132: Life Science and Earth Science and Biogeomicrobiology with Denise Akob

Published: Nov. 12, 2020, 6:53 p.m.

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Denise Akob discusses her studies of microbial communities of contaminated and pristine environments using life science and earth science techniques. She discusses how to figure out \\u201cwho\\u2019s there,\\u201d how to optimize select natural microbial activities, and her career path into government research.

Julie\\u2019s Biggest Takeaways:

Biogeomicrobiology straddles the life science and earth science fields. This is a growing area of research in the academic setting as well as in the private sector, where one can contribute to hydrogeology or bioremediation efforts.\\xa0\\xa0

What happens on the surface when extracting resources like natural gases? Wastewater from hydraulic shale fracking, or fracking, can contaminate microbes. Preliminary data suggests that microbes that thrive in that wastewater can be a fingerprint for surface contamination, and this is one of the areas of active research in Akob\\u2019s lab. Additionally, microbes can respond to contaminants to remove that risk and remediate the spills.

One trip to the field can provide samples for years of analysis. From one sample, scientists can conduct:

  • Microbiome studies through amplicon sequencing to understand population structures.
  • Metagenomics studies to understand functional potential.
  • Biochemical studies to understand active metabolic processes.

Akob asks how to make natural microbial degraders happy. For example: acetylene, a triple-bonded carbon compound, can inhibit degradation of chlorinated solvents, a potent groundwater contaminant. By studying the microbes that use acetylene as a primary energy source (acetylenotrophs), this removes this inhibition caused by acetylene and the chlorinated solvent-degraders can increase their activity.\\xa0\\xa0

Akob studies pristine environments to understand natural microbial communities. A cave she studied in Germany was \\u2018ultra pristine,\\u2019 discovered while building a highway. Understanding natural processes, such as the biomineralization promoted during stalagmite and stalactite formation helps scientists imagine how to use tehse processes in other applications.

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