Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where N. V. Pimenov is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by N. V. Pimenov.


Microbiology | 2000

Microbiological Processes of the Carbon and Sulfur Cycles at Cold Methane Seeps of the North Atlantic

N. V. Pimenov; Alexander S Savvichev; Igor I Rusanov; A. Yu. Lein; M. V. Ivanov

Functioning of microbial communities in surface sediments of the Haakon Mosby underwater mud volcano (lat. 72°N) and in gas seepage fields of the Vestnesa Ridge was investigated using Mir-1 and Mir-2 deep-sea submersibles during the 40th voyage of the research vessel Academician Mstislav Keldysh. Large areas of sedimentary deposits of the Haakon Mosby mud volcano (HMMV) and pockmarks of the Vestnesa Ridge (VR) are covered with bacterial mats 0.1 to 0.5 cm thick. The microbial community making up bacterial mats of the HMMV was dominated by large filamentous bacteria with filaments measuring up to 100 μm in length and 2 to 8 μm in width. The occurrence of rosettes allowed the observed filamentous bacteria to be referred to the morphologically similar genera Leucothrix or Thiothrix. Three morphological types of filamentous bacteria were identified in bacterial mats covering VR pockmarks. Filaments of type one are morphologically similar with representatives of the genera Thioploca or Desmanthos. Type two filaments had numerous inclusions of sulfur and resembled representatives of the genus Thiothrix. The third morphological type was constituted by single filaments made up of tightly connected disk-like cells and can be assigned to the genus Beggiatoa. The rates of methane oxidation (up to 1570 μl C/(dm3 day)) and sulfate reduction (up to 17 mg S/(dm3day)) measured in the surface sediments of HMMV and VR were close to the maximum rates of these processes observed in heavily polluted regions of the northwestern shelf of the Black Sea. High rates of microbiological processes correlated with the high number of bacteria. The rate of methane production in sediments studied was notably lower and ranged from 0.1 to 3.5 μ CH4/(dm3 day). Large areas of the HMMV caldera were populated by pogonophoras, represented by the two species Sclerolinum sp. and Oligobrachia sp. The mass development of Sclerolinum sp. in the HMMV caldera was by the activity of aerobic methane-oxidizing bacteria localized inside the cells of these animals. Bacterial cells were also found in the trophosome tissue of Oligobrachia sp., but in cells of these bacteria, we did not observe the membrane structures typical of methanotrophs. The localization pattern of pogonophoras on the surface of reduced sediments suggests that the predominant bacteria in Oligobrachia tissues are sulfur-oxidizing endosymbionts.


Microbiology | 2002

Geochemical peculiarities of the carbonate constructions formed during microbial oxidation of methane under anaerobic conditions

A. Yu. Lein; M. V. Ivanov; N. V. Pimenov; M. B. Gulin

The aragonite constructions of the Black Sea are formed in a stable anaerobic zone and are a perfect object to study the natural mechanism of anaerobic methane oxidation. The most probable pathway of methane oxidation is its methanogen-mediated reaction with bicarbonates, dissolved in seawater, with the formation of water and acetate, which is then consumed by other components of the anaerobic community. Comparison of the δ13C values of carbonate minerals and organic matter once more demonstrated that the formation of the organic matter of biomass is accompanied by intense fractionation of carbon isotopes, as a result of which the total organic matter of biomass acquires an extremely light isotopic composition, characterized by δ13C values as low as –83.8‰.


Microbiology | 2003

Microbial Processes of the Carbon and Sulfur Cycles in Lake Shira (Khakasia)

N. V. Pimenov; Igor I Rusanov; Olga V. Karnachuk; D. Yu. Rogozin; I. A. Bryantseva; O. N. Lunina; S. K. Yusupov; V. P. Parnachev; M. V. Ivanov

