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CENTER FOR GEOMICROBIOLOGY 200 2007-2012 007 00 07 2 AARHUS UNIVERSITY AU AARHUS UNIVERSITY CENTER FOR GEOMICROBIOLOGY AARHUS UNIVERSITY 2007-2012 AU AARHUS UNIVERSITY Title: Authors: Contributions from: Institution: URL: Year of publication: Editing completed: Layout: Frontpage photo: Number of pages: ISBN: Tryk: Internetversion: Center for Geomicrobiology, Aarhus University, 2007-2012 Bo Barker Jørgensen and Camilla Nissen Toftdal Nils Risgaard-Petersen, Hans Røy, Kasper U. Kjeldsen, and Ian Marshall Aarhus University, Department of Bioscience, Center for Geomicrobiology © http://geomicrobiology.au.dk 2012 October 2012 Kathe Møgelvang and Juana Jacobsen, Graphics Group, AU Silkeborg Nils Risgaard-Petersen 24 978-87-92825-68-1 Rosendahl Schultz Grafisk A/S The report is available in electronic format (pdf) at http://geomicrobiology.au.dk PHOTO: IODP-USIO Welcome to the Center for Geomicrobiology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Research goals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Discovery of the deep biosphere . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Biodiversity of the deep biosphere . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Microbial processes in the seabed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Microbiology – one cell at a time . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Life at the energetic limit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 Harvesting energy with electricity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 The future of Geomicrobiology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Academic staff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Instruments available at the Center for Geomicrobiology . . . . . 20 Drilling and coring expeditions 2007-2012 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Activities and special events at the Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 Funding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 4 CENTER FOR GEOMICROBIOLOGY, AARHUS UNIVERSITY, 2007-2012 WELCOME Head of the Center, Bo Barker Jørgensen. PHOTO: MORTEN BARKER TO THE CENTER FOR GEOMICROBIOLOGY AT AARHUS UNIVERSITY The Center for Geomicrobiology was founded in 2007 by Prof. Bo Barker Jørgensen, director at the Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology in Bremen. The Center was jointly funded for five years by the German Max Planck Society, the Danish National Research Foundation, and Aarhus University. On October 1st, 2012, a new five-year funding period started for the Center for Geomicrobiology, this time as a Center of Excellence under the Danish National Research Foundation. The Center is organized under the Department of Bioscience and continues a close cooperation with the Department’s Microbiology Group, with the Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology, and with many international research groups. The Center is located on the beautiful campus of Aarhus University. The staff includes the young and international group of coworkers from the earlier Center, therefore the new Center starts out with a fully developed scientific program. The Center studies microbial life in the seabed with a particular focus on the deep sub-seafloor biosphere. Our aim is to understand the predominant microbial life on our planet: communities of microorganisms buried in the dark subsurface and subsisting at the minimum energy flow that can sustain basic biological processes. We use approaches and concepts from very different disciplines, including molecular ecology, microbial physiology, and geochemistry. On the following pages we present the research field of the Center and describe some of the highlights of our results from the first five years, 2007-2012. I wish you enjoyable reading. Bo Barker Jørgensen Head of the Center for Geomicrobiology Professor of Geomicrobiology at Aarhus University CENTER FOR GEOMICROBIOLOGY, AARHUS UNIVERSITY, 2007-2012 5 Aarhus University campus. PHOTO: POUL IB HENRIKSEN 6 CENTER FOR