Wagner, Michael


Publications
33

Crenarchaeol dominates the membrane lipids of Candidatus Nitrososphaera gargensis, a thermophilic Group I.1b Archaeon

Citation
Pitcher et al. (2010). The ISME Journal 4 (4)
Names
Ca. Nitrososphaera gargensis
Abstract
Abstract Analyses of archaeal membrane lipids are increasingly being included in ecological studies as a comparatively unbiased complement to gene-based microbiological approaches. For example, crenarchaeol, a glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraether (GDGT) with a unique cyclohexane moiety, has been postulated as biomarker for ammonia-oxidizing Archaea (AOA). Crenarchaeol has been detected in Nitrosopumilus maritimus and ‘Candidatus Nitrosocaldus yellowstonii’ representing two of the
Text

The Genome of the Amoeba Symbiont “CandidatusAmoebophilus asiaticus” Reveals Common Mechanisms for Host Cell Interaction among Amoeba-Associated Bacteria

Citation
Schmitz-Esser et al. (2010). Journal of Bacteriology 192 (4)
Names
Ca. Amoebophilus asiaticus
Abstract
ABSTRACTProtozoa play host for many intracellular bacteria and are important for the adaptation of pathogenic bacteria to eukaryotic cells. We analyzed the genome sequence of “CandidatusAmoebophilus asiaticus,” an obligate intracellular amoeba symbiont belonging to theBacteroidetes. The genome has a size of 1.89 Mbp, encodes 1,557 proteins, and shows massive proliferation of IS elements (24% of all genes), although the genome seems to be evolutionarily relatively stable. The genome does not enco
Text

CandidatusThiobios zoothamnicoli,” an Ectosymbiotic Bacterium Covering the Giant Marine CiliateZoothamnium niveum

Citation
Rinke et al. (2006). Applied and Environmental Microbiology 72 (3)
Names
“Thiobios zoothamnicoli”
Abstract
ABSTRACTZoothamnium niveumis a giant, colonial marine ciliate from sulfide-rich habitats obligatorily covered with chemoautotrophic, sulfide-oxidizing bacteria which appear as coccoid rods and rods with a series of intermediate shapes. Comparative 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis and fluorescence in situ hybridization showed that the ectosymbiont ofZ. niveumbelongs to only one pleomorphic phylotype. TheZ. niveumectosymbiont is only moderately related to previously identified groups of thiotrophic
Text

Selective enrichment and molecular characterization of a previously uncultured Nitrospira ‐like bacterium from activated sludge

Citation
Spieck et al. (2006). Environmental Microbiology 8 (3)
Names
“Nitrospira defluvii”
Abstract
Summary Previously uncultured nitrite‐oxidizing bacteria affiliated to the genus Nitrospira have for the first time been successfully enriched from activated sludge from a municipal wastewater treatment plant. During the enrichment procedure, the abundance of the Nitrospira ‐like bacteria increased to approximately 86% of the total bacterial population. This high degree of purif
Text

‘Candidatus Protochlamydia amoebophila’, an endosymbiont of Acanthamoeba spp

Citation
Collingro et al. (2005). International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology 55 (5)
Names
Ca. Protochlamydia amoebophila
Abstract
The obligately intracellular coccoid bacterium UWE25, a symbiont of Acanthamoeba spp., was previously identified as being related to chlamydiae based upon the presence of a chlamydia-like developmental cycle and its 16S rRNA gene sequence. Analysis of its complete genome sequence demonstrated that UWE25 shows many characteristic features of chlamydiae, including dependency on host-derived metabolites, composition of the cell envelope and the ability to thrive as an energy parasite within the cel
Text

Members of the Cytophaga–Flavobacterium–Bacteroides phylum as intracellular bacteria of acanthamoebae: proposal of ‘ Candidatus Amoebophilus asiaticus’

Citation
Horn et al. (2001). Environmental Microbiology 3 (7)
Names
Ca. Amoebophilus asiaticus “Amoebophilus asiaticus”
Abstract
Three Gram‐negative, rod‐shaped bacteria that were found intracellularly in two environmental and one clinical Acanthamoeba sp. isolates were analysed. Two endocytobionts showing a parasitic behaviour were propagated successfully outside their amoebal host cells and were identified subsequently by comparative 16S rRNA sequence analysis as being most closely affiliated with Flavobacterium succinicans
Text