Microbiological and biogeochemical studies of the meromictic saline Lake Shira (Khakasia) were conducted. In the upper part of the hydrogen-sulfide zone, at a depth of 13.5–14 m, there was a pale pink layer of water due to the development of purple bacteria (6 × 105 cells/ml), which were assigned by their morphological and spectral characteristics toLamprocystis purpurea (formerly Amoebobacter purpureus). In August, the production of organic matter (OM) in Lake Shira was estimated to be 943 mg C/(m2day). The contribution of anoxygenic photosynthesis was insignificant (about 7% of the total OM production). The share of bacterial chemosynthesis was still less (no more than 2%). In the anaerobic zone, the community of sulfate-reducing bacteria played a decisive role in the terminal decomposition of OM. The maximal rates of sulfate reduction were observed in the near-bottom water (114 μg S/(l day)) and in the surface layer of bottom sediments (901 μg S/(dm3 day)). The daily expenditure of Corg for sulfate reduction was 73% of Corg formed daily in the processes of oxygenic and anoxygenic photosynthesis and bacterial chemosynthesis. The profile of methane distribution in the water column and bottom sediments was typical of meromictic reservoirs. The methane content in the water column increased beginning with the thermocline (7–8 m) and reached maximum values in the near-bottom water (17 μl/l). In bottom sediments, the greatest methane concentrations (57 μl/l) were observed in the surface layer (0–3 cm). The integral rate of methane formation in the water column and bottom sediments was almost an order of magnitude higher than the rate of its oxidation by aerobic and anaerobic methanotrophic microorganisms.


Microbiology | 2002

Utilization of methane and carbon dioxide by symbiotrophic bacteria in gills of Mytilidae (Bathymodiolus) from the Rainbow and Logachev hydrothermal fields on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge

N. V. Pimenov; Marina G. Kalyuzhnaya; V. N. Khmelenina; L. L. Mityushina; Yu. A. Trotsenko

Bivalve mollusks Bathymodiolus asoricus and Bathymodiolus puteoserpentis collected from the Rainbow and Logachev hydrothermal fields during dives of the Mir 1 and Mir 2 deep-sea manned submersibles were studied. Rates of methane oxidation and carbon dioxide assimilation in mussel gill tissue were determined by radiolabel analysis. During oxidation of 14CH4, radiocarbon was detected in significant quantities not only in carbon dioxide but also in dissolved organic matter, most notably 14C-formate and 14C-acetate, occurring in a 2 : 1 ratio. Activities of hexulose-phosphate synthase, phosphoribulokinase, and ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase were shown in the soluble fraction of gill tissue cells. At the same time, no activity of hydroxypyruvate reductase—the key enzyme of the serine pathway of C1-assimilation—was detected. The results of PCR amplification using genetic probes for membrane-bound methane monooxygenase (pmoA) and methanol dehydrogenase (mxaF) attest to the presence of the genes of these enzymes in the total DNA extracted from gill samples. However, no appropriate PCR responses were obtained with the mmoX primer system, which is a marker for soluble methane monooxygenase. All samples studied showed amplification with primers for the genera Methylobacter and Methylosphaera. At the same time, no genes specific to the genera Methylomonas, Methylococcus, Methylomicrobium, or MethylosinusandMethylocystis were detected. Electron microscopic examinations revealed the presence of two groups of endosymbiotic bacteria in the mussel gill tissue. The first group was represented by large cells possessing a complex system of cytoplasmic membranes, typical of methanotrophs of morphotype I. The other type of endosymbionts, having much smaller cells and lacking intracellular membrane structures, is likely to be constituted by sulfur bacteria.


Microbiology | 2007

[Seasonal changes in the structure of the anoxygenic photosynthetic bacterial community in Lake Shunet, Khakassia].

O. N. Lunina; I. A. Bryantseva; V. N. Akimov; Igor I Rusanov; D. Yu. Rogozin; E. S. Barinova; Anatoly M. Lysenko; N. V. Pimenov