GEOMICROBIOLOGY, AARHUS UNIVERSITY, 2007-2012 RESEARCH GOALS A large part of all bacteria and archaea on Earth live in the “deep biosphere”. Their cellular energy flux is orders of magnitude below anything studied in laboratory cultures so far. Thus, the prokaryotic cells of the deep biosphere are essentially non-growing with apparent mean generation times of hundreds to thousands of years. In spite of their slow life, these microorganisms drive major processes in the geosphere and control element cycles that affect hydrocarbon reservoirs, ocean chemistry, and global climate on geological time scales. The Center for Geomicrobiology develops and applies new approaches to study microbial life under extreme energy limitation. It is our goal to understand the genetic and physiological potential of the marine deep biosphere and determine how it differs from the much more active surface biosphere. This is a major challenge as it is has generally not been possible to cultivate the organisms in the laboratory. Members of the Center join research expeditions to different regions of the world oceans in order to obtain the precious sediment core material. In the laboratory we combine high-capacity genomic sequence analyses with sensitive chemical and isotopic techniques to search for the coupling between organisms and processes. We also apply new high-resolution techniques for singlecell studies in order to reveal the coupling between phylogenetic identity and metabolic function of dominant microorganisms. Results from our recent work have been exciting and surprising. Further details of these results and a complete publication list can be found on the Center’s website (www.geomicrobiology.au.dk). Gravity coring of the seabed in Aarhus Bay. PHOTO: BO BARKER JØRGENSEN 7 CENTER FOR GEOMICROBIOLOGY, AARHUS UNIVERSITY, 2007-2012 DISCOVERY OF THE DEEP BIOSPHERE Microscopic counting of microbial cells in deep sediment cores from the world’s oceans has shown that microorganisms are present almost everywhere. The subsurface world is widely inhabited by at least two of the three domains of life, namely the bacteria and the archaea. This is revealed by analyses of DNA or of intact membrane lipids. The discovery of microorganisms in several million year old sedimentary deposits, and even in basement rock, has profoundly changed our perspective on the limits of living organisms. It is now apparent that processes in the geosphere may provide a driving force for life and that, vice versa, the subsurface biosphere has a large impact on geological processes. The biological degradation of organic carbon in the deep subsurface has a large-scale impact on carbon preservation in the seabed with consequences for the chemistry of the ocean and atmosphere. We aim to understand the microbiology behind these slow processes and how they differ from the highly active surface of the sea floor. The Center for Geomicrobiology collaborates internationally in studies of the deep biosphere through expeditions in the world oceans. Since 2007, members of the Center have participated in six expeditions of the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) in the Pacific and the Atlantic Ocean. On board the US drilling vessel, JOIDES Resolution, the Center has engaged in research on arctic sediments of the Bering Sea, on ocean crust and sediment of the Northeast Pacific and the mid-Atlantic ridge, and on the nutrient-starved South Pacific. On board the Japanese drilling vessel, Chikyu, the Center has joined drilling to more than 2 kilometer deep coal beds off Japan. The Japanese drilling vessel, Chikyu. PHOTO: UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI Key publications The Center also works intensively with marine sediments at our doorstep. In Aarhus Bay a ten meter thick mud deposit has accumulated during the past 8,000 years following the last ice age. Our new methods and hypotheses are first tested in Aarhus Bay sediment where fresh core material can be repeatedly sampled. 