Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Brent C. Christner is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Brent C. Christner.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2016

Microbial Community Structure of Subglacial Lake Whillans, West Antarctica

Amanda M. Achberger; Brent C. Christner; Alexander B. Michaud; John C. Priscu; Mark L. Skidmore; Trista J. Vick-Majors; W. P. Adkins; Sridhar Anandakrishnan; Carlo Barbante; G. Barcheck; Lucas H. Beem; Alberto Behar; M. Beitch; R. Bolsey; C. Branecky; Stephanie Power Carter; Knut Christianson; Ross Edwards; Andrew T. Fisher; Helen Amanda Fricker; N. Foley; B. Guthrie; Timothy O. Hodson; Robert W. Jacobel; S. Kelley; Kenneth D. Mankoff; E. McBryan; Jill A. Mikucki; Andrew Mitchell; R. D. Powell

Subglacial Lake Whillans (SLW) is located beneath ∼800 m of ice on the Whillans Ice Stream in West Antarctica and was sampled in January of 2013, providing the first opportunity to directly examine water and sediments from an Antarctic subglacial lake. To minimize the introduction of surface contaminants to SLW during its exploration, an access borehole was created using a microbiologically clean hot water drill designed to reduce the number and viability of microorganisms in the drilling water. Analysis of 16S rRNA genes (rDNA) amplified from samples of the drilling and borehole water allowed an evaluation of the efficacy of this approach and enabled a confident assessment of the SLW ecosystem inhabitants. Based on an analysis of 16S rDNA and rRNA (i.e., reverse-transcribed rRNA molecules) data, the SLW community was found to be bacterially dominated and compositionally distinct from the assemblages identified in the drill system. The abundance of bacteria (e.g., Candidatus Nitrotoga, Sideroxydans, Thiobacillus, and Albidiferax) and archaea (Candidatus Nitrosoarchaeum) related to chemolithoautotrophs was consistent with the oxidation of reduced iron, sulfur, and nitrogen compounds having important roles as pathways for primary production in this permanently dark ecosystem. Further, the prevalence of Methylobacter in surficial lake sediments combined with the detection of methanogenic taxa in the deepest sediment horizons analyzed (34–36 cm) supported the hypothesis that methane cycling occurs beneath the West Antarctic Ice Sheet. Large ratios of rRNA to rDNA were observed for several operational taxonomic units abundant in the water column and sediments (e.g., Albidiferax, Methylobacter, Candidatus Nitrotoga, Sideroxydans, and Smithella), suggesting a potentially active role for these taxa in the SLW ecosystem. Our findings are consistent with chemosynthetic microorganisms serving as the ecological foundation in this dark subsurface environment, providing new organic matter that sustains a microbial ecosystem beneath the West Antarctic Ice Sheet.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2016

Physiological Ecology of Microorganisms in Subglacial Lake Whillans

Trista J. Vick-Majors; Andrew Mitchell; Amanda M. Achberger; Brent C. Christner; John E. Dore; Alexander B. Michaud; Jill A. Mikucki; Alicia Purcell; Mark L. Skidmore; John C. Priscu

Subglacial microbial habitats are widespread in glaciated regions of our planet. Some of these environments have been isolated from the atmosphere and from sunlight for many thousands of years. Consequently, ecosystem processes must rely on energy gained from the oxidation of inorganic substrates or detrital organic matter. Subglacial Lake Whillans (SLW) is one of more than 400 subglacial lakes known to exist under the Antarctic ice sheet; however, little is known about microbial physiology and energetics in these systems. When it was sampled through its 800 m thick ice cover in 2013, the SLW water column was shallow (~2 m deep), oxygenated, and possessed sufficient concentrations of C, N, and P substrates to support microbial growth. Here, we use a combination of physiological assays and models to assess the energetics of microbial life in SLW. In general, SLW microorganisms grew slowly in this energy-limited environment. Heterotrophic cellular carbon turnover times, calculated from 3H-thymidine and 3H-leucine incorporation rates, were long (60 to 500 days) while cellular doubling times averaged 196 days. Inferred growth rates (average ~0.006 d−1) obtained from the same incubations were at least an order of magnitude lower than those measured in Antarctic surface lakes and oligotrophic areas of the ocean. Low growth efficiency (8%) indicated that heterotrophic populations in SLW partition a majority of their carbon demand to cellular maintenance rather than growth. Chemoautotrophic CO2-fixation exceeded heterotrophic organic C-demand by a factor of ~1.5. Aerobic respiratory activity associated with heterotrophic and chemoautotrophic metabolism surpassed the estimated supply of oxygen to SLW, implying that microbial activity could deplete the oxygenated waters, resulting in anoxia. We used thermodynamic calculations to examine the biogeochemical and energetic consequences of environmentally imposed switching between aerobic and anaerobic metabolisms in the SLW water column. Heterotrophic metabolisms utilizing acetate and formate as electron donors yielded less energy than chemolithotrophic metabolisms when calculated in terms of energy density, which supports experimental results that showed chemoautotrophic activity in excess of heterotrophic activity. The microbial communities of subglacial lake ecosystems provide important natural laboratories to study the physiological and biogeochemical behavior of microorganisms inhabiting cold, dark environments.