Seasonal studies of the anoxygenic phototrophic bacterial community of the water column of the saline eutrophic meromictic Lake Shunet (Khakassia) were performed in 2002 (June) and 2003 (February–March and August). From the redox zone down, the lake water was of dark green color. Green sulfur bacteria predominated in every season. The maximum number of green sulfur bacteria was 107 cells/ml in summer and 106 cells/ml in winter. A multi-syringe stratification sampler was applied for the study of the fine vertical distribution of phototrophs in August 2003; the sampling was performed every 5 cm. A 5-cm-thick pink-colored water layer inhabited by purple sulfur bacteria was shown to be located above the layer of green bacteria. The species composition and ratio of purple bacterial species depended on the sampling depth and on the season. In summer, the number of purple sulfur bacteria in the layer of pink water was 1.6 × 108 cells/ml. Their number in winter was 3 × 105 cells/ml. In the upper oxygen-containing layer of the chemocline the cells of purple nonsulfur bacteria were detected in summer. The maximum number of nonsulfur purple bacteria, 5 × 102 cells/ml, was recorded in August 2003. According to the results of the phylogenetic analysis of pure cultures of the isolated phototrophic bacteria, which were based on 16S rDNA sequencing, green sulfur bacteria were close to Prosthecochloris vibrioformis, purple sulfur bacteria, to Thiocapsa and Halochromatium species, and purple nonsulfur bacteria, to Rhodovulum euryhalinum and Pinkicyclus mahoneyensis.


Microbiology | 2000

Microbial processes at the aerobic-anaerobic interface in the deep-water zone of the black sea

N. V. Pimenov; Igor I Rusanov; S. K. Yusupov; J. Fridrich; A. Yu. Lein; Bernhard Wehrli; M. V. Ivanov

Chemical and key microbiological processes (assimilation of carbon dioxide, oxidation and formation of methane, and sulfate reduction) occurring at the aerobic-anaerobic interface in the deep-water zone of the Black Sea were investigated. Measurements were taken at depths from 90 to 300 m at intervals of 5–10 m. The integral rate of the dark assimilation of carbon dioxide varied from 120 to 207 mg C/(m2 day) with a maximum at the boundary of cyclonic currents. The organic matter (OM) formed from methane comprised less than 5% of the OM formed from carbon dioxide. A comparison between the rates of methane oxidation and methane production suggests that methane that is oxidized at depths from 100 to 300 m was formed in deeper water horizons. The maximum rate of sulfate reduction (1230 mg S/(m2 day)) was observed in the western halistatic region, and the minimum rate (490 mg S/(m2 day)), in the eastern halistatic region. The average rate of hydrogen sulfide production measured at three deep-sea stations amounted to 755 mg S/(m2 day), or 276 g S/(m2 year).


Microbiology | 2006

Distribution, diversity, and activity of sulfate-reducing bacteria in the water column in Gek-Gel Lake, Azerbaijan

Olga V. Karnachuk; N. V. Pimenov; S. K. Yusupov; Yu. A. Frank; Ya. A. Puhakka; M. V. Ivanov

The distribution and activity of sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) in the water column of the alpine meromictic Gek-Gel lake were studied. Apart from traditional microbiological methods based on cultivation and on measuring the process rates with radioactive labels, in situ fluorescent hybridization (FISH) was used, which enables identification and quantification without cultivating organisms. The peak rate of sulfate reduction, 0.486 µg S 1−1 day−1, was found in the chemocline at 33 m. The peak SRB number of 2.5×106 cells/ml, as determined by the most probable number method on selective media, was found at the same depth. The phylogenetic affiliation of the SRB, as determined by FISH, revealed the predominance of the Desulfovibrio spp., Desulfobulbus spp., and Desulfoarculus spp./Desulfomonile spp. groups. The numbers of spore-forming Desulfotomaculum spp. increased with depth. The low measured rates of sulfate reduction accompanied by high SRB numbers and the predominance of the groups capable of reducing a wide range of substrates permit us to assume utilization of electron acceptors other than sulfate as the main activity of the SRB in the water column.


Microbiology | 2005

Microbiological and isotopic-geochemical investigations of meromictic lakes in Khakasia in winter

Alexander S Savvichev; Igor I Rusanov; D. Yu. Rogozin; E. E. Zakharova; O. N. Lunina; I. A. Bryantseva; S. K. Yusupov; N. V. Pimenov; A. G. Degermendzhi; M. V. Ivanov