10 Log cell numbers (cm–3) 9 8 The microbial community size drops steeply with increasing depth and age of the seabed. At the sediment surface, with an age of a hundred years, there are a billion cells per cm3. In more than ten-million-year-old subsurface sediments numbers drop to a million and even to a few thousand per cm3. 7 6 Baltic Sea, (Parkes RJ, unpubl.) Peru Shelf, IODP 1227 Peru Shelf, IODP 1230 East Pacific, IODP 1225 Peru Basin, IODP 1231 South Pacific gyre, SPG-2 5 4 3 1 2 3 4 5 Log age (years) GRAPH: BO BARKER JØRGENSEN 6 7 8 Jørgensen, B.B. (2012). Shrinking majority of the deep biosphere. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, USA, 109: 1597615977. Orcutt, B., Sylvan, J.B., Knab, N.J. & Edwards, K.J. (2011). Microbial ecology of the dark ocean above, at, and below the seafloor. Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews 75: 361-422. Jørgensen, B.B. & Boetius, A. (2007). Feast and Famine – microbial life in the deepsea bed. Nature Review Microbiology 5: 770-781. 8 Cutting a gravity core liner on the deck. PHOTO: BO BARKER JØRGENSEN CENTER FOR GEOMICROBIOLOGY, AARHUS UNIVERSITY, 2007-2012 9 CENTER FOR GEOMICROBIOLOGY, AARHUS UNIVERSITY, 2007-2012 BIODIVERSITY OF THE DEEP BIOSPHERE Very basic questions remain open about the identity of microorganisms in the deep biosphere. Who are they and from where did they originate? Are the deeply buried communities relicts of a time when the sediment was originally deposited or are they selected by the current environmental conditions in the subsurface? Is there a unique microbial biosphere deep down in the seabed or do the organisms mix genetically with the surface world? To answer these questions we have extracted community DNA from distinct biogeochemical zones in marine sediments. We have analyzed hundreds of thousands of gene sequences of important marker genes for specific physiological types of organisms such as sulfate-reducing bacteria or methane-producing archaea. This allows us to compare the diversity of microbial species in the different biogeochemical zones in the seabed. The results show that even well-known physiological types belong to unknown phylogenetic groups that may even be deeply branching in the tree of life. This is, for example, the case for the sulfate-reducing microorganisms in subsurface sediment. The extraction of DNA is fundamental to studies of community composition. Some of the DNA may not reside in living cells, however, but be free or adsorbed DNA that remains from microorganisms that lived there in the past. During the last years we have developed a DNA extraction method to separate cellular DNA (iDNA) and extracellular, fossil DNA (eDNA). We can now recover and PCR-amplify bacterial and archaeal DNA in the sub-seafloor and have applied our methods to low-biomass, sub-seafloor environments, such as the central South Pacific, the Bering Sea, and the Northeast Pacific. The new eDNA extraction protocol will be used in future research to examine the potential for marine sub-seafloor sediments as a genetic archive of past environmental change. Chemical analyses of samples of sediment pore water. PHOTO: NILS RISGAARD-PETERSEN Key publications Sampling for microbiology through windows in the core liner. PHOTO: NILS RISGAARD-PETERSEN Lever, M. (2012). Acetogenesis in the Energy-Starved Deep Biosphere – A Paradox? Frontiers in Microbiology 2: 1-18. Tarpgaard, I.H., Røy, H. & Jørgensen, B.B. (2011). Concurrent low- and high-affinity sulfate reduction kinetics in marine sediment. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 75: 2997-3010. Lloyd, K., Teske, A. & Alperin, M.J. (2011). Environmental evidence for net methane production and oxidation in putative ANaerobic MEthanotrophic (ANME) archaea. Environmental Microbiology 13: 2548-2564. 