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Dive into the research topics where Alexander Y. Merkel is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexander Y. Merkel.


Environmental Microbiology | 2013

Characterization of Melioribacter roseus gen. nov., sp. nov., a novel facultatively anaerobic thermophilic cellulolytic bacterium from the class Ignavibacteria, and a proposal of a novel bacterial phylum Ignavibacteriae

Olga A. Podosokorskaya; Vitaly V. Kadnikov; Sergey Gavrilov; Andrey V. Mardanov; Alexander Y. Merkel; Olga V. Karnachuk; N. V. Ravin; Elizaveta A. Bonch-Osmolovskaya; Ilya V. Kublanov

A novel moderately thermophilic, facultatively anaerobic chemoorganotrophic bacterium strain P3M-2(T) was isolated from a microbial mat developing on the wooden surface of a chute under the flow of hot water (46°C) coming out of a 2775-m-deep oil exploration well (Tomsk region, Russia). Strain P3M-2(T) is a moderate thermophile and facultative anaerobe growing on mono-, di- or polysaccharides by aerobic respiration, fermentation or by reducing diverse electron acceptors [nitrite, Fe(III), As(V)]. Its closest cultivated relative (90.8% rRNA gene sequence identity) is Ignavibacterium album, the only chemoorganotrophic member of the phylum Chlorobi. New genus and species Melioribacter roseus are proposed for isolate P3M-2(T) . Together with I. album, the new organism represents the class Ignavibacteria assigned to the phylum Chlorobi. The revealed group includes a variety of uncultured environmental clones, the 16S rRNA gene sequences of some of which have been previously attributed to the candidate division ZB1. Phylogenetic analysis of M. roseus and I. album based on their 23S rRNA and RecA sequences confirmed that these two organisms could represent an even deeper, phylum-level lineage. Hence, we propose a new phylum Ignavibacteriae within the Bacteroidetes-Chlorobi group with a sole class Ignavibacteria, two families Ignavibacteriaceae and Melioribacteraceae and two species I. album and M. roseus. This proposal correlates with chemotaxonomic data and phenotypic differences of both organisms from other cultured representatives of Chlorobi. The most essential differences, supported by the analyses of complete genomes of both organisms, are motility, facultatively anaerobic and obligately organotrophic mode of life, the absence of chlorosomes and the apparent inability to grow phototrophically.


Nature microbiology | 2017

Discovery of extremely halophilic, methyl-reducing euryarchaea provides insights into the evolutionary origin of methanogenesis

Dimitry Y. Sorokin; Kira S. Makarova; Ben Abbas; Manuel Ferrer; Peter N. Golyshin; Erwin A. Galinski; Sergio Ciordia; María Carmen Mena; Alexander Y. Merkel; Yuri I. Wolf; Mark C.M. van Loosdrecht; Eugene V. Koonin

Methanogenic archaea are major players in the global carbon cycle and in the biotechnology of anaerobic digestion. The phylum Euryarchaeota includes diverse groups of methanogens that are interspersed with non-methanogenic lineages. So far, methanogens inhabiting hypersaline environments have been identified only within the order Methanosarcinales. We report the discovery of a deep phylogenetic lineage of extremophilic methanogens in hypersaline lakes and present analysis of two nearly complete genomes from this group. Within the phylum Euryarchaeota, these isolates form a separate, class-level lineage ‘Methanonatronarchaeia’ that is most closely related to the class Halobacteria. Similar to the Halobacteria, ‘Methanonatronarchaeia’ are extremely halophilic and do not accumulate organic osmoprotectants. The high intracellular concentration of potassium implies that ‘Methanonatronarchaeia’ employ the ‘salt-in’ osmoprotection strategy. These methanogens are heterotrophic methyl-reducers that use C1-methylated compounds as electron acceptors and formate or hydrogen as electron donors. The genomes contain an incomplete and apparently inactivated set of genes encoding the upper branch of methyl group oxidation to CO2 as well as membrane-bound heterodisulfide reductase and cytochromes. These features differentiate ‘Methanonatronarchaeia’ from all known methyl-reducing methanogens. The discovery of extremely halophilic, methyl-reducing methanogens related to haloarchaea provides insights into the origin of methanogenesis and shows that the strategies employed by methanogens to thrive in salt-saturating conditions are not limited to the classical methylotrophic pathway.


Journal of Biotechnology | 2012

Activity and diversity of haloalkaliphilic methanogens in Central Asian soda lakes.

