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Authors Dutilh

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Dutilh, Bas E.


Publications
4

CitationNamesAbstract
The bacterial sulfur cycle in expanding dysoxic and euxinic marine waters van Vliet et al. (2021). Environmental Microbiology 23 (6) Pseudothioglobus Pseudothioglobus singularis Ts
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Ecogenomics and Taxonomy of Cyanobacteria Phylum Walter et al. (2017). Frontiers in Microbiology 8 Regnicoccus antarcticus Ts “Parasynechococcus antarcticus” Regnicoccus
Draft Genome Sequence of Anammox Bacterium “Candidatus Scalindua brodae,” Obtained Using Differential Coverage Binning of Sequencing Data from Two Reactor Enrichments Speth et al. (2015). Genome Announcements 3 (1) Ca. Scalindua brodae
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Nitrite-driven anaerobic methane oxidation by oxygenic bacteria Ettwig et al. (2010). Nature 464 (7288) Methylomirabilis oxygeniifera Ts Methylomirabilis

The bacterial sulfur cycle in expanding dysoxic and euxinic marine waters
Dysoxic marine waters (DMW, < 1 μM oxygen) are currently expanding in volume in the oceans, which has biogeochemical, ecological and societal consequences on a global scale. In these environments, distinct bacteria drive an active sulfur cycle, which has only recently been recognized for open‐ocean DMW. This review summarizes the current knowledge on these sulfur‐cycling bacteria. Critical bottlenecks and questions for future research are specifically addressed. Sulfate‐reducing bacteria (SRB) are core members of DMW. However, their roles are not entirely clear, and they remain largely uncultured. We found support for their remarkable diversity and taxonomic novelty by mining metagenome‐assembled genomes from the Black Sea as model ecosystem. We highlight recent insights into the metabolism of key sulfur‐oxidizing SUP05 and Sulfurimonas bacteria, and discuss the probable involvement of uncultivated SAR324 and BS‐GSO2 bacteria in sulfur oxidation. Uncultivated Marinimicrobia bacteria with a presumed organoheterotrophic metabolism are abundant in DMW. Like SRB, they may use specific molybdoenzymes to conserve energy from the oxidation, reduction or disproportionation of sulfur cycle intermediates such as S 0 and thiosulfate, produced from the oxidation of sulfide. We expect that tailored sampling methods and a renewed focus on cultivation will yield deeper insight into sulfur‐cycling bacteria in DMW.
Draft Genome Sequence of Anammox Bacterium “Candidatus Scalindua brodae,” Obtained Using Differential Coverage Binning of Sequencing Data from Two Reactor Enrichments
ABSTRACT We present the draft genome of anammox bacterium “ Candidatus Scalindua brodae,” which at 282 contigs is a major improvement over the highly fragmented genome assembly of related species “ Ca. Scalindua profunda” (1,580 contigs) which was previously published.
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