Ongoing Master's thesis projects
Unraveling the Ecological Significance of DPANN Archaea in the Deep-Sea Sediment
- Project type: MSc in Biology, 30 ECTS
- Student: Elise Marie Dinesen
- Supervisors: Ronnie Glud, Blandine Trouche
- Start: 1 February 2025
- End: 31 December 2025
The DPANN superphylum (historically Diapherotrites, Parvarchaeota, Aenigmarchaeota, Nanoarchaeota and Nanohaloarchaea) is the most abundant archaeal lineage in the anoxic layers of hadal sediments. It encompasses some of the smallest and least understood archaea, presenting a unique opportunity to unravel their ecological roles and evolutionary history in extreme environments. (Zhang, et al., 2024; Rinke, et al., 2013; Lannes, Cavaud, Lopez, & Bapteste, 2020). This archaeal lineage is hypothesized to be living either in symbiosis or in consortia (Dombrowski, Lee, Williams, Offre, & Spang, 2019; Vigneron, Cruaud, Lovejoy, & Vincent, 2022).
In this project, I will take advantage of a large repository of metagenomes and associated metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs), spanning four trench system in the Pacific Ocean and the Molloy Deep (Artic Ocean), to (i) describe the taxonomic diversity of DPANN archaea in deep sea benthic sediments, (ii) characterize the global and local distribution patterns and reveal the environmental factors driving them, (iii) identify potential ecological roles by characterizing the functional diversity and metabolism, and (iv) elaborate on the study of their evolutionary history through a comparison with representatives from other biomes (Liu, et al., 2018; Liu, Wang, & Gu, 2021).
This project will provide new insight into the diversity, biogeography and ecology of these archaea in deep-sea environment, and their potential implication in the global biogeochemical cycles.
Exploring the role of viruses and prokaryotes in the Northwest Atlantic Ocean: Vertical distribution of microbial density, activity and diversity.
- Project type: MSc in Biology, 30 ECTS
- Student: Ruo Chen
- Supervisors: Mathias Middelboe
- Start: 1 September 2024
- End: 30 May 2025
This project will focus on the prokaryotic and viral distribution and activity across the depth gradient from surface water to the bathypelagic layer in the North-west Atlantic Ocean. A key focus will be on taxon-specific lysis, a novel perspective that uses the ratio between exocellular 16S rRNA and cellular 16S rRNA to quantify viral lysis on specific prokaryotic taxa. Additionally, given the profound effects of hydrostatic pressure on microbial distribution and activity, the project will specifically explore how pressure affects viral production and the regulatory role of viruses in regulating prokaryotic communities.
The key objectives will include 1) quantifying the prokaryotic and viral abundance across a depth gradient; 2) calculating the viral production at different depths and studying the effects of pressure; 3) extracting the cellular 16s rRNA and the exocellular 16s rRNA to explore the taxon-specific viral lysis across the depth gradient and under the different pressure conditions to study the viral regulation on prokaryotic communities.
Importance of resuspension for benthic oxygenation and remobilization of trace metals in coastal sediments
- Project type: MSc in Environmental Sciences, 30 ECTS
- Student: Hannah Sofie Mihm
- Supervisors: Ronnie Glud, Lisbeth Fürst-Sørensen
- Start: 6 May 2024
- End: 6 December 2024
This project aims at quantifying trace metal mobilization – with special focus on mercury - during resuspension experiments in coastal sediments. I am a student from the Technische Universität Braunschweig where the Department of Environmental Geochemistry (Prof. Harald Biester) is focused on the biogeochemical cycles of trace metals. An optimized experimental setup for simulating natural resuspension events (EROMES system) combined with appropriate measurements of biogeochemical parameters will be realized in a number of targeted sediment types.
Possible sites include the proximal Odense Fjord and the Limfjord. The latter being a shallow and eutrophic sound in the Jutland, would offer the possibility to compare sites rich in organic matter from mussel farming and references sites with lower organic matter content. Resuspension events are an inherent forcing in many marine settings, but the importance for the overall biogeochemical function of marine settings is underexplored. This topic is relevant and timely as coastal sediments are increasingly being affected by resuspension due to climate induced changes in weather patterns.
Finished Master's thesis projects
Prophages: ticking time bomb or key to genetic elements in bacterial hosts?
- Project type: MSc in Biology, 60 ECTS
- Student: Lara Laubscher
- Supervisor: Mathias Middelboe, Sachia Traving.
- Start: 15 January 2024
- End: 30 June 2024
The aim of this work will be to investigate specific marine phage-host systems. Through isolation and subsequent sequencing, Lara will isolate and cultivate novel virus-host systems from environmental samples collected from different cruises in the North Atlantic and Japan. In addition, she will be extracting environmental DNA to characterize the natural communities from which these virus-host systems originate.
