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Featured researches published by Giselher Gust.


AMB Express | 2014

Effect of high pressure on hydrocarbon-degrading bacteria

Martina Schedler; Robert Hiessl; Ana Gabriela Valladares Juárez; Giselher Gust; Rudolf Müller

The blowout of the Deepwater Horizon in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010 occurred at a depth of 1500 m, corresponding to a hydrostatic pressure of 15 MPa. Up to now, knowledge about the impact of high pressure on oil-degrading bacteria has been scarce. To investigate how the biodegradation of crude oil and its components is influenced by high pressures, like those in deep-sea environments, hydrocarbon degradation and growth of two model strains were studied in high-pressure reactors. The alkane-degrading strain Rhodococcus qingshengii TUHH-12 grew well on n-hexadecane at 15 MPa at a rate of 0.16 h−1, although slightly slower than at ambient pressure (0.36 h−1). In contrast, the growth of the aromatic hydrocarbon degrading strain Sphingobium yanoikuyae B1 was highly affected by elevated pressures. Pressures of up to 8.8 MPa had little effect on growth of this strain. However, above this pressure growth decreased and at 12 MPa or more no more growth was observed. Nevertheless, S. yanoikuyae continued to convert naphthalene at pressure >12 MPa, although at a lower rate than at 0.1 MPa. This suggests that certain metabolic functions of this bacterium were inhibited by pressure to a greater extent than the enzymes responsible for naphthalene degradation. These results show that high pressure has a strong influence on the biodegradation of crude oil components and that, contrary to previous assumptions, the role of pressure cannot be discounted when estimating the biodegradation and ultimate fate of deep-sea oil releases such as the Deepwater Horizon event.


FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2015

Measuring bacterial activity and community composition at high hydrostatic pressure using a novel experimental approach: a pilot study

Nicola Wannicke; Katharina Frindte; Giselher Gust; Iris Liskow; Alexander Wacker; Andreas Bernhard Meyer; Hans-Peter Grossart

In this pilot study, we describe a high-pressure incubation system allowing multiple subsampling of a pressurized culture without decompression. The system was tested using one piezophilic (Photobacterium profundum), one piezotolerant (Colwellia maris) bacterial strain and a decompressed sample from the Mediterranean deep sea (3044 m) determining bacterial community composition, protein production (BPP) and cell multiplication rates (BCM) up to 27 MPa. The results showed elevation of BPP at high pressure was by a factor of 1.5 ± 1.4 and 3.9 ± 2.3 for P. profundum and C. maris, respectively, compared to ambient-pressure treatments and by a factor of 6.9 ± 3.8 fold in the field samples. In P. profundum and C. maris, BCM at high pressure was elevated (3.1 ± 1.5 and 2.9 ± 1.7 fold, respectively) compared to the ambient-pressure treatments. After 3 days of incubation at 27 MPa, the natural bacterial deep-sea community was dominated by one phylum of the genus Exiguobacterium, indicating the rapid selection of piezotolerant bacteria. In future studies, our novel incubation system could be part of an isopiestic pressure chain, allowing more accurate measurement of bacterial activity rates which is important both for modeling and for predicting the efficiency of the oceanic carbon pump.


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 1999

Water flow in tide- and wave-dominated beds of the seagrass Thalassia testudinum

Evamaria W. Koch; Giselher Gust


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2000

In situ sinking-particle flux from collection rates of cylindrical traps

Giselher Gust; Hans-Peter Kozerski


Journal of Applied Phycology | 2013

Influence of mixing and shear stress on Chlorella vulgaris, Scenedesmus obliquus, and Chlamydomonas reinhardtii

Marco Leupold; Stefan Hindersin; Giselher Gust; Martin Kerner; Dieter Hanelt


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2009

Hydrostatic pressure affects physiology and community structure of marine bacteria during settling to 4000 m: an experimental approach

Hans-Peter Grossart; Giselher Gust


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2004

Combined water-column mixing and benthic boundary-layer flow in mesocosms: key for realistic benthic-pelagic coupling studies

Elka T. Porter; Lawrence P. Sanford; Giselher Gust; F. Scott Porter


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 1999

Influence of the physiological status of bacteria on their transport into permeable sediments

Susanne Heise; Giselher Gust


Marine Chemistry | 2009

Methane hydrate dissolution rates in undersaturated seawater under controlled hydrodynamic forcing

Nikolaus Bigalke; Gregor Rehder; Giselher Gust


Limnology and Oceanography | 2013

Intermittent riverine resuspension: Effects on phosphorus transformations and heterotrophic bacteria

Andreas Kleeberg; Michael Hupfer; Giselher Gust; Ivette Salka; Kirsten Pohlmann; Hans-Peter Grossart

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Andreas Meyer

Hamburg University of Technology

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Gregor Rehder

Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research

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Iris Liskow

Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research

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