microbial biogeochemistry
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2021 ◽  
Vol 153 ◽  
pp. 108078
Author(s):  
Milda Pucetaite ◽  
Pelle Ohlsson ◽  
Per Persson ◽  
Edith Hammer

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mak A. Saito ◽  
Jaclyn K. Saunders ◽  
Michael Chagnon ◽  
David Gaylord ◽  
Adam Shepherd ◽  
...  

AbstractProteins are critical in catalyzing chemical reactions, forming key cellular structures, and in regulating cellular processes. Investigation of marine microbial proteins by metaproteomics methods enables the discovery of numerous aspects of microbial biogeochemistry processes. However, these datasets present big-data challenges as they often involve many samples collected across broad geospatial and temporal scales, resulting in thousands of protein identifications, abundances, and corresponding annotation information. The Ocean Protein Portal (OPP) was created to enable data sharing and discovery among multiple scientific domains and serve both research and education functions. The portal focuses on three use case questions: “Where is my protein of interest?”, “Who makes it?”, and “How much is there?”, and provides profile and section visualizations, real-time taxonomic analysis, and links to metadata, sequence analysis, and other external resources to enabling connections to be made between biogeochemical and proteomics datasets.


2018 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 481-499 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chuanlun Zhang ◽  
Hongyue Dang ◽  
Farooq Azam ◽  
Ronald Benner ◽  
Louis Legendre ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Carbon is a keystone element in global biogeochemical cycles. It plays a fundamental role in biotic and abiotic processes in the ocean, which intertwine to mediate the chemistry and redox status of carbon in the ocean and the atmosphere. The interactions between abiotic and biogenic carbon (e.g. CO2, CaCO3, organic matter) in the ocean are complex, and there is a half-century-old enigma about the existence of a huge reservoir of recalcitrant dissolved organic carbon (RDOC) that equates to the magnitude of the pool of atmospheric CO2. The concepts of the biological carbon pump (BCP) and the microbial loop (ML) shaped our understanding of the marine carbon cycle. The more recent concept of the microbial carbon pump (MCP), which is closely connected to those of the BCP and the ML, explicitly considers the significance of the ocean's RDOC reservoir and provides a mechanistic framework for the exploration of its formation and persistence. Understanding of the MCP has benefited from advanced ‘omics’ and novel research in biological oceanography and microbial biogeochemistry. The need to predict the ocean's response to climate change makes an integrative understanding of the BCP, ML and MCP a high priority. In this review, we summarize and discuss progress since the proposal of the MCP in 2010 and formulate research questions for the future.


2013 ◽  
Vol 6 (9) ◽  
pp. 711-717 ◽  
Author(s):  
Douglas G. Capone ◽  
David A. Hutchins

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