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Featured researches published by M. Braster.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2001

Relationships between Microbial Community Structure and Hydrochemistry in a Landfill Leachate-Polluted Aquifer

Wilfred F.M. Röling; B.M. van Breukelen; M. Braster; B. Lin; H. W. van Verseveld

ABSTRACT Knowledge about the relationship between microbial community structure and hydrogeochemistry (e.g., pollution, redox and degradation processes) in landfill leachate-polluted aquifers is required to develop tools for predicting and monitoring natural attenuation. In this study analyses of pollutant and redox chemistry were conducted in parallel with culture-independent profiling of microbial communities present in a well-defined aquifer (Banisveld, The Netherlands). Degradation of organic contaminants occurred under iron-reducing conditions in the plume of pollution, while upstream of the landfill and above the plume denitrification was the dominant redox process. Beneath the plume iron reduction occurred. Numerical comparison of 16S ribosomal DNA (rDNA)-based denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) profiles of Bacteria andArchaea in 29 groundwater samples revealed a clear difference between the microbial community structures inside and outside the contaminant plume. A similar relationship was not evident in sediment samples. DGGE data were supported by sequencing cloned 16S rDNA. Upstream of the landfill members of the β subclass of the class Proteobacteria(β-proteobacteria) dominated. This group was not encountered beneath the landfill, where gram-positive bacteria dominated. Further downstream the contribution of gram-positive bacteria to the clone library decreased, while the contribution of δ-proteobacteria strongly increased and β-proteobacteria reappeared. The β-proteobacteria (Acidovorax,Rhodoferax) differed considerably from those found upstream (Gallionella, Azoarcus). Direct comparisons of cloned 16S rDNA with bands in DGGE profiles revealed that the data from each analysis were comparable. A relationship was observed between the dominant redox processes and the bacteria identified. In the iron-reducing plume members of the familyGeobacteraceae made a strong contribution to the microbial communities. Because the only known aromatic hydrocarbon-degrading, iron-reducing bacteria areGeobacter spp., their occurrence in landfill leachate-contaminated aquifers deserves more detailed consideration.


Microbial Ecology | 2001

Spatiotemporal stability of an ammonia oxidizing community in a nitrogen-saturated forest soil

Anniet M. Laverman; A. G. C. L. Speksnijder; M. Braster; G. A. Kowalchuk; H.A. Verhoef; H. W. van Verseveld

Elevated levels of nitrogen input into various terrestrial environments in recent decades have led to increases in soil nitrate production and leaching. However, nitrifying potential and nitrifying activity tend to be highly variable over space and time, making broad-scale estimates of nitrate production difficult. This study investigates whether the high spatiotemporal variation in nitrate production might be explained by differences in the structure of ammonia-oxidizing bacterial communities in nitrogen-saturated coniferous forest soils. The diversity of ammonia-oxidizing bacteria of the β-subgroup Proteobacteria was therefore investigated using two different PCR-based approaches. The first targeted the 16S rRNA gene and involved temporal temperature gradient electrophoresis (TTGE) of specifically amplified PCR products, with subsequent band excision and nucleotide sequence determination. The second approach involved the cloning and sequencing of PCR-amplified amoA gene fragments. All recovered 16S rDNA sequences were closely related to the culture strain Nitrosospira sp. AHB1, which was isolated from an acid soil and is affiliated with Nitrosospira cluster 2, a sequence group previously shown to be associated with acid environments. All amoA-like sequences also showed a close affinity with this acid-tolerant Nitrosospira strain, although greater sequence variation could be detected in the amoA analysis. The ammonia-oxidizing bacterial community in the nitrogen-saturated coniferous forest soil was determined to be very stable, showing little variation between different organic layers and throughout the year, despite large differences in the total Bacterial community structure as determined by 16S rDNA DGGE community fingerprinting. These results suggest that environmental heterogeneity affecting ammonia oxidizer numbers and activity, and not ammonia oxidizer community structure, is chiefly responsible for spatial and temporal variation in nitrate production in these acid forest soils.


