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Dive into the research topics where Elisabet L. Sà is active.

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Featured researches published by Elisabet L. Sà.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Life-Style and Genome Structure of Marine Pseudoalteromonas Siphovirus B8b Isolated from the Northwestern Mediterranean Sea

Elena Lara; Karin Holmfeldt; Natalie Solonenko; Elisabet L. Sà; J. Cesar Ignacio-Espinoza; Francisco M. Cornejo-Castillo; Nathan C. VerBerkmoes; Dolors Vaqué; Matthew B. Sullivan; Silvia G. Acinas

Marine viruses (phages) alter bacterial diversity and evolution with impacts on marine biogeochemical cycles, and yet few well-developed model systems limit opportunities for hypothesis testing. Here we isolate phage B8b from the Mediterranean Sea using Pseudoalteromonas sp. QC-44 as a host and characterize it using myriad techniques. Morphologically, phage B8b was classified as a member of the Siphoviridae family. One-step growth analyses showed that this siphovirus had a latent period of 70 min and released 172 new viral particles per cell. Host range analysis against 89 bacterial host strains revealed that phage B8b infected 3 Pseudoalteromonas strains (52 tested, >99.9% 16S rRNA gene nucleotide identity) and 1 non-Pseudoaltermonas strain belonging to Alteromonas sp. (37 strains from 6 genera tested), which helps bound the phylogenetic distance possible in a phage-mediated horizontal gene transfer event. The Pseudoalteromonas phage B8b genome size was 42.7 kb, with clear structural and replication modules where the former were delineated leveraging identification of 16 structural genes by virion structural proteomics, only 4 of which had any similarity to known structural proteins. In nature, this phage was common in coastal marine environments in both photic and aphotic layers (found in 26.5% of available viral metagenomes), but not abundant in any sample (average per sample abundance was 0.65% of the reads). Together these data improve our understanding of siphoviruses in nature, and provide foundational information for a new ‘rare virosphere’ phage–host model system.


Science Advances | 2017

Unveiling the role and life strategies of viruses from the surface to the dark ocean

Elena Lara; Dolors Vaqué; Elisabet L. Sà; Julia A. Boras; Ana Gomes; Encarna Borrull; Cristina Díez-Vives; Eva Teira; Massimo C. Pernice; Francisca C. García; Irene Forn; Yaiza M. Castillo; Aida Peiró; Guillem Salazar; Xosé Anxelu G. Morán; Ramon Massana; Teresa S. Catalá; Gian Marco Luna; Susana Agustí; Marta Estrada; Josep M. Gasol; Carlos M. Duarte

Viral activity exerts a particularly important role in the dark ocean across the global tropical and subtropical oceans. Viruses are a key component of marine ecosystems, but the assessment of their global role in regulating microbial communities and the flux of carbon is precluded by a paucity of data, particularly in the deep ocean. We assessed patterns in viral abundance and production and the role of viral lysis as a driver of prokaryote mortality, from surface to bathypelagic layers, across the tropical and subtropical oceans. Viral abundance showed significant differences between oceans in the epipelagic and mesopelagic, but not in the bathypelagic, and decreased with depth, with an average power-law scaling exponent of −1.03 km−1 from an average of 7.76 × 106 viruses ml−1 in the epipelagic to 0.62 × 106 viruses ml−1 in the bathypelagic layer with an average integrated (0 to 4000 m) viral stock of about 0.004 to 0.044 g C m−2, half of which is found below 775 m. Lysogenic viral production was higher than lytic viral production in surface waters, whereas the opposite was found in the bathypelagic, where prokaryotic mortality due to viruses was estimated to be 60 times higher than grazing. Free viruses had turnover times of 0.1 days in the bathypelagic, revealing that viruses in the bathypelagic are highly dynamic. On the basis of the rates of lysed prokaryotic cells, we estimated that viruses release 145 Gt C year−1 in the global tropical and subtropical oceans. The active viral processes reported here demonstrate the importance of viruses in the production of dissolved organic carbon in the dark ocean, a major pathway in carbon cycling.


