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Jian Xing

Bio: Jian Xing is an academic researcher from Michigan State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pyramid (geometry) & Library. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 3 publications receiving 583 citations.

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Although dominant OTUs were constantly replaced from one sampling point to the next, phylogenetic analysis indicated that inferred physiologic changes in the community were not as dramatic as were genetic changes and indicate that an extremely dynamic community can maintain a stable ecosystem function.
Abstract: The microbial community dynamics of a functionally stable, well-mixed, methanogenic reactor fed with glucose were analyzed over a 605-day period. The reactor maintained constant pH and chemical oxygen demand removal during this period. Thirty-six rrn clones from each of seven sampling events were analyzed by amplified ribosomal DNA restriction analysis (ARDRA) for the Bacteria and Archaea domains and by sequence analysis of dominant members of the community. Operational taxonomic units (OTUs), distinguished as unique ARDRA patterns, showed reproducible distribution for three sample replicates. The highest diversity was observed in the Bacteria domain. The 16S ribosomal DNA Bacteria clone library contained 75 OTUs, with the dominant OTU accounting for 13% of the total clones, but just 21 Archaea OTUs were found, and the most prominent OTU represented 50% of the clones from the respective library. Succession in methanogenic populations was observed, and two periods were distinguished: in the first, Methanobacterium formicicum was dominant, and in the second, Methanosarcina mazei and a Methanobacterium bryantii-related organism were dominant. Higher variability in Bacteria populations was detected, and the temporal OTU distribution suggested a chaotic pattern. Although dominant OTUs were constantly replaced from one sampling point to the next, phylogenetic analysis indicated that inferred physiologic changes in the community were not as dramatic as were genetic changes. Seven of eight dominant OTUs during the first period clustered with the spirochete group, although a cyclic pattern of substitution occurred among members within this order. A more flexible community structure characterized the second period, since a sequential replacement of a Eubacterium-related organism by an unrelated deep-branched organism and finally by a Propionibacterium-like species was observed. Metabolic differences among the dominant fermenters detected suggest that changes in carbon and electron flow occurred during the stable performance and indicate that an extremely dynamic community can maintain a stable ecosystem function.

521 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The response of a glucose-fed anaerobic community to a long-term (>400 days) periodic substrate perturbation was examined in this paper, where a completely mixed "mother" reactor operated at steady state with a 10-day hydraulic retention time and constant 8 g/liter glucose feed served as the source of organisms for a "daughter" reactor.

64 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the anaerobic system was able to adapt to the periodic substrate perturbation through a long-term change in community structure through changes in substrate degradation rates, and microscopic examination.
Abstract: The response of a glucose-fed anaerobic chemostat community to a long-term (>200 days) periodic substrate perturbation was examined. Identical steady-state communities were established in a ``mother'' and a ``daughter'' reactor at pH 7, 35°C, inlet glucose concentration of 8 g l−1, and dilution rate of 0.1 day−1. After reaching steady state, the daughter reactor was subjected to a periodic organic loading pattern in which the influent glucose concentration was alternately varied from 16 g l−1 to 0 g l−1 (mineral media only) on a 2-day cycle (1 day at 16 g l−1 followed by 1 day without glucose feed). The average organic loading rate for the perturbation cycle was equal to the steady-state glucose loading rate of 0.8 g l−1 day−1. The dilution rate of the daughter reactor was constant at 0.1 day−1 throughout the perturbation period. A rapid accumulation in volatile fatty acids (VFAs) occurred immediately after initiating the perturbation. During the first 45 days, effluent acetate, propionate, and butyrate concentrations increased to ca. 2,500, 800, and 1,200 mg l−1, respectively; effluent chemical oxygen demand (COD) increased from 450 mg l−1 to 5,200 mg l−1. Total gas production decreased from about 600 ml day−1 to an average value of 290 ml day−1; CH4 content of the biogas decreased from 50% to about 30%; and the pH decreased from 7.0 to 6.4. This was followed by a 60-day metastable ``steady'' state during which time the effluent COD and VFA concentrations fluctuated about new median values. A dramatic change in the fermentation products of glucose was observed. At the end of the metastable period, VFA concentrations decreased rapidly. First, a rapid decrease in butyrate concentration occurred. Subsequently, acetate and propionate concentrations decreased to near the original preperturbation steady-state levels. Within ca. 30 days, a new steady state was established. These observations demonstrate that the anaerobic system was able to adapt to the periodic substrate perturbation through a long-term change in community structure. This conclusion was verified by comparison of DNA extracts from the steady-state control ``mother'' reactor with extracts from the perturbed ``daughter'' reactor, changes in substrate degradation rates, and microscopic examination.

22 citations


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Journal ArticleDOI
24 Feb 2006-Cell
TL;DR: The human gut is populated with as many as 100 trillion cells, whose collective genome, the microbiome, is a reflection of evolutionary selection pressures acting at the level of the host and at thelevel of the microbial cell.