Microbial Ecology | 2000

Analysis of Microbial Communities in a Landfill Leachate Polluted Aquifer using a New Method for Anaerobic Physiological Profiling and 16S rDNA Based Fingerprinting.

Wilfred F.M. Röling; B.M. van Breukelen; M. Braster; M.T. Goeltom; J. Groen; H. W. van Verseveld

A bstractDatabases containing information regarding presence and activity of microbial communities will be very useful for determination of the potential for intrinsic bioremediation in landfill leachate polluted aquifers. Simple analyses such as community-level physiological profiling (CLPP) and denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) of 16S rDNA fragments yield large sets of data for inclusion into such databases. In this study we describe the development of a method for anaerobic CLPP, using commercially available Biolog plates. Incubation at the in situ temperature of the aquifer (10°C) for 28 days was optimal for obtaining a specific, reproducible physiological profile. Anaerobic incubation was essential for profiling anaerobic communities. The anaerobic cultivation-dependent CLPP method and cultivation-independent DGGE were applied to groundwater and sediment samples from the aquifer near the Coupépolder landfill in The Netherlands. A combination of computer-assisted CLPP and DGGE analysis of both groundwater and sediment samples yielded the best separating power for characterizing microbial communities in the aquifer. Communities in groundwater were significantly different from those in the corresponding sediment. Microbial communities present in subsamples from sediment cores usually were similar for the various sampling locations. Variation was observed for the heterogeneous sediment beneath the landfill. Both anaerobic CLPP and DGGE analysis clearly separated microbial communities from the polluted aquifer underneath the landfill from those in the less or not polluted aquifer downstream and upstream of the landfill.


Archives of Microbiology | 1984

Eubacteria have 3 growth modes keyed to nutrient flow

H. W. van Verseveld; William Chesbro; M. Braster; A. H. Stouthamer

Aerobic growth of Escherichia coli and Paracoccus denitrificans has been studied in chemostat, fed batch, and recycling fermentor modes under carbon and energy limitation. Two abrupt drops or discontinuities in molar growth yield, Y, have been found that occur over relatively short ranges in the value of specific growth rate.Before the first discontinuity, Y is constant and maximal. After the first discontinuity, at a doubling time of 33 h, Y becomes constant again and independent of μ until the second discontinuity appears at a doubling time of about 50 h, corresponding to a μ of about 0.014. At this point, Y drops to a lower value that is constant at doubling times longer than 100 h, corresponding to a μ of about 0.007.The second discontinuity is associated in Paracoccus with elevated levels of guanosine tetraphosphate (ppGpp) that impose stringent regulation as has been found previously with Bacillus and Escherichia species. It is thus likely that the stringent response generally occurs in bacteria in vivo at a doubling time of about 50 h. The cause of the first discontinuity is unknown. All experiments indicate that Pirt-type calculations relating μ, Y, and maintenance energy demand are no longer valid. In chemostat experiments, the intercept of the relationship between specific substrate utilization and specific growth rate is defined as maintenance. However, this intercept most probably is caused by stringent regulation at low dilution rates. Three regions of bacterial growth rates are defined by this study, corresponding to doubling times of 0.5 to 15 h, 33 to 50 h, and >100 h. Some growth behavior in each region is unique to that region.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2005

Geobacteraceae Community Composition Is Related to Hydrochemistry and Biodegradation in an Iron-Reducing Aquifer Polluted by a Neighboring Landfill

B. Lin; M. Braster; Boris M. van Breukelen; Henk W. van Verseveld; Hans V. Westerhoff; Wilfred F.M. Röling

ABSTRACT Relationships between community composition of the iron-reducing Geobacteraceae, pollution levels, and the occurrence of biodegradation were established for an iron-reducing aquifer polluted with landfill leachate by using cultivation-independent Geobacteraceae 16S rRNA gene-targeting techniques. Numerical analysis of denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) profiles and sequencing revealed a high Geobacteraceae diversity and showed that community composition within the leachate plume differed considerably from that of the unpolluted aquifer. This suggests that pollution has selected for specific species out of a large pool of Geobacteraceae. DGGE profiles of polluted groundwater taken near the landfill (6- to 39-m distance) clustered together. DGGE profiles from less-polluted groundwater taken further downstream did not fall in the same cluster. Several individual DGGE bands were indicative of either the redox process or the level of pollution. This included a pollution-indicative band that dominated the DGGE profiles from groundwater samples taken close to the landfill (6 to 39 m distance). The clustering of these profiles and the dominance by a single DGGE band corresponded to the part of the aquifer where organic micropollutants and reactive dissolved organic matter were attenuated at relatively high rates.