10 CENTER FOR GEOMICROBIOLOGY, AARHUS UNIVERSITY, 2007-2012 MICROBIAL PROCESSES IN THE SEABED A fresh 10-m long sediment core section is retrieved on the drill ship. PHOTO: IODP-TAMU In deep sediments we calculate the ongoing microbiological processes from transport-reaction modeling based on analyzed pore water chemistry. In more active sediments the processes are determined from laboratory experiments using radioisotopes or stable isotopes as tracers. For example, we have developed the experimental method for measuring respiratory sulfate reduction to extreme sensitivity so that the reduction of less than a millionth of the sulfate can be determined. From our studies of sulfate reduction rates in the seabed we have recognized a universal power law of mineralization rates versus age for organic carbon buried over thousands to millions of years. The power law shows that microbial respiration decreases by about two orders of magnitude for each order of magnitude increase in depth or age in the seabed. This relation appears to be inherent to organic matter degradation, independent of the terminal pathway of mineralization in the microbial food chain. We used this power law to model very deep oxygen respiration in the central North Pacific. The most striking feature of this and other “desert” areas of the ocean gyres is that oxygen penetrates tens of meters through the sediment column and even into the basaltic ocean crust. We could show that the deep oxygen penetration is controlled primarily by low sedimentation rate rather than by low influx of organic matter. In 86-million-yearold sediment the oxygen was still being used for respiration at rates of 1 μM O2 per 1000 years and was turning over on a time scale of 40,000 years. 11 CENTER FOR GEOMICROBIOLOGY, AARHUS UNIVERSITY, 2007-2012 Shipboard gas chromatographic analysis of methane. PHOTO: BO BARKER JØRGENSEN 0 Key publications Røy, H., Kallmeyer, J., Adhikari, R.R., Pockalny, R., Jørgensen, B.B. & D’Hondt, S. (2012). Aerobic microbial respiration in 86-million-year-old deep-sea red clay. Science 336: 922-925. Wehrmann, L.M., RisgaardPetersen, N., Schrum, H.N., Walsh, E.A., Huh, Y., Ikehara, M., Pierre, C., D’Hondt, S., Ferdelman, T.G., Ravelo, A.C., Takahashi, K., Zarikian, C.A. & The Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Expedition 323 Scientific Party (2011). Coupled organic and inorganic carbon cycling in the deep subseafloor sediment of the northeastern Bering Sea Slope (IODP Exp. 323). Chemical Geology 284: 251-261. 5 Depth (m) 10 15 15 20 20 Oxygen penetration to more than 30 m depth in the seabed of the central North Pacific. In the 86-million-year-old sediment oxygen is turned over once in 40,000 years. FROM RØY ET AL., SCIENCE, 2012. 25 25 36 38 40 42 30 0 50 100 O2 (µmol L–1) 150 12 CENTER FOR GEOMICROBIOLOGY, AARHUS UNIVERSITY, 2007-2012 MICROBIOLOGY – ONE CELL AT A TIME In the deep biosphere, the metabolic rate per cell is very much lower than the resting metabolic rate in a laboratory culture. It is not realistic to explore the natural life of the microorganisms by culturing them in the laboratory, and therefore we develop new methods that are independent of cultivation. In 2010 we succeeded in isolating single microbial cells from the seabed by using laser microdissection (LMD) microscopy and by fluorescence-assisted cell sorting (FACS) in collaboration with the Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences, USA. We have since been able to amplify the genomes of a large number of single cells and determine a large part of their entire genome sequence information. By analyzing the genetic code in single bacterial cells we can simultaneously determine the identity of the microorganisms and the metabolic processes for which they have the genetic potential. More than half of the cells belong to groups of bacteria or archaea that are so far known only from marker genes in environmental DNA. Their metabolic capabilities and ecological function are completely unknown. We have thus caught representatives from groups of archaea that are among the most abundant organisms in the world. By sequencing and analyzing the cells’ genetic code we have investigated for which enzymes the genes code. Our surprising finding is that archaea in the seabed are capable of decomposing complex refractory organic compounds and therefore have a very different function in the marine ecosystem than previously anticipated. We now assume