Archive | 2014

Viruses and Their Role in the Ocean: Bacteriophages and Bacteria Interactions

Dolors Vaqué; Elisabet L. Sà; Elena Lara; Silvia G. Acinas

Aquatic microorganisms are responsible for a variety of biogeochemical cycles that fuel our planet [5, 6]. In particular, viruses that could infect all marine organisms (from bacteria to whales) play a key role in marine systems [7]. Virus are the most abundant biological particles, ca. 107 ml−1 in surface waters Suttle 2007 and a large proportion are bacteriophages which together with protists are the main source of microbial mortality (viral shunt) returning dissolved nutrients and organic matter from lysed bacteria to the water column [3, 14] and contributing to the recycling production of the systems; see Fig. 1. Viruses are mostly considered as killers, releasing from 20 to 300 virus particles per host-cell [2, 17]. However they can insert part of their genome in the chromosome of the prokaryotic host or in the chloroplast, mitochondrial or nuclear genetic systems in the eukaryotic algae host.


FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2007

Seasonality in bacterial diversity in north-west Mediterranean coastal waters: assessment through clone libraries, fingerprinting and FISH

Laura Alonso-Sáez; Vanessa Balagué; Elisabet L. Sà; Olga Sánchez; José M. González; Jarone Pinhassi; Ramon Massana; Jakob Pernthaler; Carlos Pedrós-Alió; Josep M. Gasol


Polar Biology | 2010

Effect of ice melting on bacterial carbon fluxes channelled by viruses and protists in the Arctic Ocean

Julia A. Boras; M. Montserrat Sala; Jesús M. Arrieta; Elisabet L. Sà; Jorge Felipe; Susana Agustí; Carlos M. Duarte; Dolors Vaqué


Estuarine Coastal and Shelf Science | 2015

Factors shaping bacterial phylogenetic and functional diversity in coastal waters of the NW Mediterranean Sea

Julia A. Boras; Dolors Vaqué; Elisabet L. Sà; Markus G. Weinbauer; Maria Montserrat Sala


Archive | 2015

Could experimental warming and acidification produce changes in the virus life cycle in the Arctic

Dolors Vaqué; Elena Lara; Elisabet L. Sà; Iris E. Hendriks; Johnna Holding; Susana Agustí; Jesús M. Arrieta López de Uralde; Paul F. Wassmann; Carlos M. Duarte


Archive | 2015

Pseudoalteromonas phages: phage-host interactions, comparative genomics and biogeography

Elena Lara; Elisabet L. Sà; Guillem Salazar; Pilar Sánchez; Karin Holmfeldt; Melissa B. Duhaime; J.C. Ignacio-Espinoza; Matthew B. Sullivan; Dolors Vaqué; Silvia G. Acinas


Archive | 2015

Marine heterotrophic bacteria synthesize non-phosphorus lipids upon phosphorus stress

Marta Sebastián; José M. González; Helen F. Fredricks; B. Van Mooy; Michal Koblizek; Elisabet L. Sà; B. Mostajir; Paraskevi Pitta; Josep M. Gasol


Archive | 2013

Bacteriophages in the Sea: viruses and their role in the ocean

Dolors Vaqué; Elisabet L. Sà; Elena Lara; Silvia G. Acinas

Collaboration


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Dolors Vaqué

Spanish National Research Council

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Elena Lara

Spanish National Research Council

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Julia A. Boras

Spanish National Research Council

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Silvia G. Acinas

Spanish National Research Council

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Carlos M. Duarte

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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Josep M. Gasol

Spanish National Research Council

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Guillem Salazar

Spanish National Research Council

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M. Montserrat Sala

Spanish National Research Council

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Ramon Massana

Spanish National Research Council

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