Anja Worrich
Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ
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Publication
Featured researches published by Anja Worrich.
Nature Communications | 2017
Anja Worrich; Hryhoriy Stryhanyuk; Niculina Musat; Sara König; Thomas Banitz; Florian Centler; Karin Frank; Martin Thullner; Hauke Harms; Hans-Hermann Richnow; Anja Miltner; Matthias Kästner; Lukas Y. Wick
Fungal–bacterial interactions are highly diverse and contribute to many ecosystem processes. Their emergence under common environmental stress scenarios however, remains elusive. Here we use a synthetic microbial ecosystem based on the germination of Bacillus subtilis spores to examine whether fungal and fungal-like (oomycete) mycelia reduce bacterial water and nutrient stress in an otherwise dry and nutrient-poor microhabitat. We find that the presence of mycelia enables the germination and subsequent growth of bacterial spores near the hyphae. Using a combination of time of flight- and nanoscale secondary ion mass spectrometry (ToF- and nanoSIMS) coupled with stable isotope labelling, we link spore germination to hyphal transfer of water, carbon and nitrogen. Our study provides direct experimental evidence for the stimulation of bacterial activity by mycelial supply of scarce resources in dry and nutrient-free environments. We propose that mycelia may stimulate bacterial activity and thus contribute to sustaining ecosystem functioning in stressed habitats.
Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2016
Anja Worrich; Sara König; Anja Miltner; Thomas Banitz; Florian Centler; Karin Frank; Martin Thullner; Hauke Harms; Matthias Kästner; Lukas Y. Wick
ABSTRACT Fungal mycelia serve as effective dispersal networks for bacteria in water-unsaturated environments, thereby allowing bacteria to maintain important functions, such as biodegradation. However, poor knowledge exists on the effects of dispersal networks at various osmotic (Ψo) and matric (Ψm) potentials, which contribute to the water potential mainly in terrestrial soil environments. Here we studied the effects of artificial mycelium-like dispersal networks on bacterial dispersal dynamics and subsequent effects on growth and benzoate biodegradation at ΔΨo and ΔΨm values between 0 and −1.5 MPa. In a multiple-microcosm approach, we used a green fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged derivative of the soil bacterium Pseudomonas putida KT2440 as a model organism and sodium benzoate as a representative of polar aromatic contaminants. We found that decreasing ΔΨo and ΔΨm values slowed bacterial dispersal in the system, leading to decelerated growth and benzoate degradation. In contrast, dispersal networks facilitated bacterial movement at ΔΨo and ΔΨm values between 0 and −0.5 MPa and thus improved the absolute biodegradation performance by up to 52 and 119% for ΔΨo and ΔΨm, respectively. This strong functional interrelationship was further emphasized by a high positive correlation between population dispersal, population growth, and degradation. We propose that dispersal networks may sustain the functionality of microbial ecosystems at low osmotic and matric potentials.
Environmental Modelling and Software | 2017
Sara Knig; Anja Worrich; Florian Centler; Lukas Y. Wick; Anja Miltner; Matthias Kstner; Martin Thullner; Karin Frank; Thomas Banitz
Functional stability of microbial ecosystems subjected to disturbances is essential for maintaining microbial ecosystem services such as the biodegradation of organic contaminants in terrestrial environments. Functional responses to disturbances are thus an important aspect which is, however, not well understood yet. Here, we present a microbial simulation model to investigate key processes for the recovery of biodegradation. We simulated single disturbances with different spatiotemporal characteristics and monitored subsequent recovery of the biodegradation dynamics. After less intense disturbance events local regrowth governs biodegradation recovery. After highly intense disturbance events the disturbance patterns spatial configuration is decisive and processes governing local functional recovery vary depending on habitat location with respect to the spatial disturbance pattern. Local regrowth may be unimportant when bacterial dispersal from undisturbed habitats is high. Hence, our results suggest that spatial dynamics are crucial for the robust delivery of the ecosystem service biodegradation under disturbances in terrestrial environments. We present a generic simulation model of microbial degradation after disturbances.Recovery processes were disentangled by a spatially resolved mechanistic analysis.Decisive processes for local functional recovery vary for different locations.Overall functional resilience depends on the spatial pattern of the disturbance.