that they subsist by fermenting organic compounds, and that they have a type of metabolism that we normally ascribe to bacteria. Laser microdissection microscrope. PHOTO: BO BARKER JØRGENSEN 13 CENTER FOR GEOMICROBIOLOGY, AARHUS UNIVERSITY, 2007-2012 LIFE AT THE ENERGETIC LIMIT Even though so many prokaryotes reside in the deep biosphere, the energy flux available to them from buried organic carbon is less than one percent of the photosynthetically fixed carbon on the surface of our planet. With increasing depth and age of marine sediments, microbial cells become increasingly energy limited. At several hundred meters below the sea floor population sizes are still large but the energy flux and the theoretical growth rate of the bacteria are orders of magnitude below anything we know from cultivated microorganisms. One of the greatest enigmas is how these vast communities can subsist under conditions that provide only marginal energy for cell growth and division and seem to barely enable the maintenance of basic cell functions. We have determined the mean metabolic rate of microbial cells from measurements of their bulk activity in the sediment divided by their cell numbers. From this we have estimated the turnover rate of their biomass and thereby calculated their generation 1 hour 10–2 1 week 10–4 1 year 10–6 100 years 10–8 10,000 years –5 0 5 10 15 20 25 Temperature (°C) Turnover of cell carbon and corresponding generation time in microbial communities from surface environments (blue, e.g. lakes and soils) and sub-surface environments (red, e.g. young and old marine sediments) at different temperatures. FROM JØRGENSEN, PNAS, 2012 Such extremely slow life is difficult to reconcile with our laboratory knowledge of microbial growth and maintenance metabolism. Importantly, we could confirm these controversial results by a completely independent approach that uses the slow interconversion between the mirror images of common amino acids as a molecular clock. By determining the ratio between these L and D mirror images in sediment amino acids, their age can be estimated and used to estimate the turnover of amino acids in the microbial community. Key publications Turnover time Metabolic rate (g C g–1 cell C h–1) 100 time. We have done such calculations specifically for sulfate reducing microorganisms in marine sediments and discovered a systematic variation where generation times range from one year near the seafloor to a thousand years deep beneath the seafloor. In comparison, laboratory cultures of these bacteria have generation times of days, that is 100,000 times shorter than in the deep biosphere. Lomstein, B.Aa., Langerhuus, A.T., D’Hondt, S., Jørgensen, B.B. & Spivack, A. (2012). Endospore abundance, microbial growth and necromass turnover in deep subseafloor sediment. Nature 484: 101-104. Jørgensen, B.B. (2011). Deep subseafloor microbial cells on physiological standby, Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, USA, 108: 18193-18194. Hubert, C., Loy, A., Nickel, M., Arnosti, C., Baranyi, C., Brüchert, V., Ferdelman, T., Finster, K., Christensen, F.M., Rosa de Rezende, J. Vandieken, V. & Jørgensen, B.B. (2009). A constant flux of diverse thermophilic bacteria into the cold arctic seabed. Science 325: 15411544. 14 CENTER FOR GEOMICROBIOLOGY, AARHUS UNIVERSITY, 2007-2012 Experiments on the electric conductance by cable bacteria in a core of marine sediment. PHOTO: NILS RISGAARD-PETERSEN “Cable bacteria” grow as filaments up through a fractured sediment column of 2-cm width. Scanning electron microscope image of cable bacteria (in false blue color) in a marine sediment. Bacteria are ca 2 μm wide. PHOTO: NILS RISGAARD-PETERSEN IMAGE: MINGDONG DONG, JIE SONG, AND NILS RISGAARD-PETERSEN 15 CENTER FOR GEOMICROBIOLOGY, AARHUS UNIVERSITY, 2007-2012 HARVESTING ENERGY WITH ELECTRICITY Our research on biogeochemical processes in the surface layers of marine sediments have revealed that electric currents can couple spatially separated biogeochemical processes, such as oxygen reduction at the sediment surface and hydrogen sulphide