(91ÁÔÆæ Public Relations Office)
A 91ÁÔÆæ professor is one of the 14 scientists, and the sole awardee from Japan, selected for the of the US Department of Energy¡¯s Joint Genome Institute (DOE-JGI).
Professor of 91ÁÔÆæ¡¯s secured support for a proposal to research Patescibacteria, a recently discovered phylum of ultrasmall bacteria measuring just 100 to 300 nanometers (a nanometer is one-billionth of a meter). These microorganisms carry reduced genomes, lacking many of the genes essential for life, and are thought to survive primarily through symbiotic or parasitic relationships with other microbes.
Despite their abundance in groundwater, the ecological roles of Patescibacteria and their interactions with other microorganisms remain largely unknown. Maruyama's team will use the US DOE-JGI¡¯s advanced sequencing capabilities to reconstruct high-quality genomes of the bacteria and their host organisms, map metabolic pathways, clarify nutrient exchange and symbiotic interactions, and examine contributions to carbon, nitrogen, and other biogeochemical cycles. The findings are expected to yield new insights into previously unexplored microbial ecosystems in the deep subsurface, with potential implications for our understanding of global material cycles.
¡°Through this research, we aim to advance our understanding of the vast, unknown microbial world beneath our feet and open new frontiers in environmental microbiology,¡± Maruyama said.
This distinction is expected to deepen the university¡¯s partnerships with the US DOE-JGI and leading international collaborators, while opening doors for early-career researchers¡ªincluding co-awardee Muneyuki Fukushi, a second-year doctoral student at 91ÁÔÆæ¡¯s Graduate School of Innovation and Practice for Smart Society.
Other awardees include researchers from Princeton University, the University of Chicago, Duke University, and national research institutes in the US and France.