Timo Sipilä
University of Helsinki
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Publication
Featured researches published by Timo Sipilä.
The ISME Journal | 2008
Timo Sipilä; Anna-Kaisa Keskinen; Marja-Leena Åkerman; Kielo Haahtela; Kim Yrjälä
Genes encoding key enzymes of catabolic pathways can be targeted by DNA fingerprinting to explore genetic degradation potential in pristine and polluted soils. We performed a greenhouse microcosm experiment to elucidate structural and functional bacterial diversity in polyaromatic hydrocarbon (PAH)-polluted soil and to test the suitability of birch (Betula pendula) for remediation. Degradation of PAHs was analysed by high-performance liquid chromatography, DNA isolated from soil amplified and fingerprinted by restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) and terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP). Bacterial 16S rRNA T-RFLP fingerprinting revealed a high structural bacterial diversity in soil where PAH amendment altered the general community structure as well as the rhizosphere community. Birch augmented extradiol dioxygenase diversity in rhizosphere showing a rhizosphere effect, and further pyrene was more efficiently degraded in planted pots. Degraders of aromatic compounds upon PAH amendment were shown by the changed extradiol ring-cleavage community structure in soil. The RFLP analysis grouped extradiol dioxygenase marker genes into 17 distinct operational taxonomic units displaying novel phylogenetic clusters of ring-cleavage dioxygenases representing putative catabolic pathways, and the peptide sequences contained conserved amino-acid signatures of extradiol dioxygenases. A branch of major environmental TS cluster was identified as being related to Parvibaculum lavantivorans ring-cleavage dioxygenase. The described structural and functional diversity demonstrated a complex interplay of bacteria in PAH pollution. The findings improve our understanding of rhizoremediation and unveil the extent of uncharacterized enzymes and may benefit bioremediation research by facilitating the development of molecular tools to detect and monitor populations involved in degradative processes.
Environmental Pollution | 2010
Kim Yrjälä; Anna-Kaisa Keskinen; Marja-Leena Åkerman; Timo Sipilä
To reveal the degradation capacity of bacteria in PAH polluted soil and rhizosphere we combined bacterial extradiol ring-cleavage dioxygenase and 16S rRNA analysis in Betula pubescens rhizoremediation. Characterisation of the functional bacterial community by RFLP revealed novel environmental dioxygenases, and their putative hosts were studied by 16S rRNA amplification. Plant rhizosphere and PAH amendment effects were detected by the RFLP/T-RFLP analysis. Functional species richness increased in the birch rhizosphere and PAH amendment impacted the compositional diversity of the dioxygenases and the structural 16S rRNA community. A shift from an Acidobacteria and Verrucomicrobia dominated to an Alpha- and Betaproteobacteria dominated community structure was detected in polluted soil. Clone sequence analysis indicated catabolic significance of Burkholderia in PAH polluted soil. These results advance our understanding of rhizoremediation and unveil the extent of uncharacterized functional bacteria to benefit bioremediation by facilitating the development of the molecular tool box to monitor bacterial populations in biodegradation.
Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2012
Timo Sipilä; Kim Yrjälä; Laura Alakukku; Ansa Palojärvi
ABSTRACT The exploitation of soil ecosystem services by agricultural management strategies requires knowledge of microbial communities in different management regimes. Crop cover by no-till management protects the soil surface, reducing the risk of erosion and nutrient leaching, but might increase straw residue-borne and soilborne plant-pathogenic fungi. A cross-site study of soil microbial communities and Fusarium fungistasis was conducted on six long-term agricultural fields with no-till and moldboard-plowed treatments. Microbial communities were studied at the topsoil surface (0 to 5 cm) and bottom (10 to 20 cm) by general bacterial and actinobacterial terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP) and phospholipid fatty acid (PLFA) analyses. Fusarium culmorum soil fungistasis describing soil receptivity to plant-pathogenic fungi was explored by using the surface layer method. Soil depth had a significant impact on general bacterial as well as actinobacterial communities and PLFA profiles in no-till treatment, with a clear spatial distinction of communities (P < 0.05), whereas the depth-related separation of microbial communities was not observed in plowed fields. The fungal biomass was higher in no-till surface soil than in plowed soil (P < 0.07). Soil total microbial biomass and fungal biomass correlated with fungistasis (P < 0.02 for the sum of PLFAs; P < 0.001 for PLFA 18:2ω6). Our cross-site study demonstrated that agricultural management strategies can have a major impact on soil microbial community structures, indicating that it is possible to influence the soil processes with management decisions. The interactions between plant-pathogenic fungi and soil microbial communities are multifaceted, and a high level of fungistasis could be linked to the high microbial biomass in soil but not to the specific management strategy.
