchaeum crystalense and Ca.

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Despite important ecological roles posited for virocells (i.e., cells infected with viruses), studying individual cells in situ is technically challenging.

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Marine viruses are a major driver of phytoplankton mortality and thereby influence biogeochemical cycling of carbon and other nutrients. Phytoplankton-targeting viruses are important components of ecosystem dynamics, but broad-scale experimental investigations of host-virus interactions remain scarce. Here, we investigated in detail a picophytoplankton (size 1 µm) host's responses to infections by species-specific viruses from distinct geographical regions and different sampling seasons.

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Spatial and temporal distribution of lytic viruses in deep groundwater remains unexplored so far. Here, we tackle this gap of knowledge by studying viral infections of Altivir_1_MSI in biofilms dominated by the uncultivated host Altiarchaeum hamiconexum sampled from deep anoxic groundwater over a period of four years. Using virus-targeted direct-geneFISH (virusFISH) whose detection efficiency for individual viral particles was 15%, we show a significant and steady increase of virus infections from 2019 to 2022.

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Resolving bacterial and archaeal genomes from metagenomes has revolutionized our understanding of Earth's biomes yet producing high-quality genomes from assembled fragments has been an ever-standing problem. While automated binning software and their combination produce prokaryotic bins in high throughput, their manual refinement has been slow, sometimes difficult or missing entirely facilitating error propagation in public databases. Here, we present uBin, a GUI-based, standalone bin refiner that runs on all major operating platforms and was additionally designed for educational purposes.

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Article Synopsis
  • Raman microspectroscopy effectively analyzes the biochemical changes in bacterial and archaeal cells before and after infection with virulent viruses, revealing significant spectral differences.
  • The study highlights a measurable increase in the nucleic acid-to-protein ratio in infected cells, serving as a potential indicator for virocells.
  • The method successfully identified changes in single-cell responses during viral infections, confirming known infection processes and demonstrating its usefulness for examining Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacterial infections.
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Viruses influence the fate of nutrients and human health by killing microorganisms and altering metabolic processes. Organosulfur metabolism and biologically derived hydrogen sulfide play dynamic roles in manifestation of diseases, infrastructure degradation, and essential biological processes. Although microbial organosulfur metabolism is well studied, the role of viruses in organosulfur metabolism is unknown.

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The continental subsurface houses a major portion of life's abundance and diversity, yet little is known about viruses infecting microbes that reside there. Here, we use a combination of metagenomics and virus-targeted direct-geneFISH (virusFISH) to show that highly abundant carbon-fixing organisms of the uncultivated genus Candidatus Altiarchaeum are frequent targets of previously unrecognized viruses in the deep subsurface. Analysis of CRISPR spacer matches display resistances of Ca.

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