Publications by authors named "Patrick H Thieringer"

We report the metagenome-assembled genome of an ammonia-oxidizing archaeon that is closely related to NF5 but shows distinct genomic features compared to strain NF5.

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Article Synopsis
  • Silicifying environments, like hot springs, are key for preserving microbial life, providing insights into microbial existence throughout Earth's history and potentially on other planets.* -
  • Research at Steep Cone Geyser in Yellowstone analyzed microbial materials from living systems, silicified areas, and lithified samples to understand how biosignatures change during the processes of silicification and burial.* -
  • The study revealed the presence of distinct microbial communities, especially Cyanobacteria, whose biosignatures changed from living samples to lithified ones, indicating that microbial preservation and community dynamics are complex and significant for understanding past life.*
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Serpentinization reactions produce highly reduced waters that have hyperalkaline pH and that can have high concentrations of H and CH. Putatively autotrophic methanogenic archaea have been identified in the subsurface waters of the Samail Ophiolite, Sultanate of Oman, though the strategies to overcome hyperalkaline pH and dissolved inorganic carbon limitation remain to be fully understood. Here, we recovered metagenome assembled genomes (MAGs) and applied a metapangenomic approach to three different populations to assess habitat-specific functional gene distribution.

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Little is known of acetogens in contemporary serpentinizing systems, despite widely supported theories that serpentinite-hosted environments supported the first life on Earth via acetogenesis. To address this knowledge gap, genome-resolved metagenomics was applied to subsurface fracture water communities from an area of active serpentinization in the Samail Ophiolite, Sultanate of Oman. Two deeply branching putative bacterial acetogen types were identified in the communities belonging to the Acetothermia (hereafter, types I and II) that exhibited distinct distributions among waters with lower and higher water-rock reaction (i.

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The deep biosphere hosts uniquely adapted microorganisms overcoming geochemical extremes at significant depths within the crust of the Earth. Attention is required to understand the near subsurface and its continuity with surface systems, where numerous novel microbial members with unique physiological modifications remain to be identified. This surface-subsurface relationship raises key questions about networking of surface hydrology, geochemistry affecting near-subsurface microbial composition, and resiliency of subsurface ecosystems.

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