V. Nolla-Ardèvol; Marc Strous; Dimitry Y. Sorokin; Alexander Y. Merkel; Halina E. Tegetmeyer

Methanogens are of biotechnological interest because of their importance in biogas production. Here we investigate the suitability of sediments from Central Asian soda lakes as inoculum for high pH methane-producing bioreactors. Methane production in these sediments was modest (up to 2.5 μmol mL sediment), with methanol and hydrogen as the preferred substrates. The responsible methanogenic community was characterized based on mcrA gene sequences. McrA gene sequences so far specific to these habitats indicated the presence of two clusters within the orders Methanobacteriales and Methanomicrobiales, one apparently including representatives of the genus Methanocalculus and another distantly related to the genus Methanobacterium.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2013

Detection of Putatively Thermophilic Anaerobic Methanotrophs in Diffuse Hydrothermal Vent Fluids

Alexander Y. Merkel; Julie A. Huber; N. A. Chernyh; Elizaveta A. Bonch-Osmolovskaya; Alexander V. Lebedinsky

ABSTRACT The anaerobic oxidation of methane (AOM) is carried out by a globally distributed group of uncultivated Euryarchaeota, the anaerobic methanotrophic arachaea (ANME). In this work, we used G+C analysis of 16S rRNA genes to identify a putatively thermophilic ANME group and applied newly designed primers to study its distribution in low-temperature diffuse vent fluids from deep-sea hydrothermal vents. We found that the G+C content of the 16S rRNA genes (P GC) is significantly higher in the ANME-1GBa group than in other ANME groups. Based on the positive correlation between the P GC and optimal growth temperatures (T opt) of archaea, we hypothesize that the ANME-1GBa group is adapted to thrive at high temperatures. We designed specific 16S rRNA gene-targeted primers for the ANME-1 cluster to detect all phylogenetic groups within this cluster, including the deeply branching ANME-1GBa group. The primers were successfully tested both in silico and in experiments with sediment samples where ANME-1 phylotypes had previously been detected. The primers were further used to screen for the ANME-1 microorganisms in diffuse vent fluid samples from deep-sea hydrothermal vents in the Pacific Ocean, and sequences belonging to the ANME-1 cluster were detected in four individual vents. Phylotypes belonging to the ANME-1GBa group dominated in clone libraries from three of these vents. Our findings provide evidence of existence of a putatively extremely thermophilic group of methanotrophic archaea that occur in geographically and geologically distinct marine hydrothermal habitats.


Extremophiles | 2017

Microbial diversity and autotrophic activity in Kamchatka hot springs

Alexander Y. Merkel; Nikolay Pimenov; Igor I Rusanov; A. I. Slobodkin; G. B. Slobodkina; Ivan Yu. Tarnovetckii; Evgeny N. Frolov; Arseny V. Dubin; Anna A. Perevalova; Elizaveta A. Bonch-Osmolovskaya

Microbial communities of Kamchatka Peninsula terrestrial hot springs were studied using molecular, radioisotopic and cultural approaches. Analysis of 16S rRNA gene fragments performed by means of high-throughput sequencing revealed that aerobic autotrophic sulfur-oxidizing bacteria of the genus Sulfurihydrogenibium (phylum Aquificae) dominated in a majority of streamers. Another widely distributed and abundant group was that of anaerobic bacteria of the genus Caldimicrobium (phylum Thermodesulfobacteria). Archaea of the genus Vulcanisaeta were abundant in a high-temperature, slightly acidic hot spring, where they were accompanied by numerous Nanoarchaeota, while the domination of uncultured Thermoplasmataceae A10 was characteristic for moderately thermophilic acidic habitats. The highest rates of inorganic carbon assimilation determined by the in situ incubation of samples in the presence of 14C-labeled bicarbonate were found in oxygen-dependent streamers; in two sediment samples taken from the hottest springs this process, though much weaker, was found to be not dependent on oxygen. The isolation of anaerobic lithoautotrophic prokaryotes from Kamchatka hot springs revealed a wide distribution of the ability for sulfur disproportionation, a new lithoautotrophic process capable to fuel autonomous anaerobic ecosystems.


International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 2015

Methanosalsum natronophilum sp. nov., and Methanocalculus alkaliphilus sp. nov., haloalkaliphilic methanogens from hypersaline soda lakes.

