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Authors Amann

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Amann, Rudolf


Publications
15

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CitationNamesAbstract
Cultivation and functional characterization of 79 planctomycetes uncovers their unique biology Wiegand et al. (2019). Nature Microbiology 5 (1) “Paenistieleria bergensis” “Stieleria magnilauensis”
The low diverse gastric microbiome of the jellyfish Cotylorhiza tuberculata is dominated by four novel taxa Viver et al. (2017). Environmental Microbiology 19 (8) “Sygnamydia medusae”
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Revised phylogeny of Bacteroidetes and proposal of sixteen new taxa and two new combinations including Rhodothermaeota phyl. nov Munoz et al. (2016). Systematic and Applied Microbiology 39 (5) Rhodothermota
Phylogeny and in situ identification of a morphologically conspicuous bacterium, Candidatus Magnospira bakii, present at very low frequency in activated sludge Snaidr et al. (1999). Environmental Microbiology 1 (2) Ca. Magnospira bakii
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Dominating Role of an Unusual Magnetotactic Bacterium in the Microaerobic Zone of a Freshwater Sediment Spring et al. (1993). Applied and Environmental Microbiology 59 (8) Magnetobacterium
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The low diverse gastric microbiome of the jellyfish Cotylorhiza tuberculata is dominated by four novel taxa
Summary Cotylorhiza tuberculata is an important scyphozoan jellyfish producing population blooms in the Mediterranean probably due to pelagic ecosystem's decay. Its gastric cavity can serve as a simple model of microbial–animal digestive associations, yet poorly characterized. Using state‐of‐the‐art metagenomic population binning and catalyzed reporter deposition fluorescence in situ hybridization (CARD‐FISH), we show that only four novel clonal phylotypes were consistently associated with multiple jellyfish adults. Two affiliated close to Spiroplasma and Mycoplasma genera, one to chlamydial ‘ Candidatus Syngnamydia’, and one to bacteroidetal Tenacibaculum , and were at least one order of magnitude more abundant than any other bacteria detected. Metabolic modelling predicted an aerobic heterotrophic lifestyle for the chlamydia, which were found intracellularly in Onychodromopsis ‐like ciliates. The Spiroplasma ‐like organism was predicted to be an anaerobic fermenter associated to some jellyfish cells, whereas the Tenacibaculum ‐like as free‐living aerobic heterotroph, densely colonizing the mesogleal axis inside the gastric filaments. The association between the jellyfish and its reduced microbiome was close and temporally stable, and possibly related to food digestion and protection from pathogens. Based on the genomic and microscopic data, we propose three candidate taxa: ‘ Candidatus Syngnamydia medusae’, ‘ Candidatus Medusoplasma mediterranei’ and ‘ Candidatus Tenacibaculum medusae’.
Phylogeny and in situ identification of a morphologically conspicuous bacterium, Candidatus Magnospira bakii, present at very low frequency in activated sludge
A morphologically conspicuous bacterium that constituted a very small fraction (< 0.01%) of the total microbial community of activated sludge was enriched and analysed phylogenetically by a combination of cultivation‐independent molecular and physical methods. The large, corkscrew‐shaped, filamentous bacteria were first detected in municipal activated sludge by light microscopy owing to their unusual rotating gliding motility. Various attempts at microbiological enrichment and pure culture isolation with traditional techniques failed, as did attempts to retrieve the morphotype of interest by micromanipulation. In situ hybridization with the group‐specific, rRNA‐targeted oligonucleotide probe CF319a indicated a phylogenetic affiliation to the Cytophaga–Flexibacter group of the Cytophaga – Flavobacterium–Bacteroides phylum. Based on strong morphological resemblance to members of the genus Saprospira , additional 16S rRNA‐targeted oligonucleotides with more narrow specificity were designed and evaluated for in situ hybridization to the morphotype of interest. Flow cytometric cell sorting based on the fluorescence conferred by probe SGR1425 and forward scatter enabled a physical enrichment of the helical coiled cells. Subsequent polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification of 16S rDNA fragments from whole fixed sorted cells with a primer pair based on probes CF319a and SGR1425 resulted in the retrieval of 12 almost identical partial 16S rDNA fragments with sequence similarities among each other of more than 99.2%. In situ hybridizations proved that the sequences that showed the highest similarity (88.4%) to the 16S rRNA of Saprospira grandis were indeed retrieved from the corkscrew‐shaped filaments. The bacterium is likely to be a member of a genus of which no species has been cultured hitherto. It was consequently tentatively named ‘Magnospira bakii’ and has the taxonomic rank of Candidatus Magnospira bakii, as the ultimate taxonomic placement has to await its cultivation. In this study, it was demonstrated that even bacteria occurring at very low frequencies in highly complex environmental samples can be retrieved selectively without cultivation for further molecular analysis.
Dominating Role of an Unusual Magnetotactic Bacterium in the Microaerobic Zone of a Freshwater Sediment
A combination of polymerase chain reaction-assisted rRNA sequence retrieval and fluorescent oligonucleotide probing was used to identify in situ a hitherto unculturable, big, magnetotactic, rod-shaped organism in freshwater sediment samples collected from Lake Chiemsee. Tentatively named “Magnetobacterium bavaricum,” this bacterium is evolutionarily distant from all other phylogenetically characterized magnetotactic bacteria and contains unusually high numbers of magnetosomes (up to 1,000 magnetosomes per cell). The spatial distribution in the sediment was studied, and up to 7 × 10 5 active cells per cm 3 were found in the microaerobic zone. Considering its average volume (25.8 ± 4.1 μm 3 ) and relative abundance (0.64 ± 0.17%), “M. bavaricum” may account for approximately 30% of the microbial biovolume and may therefore be a dominant fraction of the microbial community in this layer. Its microhabitat and its high content of sulfur globules and magnetosomes suggest that this organism has an iron-dependent way of energy conservation which depends on balanced gradients of oxygen and sulfide.
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