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Oxygen isotope fractionation during anaerobic ammonium oxidation by the marine representative Candidatus Scalindua sp

Citation
Kobayashi et al. (2025). The ISME Journal 19 (1)
Names
Ca. Scalindua
Abstract
Abstract Analysing the nitrogen (15ε) and oxygen (18ε) isotope effects of anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox) is essential for accurately assessing its potential contribution to fixed-N losses in the ocean, yet the 18ε of anammox remains unexplored. Here, we determined the previously unexplored 18ε of anammox using a highly enriched culture of the marine anammox species “Ca. Scalindua sp”. Because Scalindua significantly accelerated oxygen isotope exchange between NO2− and H2O,
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Anaerobic breviate protist survival in microcosms depends on microbiome metabolic function

Citation
Aguilera-Campos et al. (2025). The ISME Journal 19 (1)
Names
11 Names
Abstract
Abstract Anoxic and hypoxic environments serve as habitats for diverse microorganisms, including unicellular eukaryotes (protists) and prokaryotes. To thrive in low-oxygen environments, protists and prokaryotes often establish specialized metabolic cross-feeding associations, such as syntrophy, with other microorganisms. Previous studies show that the breviate protist Lenisia limosa engages in a mutualistic association with a denitrifying Arcobacter bacterium based on hydrogen exc
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Alternative Hosts of ‘Candidatus Phytoplasma pruni’ Identified Through Surveys and Vector Gut Content Analysis

Citation
Shires et al. (2025). Plant Health Progress 26 (2)
Names
Ca. Phytoplasma pruni
Abstract
The ongoing spread of X-disease, which is associated with ‘ Candidatus Phytoplasma pruni’, has resulted in severe economic losses for cherry and stone fruit growers in the U.S. Pacific Northwest in the last decade. Given that this pathogen is transmitted by polyphagous leafhopper species, primarily Colladonus montanus ssp. reductus and C. geminatus in the Pacific Northwest, alternative plant hosts present a significant management concern. Here, we surveyed phytoplasma incidence in non- Prunus p
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