Dimitry Y. Sorokin; Ben Abbas; Alexander Y. Merkel; W.I.C. Rijpstra; J.S. Sinninghe Damsté; M. V. Sukhacheva; M.C.M. van Loosdrecht

Two groups of haloalkaliphilic methanogenic archaea were dominating in enrichments from hypersaline soda lake sediments at pH 10. At moderate salt concentrations with formate or H2 as electron donor, methanogens belonging to the genus Methanocalculus were enriched, while at high salt concentrations with methylated substrates, a group related to Methanosalsum zhilinae was dominating. For both groups, several pure cultures were obtained including the type strains AMF2T for the Methanocalculus group and AME2T for the Methanosalsum group. The Methanocalculus group is characterized by lithoheterotrophic growth with either formate (preferable substrate) or H2 at moderate salinity up to 1.5-2 M total Na+ and obligate alkaliphilic growth with an optimum at pH 9.5. According to phylogenetic analysis, the group also includes closely related strains isolated previously from the low-salt alkaline Lonar Lake. The novel Methanosalsum group is characterized by high salt tolerance (up to 3.5 M total Na+) and obligate alkaliphilic growth with an optimum at pH 9.5. It has a typical methylotrophic substrate profile, utilizing methanol, methylamines and dimethyl sulfide (at low concentrations) as methanogenic substrates. On the basis of physiological and phylogenetic data, it is proposed that the two groups of soda lake methanogenic isolates are assigned into two novel species, Methanocalculus alkaliphilus sp. nov. (type strain AMF2T = DSM 24457T = UNIQEM U859T) and Methanosalsum natronophilum sp. nov. (type strain AME2T = DSM 24634T = NBRC 110091T).


International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 2015

Tepidisphaera mucosa gen. nov., sp. nov., a moderately thermophilic member of the class Phycisphaerae in the phylum Planctomycetes, and proposal of a new family, Tepidisphaeraceae fam. nov., and a new order, Tepidisphaerales ord. nov.

Olga L. Kovaleva; Alexander Y. Merkel; A. A. Novikov; R. V. Baslerov; Stepan V. Toshchakov; Elizaveta A. Bonch-Osmolovskaya

Three strains of facultatively aerobic, moderately thermophilic bacteria were isolated from terrestrial hot springs in Baikal Lake region and Kamchatka (Russia). Cells of the new isolates were cocci reproducing by binary fission. The temperature range for growth was between 20 and 56 °C and the pH range for growth from pH 4.5 to 8.5, with optimal growth at 47-50 °C and pH 7.0-7.5. The organisms were chemoheterotrophs preferring sugars and polysaccharides as growth substrates. 16S rRNA gene sequences of strains 2842, 2813 and 2918Kr were nearly identical (99.7-100 % similarity) and indicated that the strains belonged to the phylum Planctomycetes. The phylogenetically closest cultivated relatives were Algisphaera agarilytica 06SJR6-2(T) and Phycisphaera mikurensis FYK2301M01(T) with 16S rRNA gene sequence similarity values of 82.4 and 80.3 %, respectively. The novel strains differed from them by higher growth temperature, sensitivity to NaCl concentration above 3.0 % and by their cellular fatty acids profile. On the basis of phylogenetic and physiological data, strains 2842(T), 2813 and 2918Kr represent a novel genus and species for which we propose the name Tepidisphaera mucosa sp. nov. The type strain is 2842(T) ( = VKM B-2832(T) = JCM 19875(T)). We also propose that Tepidisphaera gen. nov. is the type genus of a novel family, Tepidisphaeraceae fam. nov. and a novel order, Tepidisphaerales ord. nov.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2016

High Diversity of Planctomycetes in Soils of Two Lichen-Dominated Sub-Arctic Ecosystems of Northwestern Siberia

Anastasia A. Ivanova; Irina S. Kulichevskaya; Alexander Y. Merkel; Stepan V. Toshchakov; Svetlana N. Dedysh

A wide variety of terrestrial ecosystems in tundra have a ground vegetation cover composed of reindeer lichens (genera Cladonia and Cetraria). The microbial communities of two lichen-dominated ecosystems typical of the sub-arctic zone of northwestern Siberia, that is a forested tundra soil and a shallow acidic peatland, were examined in our study. As revealed by molecular analyses, soil and peat layers just beneath the lichen cover were abundantly colonized by bacteria from the phylum Planctomycetes. Highest abundance of planctomycetes detected by fluorescence in situ hybridization was in the range 2.2–2.7 × 107 cells per gram of wet weight. 16S rRNA gene fragments from the Planctomycetes comprised 8–13% of total 16S rRNA gene reads retrieved using Illumina pair-end sequencing from the soil and peat samples. Lichen-associated assemblages of planctomycetes displayed unexpectedly high diversity, with a total of 89,662 reads representing 1723 operational taxonomic units determined at 97% sequence identity. The soil of forested tundra was dominated by uncultivated members of the family Planctomycetaceae (53–71% of total Planctomycetes-like reads), while sequences affiliated with the Phycisphaera-related group WD2101 (recently assigned to the order Tepidisphaerales) were most abundant in peat (28–51% of total reads). Representatives of the Isosphaera–Singulisphaera group (14–28% of total reads) and the lineages defined by the genera Gemmata (1–4%) and Planctopirus–Rubinisphaera (1–3%) were present in both habitats. Two strains of Singulisphaera-like bacteria were isolated from studied soil and peat samples. These planctomycetes displayed good tolerance of low temperatures (4–15°C) and were capable of growth on a number of polysaccharides, including lichenan, a characteristic component of lichen-derived phytomass.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2016