Nature Genetics | 2017
Jarkko Salojärvi; Olli Pekka Smolander; Kaisa Nieminen; Sitaram Rajaraman; Omid Safronov; Pezhman Safdari; Airi Lamminmäki; Juha Immanen; Tianying Lan; Jaakko Tanskanen; Pasi Rastas; Ali Amiryousefi; Balamuralikrishna Jayaprakash; Juhana Kammonen; Risto Hagqvist; Gugan Eswaran; Viivi Ahonen; Juan Antonio Alonso Serra; Fred O. Asiegbu; Juan de Dios Barajas-Lopez; Daniel Blande; Olga Blokhina; Tiina Blomster; Suvi K. Broholm; Mikael Brosché; Fuqiang Cui; Chris Dardick; Sanna Ehonen; Paula Elomaa; Sacha Escamez
Silver birch (Betula pendula) is a pioneer boreal tree that can be induced to flower within 1 year. Its rapid life cycle, small (440-Mb) genome, and advanced germplasm resources make birch an attractive model for forest biotechnology. We assembled and chromosomally anchored the nuclear genome of an inbred B. pendula individual. Gene duplicates from the paleohexaploid event were enriched for transcriptional regulation, whereas tandem duplicates were overrepresented by environmental responses. Population resequencing of 80 individuals showed effective population size crashes at major points of climatic upheaval. Selective sweeps were enriched among polyploid duplicates encoding key developmental and physiological triggering functions, suggesting that local adaptation has tuned the timing of and cross-talk between fundamental plant processes. Variation around the tightly-linked light response genes PHYC and FRS10 correlated with latitude and longitude and temperature, and with precipitation for PHYC. Similar associations characterized the growth-promoting cytokinin response regulator ARR1, and the wood development genes KAK and MED5A.
Environmental Pollution | 2009
Arja Tervahauta; Marjo Tuomainen; Marja-Leena Åkerman; Kimmo Rantalainen; Timo Sipilä; Satu J. Lehesranta; Kaisa M. Koistinen; Sirpa Kärenlampi; Kim Yrjälä
Two birch clones originating from metal-contaminated sites were exposed for 3 months to soils (sand-peat ratio 1:1 or 4:1) spiked with a mixture of polyaromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs; anthracene, fluoranthene, phenanthrene, pyrene). PAH degradation differed between the two birch clones and also by the soil type. The statistically most significant elimination (p < or = 0.01), i.e. 88% of total PAHs, was observed in the more sandy soil planted with birch, the clearest positive effect being found with Betula pubescens clone on phenanthrene. PAHs and soil composition had rather small effects on birch protein complement. Three proteins with clonal differences were identified: ferritin-like protein, auxin-induced protein and peroxidase. Differences in planted and non-planted soils were detected in bacterial communities by 16S rRNA T-RFLP, and the overall bacterial community structures were diverse. Even though both represent complex systems, trees and rhizoidal microbes in combination can provide interesting possibilities for bioremediation of PAH-polluted soils.