The project will have a special focus on the discovery and characterization of potential auxiliary metabolic genes (AMGs) in the isolated viruses and what impact they have on their host.
Investigating virus-bacteria interactions in deep-sea sediments
- Project type: MSc in Biology, 60 ECTS
- Student: Thor Amdi Bastiansen
- Supervisor: Mathias Middelboe
- Start: 1 September 2022
- End: 31 August 2023
The project will have its main focus on viral and bacterial production and distribution across a depth gradient from coastal to abyssal sediments throughout Tokyo Bay and to the Japan Trench. Bacteriophages, viruses infecting bacteria, can be integrated in the host genome and provide important genetic properties for the host cell. Additionally, upon infection, bacteriophages also contribute to the turnover of organic matter in marine sediments.
Following sampling from a variety of depths we will quantify viral production and their effects ofn bacterial mortality. Further, we will isolate bacteria and viruses in order to sequence and characterize them, for further investigation of specific phage-encoded genes. We will try to isolate and characterize specific virus-bacterium interaction systems and quantify the impact of viruses on bacterial mortality and turnover of organic material throughout the depths.
Isolation and characterization of deep-sea sediment bacteria and viruses
- Project type: MSc in Biology, 44 ECTS
- Student: Larissa Baan
- Supervisors: Mathias Middelboe and Sachia Jo Traving
- Start: 1 December 2022
- End: 21 July 2023
The main objectives of my project are to (1) isolate and characterize the culturable prokaryotes and bacteriophages present in deep-sea sediment samples; and (2) compare the spatial distribution of the isolated microbial communities between four different depths ranging from the Tokyo Bay to the Japan Trench, using culture-based methods followed by 16s rRNA amplicon sequencing.
Many bacterial species cannot grow under standard cultivation methods, also known as the great plate count anomaly. Therefore, we will use isolation chips, which consist of a plastic plate with multiple holes filled with agar plugs which are incubated at in situ substrate and temperature conditions. This technique allows for only single cells to be immobilized in each chamber, so fast-growing bacteria can no longer hinder the growth of slow-growing bacteria, hopefully increasing the number and diversity of environmental isolates found.
The importance of temperature on degradation of organic matter
- Project type: MSc in Biology, 60 ECTS
- Student: Silje Waaler Pedersen
- Supervisor: Ronnie N. Glud,John Paul Balmonte
- Start: 1. February 2022
- End: 31 January 2023
In my current research, I investigate the effects of temperature on microbial enzymatic degradation of organic matter in coastal sediments across different seasons. Temperature in coastal areas can fluctuate substantially on a day-to-day basis, but the extent to which these temperature changes affect the activities of different enzymes is little understood. I carry out enzyme assays and compare rates of activity by intact microbial communities versus those on size-separated, dissolved enzymes from the same microbial communities. With this approach, I can resolve the relative importance of temperature effects on enzyme production versus pure enzyme kinetics along a broad temperature gradient and across seasons.
The importance of sediment resuspension for benthic redox and O2 dynamics
- Project type: MSc in Biology, 60 ECTS
- Student: Lisbeth Fürst Sørensen
- Supervisors: Ronnie N. Glud, Karl Attard
- Start: 1 September 2021
- End: 1 June 2022
Most studies have investigated coastal biogeochemical cycling during calm weather, whereas more dynamic weather events such as storms have been largely ignored. Such events might have major effects on costal biogeochemical function due to sediment resuspension. In this study, controlled sediment resuspension will be performed in the laboratory by using an optimized EROMES-system, where the implications for key factors of coastal biogeochemical function will be explored. I will examine the impacts across season with a special focus on the fate of oxygen during and after resuspension and investigate the implications of resuspension for organic carbon mineralization and re-oxidization of reduced constituents in the sediment.
Organic petrology, geochemistry, and depositional environment of the recent sediments from deep hadal trenches in the Pacific Ocean
- Project type: MSc in Geology-Geoscience, 60 ECTS
- Student: Marco Benkhettab Sindlev
- Supervisors: Ronnie N. Glud, Hamed Sanei
- Start: 1. September 2020
- End: 1 January 2021
This project involves advanced petrographic and geochemical characterization of organic matter in recent sediments obtained from 12 sediment cores from two ultra-deep, oceanic trenches in the Pacific Ocean. The two trenches in question are Atacama Trench and Kermadec Trench.
In this project, white light photometry and fluorescence spectrometry of organic matter preserved in the samples are used to determine depositional environment, diagenetic degradation and source of the organic matter. Furthermore, pyrolysis organic geochemistry is used to determine the molecular composition of organic matter in the context of bacterial degradation.