Environmental Microbiology | 2011

Molecular diversity and distribution of aromatic hydrocarbon-degrading anaerobes across a landfill leachate plume

Martijn Staats; M. Braster; Wilfred F.M. Röling

Natural attenuation of the mono-aromates benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene and xylene occurs under iron-reducing conditions in a leachate-contaminated aquifer near the Banisveld landfill, the Netherlands. The diversity of mono-aromate-degrading microorganisms was studied by targeting functional genes encoding benzylsuccinate synthase α-subunit (bssA) and 6-oxocyclohex-1-ene-1-carbonyl-CoA hydrolase (bamA). Sixty-four bssA and 188 bamA variants were sequenced from groundwater sampled along the pollution plume in 1999 and 2004. Species containing bssA sequences closest affiliated (> 91%) with the betaprotebacterium Georgfuchsia toluolica were the dominant alkylbenzene degraders (89% of bssA sequences). bssA genes were found at more than 10-fold lower copy numbers than bamA genes, of which only a small fraction (< 2%) was closely related to the genes of Georgfuchsia. bamA gene diversity was high and bamA-based community composition was primarily affected by dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and ferrous iron concentrations. bamA sequences closest related to Geobacteraceae were dominantly (43.2%) observed and the presence of Geobacteraceae-related bamA sequences was associated with DOC. Our results indicate a key role for specialized Georgfuchsia spp. in the degradation of alkylbenzenes, whereas Geobacteraceae are involved in degradation of aromatics other than toluene and xylene.


Antonie Van Leeuwenhoek International Journal of General and Molecular Microbiology | 1986

Modeling of microbial substrate conversion, growth and product formation in a recycling fermentor

H. W. van Verseveld; J. A. de Hollander; J. Frankena; M. Braster; Frans J. Leeuwerik; A. H. Stouthamer

Paracoccus denitrificans and Bacillus licheniformis were grown in a carbon- and energy source-limited recycling fermentor with 100% biomass feedback. Experimental data for biomass accumulation and product formation as well as rates of carbon dioxide evolution and oxygen consumption were used in a parameter optimization procedure. This procedure was applied on a model which describes biomass growth as a linear function of the substrate consumption rate and the rate of product formation as a linear function of the biomass growth rate. The fitting procedure yielded two growth domains for P. denitrificans. In the first domain the values for the maximal growth yield and the maintenance coefficient were identical to those found in a series of chemostat experiments. The second domain could be described best with linear biomass increase, which is equal to a constant growth yield. Experimental data of a protease producing B. licheniformis also yielded two growth domains via the fitting procedure. Again, in the first domain, maximal growth yield and maintenance requirements were not significantly different from those derived from a series of chemostat experiments. Domain 2 behaviour was different from that observed with P. denitrificans. Product formation halts and more glucose becomes available for biomass formation, and consequently the specific growth rate increases in the shift from domain 1 to 2. It is concluded that for many industrial production processes, it is important to select organisms on the basis of a low maintenance coefficient and a high basic production of the desired product. It seems less important that the maximal production becomes optimized, which is the basis of most selection procedures.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2008

Eukaryotic Diversity in an Anaerobic Aquifer Polluted with Landfill Leachate

Traian Brad; M. Braster; Boris M. van Breukelen; Nico M. van Straalen; Wilfred F.M. Röling

