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January 5, 2016

Metagenomics of Deep Ocean Crust Communities

Hydrologically sealed boreholes that penetrate through the sediment and into the basaltic crust currently provide the only direct means to sample microbial life within the fluids percolating through the Earth’s vast sediment-buried subseafloor basement. Only a handful of boreholes have been designed specifically for microbiological sampling of the basaltic subseafloor. Researchers plan to compare microbial… [Read More]

January 5, 2016

Influence of Phycosphere on Algae for Biofuel

Microalgae are among the most productive microbial biofuel options. Many algae accumulate neutral lipids or triacylglycerol as storage products, and can be grown on alternative water sources and marginal lands. Additionally, these organisms naturally sequester carbon dioxide and help control greenhouse gas accumulation in the atmosphere. Through a community systems biology approach, researchers hope to elucidate… [Read More]

January 4, 2016

Genetic Diversity in Switchgrass and its Microbiome

Switchgrass has been championed as a promising cellulosic feedstock based on its broad adaptability, abiotic stress tolerance, and high yields with low inputs. Researchers still need a detailed understanding of the genetic or molecular basis of these attributes or how they arose over evolutionary time. They also need more information on the role of microbial… [Read More]

January 4, 2016

Anaerobic Fungi for Biogas Production

Anaerobic fungi can break down plant mass and are best studied from the digestive tract of ruminants. During their life cycles, the fungal zoospores recognize and swim toward ingested plant matter and attach to its surface before penetrating the plant cells. In this way, fibrous lignocellulose rich substrates can be mechanically degraded. In addition to mechanical degradation,… [Read More]

January 4, 2016

Carbon Cycling in Northern Aquatic Ecosystems

The boreal forests play a central role in global carbon cycling, storing 37 percent of the total carbon present in the terrestrial biosphere. Owing to the high density of lakes in the boreal forest, these freshwater systems play a particularly important role in the carbon cycle. Often boreal lakes are supersaturated in carbon dioxide, resulting… [Read More]

January 4, 2016

Photosynthesis in Chlamydomonas

Photosynthesis is the biological process that uses the energy of sunlight to drive the primary production of organic carbon in the biosphere. Despite its fundamental importance, researchers have not yet identified all of the genes that are required for photosynthesis. To identify potentially hundreds of new genes that are necessary for photosynthesis, researchers plan to… [Read More]

January 1, 2016

Deep Sequencing of Dikarya

Fungi perform essential ecological functions, both beneficial and harmful. The ecology of most of the 1.5- 6 million fungal species is unknown. The current 1000 Fungal Genomes (1KFG) and associated CSPs (e.g., Mycorrhizal Genomics Initiative, Saprotrophic Basidiomycetes) have been mostly successful in sampling genomes of members of the Dikarya. The results have included an increased… [Read More]

January 1, 2016

Shale Gas Extraction Impact on Microbes

Due to the high cost of drilling and maintaining sample integrity, there has been very little research on microbial life in pristine hydrocarbon-bearing shale ecosystems. This project provides necessary information needed to plan for future energy and resource needs. Advances in high throughput genomics afford the first opportunity to deeply characterize microbial phylogenetic diversity and… [Read More]

January 1, 2016

Understanding Sugar Accumulation in Sorghum

The goal of the project is to identify and characterize the biological pathways and their regulators that enable sucrose accumulation in sweet sorghum, whose genome was sequenced by the DOE JGI. Understanding the genetic mechanisms underlying sugar production and storage in sorghum is of great interest to both biologists and breeders, and the genes in… [Read More]

January 1, 2016

Genomic Survey of Lentinula genus

The CSP project led by Clark University's David Hibbett focuses on an in-depth genomic survey of the Lentinula genus. Lentinula is a group of white-rot, wood-decaying fungi perhaps best known as the genus of shiitake mushrooms, Lentinula edodes. (Image by dominik18s via Flickr CC BY 2.0)Lentinula is a group of white-rot, wood-decaying fungi that is famous as the genus of shiitake mushrooms, Lentinula edodes. Today, shiitake is cultivated worldwide, and it is second only to the button mushroom, Agaricus bisporus, a previous DOE JGI project, in terms of production volume. However, the diversity within cultivars is dwarfed by the genetic… [Read More]
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