Anne Fahy
University of Essex
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Featured researches published by Anne Fahy.
Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2012
Frédéric Coulon; Panagiota-Myrsini Chronopoulou; Anne Fahy; Sandrine Païssé; Marisol Goñi-Urriza; Louis Peperzak; Laura Acuña Alvarez; Boyd A. McKew; Corina P. D. Brussaard; Graham J. C. Underwood; Kenneth N. Timmis; Robert Duran; Terry J. McGenity
ABSTRACT Mudflats and salt marshes are habitats at the interface of aquatic and terrestrial systems that provide valuable services to ecosystems. Therefore, it is important to determine how catastrophic incidents, such as oil spills, influence the microbial communities in sediment that are pivotal to the function of the ecosystem and to identify the oil-degrading microbes that mitigate damage to the ecosystem. In this study, an oil spill was simulated by use of a tidal chamber containing intact diatom-dominated sediment cores from a temperate mudflat. Changes in the composition of bacteria and diatoms from both the sediment and tidal biofilms that had detached from the sediment surface were monitored as a function of hydrocarbon removal. The hydrocarbon concentration in the upper 1.5 cm of sediments decreased by 78% over 21 days, with at least 60% being attributed to biodegradation. Most phylotypes were minimally perturbed by the addition of oil, but at day 21, there was a 10-fold increase in the amount of cyanobacteria in the oiled sediment. Throughout the experiment, phylotypes associated with the aerobic degradation of hydrocarbons, including polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) (Cycloclasticus) and alkanes (Alcanivorax, Oleibacter, and Oceanospirillales strain ME113), substantively increased in oiled mesocosms, collectively representing 2% of the pyrosequences in the oiled sediments at day 21. Tidal biofilms from oiled cores at day 22, however, consisted mostly of phylotypes related to Alcanivorax borkumensis (49% of clones), Oceanospirillales strain ME113 (11% of clones), and diatoms (14% of clones). Thus, aerobic hydrocarbon biodegradation is most likely to be the main mechanism of attenuation of crude oil in the early weeks of an oil spill, with tidal biofilms representing zones of high hydrocarbon-degrading activity.
Journal of Applied Microbiology | 2009
A Aburto; Anne Fahy; Frédéric Coulon; Gordon Lethbridge; Kenneth N. Timmis; Andrew S. Ball; Terry J. McGenity
Aims: To investigate the factors affecting benzene biodegradation and microbial community composition in a contaminated aquifer.
Letters in Applied Microbiology | 2008
Anne Fahy; Andrew S. Ball; Gordon Lethbridge; Kenneth N. Timmis; Terry J. McGenity
Aims: To isolate benzene‐degrading strains from neutral and alkaline groundwaters contaminated by benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, xylenes (BTEX) from the SIReN aquifer, UK, and to test their effective pH range and ability to degrade TEX.
FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2008
Anne Fahy; Andrew S. Ball; Gordon Lethbridge; Terry J. McGenity; Kenneth N. Timmis
Exposure to pollution exerts strong selective pressure on microbial communities, which may affect their potential to adapt to current or future environmental challenges. In this microcosm study, we used DNA fingerprinting based on 16S rRNA genes to document the impact of high concentrations of benzene on two bacterial communities from a benzene-contaminated aquifer situated below a petrochemical plant (SIReN, UK). The two groundwaters harboured distinct aerobic benzene-degrading communities able to metabolize benzene to below detection levels (1 microg L(-1)). A benzene concentration of 100 mg L(-1) caused a major shift from Betaproteobacteria to Actinobacteria, in particular Arthrobacter spp. A similar shift from Betaproteobacteria to Arthrobacter spp. and Rhodococcus erythropolis was observed in minimal medium (MM) inoculated with a third groundwater. These Gram-positive-dominated communities were able to grow on benzene at concentrations up to 600 mg L(-1) in groundwater and up to 1000 mg L(-1) in MM, concentrations that cause significant solvent stress to cellular systems. Therefore, Gram-positive bacteria were better competitors than Gram-negative organisms under experimental conditions of high benzene loads, which suggests that solvent-tolerant Gram-positive bacteria can play a role in the natural attenuation of benzene or the remediation of contaminated sites.
Microbial Ecology | 2015
Anne Fahy; Ludovic Giloteaux; Philippe N. Bertin; Denis Le Paslier; Claudine Médigue; Jean Weissenbach; Robert Duran; Béatrice Lauga
To gain an in-depth insight into the diversity and the distribution of genes under the particular evolutionary pressure of an arsenic-rich acid mine drainage (AMD), the genes involved in bacterial arsenic detoxification (arsB, ACR3) and arsenite oxidation (aioA) were investigated in sediment from Carnoulès (France), in parallel to the diversity and global distribution of the metabolically active bacteria. The metabolically active bacteria were affiliated mainly to AMD specialists, i.e., organisms detected in or isolated from AMDs throughout the world. They included mainly Acidobacteria and the non-affiliated “Candidatus Fodinabacter communificans,” as well as Thiomonas and Acidithiobacillus spp., Actinobacteria, and unclassified Gammaproteobacteria. The distribution range of these organisms suggested that they show niche conservatism. Sixteen types of deduced protein sequences of arsenite transporters (5 ArsB and 11 Acr3p) were detected, whereas a single type of arsenite oxidase (AioA) was found. Our data suggested that at Carnoulès, the aioA gene was more recent than those encoding arsenite transporters and subjected to a different molecular evolution. In contrast to the 16S ribosomal RNA (16S rRNA) genes associated with AMD environments worldwide, the functional genes aioA, ACR3, and to a lesser extent arsB, were either novel or specific to Carnoulès, raising the question as to whether these functional genes are specific to high concentrations of arsenic, AMD-specific, or site-specific.
FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2006
Anne Fahy; Terry J. McGenity; Kenneth N. Timmis; Andrew S. Ball
Environmental Microbiology | 2005
Anne Fahy; Gordon Lethbridge; Richard Earle; Andrew S. Ball; Kenneth N. Timmis; Terry J. McGenity
Environmental Microbiology | 2013
Panagiota-Myrsini Chronopoulou; Anne Fahy; Frédéric Coulon; Sandrine Païssé; Marisol Goñi-Urriza; Louis Peperzak; Laura Acuña Alvarez; Boyd A. McKew; Tracy Lawson; Kenneth N. Timmis; Robert Duran; Graham J. C. Underwood; Terry J. McGenity
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2013
Elcia M. S. Brito; Hilda A. Piñón-Castillo; Rémy Guyoneaud; César A. Caretta; J. Félix Gutiérrez-Corona; Robert Duran; Georgina E. Reyna-López; G. Virginia Nevárez-Moorillón; Anne Fahy; Marisol Goñi-Urriza
Archive | 2010
Terry J. McGenity; Corinne Whitby; Anne Fahy