oxidation in anoxic layers several centimeters below. This spatial separation of microbial processes has a major impact on the geochemistry of the sediment. It induces pH extremes that accelerate mineral dissolution or precipitation by mechanisms that have not previously been known to exist. In a collaborative project we discovered that sulfate-reducing bacteria of the genus Desulfubulbus in the sediment form unique “electric cables” that mediate electron conduction. These organisms are highly abundant in sediments with bioelectric properties. The rod-shaped bacteria form cm-long filaments composed of many hundreds of individual cells and each cell is joined to its neighbors with multiple longitudinal fibers. Electrostatic force microscopy suggests that these fibers have metallic conductive properties. We use both metabolic and nano-science approaches to understand this electron conduction that is completely new for biology. Cable bacteria are picked from marine sediment for microbiological analysis. PHOTO: CAMILLA NISSEN TOFTDAL Key publications Pfeffer, C., Larsen, S., Song, J., Dong, M., Besenbacher, F., Meyer, R.L., Kjeldsen, K.U., Schreiber, L., Gorby, Y.A., El-Naggar, M.Y., Leung, K.M., Schramm, A., RisgaardPetersen, N., & Nielsen, L.P. (2012). Filamentous bacteria transport electrons over centimetre distances. Nature, doi:10.1038/nature11586 Risgaard-Petersen, N., Revil, A., Meister, P. & Nielsen, L.P. (2012). Sulfur, iron-, and calcium cycling associated with natural electric currents running through marine sediment. GeochimicaetCosmochimicaActa92: 1–13. Nielsen, L.P., RisgaardPetersen, N., Fossing, H., Christensen, P.B. & Sayama, M. (2010). Electric currents couple spatially separated biogeochemical processes in marine sediment. Nature 463: 1071–1074. 16 CENTER FOR GEOMICROBIOLOGY, AARHUS UNIVERSITY, 2007-2012 THE FUTURE OF GEOMICROBIOLOGY The new Center for Geomicrobiology, funded for 2012-2017, will build on the research described on the preceding pages and will also take up new challenges. The Center will focus on the most promising research directions such as bioenergetics, biodiversity, bioelectricity, single-cell genomics, and several aspects of microbial physiology and sediment biogeochemistry. Exploring the life of the deep underground is an ambitious endeavor. Yet, the development of the necessary techniques is progressing rapidly and the prospects for future methodological and conceptual breakthroughs are great. The Center will continue to engage in IODPbased research. In 2013, Bo Barker Jørgensen will be the co-chief on a drilling expedition in the Baltic Sea under the European Consortium for Ocean Drilling (ECORD) (http://www.eso.ecord.org/expeditions/347/). This expedition will sample the past 140,000 years of glacial and interglacial climate history and will provide a unique opportunity to test how past climate affects the deep biosphere even today. Deep biosphere research in the Center will be exemplary of the interdisciplinary approach to marine Geomicrobiology. We believe that the results may break new ground in our basic understanding of microbial energy metabolism and the biological controls in the marine environment. CENTER FOR GEOMICROBIOLOGY, AARHUS UNIVERSITY, 2007-2012 17 PHOTO: IODP-USIO 18 CENTER FOR GEOMICROBIOLOGY, AARHUS UNIVERSITY, 2007-2012 ACADEMIC STAFF Bo Barker Jørgensen Head of Center, Professor, Dr. Microbial life at the energetic limits Alice Thoft Langerhuus Postdoc, PhD Microbial growth and turnover time in deep sub-seafloor sediments Hans Røy Scientist, PhD Slow microbial food webs of the deep subsurface Regina Schauer Postdoc, PhD Electric currents and cable bacteria in marine sediment Nils Risgaard-Petersen Senior Scientist, PhD Electric currents and cable bacteria in marine sediments Ian Marshall Postdoc, PhD Physiological adaptations to conditions of extreme energy limitation Dorthe Groth Petersen Postdoc, PhD Diversity, abundance and activity of nitrifiers in oxic gyre sediments Clemens Glombitza Postdoc, PhD Energy and carbon fluxes in sub-seafloor sediments Kasper Urup