Rappé, Michael S.


Publications
7

The importance of designating type material for uncultured taxa

Citation
Chuvochina et al. (2019). Systematic and Applied Microbiology 42 (1)
Names
19 Names
Abstract

Genomic comparisons of a bacterial lineage that inhabits both marine and terrestrial deep subsurface systems

Citation
Jungbluth et al. (2017). PeerJ 5
Names
“Desulfopertinax” “Desulfopertinax cowenii” Desulforudis audaxviator Ts
Abstract
It is generally accepted that diverse, poorly characterized microorganisms reside deep within Earth’s crust. One such lineage of deep subsurface-dwelling bacteria is an uncultivated member of the Firmicutes phylum that can dominate molecular surveys from both marine and continental rock fracture fluids, sometimes forming the sole member of a single-species microbiome. Here, we reconstructed a genome from basalt-hosted fluids of the deep subseafloor along the eastern Juan de Fuca Ridge flank and
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Metagenome sequencing and 98 microbial genomes from Juan de Fuca Ridge flank subsurface fluids

Citation
Jungbluth et al. (2017). Scientific Data 4 (1)
Names
Hydrothermus pacificus Ts Hydrothermarchaeum profundi Ts “Hydrothermarchaeota” “Hydrothermota” “Geothermarchaeota”
Abstract
AbstractThe global deep subsurface biosphere is one of the largest reservoirs for microbial life on our planet. This study takes advantage of new sampling technologies and couples them with improvements to DNA sequencing and associated informatics tools to reconstruct the genomes of uncultivated Bacteria and Archaea from fluids collected deep within the Juan de Fuca Ridge subseafloor. Here, we generated two metagenomes from borehole observatories located 311 meters apart and, using binning tools
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Streamlining and Core Genome Conservation among Highly Divergent Members of the SAR11 Clade

Citation
Grote et al. (2012). mBio 3 (5)
Names
Pelagibacterales
Abstract
ABSTRACT SAR11 is an ancient and diverse clade of heterotrophic bacteria that are abundant throughout the world’s oceans, where they play a major role in the ocean carbon cycle. Correlations between the phylogenetic branching order and spatiotemporal patterns in cell distributions from planktonic ocean environments indicate that SAR11 has evolved into perhaps a dozen or more specialized ecotypes that span evolutionary distances equivalent to a bacterial order. We isolated and sequenced
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High intraspecific recombination rate in a native population of Candidatus Pelagibacter ubique (SAR11)

Citation
Vergin et al. (2007). Environmental Microbiology 9 (10)
Names
Pelagibacter ubiqueversans Ts
Abstract
Summary Recombination is an important process in microbial evolution. Rates of recombination with extracellular DNA matter because models of microbial population structure are profoundly influenced by the degree to which recombination is occurring within the population. Low rates of recombination may be sufficient to ensure the lateral propagation of genes that have a high selective advantage without disrupting the clonal pattern of inheritance for other ge
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