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Dive into the research topics where Donald J. Herman is active.

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Featured researches published by Donald J. Herman.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2006

Application of a High-Density Oligonucleotide Microarray Approach To Study Bacterial Population Dynamics during Uranium Reduction and Reoxidation

Eoin L. Brodie; Todd Z. DeSantis; Dominique Joyner; Seung M. Baek; Joern T. Larsen; Gary L. Andersen; Terry C. Hazen; Paul M. Richardson; Donald J. Herman; Tetsu K. Tokunaga; JiaminM.M. Wan; Mary K. Firestone

ABSTRACT Reduction of soluble uranium U(VI) to less-soluble uranium U(IV) is a promising approach to minimize migration from contaminated aquifers. It is generally assumed that, under constant reducing conditions, U(IV) is stable and immobile; however, in a previous study, we documented reoxidation of U(IV) under continuous reducing conditions (Wan et al., Environ. Sci. Technol. 2005, 39:6162-6169). To determine if changes in microbial community composition were a factor in U(IV) reoxidation, we employed a high-density phylogenetic DNA microarray (16S microarray) containing 500,000 probes to monitor changes in bacterial populations during this remediation process. Comparison of the 16S microarray with clone libraries demonstrated successful detection and classification of most clone groups. Analysis of the most dynamic groups of 16S rRNA gene amplicons detected by the 16S microarray identified five clusters of bacterial subfamilies responding in a similar manner. This approach demonstrated that amplicons of known metal-reducing bacteria such as Geothrix fermentans (confirmed by quantitative PCR) and those within the Geobacteraceae were abundant during U(VI) reduction and did not decline during the U(IV) reoxidation phase. Significantly, it appears that the observed reoxidation of uranium under reducing conditions occurred despite elevated microbial activity and the consistent presence of metal-reducing bacteria. High-density phylogenetic microarrays constitute a powerful tool, enabling the detection and monitoring of a substantial portion of the microbial population in a routine, accurate, and reproducible manner.


Environmental Microbiology | 2012

Abundance of microbial genes associated with nitrogen cycling as indices of biogeochemical process rates across a vegetation gradient in Alaska

Dorthe G. Petersen; Steven J. Blazewicz; Mary K. Firestone; Donald J. Herman; Merritt J. Turetsky; Mark P. Waldrop

Nitrification and denitrification processes are crucial to plant nutrient availability, eutrophication and greenhouse gas production both locally and globally. Unravelling the major environmental predictors for nitrification and denitrification is thus pivotal in order to understand and model environmental nitrogen (N) cycling. Here, we sampled five plant community types characteristic of interior Alaska, including black spruce, bog birch, tussock grass and two fens. We assessed abundance of functional genes affiliated with nitrification (bacterial and archaeal amoA) and denitrification (nirK/S and nosZ) using qPCR, soil characteristics, potential nitrification and denitrification rates (PNR and PDR) and gross mineralization rates. The main chemical and biological predictors for PNR and PDR were assigned through path analysis. The potential N cycling rates varied dramatically between sites, from some of the highest (in fens) to some of the lowest (in black spruce) measured globally. Based on path analysis, functional gene abundances were the most important variables to predict potential rates. PNR was best explained by bacterial amoA gene abundance followed by ammonium content, whereas PDR was best explained directly by nosZ gene abundance and indirectly by nirK/S gene abundance and nitrate. Hence, functional gene abundance is a valuable index that integrates recent environmental history and recent process activity, and therefore is a good predictor of potential rates. The results of this study contribute to our understanding of the relative importance of different biological and chemical factors in driving the potential for nitrification and denitrification across terrestrial ecosystems.


Environmental Microbiology | 2013

An arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus significantly modifies the soil bacterial community and nitrogen cycling during litter decomposition

Erin E. Nuccio; Angela Hodge; Jennifer Pett-Ridge; Donald J. Herman; Peter K. Weber; Mary K. Firestone

Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) perform an important ecosystem service by improving plant nutrient capture from soil, yet little is known about how AMF influence soil microbial communities during nutrient uptake. We tested whether an AMF modifies the soil microbial community and nitrogen cycling during litter decomposition. A two-chamber microcosm system was employed to create a root-free soil environment to control AMF access to (13) C- and (15) N-labelled root litter. Using a 16S rRNA gene microarray, we documented that approximately 10% of the bacterial community responded to the AMF, Glomus hoi. Taxa from the Firmicutes responded positively to AMF, while taxa from the Actinobacteria and Comamonadaceae responded negatively to AMF. Phylogenetic analyses indicate that AMF may influence bacterial community assembly processes. Using nanometre-scale secondary ion mass spectrometry (NanoSIMS) we visualized the location of AMF-transported (13) C and (15) N in plant roots. Bulk isotope ratio mass spectrometry revealed that the AMF exported 4.9% of the litter (15) N to the host plant (Plantago lanceolata L.), and litter-derived (15) N was preferentially exported relative to litter-derived (13) C. Our results suggest that the AMF primarily took up N in the inorganic form, and N export is one mechanism by which AMF could modify the soil microbial community and decomposition processes.


Mbio | 2015

Successional Trajectories of Rhizosphere Bacterial Communities over Consecutive Seasons

Shengjing Shi; Erin E. Nuccio; Donald J. Herman; Ruud Rijkers; Katerina Y. Estera; Jiabao Li; Ulisses Nunes da Rocha; Zhili He; Jennifer Pett-Ridge; Eoin L. Brodie; Jizhong Zhou; Mary K. Firestone

ABSTRACT It is well known that rhizosphere microbiomes differ from those of surrounding soil, and yet we know little about how these root-associated microbial communities change through the growing season and between seasons. We analyzed the response of soil bacteria to roots of the common annual grass Avena fatua over two growing seasons using high-throughput sequencing of 16S rRNA genes. Over the two periods of growth, the rhizosphere bacterial communities followed consistent successional patterns as plants grew, although the starting communities were distinct. Succession in the rhizosphere was characterized by a significant decrease in both taxonomic and phylogenetic diversity relative to background soil communities, driven by reductions in both richness and evenness of the bacterial communities. Plant roots selectively stimulated the relative abundance of Alphaproteobacteria, Betaproteobacteria, and Bacteroidetes but reduced the abundance of Acidobacteria, Actinobacteria, and Firmicutes. Taxa that increased in relative abundance in the rhizosphere soil displayed phylogenetic clustering, suggesting some conservation and an evolutionary basis for the response of complex soil bacterial communities to the presence of plant roots. The reproducibility of rhizosphere succession and the apparent phylogenetic conservation of rhizosphere competence traits suggest adaptation of the indigenous bacterial community to this common grass over the many decades of its presence. IMPORTANCE We document the successional patterns of rhizosphere bacterial communities associated with a “wild” annual grass, Avena fatua, which is commonly a dominant plant in Mediterranean-type annual grasslands around the world; the plant was grown in its grassland soil. Most studies documenting rhizosphere microbiomes address “domesticated” plants growing in soils to which they are introduced. Rhizosphere bacterial communities exhibited a pattern of temporal succession that was consistent and repeatable over two growing seasons. There are few studies assessing the reproducibility over multiple seasons. Through the growing season, the rhizosphere community became progressively less diverse, likely reflecting root homogenization of soil microniches. Phylogenetic clustering of the rhizosphere dynamic taxa suggests evolutionary adaptation to Avena roots. The reproducibility of rhizosphere succession and the apparent phylogenetic conservation of rhizosphere competence traits suggest adaptation of the indigenous bacterial community to this common grass over the many decades of its presence. We document the successional patterns of rhizosphere bacterial communities associated with a “wild” annual grass, Avena fatua, which is commonly a dominant plant in Mediterranean-type annual grasslands around the world; the plant was grown in its grassland soil. Most studies documenting rhizosphere microbiomes address “domesticated” plants growing in soils to which they are introduced. Rhizosphere bacterial communities exhibited a pattern of temporal succession that was consistent and repeatable over two growing seasons. There are few studies assessing the reproducibility over multiple seasons. Through the growing season, the rhizosphere community became progressively less diverse, likely reflecting root homogenization of soil microniches. Phylogenetic clustering of the rhizosphere dynamic taxa suggests evolutionary adaptation to Avena roots. The reproducibility of rhizosphere succession and the apparent phylogenetic conservation of rhizosphere competence traits suggest adaptation of the indigenous bacterial community to this common grass over the many decades of its presence.