Kjeldsen Scientist, PhD Identity and ecophysiology of sulfate reducers in marine sediments Bente Lomstein Associate Professor Bacterial activity and endospore formation in deep sub-seafloor sediments Mark Alexander Lever Postdoc, PhD Controls on microbial carbon cycling pathways in marine sediment and basalt Andreas Schramm Associate Professor Genome evolution and ecology of sub-seafloor microbes Lars Schreiber Postdoc, PhD Single-cell genomics, metagenomics, and gene expression in marine sediments Lars Peter Nielsen Professor Electric currents and cable bacteria in marine sediments 19 CENTER FOR GEOMICROBIOLOGY, AARHUS UNIVERSITY, 2007-2012 PHD-STUDENTS VISITING SCIENTISTS TECHNICAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF Hyunsoo Na Chao Peng Jeanette Pedersen Irene Harder Tarpgaard Katy Hoffmann Trine Bech Søgaard Xihan Chen Stefan Braun Karina Bomholt Henriksen Christian Pfeffer Marion Jaussi Susanne Nielsen Andrea Torti Sissel Rønning Camilla Nissen Toftdal FORMER ACADEMIC STAFF Signe Høgslund Antje Vossmeyer Sabine Flury Elisa Piña Ochoa Britta Gribsholt Laura Lapham Andrew Steen Karen Lloyd Beth Orcutt Julia Rosa de Rezende 20 CENTER FOR GEOMICROBIOLOGY, AARHUS UNIVERSITY, 2007-2012 INSTRUMENTS AVAILABLE AT THE CENTER FOR GEOMICROBIOLOGY Loading an autosampler with N2 samples for isotope measurements. PHOTO: NILS RISGAARD-PETERSEN Isotope ratio mass spectrometer from Sercon. The system is equipped with the GLS-system for preparation of solid, liquid and gaseous samples. At present the system is configured for analysis of the isotopic composition of solid and gaseous N compounds. PHOTO: NILS RISGAARD-PETERSEN 21 CENTER FOR GEOMICROBIOLOGY, AARHUS UNIVERSITY, 2007-2012 Geochemistry analyses Molecular biology analyses • Several HPLC instruments are available with conductivity detectors for ion chromatography and with fluorescence detector for derivatized biomarker molecules. • Two gas chromatographs (SRI Instruments and Peak Laboratories) are used mostly for measuring methane (Flame Ionization Detector) and hydrogen (Reducing Gas Detector). • A specially designed, two-dimensional ion chromatograph and mass spectrometer (IC-IC-MS) instrument (Dionex) is available for separating and quantifying very low concentrations of anionic compounds. The method was developed by Dionex at the request of the CfG to measure acetate and other volatile fatty acids in marine pore water. • Two isotope ratio mass spectrometers (IR-MS) (Sercon 20-22 and Thermo Delta V) are equipped with gas samplers and elemental analyzers for resolving the natural isotopic composition of carbon, nitrogen and other isotopes in solids, liquids and gases. • Gravity corer for up to 12-m long sediment cores. • Manheim press for sampling of pore water. • Standard PCR (Verity) and qPCR (Roche Light Cycler and Agilent) thermal cyclers are used for detecting and quantifying microbial taxonomic and functional marker genes from environmental DNA extracts. • Concentrations of DNA and RNA isolated from environmental samples are determined with a Bioanalyzer (Agilent). • An Ion Torrent Personal Genome Machine (Life Technologies) can sequence entire microbial genomes within hours. • A six core, 48 GB ram Fujitsu R570 computer is used for analyzing genomic sequences and for numerical modeling. • Laser microdissection (Leica) and laser tweezer (Zeiss) microscopes are used for physically isolating single microbial cells from environmental samples. • An ultracentrifuge (Beckman-Coulter) is used for DNAbased stable isotope probing using 13C- labeled substrates to trace metabolic pathways HPLC instrument for the sensitive chemical analysis of microbial cell components. With a laser tweezer microscope we can catch individual cells in a focused laser beam and move them into thin capillaries for subsequent analyses. PHOTO: NILS RISGAARD-PETERSEN PHOTO: CAMILLA NISSEN TOFTDAL 22 CENTER FOR GEOMICROBIOLOGY, AARHUS UNIVERSITY, 2007-2012 DRILLING AND CORING EXPEDITIONS 2007-2012 The Center for Geomicrobiology has participated in international drilling and coring expeditions in the