Publications by authors named "Matthew J Scarborough"

Article Synopsis
  • Short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), which have an anti-inflammatory effect, are reduced in multiple sclerosis (MS), with unclear reasons for their depletion in the gut microbiome.* -
  • In a study using a model for MS, it was found that certain gut bacteria can worsen symptoms by depleting SCFA-producing microbes and that increased dietary fiber can help counteract this effect.* -
  • This research suggests that managing SCFA levels in MS patients may need a combination of dietary changes and adjustments to the gut microbiome to improve health outcomes.*
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Unlabelled: Chain elongating bacteria are a unique guild of strictly anaerobic bacteria that have garnered interest for sustainable chemical manufacturing from carbon-rich wet and gaseous waste streams. They produce C6-C8 medium-chain fatty acids, which are valuable platform chemicals that can be used directly, or derivatized to service a wide range of chemical industries. However, the application of chain elongating bacteria for synthesizing products beyond C6-C8 medium-chain fatty acids has not been evaluated.

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Emerging biotechnologies that solve pressing environmental and climate emergencies will require harnessing the vast functional diversity of the underlying microbiomes driving such engineered processes. Modeling is a critical aspect of process engineering that informs system design as well as aids diagnostic optimization of performance. 'Conventional' bioprocess models assume homogenous biomass within functional guilds and thus fail to predict emergent properties of diverse microbial physiologies, such as product specificity and community interactions.

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Landfills are a major source of anthropogenic methane emissions and have been found to produce nitrous oxide, an even more potent greenhouse gas than methane. Intermediate cover soil (ICS) plays a key role in reducing methane emissions but may also result in nitrous oxide production. To assess the potential for microbial methane oxidation and nitrous oxide production, long sequencing reads were generated from ICS microbiome DNA and reads were functionally annotated for 24 samples across ICS at a large landfill in New York.

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Carbon transformations during anaerobic digestion are mediated by complex microbiomes, but their assembly is poorly understood, especially in full-scale digesters. Gene-centric metagenomics combining functional and taxonomic classification was performed for an on-farm digester during start-up. Cow manure and organic waste pre-treated in a hydrolysis tank were fed to the methane-producing digester and the volatile solids loading rate was slowly increased from 0 to 3.

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Article Synopsis
  • Agroindustrial liquid residues are full of organic material and can be used by microbial communities to produce valuable chemicals, but it's challenging to direct these communities for specific outcomes.
  • Researchers conducted experiments using various residues in anaerobic bioreactors inoculated with microbial communities from a wastewater treatment plant to study how these communities behave and what products they generate.
  • Through genomic analysis, they identified 217 unique microbial genomes and evaluated their roles in producing medium-chain fatty acids (MCFAs), uncovering common biological functions among different microbial communities across various feedstocks.
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Anaerobic microbiomes can be used to recover the chemical energy in agroindustrial and municipal wastes as useful products. Here, we report a total of 109 draft metagenome-assembled genomes from a bioreactor-fed carbohydrate-rich dairy manure hydrolysate. Studying these genomes will aid us in deciphering the metabolic networks in anaerobic microbiomes.

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Here, we report the metagenomes from five anaerobic bioreactors, operated under different conditions, that were fed carbohydrate-rich thin stillage from a corn starch ethanol plant. The putative functions of the abundant taxa identified here will inform future studies of microbial communities involved in valorizing this and other low-value agroindustrial residues.

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Article Synopsis
  • Fermentative microbial communities can effectively transform agroindustrial waste into useful chemicals.
  • The study analyzes 34 metagenomes from anaerobic bioreactors using lactose-rich milk permeate as a feed.
  • Researchers identified 278 metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) that can guide future research on renewable chemical production from dairy and similar waste materials.*
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There is growing interest in producing beneficial products from wastes using microbiomes. We previously performed multiomic analyses of a bioreactor microbiome that converted carbohydrate-rich lignocellulosic residues to medium-chain carboxylic acids. Here, we present draft metagenome-assembled genomes from this microbiome, obtained from reactors in which xylose was the primary carbon source.

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Article Synopsis
  • Microbial communities play a crucial role in transforming materials in the environment and can be utilized to create valuable products like medium-chain fatty acids (MCFAs) from renewable sources.
  • Two metabolic models (iFermCell215 and iFermGuilds789) have been developed to better understand and enhance these microbial communities based on existing genomic and metabolic data.
  • Simulations show that different fermentation product ratios influence MCFA production, highlighting the potential of these models to improve microbial efficiency and contribute to sustainable carbon recycling and organic residue management.
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Chain elongation is emerging as a bioprocess to produce valuable medium-chain fatty acids (MCFA; 6 to 8 carbons in length) from organic waste streams by harnessing the metabolism of anaerobic microbiomes. Although our understanding of chain elongation physiology is still evolving, the reverse β-oxidation pathway has been identified as a key metabolic function to elongate the intermediate products of fermentation to MCFA. Here, we describe two uncultured chain-elongating microorganisms that were enriched in an anaerobic microbiome transforming the residues from a lignocellulosic biorefining process.

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Biomanufacturing from renewable feedstocks can offset fossil fuel-based chemical production. One potential biomanufacturing strategy is production of medium-chain fatty acids (MCFA) from organic feedstocks using either pure cultures or microbiomes. While the set of microbes in a microbiome can often metabolize organic materials of greater diversity than a single species can and while the role of specific species may be known, knowledge of the carbon and energy flow within and between organisms in MCFA-producing microbiomes is only now starting to emerge.

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Background: Lignocellulosic biomass is seen as an abundant renewable source of liquid fuels and chemicals that are currently derived from petroleum. When lignocellulosic biomass is used for ethanol production, the resulting liquid residue (stillage) contains large amounts of organic material that could be further transformed into recoverable bioproducts, thus enhancing the economics of the biorefinery.

Results: Here we test the hypothesis that a bacterial community could transform the organics in stillage into valuable bioproducts.

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is one of the best-studied alphaproteobacteria from biochemical, genetic, and genomic perspectives. To gain a better systems-level understanding of this organism, we generated a large transposon mutant library and used transposon sequencing (Tn-seq) to identify genes that are essential under several growth conditions. Using newly developed Tn-seq analysis software (TSAS), we identified 493 genes as essential for aerobic growth on a rich medium.

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Aeration in biological nutrient removal (BNR) processes accounts for nearly half of the total electricity costs at many wastewater treatment plants. Even though conventional BNR processes are usually operated to have aerated zones with high dissolved oxygen (DO) concentrations, recent research has shown that nitrification can be maintained using very low-DO concentrations (e.g.

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