Frontiers in Microbiology | 2016
Anja Worrich; Sara König; Thomas Banitz; Florian Centler; Karin Frank; Martin Thullner; Hauke Harms; Anja Miltner; Lukas Y. Wick; Matthias Kästner
Contaminant biodegradation in soils is hampered by the heterogeneous distribution of degrading communities colonizing isolated microenvironments as a result of the soil architecture. Over the last years, soil salinization was recognized as an additional problem especially in arid and semiarid ecosystems as it drastically reduces the activity and motility of bacteria. Here, we studied the importance of different spatial processes for benzoate biodegradation at an environmentally relevant range of osmotic potentials (ΔΨo) using model ecosystems exhibiting a heterogeneous distribution of the soil-borne bacterium Pseudomonas putida KT2440. Three systematically manipulated scenarios allowed us to cover the effects of (i) substrate diffusion, (ii) substrate diffusion and autonomous bacterial dispersal, and (iii) substrate diffusion and autonomous as well as mediated bacterial dispersal along glass fiber networks mimicking fungal hyphae. To quantify the relative importance of the different spatial processes, we compared these heterogeneous scenarios to a reference value obtained for each ΔΨo by means of a quasi-optimal scenario in which degraders were ab initio homogeneously distributed. Substrate diffusion as the sole spatial process was insufficient to counteract the disadvantage due to spatial degrader heterogeneity at ΔΨo ranging from 0 to −1 MPa. In this scenario, only 13.8−21.3% of the quasi-optimal biodegradation performance could be achieved. In the same range of ΔΨo values, substrate diffusion in combination with bacterial dispersal allowed between 68.6 and 36.2% of the performance showing a clear downwards trend with decreasing ΔΨo. At −1.5 MPa, however, this scenario performed worse than the diffusion scenario, possibly as a result of energetic disadvantages associated with flagellum synthesis and emerging requirements to exceed a critical population density to resist osmotic stress. Network-mediated bacterial dispersal kept biodegradation almost consistently high with an average of 70.7 ± 7.8%, regardless of the strength of the osmotic stress. We propose that especially fungal network-mediated bacterial dispersal is a key process to achieve high functionality of heterogeneous microbial ecosystems also at reduced osmotic potentials. Thus, mechanical stress by, for example, soil homogenization should be kept low in order to preserve fungal network integrity.
International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2018
Kristian Peters; Anja Worrich; Alexander Weinhold; Oliver Alka; Gerd Ulrich Balcke; Claudia Birkemeyer; Helge Bruelheide; Onno W. Calf; Sophie Dietz; Kai Dührkop; Emmanuel Gaquerel; Uwe Heinig; Marlen Kücklich; Mirka Macel; Caroline Müller; Yvonne Poeschl; Georg Pohnert; Christian Ristok; Víctor M. Rodríguez; Christoph Ruttkies; Meredith C. Schuman; Rabea Schweiger; Nir Shahaf; Christoph Steinbeck; María Estrella Tortosa; Hendrik Treutler; Nico Ueberschaar; Pablo Velasco; Brigitte M. Weiß; Anja Widdig
The relatively new research discipline of Eco-Metabolomics is the application of metabolomics techniques to ecology with the aim to characterise biochemical interactions of organisms across different spatial and temporal scales. Metabolomics is an untargeted biochemical approach to measure many thousands of metabolites in different species, including plants and animals. Changes in metabolite concentrations can provide mechanistic evidence for biochemical processes that are relevant at ecological scales. These include physiological, phenotypic and morphological responses of plants and communities to environmental changes and also interactions with other organisms. Traditionally, research in biochemistry and ecology comes from two different directions and is performed at distinct spatiotemporal scales. Biochemical studies most often focus on intrinsic processes in individuals at physiological and cellular scales. Generally, they take a bottom-up approach scaling up cellular processes from spatiotemporally fine to coarser scales. Ecological studies usually focus on extrinsic processes acting upon organisms at population and community scales and typically study top-down and bottom-up processes in combination. Eco-Metabolomics is a transdisciplinary research discipline that links biochemistry and ecology and connects the distinct spatiotemporal scales. In this review, we focus on approaches to study chemical and biochemical interactions of plants at various ecological levels, mainly plant–organismal interactions, and discuss related examples from other domains. We present recent developments and highlight advancements in Eco-Metabolomics over the last decade from various angles. We further address the five key challenges: (1) complex experimental designs and large variation of metabolite profiles; (2) feature extraction; (3) metabolite identification; (4) statistical analyses; and (5) bioinformatics software tools and workflows. The presented solutions to these challenges will advance connecting the distinct spatiotemporal scales and bridging biochemistry and ecology.