Ecological Applications | 2003

NITROGEN DYNAMICS IN AN ANNUAL GRASSLAND: OAK CANOPY, CLIMATE, AND MICROBIAL POPULATION EFFECTS

Donald J. Herman; Larry J. Halverson; Mary K. Firestone

Hardwood rangelands in California, which are commonly used for cattle production, are characterized by an oak overstory and annual grass understory. Our goal was to evaluate how canopies influence nitrogen-cycling processes and how tree removal affected these processes. We measured standing ammonium and nitrate pools, gross production and consumption of NH4 and NO3, nitrification potentials, and NOx and N2O emissions in soils under oak canopies and in open grassy areas over a two-year period in areas within the same watershed that were grazed by cattle or fenced to exclude cattle. We also performed a subset of these measurements in open areas and in plots near stumps of oaks in areas that had been clear-cut seven and nine years earlier. Nitrogen turnover was generally higher in canopy area soils than in open area soils, and higher in the grazed area than in the fenced area. Ammonium production was slow following first autumn wet-up, but achieved higher rates during the growing season. By contrast, NO3 pro...


Ecology | 2003

HOW DISTURBANCE BY FOSSORIAL MAMMALS ALTERS N CYCLING IN A CALIFORNIA ANNUAL GRASSLAND

Rosa M. Canals; Donald J. Herman; Mary K. Firestone

Nitrogen limitation of many temperate plant communities makes the impacts of fossorial mammal activity on soil N dynamics an interesting and potentially important topic. We determined the effects of gopher mound building on soil N transformations by measuring gross rates of N mineralization and nitrification using short-term 15N pool dilution methods, net rates of mineralization and nitrification using longer-term buried-bag determinations, inorganic N pools, and soil physical characteristics in gopher-disturbed soil, bare soil, and intact vegetated soil in a California annual grassland during the spring growing season. Soil bulk densities were lower and temperatures were higher in gopher mound material. Neither gross nor net rates of N mineralization or nitrification were statistically distinguishable among gopher-disturbed, bare, and vegetated soils. However, larger pools of NH4 and NO3 were present in mound and bare soils than in vegetated soils, nitrification potential was higher in mound soils than i...


The ISME Journal | 2014

Compartmentalized microbial composition, oxygen gradients and nitrogen fixation in the gut of Odontotaenius disjunctus

Javier A. Ceja-Navarro; Nhu H. Nguyen; Ulas Karaoz; Stephanie R Gross; Donald J. Herman; Gary L. Andersen; Thomas D Bruns; Jennifer Pett-Ridge; Meredith Blackwell; Eoin L. Brodie

Coarse woody debris is an important biomass pool in forest ecosystems that numerous groups of insects have evolved to take advantage of. These insects are ecologically important and represent useful natural analogs for biomass to biofuel conversion. Using a range of molecular approaches combined with microelectrode measurements of oxygen, we have characterized the gut microbiome and physiology of Odontotaenius disjunctus, a wood-feeding beetle native to the eastern United States. We hypothesized that morphological and physiological differences among gut regions would correspond to distinct microbial populations and activities. In fact, significantly different communities were found in the foregut (FG), midgut (MG)/posterior hindgut (PHG) and anterior hindgut (AHG), with Actinobacteria and Rhizobiales being more abundant toward the FG and PHG. Conversely, fermentative bacteria such as Bacteroidetes and Clostridia were more abundant in the AHG, and also the sole region where methanogenic Archaea were detected. Although each gut region possessed an anaerobic core, micron-scale profiling identified radial gradients in oxygen concentration in all regions. Nitrogen fixation was confirmed by 15N2 incorporation, and nitrogenase gene (nifH) expression was greatest in the AHG. Phylogenetic analysis of nifH identified the most abundant transcript as related to Ni–Fe nitrogenase of a Bacteroidetes species, Paludibacter propionicigenes. Overall, we demonstrate not only a compartmentalized microbiome in this beetle digestive tract but also sharp oxygen gradients that may permit aerobic and anaerobic metabolism to occur within the same regions in close proximity. We provide evidence for the microbial fixation of N2 that is important for this beetle to subsist on woody biomass.


American Journal of Botany | 2013

Nitrogen deposition, plant carbon allocation, and soil microbes: Changing interactions due to enrichment

Emily C. Farrer; Donald J. Herman; Eva Franzova; Trang Pham; Katharine N. Suding

PREMISE OF THE STUDY Nitrogen (N) inputs to the terrestrial environment have doubled worldwide during the past century. N negatively impacts plant diversity, but it is unknown why some species are more susceptible than others. While it is often assumed that competition drives species decline, N enrichment also strongly affects soil microbial communities. Can these changes affect plant-microbe interactions in ways that differentially influence success of plant species? Furthermore, can altered plant-microbe interactions lead to carbon (C) limitation in plants? METHODS We focused on a species that increases (Deschampsia cespitosa) and one that decreases (Geum rossii) in abundance in N-fertilized plots in alpine tundra. We measured soil microbes using phospholipid fatty acids, and C limitation and transfer using a (13)C tracer experiment, C:N ratios, nonstructural carbohydrates, and leaf preformation. KEY RESULTS While N profoundly influenced microbial communities, this change occurred similarly in association with both plant species. N addition did not alter total C allocation to microbes in either species, but it changed patterns of microbial C acquisition more in Geum, specifically in gram-negative bacteria. Geum showed evidence of C limitation: it allocated less C to storage organs, had lower C:N and carbohydrate stores, and fewer preformed leaves in N plots. CONCLUSIONS Carbon limitation may explain why some species decline with N enrichment, and the decline may be due to physiological responses of plants to N rather than to altered plant-microbe interactions. Global change will alter many processes important in structuring plant communities; noncompetitive mechanisms of species decline may be more widespread than previously thought.


Chemosphere | 2011

Microbial community response to addition of polylactate compounds to stimulate hexavalent chromium reduction in groundwater.

Eoin L. Brodie; Dominique Joyner; Boris Faybishenko; Mark E. Conrad; Carlos Rios-Velazquez; Josue Malave; Ramon Martinez; Benjamin V. Mork; Anna Willett; Steven Koenigsberg; Donald J. Herman; Mary K. Firestone; Terry C. Hazen

To evaluate the efficacy of bioimmobilization of Cr(VI) in groundwater at the Department of Energy Hanford site, we conducted a series of microcosm experiments using a range of commercial electron donors with varying degrees of lactate polymerization (polylactate). These experiments were conducted using Hanford Formation sediments (coarse sand and gravel) immersed in Hanford groundwater, which were amended with Cr(VI) and several types of lactate-based electron donors (Hydrogen Release Compound, HRC; primer-HRC, pHRC; extended release HRC) and the polylactate-cysteine form (Metal Remediation Compound, MRC). The results showed that polylactate compounds stimulated an increase in bacterial biomass and activity to a greater extent than sodium lactate when applied at equivalent carbon concentrations. At the same time, concentrations of headspace hydrogen and methane increased and correlated with changes in the microbial community structure. Enrichment of Pseudomonas spp. occurred with all lactate additions, and enrichment of sulfate-reducing Desulfosporosinus spp. occurred with almost complete sulfate reduction. The results of these experiments demonstrate that amendment with the pHRC and MRC forms result in effective removal of Cr(VI) from solution most likely by both direct (enzymatic) and indirect (microbially generated reductant) mechanisms.


Plant and Soil | 2005

Plant Colonizers Shape Early N-dynamics in Gopher-mounds

Rosa M. Canals; Valerie T. Eviner; Donald J. Herman; F. Stuart Chapin

Disturbances by fossorial mammals are extremely common in many ecosystems, including the California annual grassland. We compared the impact of juveniles of four common plant colonizers (Aegilops triuncialis, Cerastium glomeratum, Aphanes occidentalis and Lupinus bicolor) on the pools and fluxes of N in mounds created by pocket gophers (Thomomys bottae Mewa). The mechanisms and magnitude of biotic N retention differed among plant species. In mounds colonized by Cerastium, Aphanes and Lupinus, the microbial N pool was significantly larger than the plant N pool, as is typical in California grasslands in the early spring, whereas in mounds colonized by Aegilops, there was a more equal distribution of biotic N between plant and microbial pools. A 1-day 15N pulse field experiment demonstrated that plant species significantly differed in their effects on the distribution of isotopic N, with the N-fixing Lupinus leaving most (82%) 15N as inorganic N in soil, whereas more 15N was immobilized in plants or otherwise removed from the available soil pool in mounds colonized by other species. The impacts of early colonizers on N dynamics suggest that the identity of plant species that initially colonize gopher mounds may have important consequences on the dynamics of the overall grassland community.

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Eoin L. Brodie

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Jennifer Pett-Ridge

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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Erin E. Nuccio

University of California

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Gary L. Andersen

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Shengjing Shi

University of California

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A. R. Mosier

Agricultural Research Service

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Dominique Joyner

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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