Banfield, Jillian F.


Publications
16

Enigmatic, ultrasmall, uncultivated Archaea

Citation
Baker et al. (2010). Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 107 (19)
Names
Ca. Micrarchaeum Ca. Micrarchaeum acidiphilum
Abstract
Metagenomics has provided access to genomes of as yet uncultivated microorganisms in natural environments, yet there are gaps in our knowledge—particularly for Archaea—that occur at relatively low abundance and in extreme environments. Ultrasmall cells (<500 nm in diameter) from lineages without cultivated representatives that branch near the crenarchaeal/euryarchaeal divide have been detected in a variety of acidic ecosystems. We reconstructed composite, near-complete ~1-Mb geno

Extremely Acidophilic Protists from Acid Mine Drainage Host Rickettsiales -Lineage Endosymbionts That Have Intervening Sequences in Their 16S rRNA Genes

Citation
Baker et al. (2003). Applied and Environmental Microbiology 69 (9)
Names
“Captivus acidiprotistae”
Abstract
ABSTRACT During a molecular phylogenetic survey of extremely acidic (pH < 1), metal-rich acid mine drainage habitats in the Richmond Mine at Iron Mountain, Calif., we detected 16S rRNA gene sequences of a novel bacterial group belonging to the order Rickettsiales in the Alphaproteobacteria . The closest known relatives of this group (92% 16S rRNA gene sequence identity) are endosymbionts of the protist Acantham