| Literature DB >> 29556540 |
Nicole A Hynson1, Kiana L Frank2, Rosanna A Alegado3,4, Anthony S Amend1, Mohammad Arif5, Gordon M Bennett5, Andrea J Jani3, Matthew C I Medeiros2, Yuriy Mileyko6, Craig E Nelson3,4, Nhu H Nguyen7, Olivia D Nigro3, Sladjana Prisic8, Sangwoo Shin9, Daisuke Takagi6, Samuel T Wilson3, Joanne Y Yew2.
Abstract
Despite increasing acknowledgment that microorganisms underpin the healthy functioning of basically all multicellular life, few cross-disciplinary teams address the diversity and function of microbiota across organisms and ecosystems. Our newly formed consortium of junior faculty spanning fields such as ecology and geoscience to mathematics and molecular biology from the University of Hawai'i at Mānoa aims to fill this gap. We are united in our mutual interest in advancing a new paradigm for biology that incorporates our modern understanding of the importance of microorganisms. As our first concerted research effort, we will assess the diversity and function of microbes across an entire watershed on the island of Oahu, Hawai'i. Due to its high ecological diversity across tractable areas of land and sea, Hawai'i provides a model system for the study of complex microbial communities and the processes they mediate. Owing to our diverse expertise, we will leverage this study system to advance the field of biology.Entities:
Keywords: ecology; environmental microbiology; evolution; microbiome; paradigm shift
Year: 2018 PMID: 29556540 PMCID: PMC5850080 DOI: 10.1128/mSystems.00159-17
Source DB: PubMed Journal: mSystems ISSN: 2379-5077 Impact factor: 6.496
FIG 1 Conceptual schematic of C-MAIKI’s approach to address pressing questions in microbiome research by evaluating synergy (red arrows) among environmental microbiota and their hosts—from free-living to symbiotic lifestyles—leveraging the unique and replicable gradients across Hawaiian watersheds—from mountain (terrestrial) to sea (marine) habitats. Recognizing that microbes underpin the healthy function of all multicellular life, this synergistic cross-disciplinary approach allows us to address what environments act as reservoirs for symbiotic microbes when they are outside the host and how we can manage our environments to promote and maintain healthy microbial partnerships.