Frontiers in Microbiology | 2018
Sara König; Anja Worrich; Thomas Banitz; Hauke Harms; Matthias Kästner; Anja Miltner; Lukas Y. Wick; Karin Frank; Martin Thullner; Florian Centler
Bacterial degradation of organic compounds is an important ecosystem function with relevance to, e.g., the cycling of elements or the degradation of organic contaminants. It remains an open question, however, to which extent ecosystems are able to maintain such biodegradation function under recurrent disturbances (functional resistance) and how this is related to the bacterial biomass abundance. In this paper, we use a numerical simulation approach to systematically analyze the dynamic response of a microbial population to recurrent disturbances of different spatial distribution. The spatially explicit model considers microbial degradation, growth, dispersal, and spatial networks that facilitate bacterial dispersal mimicking effects of mycelial networks in nature. We find: (i) There is a certain capacity for high resistance of biodegradation performance to recurrent disturbances. (ii) If this resistance capacity is exceeded, spatial zones of different biodegradation performance develop, ranging from no or reduced to even increased performance. (iii) Bacterial biomass and biodegradation dynamics respond inversely to the spatial fragmentation of disturbances: overall biodegradation performance improves with increasing fragmentation, but bacterial biomass declines. (iv) Bacterial dispersal networks can enhance functional resistance against recurrent disturbances, mainly by reactivating zones in the core of disturbed areas, even though this leads to an overall reduction of bacterial biomass.
Scientific Reports | 2018
Sara König; Anja Worrich; Thomas Banitz; Florian Centler; Hauke Harms; Matthias Kästner; Anja Miltner; Lukas Y. Wick; Martin Thullner; Karin Frank
Terrestrial microbial ecosystems are exposed to many types of disturbances varying in their spatial and temporal characteristics. The ability to cope with these disturbances is crucial for maintaining microbial ecosystem functions, especially if disturbances recur regularly. Thus, understanding microbial ecosystem dynamics under recurrent disturbances and identifying drivers of functional stability and thresholds for functional collapse is important. Using a spatially explicit ecological model of bacterial growth, dispersal, and substrate consumption, we simulated spatially heterogeneous recurrent disturbances and investigated the dynamic response of pollutant biodegradation – exemplarily for an important ecosystem function. We found that thresholds for functional collapse are controlled by the combination of disturbance frequency and spatial configuration (spatiotemporal disturbance regime). For rare disturbances, the occurrence of functional collapse is promoted by low spatial disturbance fragmentation. For frequent disturbances, functional collapse is almost inevitable. Moreover, the relevance of bacterial growth and dispersal for functional stability also depends on the spatiotemporal disturbance regime. Under disturbance regimes with moderate severity, microbial properties can strongly affect functional stability and shift the threshold for functional collapse. Similarly, networks facilitating bacterial dispersal can delay functional collapse. Consequently, measures to enhance or sustain bacterial growth/dispersal are promising strategies to prevent functional collapses under moderate disturbance regimes.
Archive | 2018
Anja Worrich; Lukas Y. Wick; Thomas Banitz
International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2018
Kristian Peters; Anja Worrich; Alexander Weinhold; Oliver Alka; Gerd Ulrich Balcke; Claudia Birkemeyer; Helge Bruelheide; Onno W. Calf; Sophie Dietz; Kai Dührkop; Emmanuel Gaquerel; Uwe Heinig; Marlen Kücklich; Mirka Macel; Caroline Müller; Yvonne Poeschl; Georg Pohnert; Christian Ristok; Victor Manuel Ridriguez; Christoph Ruttkies; Meredith C. Schuman; Rabea Schweiger; Nir Shahaf; Christoph Steinbeck; María Estrella Tortosa; Hendrik Treutler; Nico Ueberschaar; Pablo Velasco; Brigitte M. Weiß; Anja Widdig
F1000 - Post-publication peer review of the biomedical literature | 2018
Hauke Harms; Anja Worrich