Publications by authors named "T Samo"

Microbial degradation of organic carbon in sediments is impacted by the availability of oxygen and substrates for growth. To better understand how particle size and redox zonation impact microbial organic carbon incorporation, techniques that maintain spatial information are necessary to quantify elemental cycling at the microscale. In this study, we produced hydrogel microspheres of various diameters (100, 250, and 500 μm) and inoculated them with an aerobic heterotrophic bacterium isolated from a freshwater wetland ( sp.

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Article Synopsis
  • Nutrient pollution from nitrogen inputs causes harmful blooms of the cyanobacterium Microcystis, which poses risks to public health and ecosystems.
  • This study explored how different forms of organic nitrogen affect Microcystis growth and toxin production, revealing that the type of nitrogen available significantly influences the associated microbial community and Microcystis' nutrient uptake.
  • Findings indicate that while Microcystis can directly absorb amino acids, the presence of certain bacteria can either compete with or enhance its nitrogen uptake, potentially supporting harmful blooms under low inorganic nitrogen conditions.
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Bacterial remineralization of algal organic matter fuels algal growth but is rarely quantified. Consequently, we cannot currently predict whether some bacterial taxa may provide more remineralized nutrients to algae than others. Here, we quantified bacterial incorporation of algal-derived complex dissolved organic carbon and nitrogen and algal incorporation of remineralized carbon and nitrogen in fifteen bacterial co-cultures growing with the diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutum at the single-cell level using isotope tracing and nanoSIMS.

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Roles of different ecological classes of algal exometabolites in regulating microbial community composition are not well understood. Here, we identify exometabolites from the model diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutum and demonstrate their potential to influence bacterial abundances. We profiled exometabolites across a time course of axenic algal growth using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry.

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Diatoms, dinoflagellates, and coccolithophores are dominant groups of marine eukaryotic phytoplankton that are collectively responsible for the majority of primary production in the ocean. These phytoplankton contain additional intracellular membranes around their chloroplasts, which are derived from ancestral engulfment of red microalgae by unicellular heterotrophic eukaryotes that led to secondary and tertiary endosymbiosis. However, the selectable evolutionary advantage of these membranes and the physiological significance for extant phytoplankton remain poorly understood.

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