Biochemistry | 2016

Functional Analysis of a Bacterial Antifreeze Protein Indicates a Cooperative Effect between Its Two Ice-Binding Domains

Chen Wang; Erin E. Oliver; Brent C. Christner; Bing-Hao Luo

Antifreeze proteins make up a class of ice-binding proteins (IBPs) that are possessed and expressed by certain cold-adapted organisms to enhance their freezing tolerance. Here we report the biophysical and functional characterization of an IBP discovered in a bacterium recovered from a deep glacial ice core drilled at Vostok Station, Antarctica (IBPv). Our study showed that the recombinant protein rIBPv exhibited a thermal hysteresis of 2 °C at concentrations of >50 μM, effectively inhibited ice recrystallization, and enhanced bacterial viability during freeze-thaw cycling. Circular dichroism scans indicated that rIBPv mainly consists of β strands, and its denaturing temperature was 53.5 °C. Multiple-sequence alignment of homologous IBPs predicted that IBPv contains two ice-binding domains, a feature unique among known IBPs. To examine functional differences between the IBPv domains, each domain was cloned, expressed, and purified. The second domain (domain B) expressed greater ice binding activity. Data from thermal hysteresis and gel filtration assays supported the idea that the two domains cooperate to achieve a higher ice binding effect by forming heterodimers. However, physical linkage of the domains was not required for this effect.


Archive | 2017

Microbiology of Subglacial Environments

Amanda M. Achberger; Alexander B. Michaud; Trista J. Vick-Majors; Brent C. Christner; Mark L. Skidmore; John C. Priscu; Martyn Tranter

The abundance of water at the base of glaciers and polar ice sheets forms lacustrine features and habitats in the saturated sediments of subglacial hydrological systems. Nutrients and energy sources may be made available through mineralization of stored organic matter or through glacial processes (e.g., bedrock comminution) that provide redox couples for microbial life. The logistical challenges of accessing subglacial environments has limited direct observations to a small number of locations, but microorganisms and associated microbial activities have been found in all subglacial environments examined to date (i.e., basal ice and sediment cores, subglacial lakes, and subglacial outflows at glacial margins). Molecular and biogeochemical data imply that the microbial clades common in subglacial environments are utilizing reduced iron, sulfur, and nitrogen compounds as energy sources to fuel primary production at the glacial bed. Here, we review the latest information on the diversity of subglacial environments and discuss how interactions between physical and biogeochemical processes affect microbial ecosystems and processes at the glacier bed.


Mbio | 2018

Metagenomic analysis of basal ice from an Alaskan glacier

Masood ur Rehman Kayani; Shawn M. Doyle; Naseer Sangwan; Guanqun Wang; Jack A. Gilbert; Brent C. Christner; Ting F. Zhu

BackgroundGlaciers cover ~u200910% of land but are among the least explored environments on Earth. The basal portion of glaciers often harbors unique aquatic microbial ecosystems in the absence of sunlight, and knowledge on the microbial community structures and their metabolic potential is very limited. Here, we provide insights into the microbial lifestyle present at the base of the Matanuska Glacier, Alaska.ResultsDNA and RNA were extracted from samples of the Matanuska Glacier basal ice. Using Illumina MiSeq and HiSeq sequencing, we investigated the microbial diversity with the metagenomic shotgun reads and 16S ribosomal RNA data. We further assembled 9 partial and draft bacterial genomes from the metagenomic assembly, and identified key metabolic pathways such as sulfur oxidation and nitrification. Collectively, our analyses suggest a prevalence of lithotrophic and heterotrophic metabolisms in the subglacial microbiome.ConclusionOur results present the first metagenomic assembly and bacterial draft genomes for a subglacial environment. These results extend our understanding of the chemical and biological processes in subglacial environments critically influenced by global climate change.


International Journal of Astrobiology | 2017

An intelligent algorithm for autonomous scientific sampling with the VALKYRIE cryobot

Evan B. Clark; Nathan E. Bramall; Brent C. Christner; Chris Flesher; John Harman; Bart Hogan; Heather Lavender; Scott Lelievre; Joshua Moor; Vickie Siegel; William C. Stone

The development of algorithms for agile science and autonomous exploration has been pursued in contexts ranging from spacecraft to planetary rovers to unmanned aerial vehicles to autonomous underwater vehicles. In situations where time, mission resources and communications are limited and the future state of the operating environment is unknown, the capability of a vehicle to dynamically respond to changing circumstances without human guidance can substantially improve science return. Such capabilities are difficult to achieve in practice, however, because they require intelligent reasoning to utilize limited resources in an inherently uncertain environment. Here we discuss the development, characterization and field performance of two algorithms for autonomously collecting water samples on VALKYRIE (Very deep Autonomous Laser-powered Kilowatt-class Yo-yoing Robotic Ice Explorer), a glacier-penetrating cryobot deployed to the Matanuska Glacier, Alaska (Mission Control location: 61°42′09.3″N 147°37′23.2″W). We show performance on par with human performance across a wide range of mission morphologies using simulated mission data, and demonstrate the effectiveness of the algorithms at autonomously collecting samples with high relative cell concentration during field operation. The development of such algorithms will help enable autonomous science operations in environments where constant real-time human supervision is impractical, such as penetration of ice sheets on Earth and high-priority planetary science targets like Europa.


Polar Lakes and Rivers | 2008

Antarctic subglacial water: Origin, evolution and ecology

John C. Priscu; Slawek Tulaczyk; Michael Studinger; Mahlon C. Kennicutt; Brent C. Christner; Christine M. Foreman


Archive | 2004

Incorporation of particulates into accreted ice above subglacial Lake Vostok, Antarctica

George Royston-Bishop; John C. Priscu; Martyn Tranter; Brent C. Christner; Martin J. Siegert; Victoria Lee


Springer US | 2008

Psychrophiles: from Biodiverstiy to Biotechnology

Brent C. Christner; Mark L. Skidmore; John C. Priscu; Martyn Tranter; Christine M. Foreman


Archive | 2009

Microbial respiration at sub-zero temperatures in laboratory ices

Mark L. Skidmore; Corien Bakermans; Tim Brox; Brent C. Christner; Scott N. Montross

Collaboration


Dive into the Brent C. Christner's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John C. Priscu

Montana State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge