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Authors Woodcroft

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Woodcroft, Ben J


Publications
2

CitationNamesAbstract
Occurrence and temporal dynamics of denitrifying protist endosymbionts in the wastewater microbiome Nicolas-Asselineau et al. (2025). ISME Communications 5 (1) Azoamicus “Azoamicus mariagerensis” Ca. Azoamicus parvus
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Recoding of stop codons expands the metabolic potential of two novel Asgardarchaeota lineages Sun et al. (2021). ISME Communications 1 (1) 15 Names
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Occurrence and temporal dynamics of denitrifying protist endosymbionts in the wastewater microbiome
Abstract Effective wastewater treatment is of critical importance for preserving public health and protecting natural environments. Key processes in wastewater treatment, such as denitrification, are performed by a diverse community of prokaryotic and eukaryotic microbes. However, the diversity of the microbiome and the potential role of the different microbial taxa in some wastewater treatment plant setups is not fully understood. We aimed to investigate the presence and diversity of denitrifying bacteria of the candidate family Azoamicaceae that form obligate symbioses with protists in wastewater treatment plants. Our analyses showed that denitrifying endosymbionts belonging to the Ca. Azoamicus genus are present in 20%–50% of wastewater treatment plants worldwide. Time-resolved amplicon data from four Danish WWTPs showed high temporal fluctuations in the abundance and composition of the denitrifying endosymbiont community. Twelve high-quality metagenome-assembled genomes of denitrifying endosymbionts, four of which were circular, were recovered. Genome annotation showed that a newly described, globally widespread species, Ca. Azoamicus parvus, lacked a nitrous oxide reductase, suggesting that its denitrification pathway is incomplete. This observation further expands the diversity of metabolic potentials found in denitrifying endosymbionts and indicates a possible involvement of microbial eukaryote holobionts in wastewater ecosystem dynamics of nitrogen removal and greenhouse gas production.
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Recoding of stop codons expands the metabolic potential of two novel Asgardarchaeota lineages
Abstract Asgardarchaeota have been proposed as the closest living relatives to eukaryotes, and a total of 72 metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) representing six primary lineages in this archaeal phylum have thus far been described. These organisms are predicted to be fermentative heterotrophs contributing to carbon cycling in sediment ecosystems. Here, we double the genomic catalogue of Asgardarchaeota by obtaining 71 MAGs from a range of habitats around the globe, including the deep subsurface, brackish shallow lakes, and geothermal spring sediments. Phylogenomic inferences followed by taxonomic rank normalisation confirmed previously established Asgardarchaeota classes and revealed four additional lineages, two of which were consistently recovered as monophyletic classes. We therefore propose the names Candidatus Sifarchaeia class nov. and Ca. Jordarchaeia class nov., derived from the gods Sif and Jord in Norse mythology. Metabolic inference suggests that both classes represent hetero-organotrophic acetogens, which also have the ability to utilise methyl groups such as methylated amines, with acetate as the probable end product in remnants of a methanogen-derived core metabolism. This inferred mode of energy conservation is predicted to be enhanced by genetic code expansions, i.e., stop codon recoding, allowing the incorporation of the rare 21st and 22nd amino acids selenocysteine (Sec) and pyrrolysine (Pyl). We found Sec recoding in Jordarchaeia and all other Asgardarchaeota classes, which likely benefit from increased catalytic activities of Sec-containing enzymes. Pyl recoding, on the other hand, is restricted to Sifarchaeia in the Asgardarchaeota, making it the first reported non-methanogenic archaeal lineage with an inferred complete Pyl machinery, likely providing members of this class with an efficient mechanism for methylamine utilisation. Furthermore, we identified enzymes for the biosynthesis of ester-type lipids, characteristic of bacteria and eukaryotes, in both newly described classes, supporting the hypothesis that mixed ether-ester lipids are a shared feature among Asgardarchaeota.
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