Publications by authors named "Lisa Stein"

This paper is a call to action. By publishing concurrently across journals like an emergency bulletin, we are not merely making a plea for awareness about climate change. Instead, we are demanding immediate, tangible steps that harness the power of microbiology and the expertise of researchers and policymakers to safeguard the planet for future generations.

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This paper is a call to action. By publishing concurrently across journals like an emergency bulletin, we are not merely making a plea for awareness about climate change. Instead, we are demanding immediate, tangible steps that harness the power of microbiology and the expertise of researchers and policymakers to safeguard the planet for future generations.

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This paper is a call to action. By publishing concurrently across journals like an emergency bulletin, we are not merely making a plea for awareness about climate change. Instead, we are demanding immediate, tangible steps that harness the power of microbiology and the expertise of researchers and policymakers to safeguard the planet for future generations.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This paper is a call to action. By publishing concurrently across journals like an emergency bulletin, we are not merely making a plea for awareness about climate change. Instead, we are demanding immediate, tangible steps that harness the power of microbiology and the expertise of researchers and policymakers to safeguard the planet for future generations.

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Article Synopsis
  • Injecting hydrogen (H) deep underground can create artificial microbial ecosystems.
  • These ecosystems will alter the types of microbes that are naturally found in that environment.
  • The changes in microbial communities will also impact their metabolism, or how they convert energy and nutrients.
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In lichen research, metagenomes are increasingly being used for evaluating symbiont composition and metabolic potential, but the overall content and limitations of these metagenomes have not been assessed. We reassembled over 400 publicly available metagenomes, generated metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs), constructed phylogenomic trees, and mapped MAG occurrence and frequency across the data set. Ninety-seven percent of the 1,000 recovered MAGs were bacterial or the fungal symbiont that provides most cellular mass.

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Microorganisms, including bacteria, archaea, viruses, fungi, and protists, are essential to life on Earth and the functioning of the biosphere. Here, we discuss the key roles of microorganisms in achieving the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), highlighting recent and emerging advances in microbial research and technology that can facilitate our transition toward a sustainable future. Given the central role of microorganisms in the biochemical processing of elements, synthesizing new materials, supporting human health, and facilitating life in managed and natural landscapes, microbial research and technologies are directly or indirectly relevant for achieving each of the SDGs.

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The complex nitrogen (N) cycle in groundwater systems is affected by both biological and environmental factors. The interactions between hydrogeological conditions and the microbial community assembly processes that impact N-cycling processes remain poorly understood. We explored the assembly patterns of N-cycling microbial communities along the groundwater flow path.

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Microbes that use the single-carbon substrates methanol and methane offer great promise to bioindustry along with substantial environmental benefits. Methanotrophs and other methylotrophs can be engineered and optimized to produce a wide range of products, from biopolymers to biofuels and beyond. While significant limitations remain, including delivery of single-carbon feedstock to bioreactors, efficient growth, and scale-up, these challenges are being addressed and notable improvements have been rapid.

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Genome-scale metabolic models (GEMs) are valuable tools serving systems biology and metabolic engineering. However, GEMs are still an underestimated tool in informing microbial ecology. Since their first application for aerobic gammaproteobacterial methane oxidizers less than a decade ago, GEMs have substantially increased our understanding of the metabolism of methanotrophs, a microbial guild of high relevance for the natural and biotechnological mitigation of methane efflux to the atmosphere.

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Article Synopsis
  • Effective emission reduction strategies should address both methane and nitrous oxide simultaneously to maximize their impact.
  • Focusing solely on one gas may overlook significant opportunities to lower overall greenhouse gas emissions.
  • Collaborative approaches can enhance sustainability efforts in various sectors, including agriculture and energy, by targeting these potent gases together.
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Methanotrophic bacteria mitigate emissions of the potent greenhouse gas methane (CH4) from a variety of anthropogenic and natural sources, including freshwater lakes, which are large sources of CH4 on a global scale. Despite a dependence on dioxygen (O2) for CH4 oxidation, abundant populations of putatively aerobic methanotrophs have been detected within microoxic and anoxic waters and sediments of lakes. Experimental work has demonstrated active aerobic methanotrophs under those conditions, but how they are able to persist and oxidize CH4 under O2 deficiency remains enigmatic.

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Understanding the ecology of microorganisms is essential for optimizing aquaponics systems. Effects of pH and inoculum on ammonium removal and dynamics of microbial community composition from all compartments of lab-scale aquaponics systems were examined. Initial ammonium accumulation in systems with comammox-enriched inocula were 47% and 69% that of systems enriched with ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB), with higher rates of ammonium removal and transient nitrite accumulation measured in the latter systems.

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Agritech to Tame the Nitrogen Cycle.

Cold Spring Harb Perspect Biol

March 2024

Article Synopsis
  • The Haber-Bosch process has significantly boosted food production for humanity but has led to negative environmental impacts, such as increased nitrate production, GHG emissions, and water pollution.
  • Agriculture contributes approximately 9.3 Gt of CO2 equivalents annually, with major GHGs being methane and nitrous oxide, highlighting the need for a shift to sustainable practices.
  • The adoption of biological fertilizers and innovative agritech solutions like soil-free aquaponics can improve nitrogen efficiency, reduce GHG emissions, and protect water resources while addressing the issues caused by synthetic fertilizers.
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Methanol is an abundant and low-cost next-generation carbon source. While many species of methanotrophic bacteria can convert methanol into valuable bioproducts in bioreactors, Methylotuvimicrobium buryatense 5GB1C stands out as one of the most promising strains for industrialization. It has a short doubling time compared to most methanotrophs, remarkable resilience against contamination, and a suite of tools enabling genetic engineering.

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is a prevalent gut microbe reported to occur in higher abundance among individuals with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). This study reports the isolation and characterization of six bacteriophages (phages) isolated from human fecal material and environmental samples that infect this species. Isolated phages have a siphovirus morphology, with genomes ranging between 36.

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Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are ubiquitous in O-perturbed aquifers, but their role in shaping ammonia-oxidizing microbial communities is not clear. This study examined the dynamic responses of ammonia-oxidizing microorganisms (AOMs) in redox-fluctuating aquifers to ROS via field investigation and in-lab verification using transcriptomes/ metatranscriptome and RT-qPCR. Ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) dominated recharge aquifers with lower ROS levels, whereas ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB) and heterotrophic nitrifying aerobic bacteria (HNB) predominated in discharge areas with higher ROS levels.

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Self-cycling fermentation (SCF), a cyclic process in which cells, on average, divide once per cycle, has been shown to lead to whole-culture synchronization and improvements in productivity during bioconversion. Previous studies have shown that the completion of synchronized cell replication sometimes occurs simultaneously with depletion of the limiting nutrient. However, cases in which the end of cell doubling occurred before limiting nutrient exhaustion were also observed.

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