ABSTRACT Eukaryotes may influence pollutant degradation processes in groundwater ecosystems by activities such as predation on bacteria and recycling of nutrients. Culture-independent community profiling and phylogenetic analysis of 18S rRNA gene fragments, as well as culturing, were employed to obtain insight into the sediment-associated eukaryotic community composition in an anaerobic sandy aquifer polluted with landfill leachate (Banisveld, The Netherlands). The microeukaryotic community at a depth of 1 to 5 m below the surface along a transect downgradient (21 to 68 m) from the landfill and at a clean reference location was diverse. Fungal sequences dominated most clone libraries. The fungal diversity was high, and most sequences were sequences of yeasts of the Basidiomycota. Sequences of green algae (Chlorophyta) were detected in parts of the aquifer close (<30 m) to the landfill. The bacterium-predating nanoflagellate Heteromita globosa (Cercozoa) was retrieved in enrichments, and its sequences dominated the clone library derived from the polluted aquifer at a depth of 5 m at a location 21 m downgradient from the landfill. The number of culturable eukaryotes ranged from 102 to 103 cells/g sediment. Culture-independent quantification revealed slightly higher numbers. Groundwater mesofauna was not detected. We concluded that the food chain in this polluted aquifer is short and consists of prokaryotes and fungi as decomposers of organic matter and protists as primary consumers of the prokaryotes.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2012

The influence of long-term copper contaminated agricultural soil at different pH levels on microbial communities and springtail transcriptional regulation.

T.E. de Boer; N. Tas; M. Braster; E.J.M. Temminghoff; Wilfred F.M. Röling; Dick Roelofs

Copper has long been applied for agricultural practises. Like other metals, copper is highly persistent in the environment and biologically active long after its use has ceased. Here we present a unique study on the long-term effects (27 years) of copper and pH on soil microbial communities and on the springtail Folsomia candida an important representative of the soil macrofauna, in an experiment with a full factorial, random block design. Bacterial communities were mostly affected by pH. These effects were prominent in Acidobacteria, while Actinobacteria and Gammaroteobacteria communities were affected by original and bioavailable copper. Reproduction and survival of the collembolan F. candida was not affected by the studied copper concentrations. However, the transcriptomic responses to copper reflected a mechanism of copper transport and detoxification, while pH exerted effects on nucleotide and protein metabolism and (acute) inflammatory response. We conclude that microbial community structure reflected the history of copper contamination, while gene expression analysis of F. candida is associated with the current level of bioavailable copper. The study is a first step in the development of a molecular strategy aiming at a more comprehensive assessment of various aspects of soil quality and ecotoxicology.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2001

Microorganisms with a Taste for Vanilla: Microbial Ecology of Traditional Indonesian Vanilla Curing

Wilfred F.M. Röling; J. Kerler; M. Braster; Anton Apriyantono; H. Stam; H. W. van Verseveld

ABSTRACT The microbial ecology of traditional postharvesting processing of vanilla beans (curing) was examined using a polyphasic approach consisting of conventional cultivation, substrate utilization-based and molecular identification of isolates, and cultivation-independent community profiling by 16S ribosomal DNA based PCR-denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis. At two different locations, a batch of curing beans was monitored. In both batches a major shift in microbial communities occurred after short-term scalding of the beans in hot water. Fungi and yeast disappeared, although regrowth of fungi occurred in one batch during a period in which process conditions were temporarily not optimal. Conventional plating showed that microbial communities consisting of thermophilic and thermotolerant bacilli (mainly closely related to Bacillus subtilis, B. licheniformis,, and B. smithii) developed under the high temperatures (up to 65°C) that were maintained for over a week after scalding. Only small changes in the communities of culturable bacteria occurred after this period. Molecular analysis revealed that a proportion of the microbial communities could not be cultured on conventional agar medium, especially during the high-temperature period. Large differences between both batches were observed in the numbers of microorganisms, in species composition, and in the enzymatic abilities of isolated bacteria. These large differences indicate that the effects of microbial activities on the development of vanilla flavor could be different for each batch of cured vanilla beans.

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Anniet M. Laverman

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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B. Lin

VU University Amsterdam

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J. Groen

VU University Amsterdam

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Boris M. van Breukelen

Delft University of Technology

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