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SRX9130512: shotgun sequencing of metagenomes
1 ILLUMINA (NextSeq 500) run: 22.3M spots, 6.2G bases, 2.9Gb downloads

Design: pooled samples
Submitted by: Monash University
Study: Hydrogen emissions from termites support lithoautotrophic microbial community in termite mounds
show Abstracthide Abstract
We report the widespread metabolic capacity for lithoautotrophy (gaining carbon and energy from inorganic sources) in the microbial community of termite mounds, sustained by termite hydrogen emissions. This unique example of interspecies hydrogen transfer across habitats creates a niche for an ancient metabolic trait and offers a new perspective in the important role of termites as ecosystem engineers. The remarkable enrichment of hydrogen-oxidising bacteria with high capacity to consume atmospheric hydrogen contrasts the low numbers of methane oxidisers and the limited filtering capacity of mounds to mitigate global termite methane emissions. Hydrogen thus appears to be a preferred substrate that strongly shapes soil microbial communities, which warrants consideration when transferring to a hydrogen-based economy.
Sample: Pooled sample
SAMN16176658 • SRS7372843 • All experiments • All runs
Library:
Name: Ms-ss_metagenome
Instrument: NextSeq 500
Strategy: WGS
Source: METAGENOMIC
Selection: RANDOM
Layout: PAIRED
Runs: 1 run, 22.3M spots, 6.2G bases, 2.9Gb
Run# of Spots# of BasesSizePublished
SRR1264912622,253,0406.2G2.9Gb2020-09-16

ID:
11890394

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