Uncovering the Diversity and Activity of Methylotrophic Methanogens in Freshwater Wetland Soils
暂无分享,去创建一个
Elizabeth K. Eder | D. Hoyt | G. Bohrer | K. Wrighton | R. Daly | M. Borton | Richard A. Wolfe | Adrienne B. Narrowe | Garret Smith | Allison R. Wong | C. Miller | J. Angle | Alexandra Pappas
[1] R. Irizarry. ggplot2 , 2019, Introduction to Data Science.
[2] J. Tamames,et al. Microdiversity ensures the maintenance of functional microbial communities under changing environmental conditions , 2019, The ISME Journal.
[3] N. Fierer,et al. High proportions of bacteria and archaea across most biomes remain uncultured , 2019, The ISME Journal.
[4] William A. Walters,et al. Reproducible, interactive, scalable and extensible microbiome data science using QIIME 2 , 2019, Nature Biotechnology.
[5] P. Carini. A “Cultural” Renaissance: Genomics Breathes New Life into an Old Craft , 2019, mSystems.
[6] L. M. Markillie,et al. Wetland Sediments Host Diverse Microbial Taxa Capable of Cycling Alcohols , 2019, Applied and Environmental Microbiology.
[7] S. Giovannoni,et al. Microbial trimethylamine metabolism in marine environments. , 2018, Environmental microbiology.
[8] D. Hoyt,et al. Comparative genomics and physiology of the genus Methanohalophilus, a prevalent methanogen in hydraulically fractured shale , 2018, Environmental microbiology.
[9] T. Morin,et al. Members of the Genus Methylobacter Are Inferred To Account for the Majority of Aerobic Methane Oxidation in Oxic Soils from a Freshwater Wetland , 2018, mBio.
[10] R. Daniel,et al. Methanol metabolism in the acetogenic bacterium Acetobacterium woodii , 2018, Environmental microbiology.
[11] V. Orphan,et al. Metabolic marker gene mining provides insight in global mcrA diversity and, coupled with targeted genome reconstruction, sheds further light on metabolic potential of the Methanomassiliicoccales , 2018, PeerJ.
[12] M. Jetten,et al. Increases in temperature and nutrient availability positively affect methane‐cycling microorganisms in Arctic thermokarst lake sediments , 2018, Environmental microbiology.
[13] Elizabeth K. Eder,et al. Coupled laboratory and field investigations resolve microbial interactions that underpin persistence in hydraulically fractured shales , 2018, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[14] Eoin L. Brodie,et al. Dynamic root exudate chemistry and microbial substrate preferences drive patterns in rhizosphere microbial community assembly , 2018, Nature Microbiology.
[15] R. Aerts,et al. Methane Feedbacks to the Global Climate System in a Warmer World , 2018 .
[16] S. Bridgham,et al. Methylotrophic methanogenesis in Sphagnum-dominated peatland soils , 2018 .
[17] Christopher S. Miller,et al. Complex Evolutionary History of Translation Elongation Factor 2 and Diphthamide Biosynthesis in Archaea and Parabasalids , 2018, bioRxiv.
[18] N. Fierer,et al. A global atlas of the dominant bacteria found in soil , 2018, Science.
[19] P. Verhaert,et al. The deep-subsurface sulfate reducer Desulfotomaculum kuznetsovii employs two methanol-degrading pathways , 2018, Nature Communications.
[20] Christopher S. Miller,et al. Methanogenesis in oxygenated soils is a substantial fraction of wetland methane emissions , 2017, Nature Communications.
[21] U. Deppenmeier,et al. Growth Characteristics of Methanomassiliicoccus luminyensis and Expression of Methyltransferase Encoding Genes , 2017, Archaea.
[22] Wen-Tso Liu,et al. Thermodynamically diverse syntrophic aromatic compound catabolism , 2017, Environmental microbiology.
[23] S. Gribaldo,et al. The growing tree of Archaea: new perspectives on their diversity, evolution and ecology , 2017, The ISME Journal.
[24] Julien F. Ollivier,et al. In-depth analysis of core methanogenic communities from high elevation permafrost-affected wetlands , 2017 .
[25] A. von Haeseler,et al. UFBoot2: Improving the Ultrafast Bootstrap Approximation , 2017, bioRxiv.
