LET'S GET READY TO RUMBLE!
It's Round One of March Microbe Madness, and our 32 fantastic yet tiny competitors are ready to fight it out for microbial glory.
But first, a quick recap of the rules. Each pair of mighty microbes will face off in one of four randomly selected environments: soil, ocean surface, freshwater lake, and the human gut.
The winner is selected by BIOL346 votes UNLESS they would not survive the environment and their competitor would. This is how upsets can happen!
BIOL346, you've submitted your brackets. It's no surprise that last year's runner-up is a strong contender, with the most students choosing Tardigrade as their champion!
But Team Tardigrade is not assured of victory! It was the #1 choice last year too, but Team Cyanobacterium got out the vote.
Other teams are emerging, with Team E. coli and Team Deinococcus representing!
A handful of other organisms are also chosen champions, including the literal home-grown favorite, Lactobacillus, whom many of you likely have in the sauerkraut on your counters.
Let's get started! For the inaugural 2022 March Microbe Madness battle, we start with the BACTERIA DIVISION, with Dehalococcoides mccartyii facing off against Escherichia coli K12 in SOIL.
Dehalococcoides mccartyii is a rare bioremediation success story - one of very few species that can completely degrade chlorinated solvents to the non-toxic ethene. They are typically found in subsurface aquifers and are HIGHLY oxygen sensitive.
Prior work had visualized them as flattened cocci, somewhat like a red blood cell. Work published January of this year using cryo-electron tomography showed this shape was an artifact - the cells are more rounded. pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34788060/
How it startedHow it's going
E. coli are frequent denizens of soil, including pathogenic strains able to join plant rhizosphere communities, a potential route for food-borne illnesses. purdue.edu/newsroom/resea….
Dehalococcoides are not as comfortable in soil as E. coli. Dehalococcoides might find a micro-environment without any oxygen to persist in, but with the ability to thrive AND a whopping 96% of the vote, E. COLI ADVANCES.
Next up in the BACTERIA DIVISION is Lactobacillus versus Geobacter, the new competitor to the bracket, battling in the HUMAN GUT.
Lactobacillus is no stranger to the human gut, as one of the most common organisms cultivated from the stomach, intestine, and feces.
However, as we know, cultivability does not always represent underlying communities well. Lactobacillus usually represents <1% of any human gut sample, and is hypothesized to mostly be transient (allocthonous), coming in on fermented foods like sauerkraut! ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/P…
Geobacter is a hardy microorganism famous for growing nanowires to harvest electrons from metals millimeters or even centimeters away! genengnews.com/news/microbial…
Super cool, but there's not much metal in the human gut...
However, there ARE electrogenic organisms in the gut, which might be options to power tiny batteries inside the body. pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/ac…
We're a long way away from that reality, but Geobacter has been seen in gut samples, and the anaerobic environment would suit it.
Both competitors are found in the human gut, so we turn to the voters to decide. With 68% of the vote, LACTOBACILLUS ADVANCES. Team Lactobacillus can breathe easier.. for now!
Next up in the BACTERIAL DIVISION are Rhizobia versus Pseudomonas, who will be battling it out in SOIL.
Both of these organisms are very comfortable in this environment.
Rhizobia are plant growth-promoting bacteria that live inside nodules of plant roots. They fix nitrogen for the plant, and receive protection and lots of tasty exudates in return. This is one of the best-described microbe-plant interactions. pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36624/
Pseudomonas are ubiquitous in soils and surface waters. They were first described by Polish-born German microbiologist Walter Migula in 1894: "Cells with polar organs of motility. Formation of spores occurs in some species, but it is rare." ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/P….
Neither organism is going to yield to the environment, but one was the clear class favorite - with 84% of the vote, PSEUDOMONAS ADVANCES
In the final battle for the BACTERIAL DIVISION, we have Commamox Nitrospira facing off against Patescibacteria in the HUMAN GUT.
Neither of these competitors are commonly found in this environment - can they survive?
Commamox Nitrospira are one of the most exciting discoveries of the past decade in microbiology. Connection of ammonia oxidation and nitrite oxidation to form complete nitrification in a single organism was long hypothesized - and then discovered! natureasia.com/en/nature/hot-…
Commamox as a process is most often found in slow moving, low nutrient systems - the exact opposite of the human gut! However, Nitrospira organisms are frequently found in the gut, so it's likely Commamox Nitrospira would survive.
