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Chapter 27 Biogeochemical Cycling and Introductory Microbial Ecology 1 Microbial Ecology • The study of community dynamics and the interaction of microbes with each other, with plants and animals, and with the environment in which they live • Microbes play a major role in life on earth, yet only ~ 1% of all species have been cultured, identified, and studied 2 Foundations of Microbial Ecology • Populations – assemblages of similar organisms • Communities – mixtures of different populations • Ecosystems – self-regulating biological communities and their physical environment 3 Biogeochemical Cycling • Biogeochemical cycling of nutrients – involves biological and chemical processes – often involves oxidation-reduction reactions that change chemical and physical characteristics of nutrients • All nutrient cycles are linked and make life on Earth possible 4 Figure 27.1 5 Table 27.1 6 Carbon Cycle • Carbon can be a variety of forms – reduced e.g., methane (CH4) and organic matter – oxidized e.g., CO and CO2 7 Carbon Cycle Figure 27.2 8 Degradation of organic matter • Influenced by several factors – nutrients present in environment – abiotic conditions – microbial community present 9 Table 27.2 • mineralization – decomposition of organic matter to simpler inorganic compounds (e.g., NH4) • nutrient immobilization – the nutrients that are converted into biomass become temporarily unavailable for nutrient cycling. 10 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Figure 27.3 11 Microbial Ecology and Its Methods: An Overview • Many methods available • Main use is to understand microbial communities • Initial questions asked include – How many organisms are present? – What genera and species are represented in the ecosystem? 12 Techniques • Examination of microbial populations – determination of numbers and types of microbes – direct viable counts – enrichment techniques – when organisms do not grow under test condition • they may be nonviable • they may be viable but nonculturable (VBNC) 13 Figure 27.16 14 Molecular Techniques • Small subunit (SSU) ribosomal RNA analysis is used to identify community populations • Denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) – uses gradient of DNA denaturing agents to separate DNA fragments • DNA reassociation used to determine the number of genomes present 15 Figure 27.17 16 Examination of Microbial Community Structure • The most direct way to assess microbial community structure is to directly observe communities in nature • Assessment can be done in situ using immersed slides 17 Understanding physical structure • Direct observation – classical staining procedures – fluorescent stains – fluorescent molecular probes • Often coupled with molecular techniques – specific molecular probes 18 Figure 27.18 19 Understanding constituents • Filtration can be used to collect microorganisms from habitat • Volume, dry weight, or chemical content can be measured – not useful for non-discrete microorganisms (e.g., filamentous fungi) • Molecular “fingerprinting” techniques identify members of community 20 Environmental Genomics • Also called metagenomics • Goal is to define the function of the community gene pool under a variety of conditions • Requires collaboration of biologists trained in microbiology, ecology, math, and bioinformatics 21 Microbial Activity and Turnover • Direct chemical measurements of specific processes (e.g., nitrification) • Microarrays to measure gene expression • Stable isotope measurements • Microbial growth rates measured two ways: – direct microscopic examination – incorporation of radiolabelled components (e.g., thymidine) 22 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Recovery or Addition of Individual Microbes • isolation of individual cells provides insight into microbial community – e.g., phenotypic (population) heterogeneity • cells from genetically uniform population have different phenotypes • reporter microbes with specific characteristics can be added to microbial community to understand community structure and function better – reporter genes present in reporter microbes respond to environmental and physiological changes 23 Isolation of individual cells • Optical tweezers – laser beam used to drag microbe away from its neighbors • Micromanipulator – fine capillary used to separate microbe from its neighbors • Isolation can be followed by analysis of organism’s DNA 24