Stable and Variable Parts of Microbial Community in Siberian Deep Subsurface Thermal Aquifer System Revealed in a Long-Term Monitoring Study

Yulia A. Frank; Vitaly V. Kadnikov; Sergey Gavrilov; David Banks; Anna L. Gerasimchuk; Olga A. Podosokorskaya; Alexander Y. Merkel; Nikolai A. Chernyh; Andrey V. Mardanov; Nikolai V. Ravin; Olga V. Karnachuk; Elizaveta A. Bonch-Osmolovskaya

The goal of this work was to study the diversity of microorganisms inhabiting a deep subsurface aquifer system in order to understand their functional roles and interspecies relations formed in the course of buried organic matter degradation. A microbial community of a deep subsurface thermal aquifer in the Tomsk Region, Western Siberia was monitored over the course of 5 years via a 2.7 km deep borehole 3P, drilled down to a Palaeozoic basement. The borehole water discharges with a temperature of ca. 50°C. Its chemical composition varies, but it steadily contains acetate, propionate, and traces of hydrocarbons and gives rise to microbial mats along the surface flow. Community analysis by PCR-DGGE 16S rRNA genes profiling, repeatedly performed within 5 years, revealed several dominating phylotypes consistently found in the borehole water, and highly variable diversity of prokaryotes, brought to the surface with the borehole outflow. The major planktonic components of the microbial community were Desulfovirgula thermocuniculi and Methanothermobacter spp. The composition of the minor part of the community was unstable, and molecular analysis did not reveal any regularity in its variations, except some predominance of uncultured Firmicutes. Batch cultures with complex organic substrates inoculated with water samples were set in order to enrich prokaryotes from the variable part of the community. PCR-DGGE analysis of these enrichments yielded uncultured Firmicutes, Chloroflexi, and Ignavibacteriae. A continuous-flow microaerophilic enrichment culture with a water sample amended with acetate contained Hydrogenophilus thermoluteolus, which was previously detected in the microbial mat developing at the outflow of the borehole. Cultivation results allowed us to assume that variable components of the 3P well community are hydrolytic organotrophs, degrading buried biopolymers, while the constant planktonic components of the community degrade dissolved fermentation products to methane and CO2, possibly via interspecies hydrogen transfer. Occasional washout of minor community components capable of oxygen respiration leads to the development of microbial mats at the outflow of the borehole where residual dissolved fermentation products are aerobically oxidized. Long-term community analysis with the combination of molecular and cultivation techniques allowed us to characterize stable and variable parts of the community and propose their environmental roles.


Microbiology | 2015

Occurrence, diversity, and abundance of methanogenic archaea in terrestrial hot springs of Kamchatka and Saõ Miguel Island

Alexander Y. Merkel; Olga A. Podosokorskaya; N. A. Chernyh; Elizaveta A. Bonch-Osmolovskaya

Detection and analysis of the mcrA gene encoding methyl-coenzyme M reductase, the key enzyme of methanogenesis, was used to assess occurrence and diversity of methanogenic archaea in terrestrial hot springs of Kamchatka and Sa~o Miguel Island (the Azores). For this analysis, phylogeny of methanogens was initially reconstructed based on available sequences of the mcrA gene, which is a common functional and phylogenetic marker for this physiological group of prokaryotes. Methanogens were revealed in most of the studied terrestrial hot springs with temperatures from 51 to 89°C, although they constituted an insignificant portion of the microbial population. The mcrA gene sequences revealed in the samples belonged to members of the genera Methanothermobacter, Methanothermus, and Methanothrix, previously detected in hot springs, as well as to methanogens not found earlier in these environments. The latter belonged to Methanomassiliicoccales, Methanocellales, and Methanomethylovorans, as well as to MCR-2a, the new deep phylogenetic cluster of uncultured methanogenic archaea; its phylotypes were present in all springs where the mcrA gene was detected. Our results indicate high diversity of the thermophilic methanogens inhabiting terrestrial hot springs and the presence among them of new groups with yet unknown substrate specificity.

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Ilya V. Kublanov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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N. A. Chernyh

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Sergey Gavrilov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Andrey V. Mardanov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Ben Abbas

Delft University of Technology

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Dimitry Y. Sorokin

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Igor I Rusanov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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