Microbiological and isotopic-geochemical investigations of the brackish meromictic lakes Shira and Shunet were performed in the steppe region of Khakasia in winter. Measurements made with a submersed sensor demonstrated that one-meter ice transmits light in a quantity sufficient for oxygenic and anoxygenic photosynthesis. As in the summer season, in the community of phototrophic bacteria found in Lake Shira, the purple sulfur bacteria Amoebobacter purpureus dominated, whereas, in Lake Shunet, the green sulfur bacteria Pelodictyon luteolum were predominant. Photosynthetic production, measured using the radioisotopic method, was several times lower than that in summer. The rates of sulfate reduction and production and oxidation of methane in the water column and bottom sediments were also lower than those recorded in summer. The process of anaerobic methane oxidation in the sediments was an exception, being more intense in winter than in summer. The data from radioisotopic measurements of the rates of microbial processes correlate well with the results of determination of the isotopic composition of organic and mineral carbon (δ13C) and hydrogen sulfide and sulfate (δ34S) and suggest considerable seasonal variations in the activity of the microbial community in the water bodies investigated.


Microbiology | 2009

Bacteria of the sulfur cycle in the sediments of gold mine tailings, Kuznetsk Basin, Russia

Olga V. Karnachuk; Anna L. Gerasimchuk; David Banks; Bjørn Frengstad; G. A. Stykon; Z. L. Tikhonova; A. Kaksonen; J. Puhakka; A. S. Yanenko; N. V. Pimenov

The number and diversity of culturable microorganisms involved in sulfur oxidation and sulfate reduction were investigated in the oxidized sediments of gold mine tailings, Kuznetsk Basin, Russia. The sediments had a low pH (2.4–2.8), high SO42− content (up to 22 g/l), and high concentrations of dissolved metals. The arsenic content was as high as 1.9 g/l. Bacterial phylogeny in microcosms was investigated by amplification of 16S rRNA gene fragments with subsequent denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE). Spore-forming bacteria Desulfosporosinus were the only bacteria revealed for which the capacity for dissimilatory sulfate reduction is known. Strain Desulfosporosinus sp. DB was obtained in pure culture, and it was phylogenetically remote from other cultured and uncultured members of the genus. No sulfate-reducing members of the Deltaproteobacteria were detected. The Firmicutes members were the most numerous phylotypes in the microcosms, including a separate cluster with the similarity to Pelotomaculum not exceeding 94%. Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans and A. caldus were found in anaerobic and microaerophilic microcosms. The number of sulfate reducers did not exceed 9.5 × 102 cells/ml.


Microbiology | 2006

Phylogenetic characterization of endosymbionts of the hydrothermal vent mussel Bathymodiolus azoricus by analysis of the 16S rRNA, cbbL, and pmoA genes

E. M. Spiridonova; B. B. Kuznetsov; N. V. Pimenov; T. P. Tourova

In order to assess the phylogenetic diversity of the endosymbiotic microbial community of the gills of marine bivalve Bathymodiolus azoricus, total DNA was extracted from the gills. The PCR fragments corresponding to the genes encoding 16S rRNA, ribulose-bisphosphate carboxylase (cbbL), and particulate methane monooxygenase (pmoA) were amplified, cloned, and sequenced. For the 16S rDNA genes, only one phylotype was revealed; it belonged to the cluster of thiotrophic mytilid’s symbionts within the Gammaproteobacteria. For the RuBisCO genes, two phylotypes were found, both belonging to Gammaproteobacteria. One of them was closely related to the previously known mytilid symbiont, the other, to a pogonophore symbiont, presumably a methanotrophic bacterium. One phylotype of particulate methane oxygenase genes was also revealed; this finding indicated the presence of a methanotrophic symbiont. Phylogenetic analysis of the pmoA placed this endosymbiont within the Gammaproteobacteria, in a cluster including the methanotrophic bacterial genus Methylobacter and other methanotrophic Bathymodiolus gill symbionts. These results provide evidence for the existence of two types of endosymbionts (thioautotrophic and methanotrophic) in the gills of B. azoricus and demonstrate that, apart from the phylogenetic analysis of 16S rRNA genes, parallel analysis of functional genes is essential.

Collaboration


Dive into the N. V. Pimenov's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Igor I Rusanov

Russian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M. V. Ivanov

Russian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A. Yu. Lein

Shirshov Institute of Oceanology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

S. K. Yusupov

Russian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A. Yu. Kallistova

Russian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M. V. Kevbrina

Russian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

O. N. Lunina

Russian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

T. A. Kanapatskii

Russian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge