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Dive into the research topics where Ulrich Nübel is active.

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Featured researches published by Ulrich Nübel.


Archives of Microbiology | 1998

The phylogeny of unicellular, extremely halotolerant cyanobacteria

Ferran Garcia-Pichel; Ulrich Nübel; Gerard Muyzer

Abstract We examined the morphology, physiology, and 16S rRNA gene sequences of three culture collection strains and of ten novel isolates of unicellular cyanobacteria from hypersaline environments. The strains were morphologically diverse, with average cell widths ranging from 2.8 to 10.3 μm. There were single-celled, colonial, and baeocyte-forming strains. However, morphological traits were markedly variable with culture conditions. In contrast, all strains displayed extreme halotolerance (growing close to optimally at above 12% salinity); all were obligately marine, euryhaline, and moderately thermophilic; and all shared a suite of chemotaxonomic markers including phycobilins, carotenoids, and mycosporine-like amino acids. 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis indicated that the strains were related to each other. Sequence similarity analysis placed the strains in a monophyletic cluster (which we named the Halothece cluster) apart from all cultured or uncultured, not extremely halotolerant cyanobacteria whose 16S rRNA gene sequences are available in public nucleotide sequence databases. This represents the first case in which a phylogenetically coherent group of cyanobacteria can be defined on the basis of physiology. The Halothece cluster contained two subclusters that may be divergent at the generic level, one encompassing 12 strains (spanning 5% 16S rRNA gene sequence divergence and named the Euhalothece subcluster), and a single deep-branching isolate. Phenotypic characterization of the isolates, including morphological, physiological, and chemotaxonomic traits, did not distinguish these subclusters and only weakly suggested the existence of two separate clades, one encompassing strains of small cell size (cell width < 5 m) and another one encompassing strains of larger cell size.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2001

Predator-Specific Enrichment of Actinobacteria from a Cosmopolitan Freshwater Clade in Mixed Continuous Culture

Jakob Pernthaler; Thomas Posch; Karel Šimek; Jaroslav Vrba; Annelie Pernthaler; Frank Oliver Glöckner; Ulrich Nübel; Roland Psenner; Rudolf Amann

ABSTRACT We investigated whether individual populations of freshwater bacteria in mixed experimental communities may exhibit specific responses to the presence of different bacterivorous protists. In two successive experiments, a two-stage continuous cultivation system was inoculated with nonaxenic batch cultures of the cryptophyteCryptomonas sp. Algal exudates provided the sole source of organic carbon for growth of the accompanying microflora. The dynamics of several 16S rRNA-defined bacterial populations were followed in the experimental communities. Although the composition and stability of the two microbial communities differed, numerous members of the first assemblage could again be detected during the second experiment. The introduction of a size-selectively feeding mixotrophic nanoflagellate (Ochromonas sp.) always resulted in an immediate bloom of a single phylotype population of members of the classActinobacteria (Ac1). These bacteria were phylogenetically affiliated with an uncultured lineage of gram-positive bacteria that have been found in freshwater habitats only. The Ac1 cells were close to the average size of freshwater bacterioplankton and significantly smaller than any of the other experimental community members. In contrast, no increase of the Ac1 population was observed in vessels exposed to the bacterivorous ciliate Cyclidium glaucoma. However, when the Ochromonas sp. was added after the establishment of C. glaucoma, the proportion of population Ac1 within the microbial community rapidly increased. Populations of a beta proteobacterial phylotype related to an Aquabacteriumsp. decreased relative to the total bacterial communities following the addition of either predator, albeit to different extents. The community structure of pelagic microbial assemblages can therefore be influenced by the taxonomic composition of the predator community.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2003

Effect of Signal Compounds and Incubation Conditions on the Culturability of Freshwater Bacterioplankton

Alke Bruns; Ulrich Nübel; Heribert Cypionka; Jörg Overmann

ABSTRACT The effect of signal compounds and of different incubation conditions on the culturability (i.e., the fraction of all cells capable of growth) of natural bacterioplankton from the eutrophic lake Zwischenahner Meer was investigated over a period of 20 months. Numbers of growing cells were determined by the most-probable-number technique in liquid media containing low concentrations (10 μM) of the signal compounds N-(oxohexanoyl)-dl-homoserine lactone, N-(butyryl)-dl-homoserine lactone, cyclic AMP (cAMP), or ATP. cAMP was the most effective signal compound, leading to significantly increased cultivation efficiencies of up to 10% of the total bacterial counts. Microautoradiography with [2,8-3H]cAMP, combined with fluorescence in situ hybridization, demonstrated that cAMP was taken up by 18% of all cells. The bacterial cAMP uptake systems had a very low Km value of ≤1 nM. Analysis of the cultured bacteria by 16S rRNA gene fingerprinting showed that different bacterial phylotypes were recovered in the presence and in the absence of cAMP. Consequently, the addition of cAMP caused a stimulation of otherwise nonculturable bacteria. Phylogenetically different bacteria were also recovered at different temperatures and oxygen partial pressures. Throughout the study period, mainly members of the β-subclass of the Proteobacteria were cultivated. In addition, some members of the Actinomycetales were enriched. Quantification by culture-independent fluorescence in situ hybridization demonstrated that β-Proteobacteria and Actinomycetales also dominated the natural bacterioplankton assemblage. Sequence comparison revealed that two members of the Actinomycetales which reached high numbers in the natural bacterioplankton assemblage could actually be enriched by our cultivation approach.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2005

Diel Variations in Carbon Metabolism by Green Nonsulfur-Like Bacteria in Alkaline Siliceous Hot Spring Microbial Mats from Yellowstone National Park

Marcel T J van der Meer; Stefan Schouten; Mary M. Bateson; Ulrich Nübel; Andrea Wieland; Michael Kühl; Jan W. de Leeuw; Jaap S. Sinninghe Damsté; David M. Ward

ABSTRACT Green nonsulfur-like bacteria (GNSLB) in hot spring microbial mats are thought to be mainly photoheterotrophic, using cyanobacterial metabolites as carbon sources. However, the stable carbon isotopic composition of typical Chloroflexus and Roseiflexus lipids suggests photoautotrophic metabolism of GNSLB. One possible explanation for this apparent discrepancy might be that GNSLB fix inorganic carbon only during certain times of the day. In order to study temporal variability in carbon metabolism by GNSLB, labeling experiments with [13C]bicarbonate, [14C]bicarbonate, and [13C]acetate were performed during different times of the day. [14C]bicarbonate labeling indicated that during the morning, incorporation of label was light dependent and that both cyanobacteria and GNSLB were involved in bicarbonate uptake. 13C-labeling experiments indicated that during the morning, GNSLB incorporated labeled bicarbonate at least to the same degree as cyanobacteria. The incorporation of [13C]bicarbonate into specific lipids could be stimulated by the addition of sulfide or hydrogen, which both were present in the morning photic zone. The results suggest that GNSLB have the potential for photoautotrophic metabolism during low-light periods. In high-light periods, inorganic carbon was incorporated primarily into Cyanobacteria-specific lipids. The results of a pulse-labeling experiment were consistent with overnight transfer of label to GNSLB, which could be interrupted by the addition of unlabeled acetate and glycolate. In addition, we observed direct incorporation of [13C]acetate into GNSLB lipids in the morning. This suggests that GNSLB also have a potential for photoheterotrophy in situ.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2002

Microscopic examination of distribution and phenotypic properties of phylogenetically diverse Chloroflexaceae-related bacteria in hot spring microbial mats

Ulrich Nübel; Mary M. Bateson; Verona Vandieken; Andrea Wieland; Michael Kühl; David M. Ward

ABSTRACT We investigated the diversity, distribution, and phenotypes of uncultivated Chloroflexaceae-related bacteria in photosynthetic microbial mats of an alkaline hot spring (Mushroom Spring, Yellowstone National Park). By applying a directed PCR approach, molecular cloning, and sequence analysis of 16S rRNA genes, an unexpectedly large phylogenetic diversity among these bacteria was detected. Oligonucleotide probes were designed to target 16S rRNAs from organisms affiliated with the genus Chloroflexus or with the type C cluster, a group of previously discovered Chloroflexaceae relatives of this mat community. The application of peroxidase-labeled probes in conjunction with tyramide signal amplification enabled the identification of these organisms within the microbial mats by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) and the investigation of their morphology, abundance, and small-scale distribution. FISH was combined with oxygen microelectrode measurements, microscope spectrometry, and microautoradiography to examine their microenvironment, pigmentation, and carbon source usage. Abundant type C-related, filamentous bacteria were found to flourish within the cyanobacterium-dominated, highly oxygenated top layers and to predominate numerically in deeper orange-colored zones of the investigated microbial mats, correlating with the distribution of bacteriochlorophyll a. Chloroflexus sp. filaments were rare at 60°C but were more abundant at 70°C, where they were confined to the upper millimeter of the mat. Both type C organisms and Chloroflexus spp. were observed to assimilate radiolabeled acetate under in situ conditions.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2001

Diversity and Distribution in Hypersaline Microbial Mats of Bacteria Related to Chloroflexus spp.

Ulrich Nübel; Mary M. Bateson; Michael T. Madigan; Michael Kühl; David M. Ward

ABSTRACT Filamentous bacteria containing bacteriochlorophylls cand a were enriched from hypersaline microbial mats. Based on phylogenetic analyses of 16S rRNA gene sequences, these organisms form a previously undescribed lineage distantly related toChloroflexus spp. We developed and tested a set of PCR primers for the specific amplification of 16S rRNA genes from filamentous phototrophic bacteria within the kingdom of “green nonsulfur bacteria.” PCR products recovered from microbial mats in a saltern in Guerrero Negro, Mexico, were subjected to cloning or denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis and then sequenced. We found evidence of a high diversity of bacteria related toChloroflexus which exhibit different distributions along a gradient of salinity from 5.5 to 16%.


International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 2000

The halotolerance and phylogeny of cyanobacteria with tightly coiled trichomes (Spirulina Turpin) and the description of Halospirulina tapeticola gen. nov., sp. nov.

Ulrich Nübel; Ferran Garcia-Pichel; Gerard Muyzer

The morphologies, halotolerances, temperature requirements, pigment compositions and 16S rRNA gene sequences of five culture collection strains and six novel isolates of cyanobacteria with helical, tightly coiled trichomes were investigated. All strains were very similar morphologically and could be assigned to the genus Spirulina (or section Euspirulina sensu Geitler), according to traditional classification. However, the isolates showed significantly different requirements for salinity and temperature, which were in accordance with their respective environmental origins. The genetic divergence among the strains investigated was large. The results indicate the drastic underestimation of the physiological and phylogenetic diversity of these cyanobacteria by the current morphology-based classification and the clear need for new taxa. Three of the isolates originated from hypersaline waters and were similar with respect to their high halotolerance, broad euryhalinity and elevated temperature tolerance. By phylogenetic analyses, they were placed in a tight monophyletic cluster apart from all other cyanobacteria. Thus it is proposed to reclassify highly halotolerant cyanobacteria with tightly coiled trichomes in Halospirulina gen. nov., with the type species Halospirulina tapeticola sp. nov.


Journal of Phycology | 1999

SALINITY‐DEPENDENT LIMITATION OF PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND OXYGEN EXCHANGE IN MICROBIAL MATS

Ferran Garcia-Pichel; Michael Kühl; Ulrich Nübel; Gerard Muyzer

We used benthic flux chambers and microsensor profiling under standardized incubation conditions to compare the short‐term (hours) and long‐term (days) functional responses to salinity in eight different hypersaline microbial mats. The short‐term response of productivity to changes in salinity was specific for each community and in accordance with optimal performance at the respective salinity of origin. This pattern was lost after long‐term exposure to varying salinities when responses to salinity were found to approach a general pattern of decreasing photosynthesis and oxygen exchange capacity with increasing salinity. Exhaustive measurements of oxygen export in the light, oxygen consumption in the dark and gross photosynthesis indicated that a salinity‐dependent limitation of all three parameters occurred. Maximal values for all three parameters decreased exponentially with increasing salinity; exponential decay rates (base 10) were around 4–5 mL·g−1. The values of mats in steady state with respect to salinity tended to approach this salinity‐dependent limit. On the basis of environmental and ecophysiological data, we argue that this limitation was not caused directly by salinity effects on the microorganisms. Rather, the decreasing diffusive supply of O2 in the dark and the increasing diffusion barriers to O2 escape in the light, which intensify with increasing salinity, were likely responsible for the salinity‐dependent limitations observed.


Hydrobiologia | 1999

Spatial scale and the diversity of benthic cyanobacteria and diatoms in a salina

Ulrich Nübel; Ferran Garcia-Pichel; Michael Kühl; Gerard Muyzer

We characterized the richness of benthic cyanobacteria and diatoms in a salina system using traditional and molecular biological methods. After determining the different morphotypes and 16S rRNA genes present in various localities within this hypersaline system, an analysis of the increase of organismal richness as a function of numbers of samples considered was carried out. We found that the spatial scales of sampling yielding significant increases in cumulative richness were those at which significant variations in environmental parameters (salinity, vertical microgradients) are known to exist, indicating that the presence of environmental gradients contributes to increased biodiversity. Additionally, we could use this type of cumulative analysis for the estimation, through asymptotic extrapolation, of the total richness of oxygenic phototrophs present in the entire salina system, and for the estimation of the average degree of dissemination of community members within the system. We found interesting differences between analyses based on morphotypes or 16S rRNA genes. The cumulative number of rRNA gene sequences exceeded that of morphotypes by more than two-fold. This indicates that many organisms possessing distinct 16S rRNA gene sequences could not be distinguished on the basis of morphology. Thus, some of the apparently widely distributed morphotypes may in fact conceal several ecologically independent genotypes.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2017

glnA Truncation in Salmonella enterica Results in a Small Colony Variant Phenotype, Attenuated Host Cell Entry, and Reduced Expression of Flagellin and SPI-1-Associated Effector Genes

Philipp Aurass; Juliane Düvel; Susanne Karste; Ulrich Nübel; Wolfgang Rabsch; Antje Flieger

ABSTRACT Many pathogenic bacteria use sophisticated survival strategies to overcome harsh environmental conditions. One strategy is the formation of slow-growing subpopulations termed small colony variants (SCVs). Here we characterize an SCV that spontaneously emerged from an axenic Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium water culture. We found that the SCV harbored a frameshift mutation in the glutamine synthetase gene glnA, leading to an ∼90% truncation of the corresponding protein. Glutamine synthetase, a central enzyme in nitrogen assimilation, converts glutamate and ammonia to glutamine. Glutamine is an important nitrogen donor that is required for the synthesis of cellular compounds. The internal glutamine pool serves as an indicator of nitrogen availability in Salmonella. In our study, the SCV and a constructed glnA knockout mutant showed reduced growth rates, compared to the wild type. Moreover, the SCV and the glnA mutant displayed attenuated entry into host cells and severely reduced levels of exoproteins, including flagellin and several Salmonella pathogenicity island 1 (SPI-1)-dependent secreted virulence factors. We found that these proteins were also depleted in cell lysates, indicating their diminished synthesis. Accordingly, the SCV and the glnA mutant had severely decreased expression of flagellin genes, several SPI-1 effector genes, and a class 2 motility gene (flgB). However, the expression of a class 1 motility gene (flhD) was not affected. Supplementation with glutamine or genetic reversion of the glnA truncation restored growth, cell entry, gene expression, and protein abundance. In summary, our data show that glnA is essential for the growth of S. enterica and controls important motility- and virulence-related traits in response to glutamine availability. IMPORTANCE Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium is a significant pathogen causing foodborne infections. Here we describe an S. Typhimurium small colony variant (SCV) that spontaneously emerged from a long-term starvation experiment in water. It is important to study SCVs because (i) SCVs may arise spontaneously upon exposure to stresses, including environmental and host defense stresses, (ii) SCVs are slow growing and difficult to eradicate, and (iii) only a few descriptions of S. enterica SCVs are available. We clarify the genetic basis of the SCV described here as a frameshift mutation in the glutamine synthetase gene glnA, leading to glutamine auxotrophy. In Salmonella, internal glutamine limitation serves as a sign of external nitrogen deficiency and is thought to regulate cell growth. In addition to exhibiting impaired growth, the SCV showed reduced host cell entry and reduced expression of SPI-1 virulence and flagellin genes.

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Michael Kühl

University of Copenhagen

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David M. Ward

Montana State University

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