They might even thrive... if their host does too. Nitrospira were found in higher abundance in mice who were diabetes resistant following a high-fat diet. gut.bmj.com/content/61/4/5…
Patescibacteria is a phylum-level radiation of tiny cells with even tinier genomes and reduced metabolisms. They are hypothesized to be symbionts or parasites on larger bacteria, or possibly just very good scavengers.
As for the gut, Patescibacteria have been seen in human samples, including from the small intestine, though often at very low abundance. Their reduced metabolism made them difficult to support - and with 76% of the vote, COMMAMOX NITROSPIRA ADVANCES.
Welcome back to March Microbe Madness and the SEMI-FINALS!!! We have two excellent (and CLOSE!) match-ups for this penultimate round, so buckle up and get your popcorn ready.
First up, it’s a showdown between the Bacterial division champ, Pseudomonas, and the Archaeal division champ, Nitrosarchaeum koreense. These two stalwart microbes will be battling it out in the HUMAN GUT.
Pseudomonas came through the human gut back in the round of 16. Pseudomonads are semi-common denizens of the human gut, and our Pseudomonas is doing well.
Welcome back to the QUARTER FINALS of March Microbe Madness! First up, the final two Bacterial Division competitors: Escherichia coli K12 and Pseudomonas face off at the OCEAN SURFACE.
E. coli has been floating around aimlessly since vanquishing Lactobacillus in the Round of 16. This remains an inhospitable environment for E. coli, who relies on being transmitted back to a host’s warm, nutrient-filled, anaerobic intestine relatively quickly.
E. coli K-12 is our specific strain in this competition. This is one of four E. coli strains considered model organisms, and it might be the one we’ve known the longest – it was isolated in 1922 from someone with diphtheria (it was not the causative agent).
Last up, we have the WILD CARD DIVISION. Our first match up is between the current class favorite, the Tardigrade, and the lesser-known and less charismatic Paceibacteria. These two will be facing off in a FRESHWATER LAKE.
It seems like the random number generator likes Tardigrades too - its first battle was in a freshwater lake, which is a preferred habitat for the water bears. Our tardigrade is walking along, searching for some moss to munch on.
Tardigrades walk like much larger animals, despite having eight legs and despite walking as a microscopic organism being similar to if you walked around in a vat of peanut butter - the physics is different when you are that small. gizmodo.com/microscopic-ta…
Now on to the EUKARYOTE DIVISION! Our first battle is between the parasitic Trypanosoma and the photosynthetic alga Lotharella oceanica. These two will be battling in the HUMAN GUT.
This is good news for Trypanosoma, which can be spread via infected foods. From within the gut, it moves through the gastric epithelium and into the blood system where it multiplies. pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18234547/
This is NOT GOOD NEWS for Lotharella oceanica, which came from a successful battle in the open ocean where it is typically found. The human gut has nothing that Lotharella needs - it's not saline, there's no sun for photosynthesis, and the nutrient concentrations are way too high
Next up, we have the ARCHAEAL DIVISION! Facing off first, we have Methanosarcina versus ANME archaea in SOIL.
Methanosarcina just came from a grueling contest with Methanoregula, and is a bit battered by its time in the open ocean. Soil isn't much better, as methanogens rely on anoxic (no oxygen) conditions for methanogenesis, and soil is generally aerated.
Angel and colleagues looked at archaea in upland soils in 2007, and found Methanosarcina were found nearly everywhere - and that once soil was saturated from rain events, they would kick into action in the newly anoxic environment. nature.com/articles/ismej…
Welcome back to March Microbe Madness! It's the round of 16, with eight fierce battles coming up. We will kick it off with the BACTERIAL DIVISION.
First up, we have two microbes living in, on, and around us: E. coli stomped Dehalococcoides in soil, while Lactobacillus is fresh off a victory over Geobacter in the human gut. We're teleporting both competitors to the OCEAN SURFACE (via sewage pipe).
E. coli is primarily an enteric bacterium, and the open ocean doesn't feel at all like an intestine. It's facing osmotic stress with the salt, nutrient stress with the lower concentrations, and UV stress from sunlight. Can E. coli survive in the open ocean?