2,915 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A better understanding of the relations between microbial diversity and soil functions requires not only the use of more accurate assays for taxonomically and functionally characterizing DNA and RNA extracted from soil, but also high-resolution techniques with which to detect inactive and active microbial cells in the soil matrix.
Abstract: Summary Soil is a complex and dynamic biological system, and still in 2003 it is difficult to determine the composition of microbial communities in soil. We are also limited in the determination of microbially mediated reactions because present assays for determining the overall rate of entire metabolic processes (such as respiration) or specific enzyme activities (such as urease, protease and phosphomonoesterase activity) do not allow any identification of the microbial species directly involved in the measured processes. The central problem posed by the link between microbial diversity and soil function is to understand the relations between genetic diversity and community structure and between community structure and function. A better understanding of the relations between microbial diversity and soil functions requires not only the use of more accurate assays for taxonomically and functionally characterizing DNA and RNA extracted from soil, but also high-resolution techniques with which to detect inactive and active microbial cells in the soil matrix. Soil seems to be characterized by a redundancy of functions; for example, no relationship has been shown to exist between microbial diversity and decomposition of organic matter. Generally, a reduction in any group of species has little effect on overall processes in soil because other microorganisms can take on its function. The determination of the composition of microbial communities in soil is not necessary for a better quantification of nutrient transformations. The holistic approach, based on the division of the systems in pools and the measurement of fluxes linking these pools, is the most efficient. The determination of microbial C, N, P and S contents by fumigation techniques has allowed a better quantification of nutrient dynamics in soil. However, further advances require determining new pools, such as active microbial biomass, also with molecular techniques. Recently investigators have separated 13C- and 12C-DNA, both extracted from soil treated with a 13C source, by density-gradient centrifugation. This technique should allow us to calculate the active microbial C pool by multiplying the ratio between labelled and total DNA by the microbial biomass C content of soil. In addition, the taxonomic and functional characterization of 13C-DNA allows us to understand more precisely the changes in the composition of microbial communities affected by the C-substrate added to soil.

1,887 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
16 Sep 2016-Science
TL;DR: It is found that environmental conditions strongly influence the distribution of functional groups in marine microbial communities by shaping metabolic niches, but only weakly influence taxonomic composition within individual functional groups.
Abstract: Microbial metabolism powers biogeochemical cycling in Earth’s ecosystems. The taxonomic composition of microbial communities varies substantially between environments, but the ecological causes of this variation remain largely unknown. We analyzed taxonomic and functional community profiles to determine the factors that shape marine bacterial and archaeal communities across the global ocean. By classifying >30,000 marine microorganisms into metabolic functional groups, we were able to disentangle functional from taxonomic community variation. We find that environmental conditions strongly influence the distribution of functional groups in marine microbial communities by shaping metabolic niches, but only weakly influence taxonomic composition within individual functional groups. Hence, functional structure and composition within functional groups constitute complementary and roughly independent “axes of variation” shaped by markedly different processes.

1,566 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Enrichment by repeated transfer of a bacterial consortium harvested from the anode compartment of a biofuel cell in which glucose was used increased the output and selected organisms capable of mediating the electron transfer either by direct bacterial transfer or by excretion of redox components.
Abstract: Microbial fuel cells hold great promise as a sustainable biotechnological solution to future energy needs. Current efforts to improve the efficiency of such fuel cells are limited by the lack of knowledge about the microbial ecology of these systems. The purposes of this study were (i) to elucidate whether a bacterial community, either suspended or attached to an electrode, can evolve in a microbial fuel cell to bring about higher power output, and (ii) to identify species responsible for the electricity generation. Enrichment by repeated transfer of a bacterial consortium harvested from the anode compartment of a biofuel cell in which glucose was used increased the output from an initial level of 0.6 W m−2 of electrode surface to a maximal level of 4.31 W m−2 (664 mV, 30.9 mA) when plain graphite electrodes were used. This result was obtained with an average loading rate of 1 g of glucose liter−1 day−1 and corresponded to 81% efficiency for electron transfer from glucose to electricity. Cyclic voltammetry indicated that the enhanced microbial consortium had either membrane-bound or excreted redox components that were not initially detected in the community. Dominant species of the enhanced culture were identified by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis and culturing. The community consisted mainly of facultative anaerobic bacteria, such as Alcaligenes faecalis and Enterococcus gallinarum, which are capable of hydrogen production. Pseudomonas aeruginosa and other Pseudomonas species were also isolated. For several isolates, electrochemical activity was mainly due to excreted redox mediators, and one of these mediators, pyocyanin produced by P. aeruginosa, could be characterized. Overall, the enrichment procedure, irrespective of whether only attached or suspended bacteria were examined, selected for organisms capable of mediating the electron transfer either by direct bacterial transfer or by excretion of redox components.

1,234 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A new freshwater lake phylogeny constructed from all published 16S rRNA gene sequences from lake epilimnia is presented and a unifying vocabulary to discuss freshwater taxa is proposed, providing a coherent framework for future studies.
Abstract: Freshwater bacteria are at the hub of biogeochemical cycles and control water quality in lakes. Despite this, little is known about the identity and ecology of functionally significant lake bacteria. Molecular studies have identified many abundant lake bacteria, but there is a large variation in the taxonomic or phylogenetic breadths among the methods used for this exploration. Because of this, an inconsistent and overlapping naming structure has developed for freshwater bacteria, creating a significant obstacle to identifying coherent ecological traits among these groups. A discourse that unites the field is sorely needed. Here we present a new freshwater lake phylogeny constructed from all published 16S rRNA gene sequences from lake epilimnia and propose a unifying vocabulary to discuss freshwater taxa. With this new vocabulary in place, we review the current information on the ecology, ecophysiology, and distribution of lake bacteria and highlight newly identified phylotypes. In the second part of our review, we conduct meta-analyses on the compiled data, identifying distribution patterns for bacterial phylotypes among biomes and across environmental gradients in lakes. We conclude by emphasizing the role that this review can play in providing a coherent framework for future studies.

1,230 citations