Publications by authors named "Jillian F Banfield"

Background: Underground research laboratories (URLs) provide a window on the deep biosphere and enable investigation of potential microbial impacts on nuclear waste, CO and H stored in the subsurface. We carried out the first multi-year study of groundwater microbiomes sampled from defined intervals between 140 and 400 m below the surface of the Horonobe and Mizunami URLs, Japan.

Results: We reconstructed draft genomes for > 90% of all organisms detected over a four year period.

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Unlabelled: Borgs are huge extrachromosomal elements of anaerobic methane-oxidizing archaea. They exist in exceedingly complex microbiomes, lack cultivated hosts and have few protein functional annotations, precluding their classification as plasmids, viruses or other. Here, we used structure prediction methods to investigate potential roles for ∼10,000 Borg proteins.

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  • Asgard archaea, key ancestors of Eukaryotes, have mobile genetic elements (MGEs) that are not well understood, and this study investigates two complete genomes from the Atabeyarchaeia lineage to explore these elements.
  • The research identifies 18 MGEs in Atabeyarchaeia, including a notable 20.67 kbp circular plasmid and specific viruses that might influence their evolution through gene interactions.
  • Differences in defense mechanisms, such as restriction-modification systems, between Atabeyarchaeia and another Asgard archaea, Freyarchaeia, highlight how these systems can affect the relationship with MGEs and contribute to genetic diversity in these organisms.*
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Microbes were the only form of life on Earth for most of its history, and they still account for the vast majority of life's diversity. They convert rocks to soil, produce much of the oxygen we breathe, remediate our sewage, and sustain agriculture. Microbes are vital to planetary health as they maintain biogeochemical cycles that produce and consume major greenhouse gases and support large food webs.

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Sulfur oxidizing bacteria (SOB) play a key role in sulfur cycling in mine tailings impoundment (TI) waters, where sulfur concentrations are typically high. However, our understanding of SOB sulfur cycling via potential S oxidation pathways (, r, and SI) in these globally ubiquitous contexts, remains limited. Here, we identified TI water column SOB community composition, metagenomics derived metabolic repertoires, physicochemistry, and aqueous sulfur concentration and speciation in four Canadian base metal mine, circumneutral-alkaline TIs over four years (2016 - 2019).

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  • Scientists studied a group of tiny creatures called Asgard archaea to see how they affect soil ecosystems, especially in wetland soils.
  • They found two new genomes of these organisms and discovered that they can use different processes to break down substances.
  • The findings suggest that Asgard archaea could help with carbon cycling in the soil by breaking down materials without producing methane.
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  • - Borgs are large extrachromosomal elements associated with "Candidatus Methanoperedens" archaea, and researchers used nanopore sequencing to validate and reconstruct genomes, revealing 13 complete and four near-complete genomes that share 40 key genes.
  • - These conserved genes helped identify new Borgs in peatland soil and map their evolutionary relationships, showing two main clades; importantly, Borg genes related to electron transfer and cell surface proteins are more highly expressed than those of the host.
  • - The study also reconstructed the first complete genome of a Methanoperedens thought to host Borgs, revealing unique methylation patterns that may help distinguish their genomes, and suggests that Borgs could exist independently from
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  • - Methanoperedens, a type of archaea, helps reduce methane emissions and hosts unique extrachromosomal genetic elements (ECEs) called Borgs, which influence their activity; however, the diversity of these ECEs has not been thoroughly explored.
  • - New research identifies small linear ECEs, circular viruses, and other unclassified ECEs associated with Methanoperedens, with linear ECEs sharing characteristics with Borgs, prompting the term "mini-Borgs."
  • - Mini-Borgs show significant genetic diversity across at least five groups and are linked to various Methanoperedens viruses, suggesting a complex network of genetic exchange that may affect the functioning and evolution of their host
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  • Microbial hydrogen cycling is critical for the variety and function of anoxic ecosystems, traditionally linked to [FeFe] hydrogenases found in bacteria and eukaryotes.
  • Recent research shows that anaerobic archaea also possess diverse and active [FeFe] hydrogenases, indicating a broader evolutionary history than previously understood.
  • The study reveals new metabolic adaptations in archaea, introduces a simple hydrogenase in DPANN archaea, and uncovers hybrid hydrogenases formed by mixing [FeFe] and [NiFe] types, suggesting a complex evolutionary relationship between these enzyme groups.
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Soil microbial communities perform critical ecosystem services through the collective metabolic activities of numerous individual organisms. Most microbes use corrinoids, a structurally diverse family of cofactors related to vitamin B12. Corrinoid structure influences the growth of individual microbes, yet how these growth responses scale to the community level remains unknown.

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Soil microbial communities perform critical ecosystem services through the collective metabolic activities of numerous individual organisms. Most microbes use corrinoids, a structurally diverse family of cofactors related to vitamin B. Corrinoid structure influences the growth of individual microbes, yet how these growth responses scale to the community level remains unknown.

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Background: Prior to soil formation, phosphate liberated by rock weathering is often sequestered into highly insoluble lanthanide phosphate minerals. Dissolution of these minerals releases phosphate and lanthanides to the biosphere. Currently, the microorganisms involved in phosphate mineral dissolution and the role of lanthanides in microbial metabolism are poorly understood.

