Applied and Environmental Microbiology


Publications
101

Sifarchaeota ,” a Novel Asgard Phylum from Costa Rican Sediment Capable of Polysaccharide Degradation and Anaerobic Methylotrophy

Citation
Farag et al. (2021). Applied and Environmental Microbiology 87 (9)
Names
“Sifarchaeum subterraneum” “Sifarchaeum” Ca. Sifarchaeum marinoarchaea Ca. Sifarchaeum subterraneus “Sifarchaeota”
Abstract
The exploration of deep marine sediments has unearthed many new lineages of microbes. The finding of this novel phylum of Asgard archaea is important, since understanding the diversity and evolution of Asgard archaea may inform also about the evolution of eukaryotic cells. The comparison of metabolic potentials of the Asgard archaea can help inform about selective pressures the lineages have faced during evolution.

“ Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus” Secretes Nonclassically Secreted Proteins That Suppress Host Hypersensitive Cell Death and Induce Expression of Plant Pathogenesis-Related Proteins

Citation
Du et al. (2021). Applied and Environmental Microbiology 87 (8)
Names
Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus
Abstract
In this study, we present a combined computational and experimental methodology that allows a rapid and efficient identification of the ncSecPs from bacteria, in particular the unculturable bacteria like CLas. Meanwhile, the study determined that a number of CLas ncSecPs suppressed HR-based cell death, and thus indicated a novel role for the bacterial ncSecPs in extracellular milieu.

The Actin Cytoskeleton Mediates Transmission of “ Candidatus Liberibacter solanacearum” by the Carrot Psyllid

Citation
Sarkar et al. (2021). Applied and Environmental Microbiology 87 (3)
Names
“Liberibacter solanacearum”
Abstract
Plant diseases caused by vector-borne pathogens are responsible for tremendous losses and threaten some of the most important agricultural crops. A good example is the citrus greening disease, which is caused by bacteria of the genus Liberibacter and is transmitted by psyllids; it has devastated the citrus industry in the United States, China, and Brazil.

Revealing the Metabolic Flexibility of “ Candidatus Accumulibacter phosphatis” through Redox Cofactor Analysis and Metabolic Network Modeling

Citation
Guedes da Silva et al. (2020). Applied and Environmental Microbiology 86 (24)
Names
“Accumulibacter phosphatis”
Abstract
Here, we demonstrate how microbial storage metabolism can adjust to a wide range of environmental conditions. Such flexibility generates a selective advantage under fluctuating environmental conditions. It can also explain the different observations reported in PAO literature, including the capacity of “ Ca . Accumulibacter phosphatis” to act like glycogen-accumulating organisms (GAOs). These observations stem from slightly different experimental conditions,

Metabolic Diversity and Evolutionary History of the Archaeal Phylum “ Candidatus Micrarchaeota” Uncovered from a Freshwater Lake Metagenome

Citation
Kadnikov et al. (2020). Applied and Environmental Microbiology 86 (23)
Names
Ca. Diapherotrites Ca. Micrarchaeota “Fermentimicrarchaeales” “Fermentimicrarchaeaceae”
Abstract
The recently described superphylum DPANN includes several phyla of uncultivated archaea with small cell sizes, reduced genomes, and limited metabolic capabilities. One of these phyla, “ Ca . Micrarchaeota,” comprises an enigmatic group of archaea found in acid mine drainage environments, the archaeal Richmond Mine acidophilic nanoorganisms (ARMAN) group. Analysis of their reduced genomes revealed the absence of key metabolic pathways consistent with their par

An In Vitro Pipeline for Screening and Selection of Citrus-Associated Microbiota with Potential Anti-“ Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus” Properties

Citation
Blacutt et al. (2020). Applied and Environmental Microbiology 86 (8)
Names
Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus
Abstract
Globally, citrus is threatened by huanglongbing (HLB), and the lack of effective control measures is a major concern of farmers, markets, and consumers. There is compelling evidence that plant health is a function of the activities of the plant's associated microbiome. Using Liberibacter crescens , a culturable surrogate for the unculturable HLB-associated bacterium “ Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus,” we tested the hypothesis that me

“ Candidatus Desulfobulbus rimicarensis,” an Uncultivated Deltaproteobacterial Epibiont from the Deep-Sea Hydrothermal Vent Shrimp Rimicaris exoculata

Citation
Jiang et al. (2020). Applied and Environmental Microbiology 86 (8)
Names
Ca. Desulfobulbus rimicarensis
Abstract
The shrimp Rimicaris exoculata represents the dominant faunal biomass at many deep-sea hydrothermal vent ecosystems along the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. This organism harbors dense bacterial epibiont communities in its enlarged cephalothoracic chamber that play an important nutritional role. Deltaproteobacteria are ubiquitous in epibiotic communities of R. exoculata , and their functional roles as epibionts are based s

Medium-Chain Fatty Acid Synthesis by “ Candidatus Weimeria bifida” gen. nov., sp. nov., and “ Candidatus Pseudoramibacter fermentans” sp. nov

Citation
Scarborough et al. (2020). Applied and Environmental Microbiology 86 (3)
Names
Ca. Pseudoramibacter fermentans “Weimeria bifida”
Abstract
Chain elongation by medium-chain fatty acid (MCFA)-producing microbiomes offers an opportunity to produce valuable chemicals from organic streams that would otherwise be considered waste. However, the physiology and energetics of chain elongation are only beginning to be studied, and many of these organisms remain uncultured. We analyzed MCFA production by two uncultured organisms that were identified as the main MCFA producers in a microbial community enriched from an anaerobic digester; this c

Tripartite Symbiosis of an Anaerobic Scuticociliate with Two Hydrogenosome-Associated Endosymbionts, a Holospora -Related Alphaproteobacterium and a Methanogenic Archaeon

Citation
Takeshita et al. (2019). Applied and Environmental Microbiology 85 (24)
Names
Ca. Hydrogenosomobacter endosymbioticus Ca. Hydrogenosomobacter
Abstract
Tripartite symbioses between anaerobic ciliated protists and their intracellular archaeal and bacterial symbionts are not uncommon, but most reports have been based mainly on microscopic observations. Deeper insights into the function, ecology, and evolution of these fascinating symbioses involving partners from all three domains of life have been hampered by the difficulties of culturing anaerobic ciliates in the laboratory and the frequent loss of their prokaryotic partners during long-term cu

Growth Dynamics and Survival of Liberibacter crescens BT-1, an Important Model Organism for the Citrus Huanglongbing Pathogen “ Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus”

Citation
Sena-Vélez et al. (2019). Applied and Environmental Microbiology 85 (21)
Names
Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus
Abstract
Liberibacter crescens is a bacterium that is closely related to plant pathogens that have caused billions of dollars in crop losses in recent years. Particularly devastating are citrus losses due to citrus greening disease, also known as Huanglongbing, which is caused by “ Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus” and carried by the Asian citrus psyllid. L. crescens is the only close relative of “ Ca . Libe