world oceans as well as in local waters: SOURCE: EARTHOBSERVATORY.NASA.GOV MS Farm, Svalbard, 2009 RV Knorr, Equatorial Pacific, 2009 RV Meteor, Argentine Basin, 2009 DV Joides Resolution, Bering Sea, 2009 RV Atlantis and Alvin, Guaymas Basin, 2008+2009 RV Merian, Baltic Sea, 2010 DV Joides Resolution, Juan de Fuca Ridge Flank, 2010 DV Joides Resolution, South Pacific Gyre, 2010 DV Joides Resolution, North Pond, 2011 RV Dana, North Atlantic, 2012 DV Chikyu, Kumano Sea, 2012 DV Chikyu, Shimokita Coal Bed, 2012 CENTER FOR GEOMICROBIOLOGY, AARHUS UNIVERSITY, 2007-2012 23 ACTIVITIES AND SPECIAL EVENTS AT THE CENTER Education Scientists of the Center participate as teachers in university courses on microbiology, molecular ecology, biogeochemistry, and modeling. The PhD students participate in these same courses as teaching assistants. The Center scientists furthermore supervise and train PhD students who obtain their degree at the Graduate School of Science and Technology, Aarhus University. Workshops The first PhD degree at the Center to Julia Rosa de Rezende, Brazil, summer 2012. The Center mug is a symbol of “many happy returns”. The Center has organized two international workshops on “Life under Extreme Energy Limitation”. An international group of 5070 scientists met to give presentations and discuss this central research theme for three days (www.microenergy2012.org). The Center was also engaged in the International Symposium for Microbial Ecology in Copenhagen, August 2012, with over 2000 participants. Break-out group during a workshop at Aarhus University on “Life under Extreme Energy Limitation”. Honors Head of the Center, Bo Barker Jørgensen, was elected Fellow of the American Academy of Microbiology, 2009, and Fellow of the European Academy of Microbiology, 2009. He received the German Environmental Prize 2009 of the Deutsche Bundesstiftung Umwelt and the Jim Tiedje Award 2010 of the International Society for Microbial Ecology. Bo Barker Jørgensen receives the German Environmental Prize 2009 from the President, Horst Köhler. PHOTO: DBU 24 CENTER FOR GEOMICROBIOLOGY, AARHUS UNIVERSITY, 2007-2012 Everyday life at the Center • Monday morning seminars with the Microbiology Research Group: We present and discuss new results. • Tuesday morning discussion meetings at the Center: We discuss projects, theories, results and new ideas. • Seminar series with invited speakers jointly with the Microbiology Research Group. • Journal Club for PhD students jointly with the Microbiology Research Group. Group photo from Retreat in Rønbjerg, August 2012. Social life at the Center • Annual Retreat at Rønbjerg Marine Research Station • Welcome and farewell parties, Danish julefrokost and German Oktoberfest etc. • Lunch and coffee breaks in the Center’s lunch-room during the day. Traditional “Easter egg rolling contest” in the park of Aarhus University campus. FUNDING • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Danish National Research Foundation, Center for Geomicrobiology, 2007-2012 German Max Planck Society, Center for Geomicrobiology, 2007-2012 AGSoS/ GSST, PhD stipends and screening grants, 2007-2012 Marie Curie Actions Intra European Fellowship, 2008-2009 STENO fellowship, 2007-2010 FP7 BONUS program (EU and FNU), Baltic Gas, 2009-2011 FP7 Actions, Deep Sea and Sub-Seafloor Frontiers, 2010-2012 Universities Denmark (guest researcher), 2011 Swiss National Science Foundation postdoctoral fellowship, 2010-2011 Sloan Foundation (research project), 2010-2011 FNU postdoctoral fellowship, 2010-2012 Villum Kann Rasmussen block stipend, 2010-2012 Marie Curie Actions Intra European Fellowship, 2010-2012 EU, Leonardo da Vinci Scholarship, 2012. AU Ideas (research project), 2012 ERC Advanced Grant, COULOMBUS, 2012-2017 ERC Advanced Grant, MICROENERGY, 2012-2017 Danish National Research Foundation, Center for Geomicrobiology, 2012-2017 Center for Geomicrobiology Department of Bioscience, Aarhus University Ny Munkegade 114, DK-8000 Aarhus C Denmark Phone: +45 87156556 Email: [email protected] http://geomicrobiology.au.dk ISBN: 978-87-92825-68-1