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Microbial rhodopsins are photoreceptive transmembrane proteins that transport ions or regulate other intracellular biological processes. Recent genomic and metagenomic analyses found many microbial rhodopsins with unique sequences distinct from known ones. Functional characterization of these new types of microbial rhodopsins is expected to expand our understanding of their physiological roles.

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Viruses are often studied using metagenome-assembled sequences, but genome incompleteness hampers comprehensive and accurate analyses. Contig Overlap Based Re-Assembly (COBRA) resolves assembly breakpoints based on the de Bruijn graph and joins contigs. Here we benchmarked COBRA using ocean and soil viral datasets.

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Discovery of microbial diversity has been increasing at an astonishing rate. In this quick guide, Jaffe and Banfield provide an introduction to one major group of recently discovered microbes - the 'Candidate Phyla Radiation' bacteria.

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Biological sulfate reduction (BSR) represents a promising strategy for bioremediation of sulfate-rich waste streams, yet the impact of metabolic interactions on performance is largely unexplored. Here, genome-resolved metagenomics was used to characterize 17 microbial communities in reactors treating synthetic sulfate-contaminated solutions. Reactors were supplemented with lactate or acetate and a small amount of fermentable substrate.

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Background: Biofilms in sulfide-rich springs present intricate microbial communities that play pivotal roles in biogeochemical cycling. We studied chemoautotrophically based biofilms that host diverse CPR bacteria and grow in sulfide-rich springs to investigate microbial controls on biogeochemical cycling.

Results: Sulfide springs biofilms were investigated using bulk geochemical analysis, genome-resolved metagenomics, and scanning transmission X-ray microscopy (STXM) at room temperature and 87 K.

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Bacteriophages are key components of gut microbiomes, yet the phage colonization process in the infant gut remains uncertain. Here, we establish a large phage sequence database and use strain-resolved analyses to investigate DNA phage succession in infants throughout the first 3 years of life. Analysis of 819 fecal metagenomes collected from 28 full-term and 24 preterm infants and their mothers revealed that early-life phageome richness increases over time and reaches adult-like complexity by age 3.

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Here, we profiled putative phages of Saccharibacteria, which are of particular importance as Saccharibacteria influence some human oral diseases. We additionally profiled putative phages of Gracilibacteria and Absconditabacteria, two Candidate Phyla Radiation (CPR) lineages of interest given their use of an alternative genetic code. Among the phages identified in this study, some are targeted by spacers from both CPR and non-CPR bacteria and others by both bacteria that use the standard genetic code as well as bacteria that use an alternative genetic code.

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Article Synopsis
  • Rubisco is a crucial enzyme for carbon fixation in plants and algae, with the predominant form (type I) characterized by its unique hetero-oligomeric structure.
  • A recent discovery of a sister group, known as form I', has helped illuminate the origins of form I rubisco and the evolutionary steps that led to its distinct structure.
  • This study uses comparative structural analysis to trace rubisco's evolution, presenting key intermediates and providing insights into the transition from homo-oligomeric to hetero-oligomeric forms.
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The early-life gut microbiome development has long-term health impacts and can be influenced by factors such as infant diet. Human milk oligosaccharides (HMOs), an essential component of breast milk that can only be metabolized by some beneficial gut microorganisms, ensure proper gut microbiome establishment and infant development. However, how HMOs are metabolized by gut microbiomes is not fully elucidated.

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RNA-guided endonucleases form the crux of diverse biological processes and technologies, including adaptive immunity, transposition, and genome editing. Some of these enzymes are components of insertion sequences (IS) in the IS200/IS605 and IS607 transposon families. Both IS families encode a TnpA transposase and a TnpB nuclease, an RNA-guided enzyme ancestral to CRISPR-Cas12s.

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CRISPR-Cas enzymes enable RNA-guided bacterial immunity and are widely used for biotechnological applications including genome editing. In particular, the Class 2 CRISPR-associated enzymes (Cas9, Cas12 and Cas13 families), have been deployed for numerous research, clinical and agricultural applications. However, the immense genetic and biochemical diversity of these proteins in the public domain poses a barrier for researchers seeking to leverage their activities.

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Viruses are abundant, ubiquitous members of soil communities that kill microbial cells, but how they respond to perturbation of soil ecosystems is essentially unknown. Here, we investigate lineage-specific virus-host dynamics in grassland soil following "wet-up", when resident microbes are both resuscitated and lysed after a prolonged dry period. Quantitative isotope tracing, time-resolved metagenomics and viromic analyses indicate that dry soil holds a diverse but low biomass reservoir of virions, of which only a subset thrives following wet-up.

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RNA-guided endonucleases form the crux of diverse biological processes and technologies, including adaptive immunity, transposition, and genome editing. Some of these enzymes are components of insertion sequences (IS) in the IS200/IS605 and IS607 transposon families. Both IS families encode a TnpA transposase and TnpB nuclease, an RNA-guided enzyme ancestral to CRISPR-Cas12.

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