[26] Christopher S. Miller,et al. High‐resolution sequencing reveals unexplored archaeal diversity in freshwater wetland soils , 2017, Environmental microbiology.
[27] Thomas K. F. Wong,et al. ModelFinder: Fast Model Selection for Accurate Phylogenetic Estimates , 2017, Nature Methods.
[28] Benjamin Poulter,et al. The growing role of methane in anthropogenic climate change , 2016 .
[29] Donovan H. Parks,et al. Methylotrophic methanogenesis discovered in the archaeal phylum Verstraetearchaeota , 2016, Nature Microbiology.
[30] Yang Li,et al. The complete genome sequence of the methanogenic archaeon ISO4-H5 provides insights into the methylotrophic lifestyle of a ruminal representative of the Methanomassiliicoccales , 2016, Standards in genomic sciences.
[31] W. D. de Vos,et al. Unravelling the one-carbon metabolism of the acetogen Sporomusa strain An4 by genome and proteome analysis. , 2016, Environmental microbiology.
[32] Paul J. McMurdie,et al. DADA2: High resolution sample inference from Illumina amplicon data , 2016, Nature Methods.
[33] Lior Pachter,et al. Near-optimal probabilistic RNA-seq quantification , 2016, Nature Biotechnology.
[34] Donovan H. Parks,et al. Methane metabolism in the archaeal phylum Bathyarchaeota revealed by genome-centric metagenomics , 2015, Science.
[35] R. Daniel,et al. New Mode of Energy Metabolism in the Seventh Order of Methanogens as Revealed by Comparative Genome Analysis of “Candidatus Methanoplasma termitum” , 2014, Applied and Environmental Microbiology.
[36] A. von Haeseler,et al. IQ-TREE: A Fast and Effective Stochastic Algorithm for Estimating Maximum-Likelihood Phylogenies , 2014, Molecular biology and evolution.
[37] S. Gribaldo,et al. Comparative genomics highlights the unique biology of Methanomassiliicoccales, a Thermoplasmatales-related seventh order of methanogenic archaea that encodes pyrrolysine , 2014, BMC Genomics.
[38] J. Murrell,et al. Bacterial metabolism of methylated amines and identification of novel methylotrophs in Movile Cave , 2014, The ISME Journal.
[39] Jo Handelsman,et al. Conditionally Rare Taxa Disproportionately Contribute to Temporal Changes in Microbial Diversity , 2014, mBio.
[40] T. Urich,et al. Metatranscriptomic Analysis of Arctic Peat Soil Microbiota , 2014, Applied and Environmental Microbiology.
[41] Qianlai Zhuang,et al. Methane emissions from wetlands: biogeochemical, microbial, and modeling perspectives from local to global scales , 2013, Global change biology.
[42] Susan Holmes,et al. phyloseq: An R Package for Reproducible Interactive Analysis and Graphics of Microbiome Census Data , 2013, PloS one.
[43] K. Katoh,et al. MAFFT Multiple Sequence Alignment Software Version 7: Improvements in Performance and Usability , 2013, Molecular biology and evolution.
[44] A. Brune,et al. “Methanoplasmatales,” Thermoplasmatales-Related Archaea in Termite Guts and Other Environments, Are the Seventh Order of Methanogens , 2012, Applied and Environmental Microbiology.
[45] R. Conrad,et al. Stable Carbon Isotope Fractionation by Methylotrophic Methanogenic Archaea , 2012, Applied and Environmental Microbiology.
[46] Siu-Ming Yiu,et al. IDBA-UD: a de novo assembler for single-cell and metagenomic sequencing data with highly uneven depth , 2012, Bioinform..
[47] William A. Walters,et al. Ultra-high-throughput microbial community analysis on the Illumina HiSeq and MiSeq platforms , 2012, The ISME Journal.
[48] D. Jézéquel,et al. Production and consumption of methane in freshwater lake ecosystems. , 2011, Research in microbiology.
[49] Sean R. Eddy,et al. Accelerated Profile HMM Searches , 2011, PLoS Comput. Biol..
[50] W. J. Riley,et al. Barriers to predicting changes in global terrestrial methane fluxes: analyses using CLM4Me, a methane biogeochemistry model integrated in CESM , 2011 .
[51] C. Huttenhower,et al. Metagenomic biomarker discovery and explanation , 2011, Genome Biology.
[52] Patrick M. Crill,et al. Freshwater Methane Emissions Offset the Continental Carbon Sink , 2011, Science.