Molecular Ecology | 2015
Shinjini Mukherjee; Timo Sipilä; Pertti Pulkkinen; Kim Yrjälä
Poplars have widely been used for rhizoremediation of a broad range of organic contaminants for the past two decades. Still, there is a knowledge gap regarding the rhizosphere‐associated bacterial communities of poplars and their dynamics during the remediation process. It is envisaged that a detailed understanding of rhizosphere‐associated microbial populations will greatly contribute to a better design and implementation of rhizoremediation. To investigate the long‐term succession of structural and catabolic bacterial communities in oil‐polluted soil planted with hybrid poplar, we carried out a 2‐year field study. Hybrid aspen (Populus tremula × Populus tremuloides) seedlings were planted in polluted soil excavated from an accidental oil‐spill site. Vegetated and un‐vegetated soil samples were collected for microbial community analyses at seven different time points during the course of 2 years and sampling time points were chosen to cover the seasonal variation in the boreal climate zone. Bacterial community structure was accessed by means of 16S rRNA gene amplicon pyrosequencing, whereas catabolic diversity was monitored by pyrosequencing of alkane hydroxylase and extradiol dioxygenase genes. We observed a clear succession of bacterial communities on both structural and functional levels from early to late‐phase communities. Sphingomonas type extradiol dioxygenases and alkane hydroxylase homologs of Rhodococcus clearly dominated the early‐phase communities. The high‐dominance/low‐diversity functional gene communities underwent a transition to low‐dominance/high‐diversity communities in the late phase. These results pointed towards increased catabolic capacities and a change from specialist to generalist strategy of bacterial communities during the course of secondary succession.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Kai Wang; Timo Sipilä; Kirk Overmyer
The genetic model plant Arabidopsis thaliana (arabidopsis) has been instrumental to recent advances in our understanding of the molecular function of the plant immune system. However, this work has not yet included plant associated and phytopathogenic yeasts largely due to a lack of yeast species known to interact with arabidopsis. The plant phylloplane is a significant habitat for neutral-residents, plant-growth and health-promoting species, and latent-pathogenic species. However, yeast phylloplane residents of arabidopsis remain underexplored. To address this, resident yeasts from the phyllosphere of wild arabidopsis collected in field conditions have been isolated and characterized. A total of 95 yeast strains representing 23 species in 9 genera were discovered, including potentially psychrophilic and pathogenic strains. Physiological characterization revealed thermotolerance profiles, sensitivity to the arabidopsis phytoalexin camalexin, the production of indolic compounds, and the ability to activate auxin responses in planta. These results indicate a rich diversity of yeasts present in the arabidopsis phylloplane and have created culture resources and information useful in the development of model systems for arabidopsis-yeast interactions.
Archive | 2017
Kim Yrjälä; Timo Sipilä; Shinjini Mukherjee
Rhizoremediation has become increasingly interesting as it offers several solutions to environmental problems by making use of plants. The International Phytotechnology Society (http://phytosociety.org/) defines phytotechnology as the strategic use of plants to solve environmental problems by remediating the qualities and quantities of our soil, water, and air resources and by restoring ecosystem services in managed landscapes. Plants always interact with belowground microbes, bacteria, fungi, and archaea, and even aboveground epi/endophytic microbes. The recent adoption of omics techniques has led to much widened understanding of soil microbial communities, and conditions that promote predictable activity in contaminated soils with effects on plants. These methods have in microbial ecology brought out new concepts like plant microbiome describing the wide array of microorganisms living and interacting in different ways with the plant. The identification of increasing numbers of microbes associated with plants helps to notify new functional groups of microbes that are and become important for applications of phytotechnology. In the boreal cold climate freezing and thawing of soil occurs, which shapes the active microbial communities in a peculiar way. Also in the cold season soil, microbes perform tasks important for ecosystem functioning. The plants create a suitable environment for microbes especially in the rhizosphere where root exudates are excellent food for microbes in the vicinity of roots. Woody plants have received increased attention, especially poplars (Populus spp.), when it was recognized that they can reduce the level of trichloroethylenes in soil with the help of endophytes. Poplars have successfully been used for rhizoremediation of petroleum and other hydrocarbon compounds.
Analytical Biochemistry | 2015
Juhana Kammonen; Olli-Pekka Smolander; Timo Sipilä; Kirk Overmyer; Petri Auvinen; Lars Paulin
The standard digestion-ligation cloning method enables synthesis of large amounts of complementary DNA (cDNA) from a model organism facilitating study of the transcriptome. Here, we used cDNA amplification of the dimorphic yeast Taphrina betulina as an example of how a library construction protocol can significantly increase sequencing throughput. Two modification steps were introduced to the Evrogen standard Mint-2 protocol to improve its suitability for next-generation sequencing projects. We performed two partial Illumina MiSeq sequencing runs with the modified protocol: one with and one without biotin-purified primers. The results demonstrated that biotinylated libraries increased both accuracy and throughput of the modified protocol. Moreover, our sequencing results indicate that a sequence-specific miscall may affect the output of Illuminas MiSeq platform.
Boreal Environment Research | 2010
Kim Yrjälä; Giulia Mancano; Marja-Leena Åkerman; Timo Sipilä