[53] Yanfen Wang,et al. Methanol as the Primary Methanogenic and Acetogenic Precursor in the Cold Zoige Wetland at Tibetan Plateau , 2010, Microbial Ecology.
[54] W. Mitsch,et al. Methane Emissions From Created Riverine Wetlands , 2010, Wetlands.
[55] O. Gascuel,et al. New algorithms and methods to estimate maximum-likelihood phylogenies: assessing the performance of PhyML 3.0. , 2010, Systematic biology.
[56] Miriam L. Land,et al. Trace: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange Prodigal: Prokaryotic Gene Recognition and Translation Initiation Site Identification Recommended Citation Prodigal: Prokaryotic Gene Recognition and Translation Initiation Site Identification , 2022 .
[57] S. Kolb. Aerobic methanol-oxidizing bacteria in soil. , 2009, FEMS microbiology letters.
[58] Hadley Wickham,et al. ggplot2 - Elegant Graphics for Data Analysis (2nd Edition) , 2017 .
[59] Toni Gabaldón,et al. trimAl: a tool for automated alignment trimming in large-scale phylogenetic analyses , 2009, Bioinform..
[60] Anne-Kristin Kaster,et al. Methanogenic archaea: ecologically relevant differences in energy conservation , 2008, Nature Reviews Microbiology.
[61] Guishan Zhang,et al. Methanogenesis from Methanol at Low Temperatures by a Novel Psychrophilic Methanogen, “Methanolobus psychrophilus” sp. nov., Prevalent in Zoige Wetland of the Tibetan Plateau , 2008, Applied and Environmental Microbiology.
[62] Yanfen Wang,et al. Methanogen community in Zoige wetland of Tibetan plateau and phenotypic characterization of a dominant uncultured methanogen cluster ZC-I. , 2008, Environmental microbiology.
[63] J. Krzycki. Function of genetically encoded pyrrolysine in corrinoid-dependent methylamine methyltransferases. , 2004, Current opinion in chemical biology.
[64] Robert C. Edgar,et al. MUSCLE: multiple sequence alignment with high accuracy and high throughput. , 2004, Nucleic acids research.
[65] E. Delong,et al. Identification of Methyl Coenzyme M Reductase A (mcrA) Genes Associated with Methane-Oxidizing Archaea , 2003, Applied and Environmental Microbiology.
[66] P. Luton,et al. The mcrA gene as an alternative to 16S rRNA in the phylogenetic analysis of methanogen populations in landfill. , 2002, Microbiology.
[67] Robert F. Grant,et al. Simulation of methanogenesis in the mathematical model ecosys , 1998 .
[68] R. Knowles,et al. Methane Metabolism in a Temperate Swamp , 1994, Applied and environmental microbiology.
[69] A. Stams,et al. Methanogenesis from acetate: a comparison of the acetate metabolism in Methanothrix soehngenii and Methanosarcina spp. , 1992 .
[70] G. Zavarzin,et al. Extremely halophilic, methylotrophic, anaerobic bacteria , 1990 .
[71] Alfons J. M. Stams,et al. Acetate threshold values and acetate activating enzymes in methanogenic bacteria , 1990 .
[72] G. Gottschalk,et al. Sporomusa, a new genus of gram-negative anaerobic bacteria including Sporomusa sphaeroides spec. nov. and Sporomusa ovata spec. nov. , 1984, Archives of Microbiology.
[73] Derek R. Lovley,et al. Methanogenesis from Methanol and Methylamines and Acetogenesis from Hydrogen and Carbon Dioxide in the Sediments of a Eutrophic Lake , 1983, Applied and environmental microbiology.
[74] T. Urich,et al. Phylogenetic and genomic analysis of Methanomassiliicoccales in wetlands and animal intestinal tracts reveals clade-specific habitat preferences. , 2016, FEMS microbiology ecology.
[75] Peer Bork,et al. Interactive Tree Of Life (iTOL): an online tool for phylogenetic tree display and annotation , 2007, Bioinform..
[76] J. Zeikus,et al. Microbial methanol formation: A major end product of pectin metabolism , 2007, Current Microbiology.
[77] K. Fiebig,et al. Utilization of trimethylamine and other N-methyl compounds for growth and methane formation by Methanosarcina barkeri. , 1979, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.