56 research outputs found
Gut microbiota: Role in pathogen colonization, immune responses, and inflammatory disease
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/138242/1/imr12567.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/138242/2/imr12567_am.pd
Utilization and control of ecological interactions in polymicrobial infections and community-based microbial cell factories
Microbial activities are most often shaped by interactions between co-existing microbes within mixed-species communities. Dissection of the molecular mechanisms of species interactions within communities is a central issue in microbial ecology, and our ability to engineer and control microbial communities depends, to a large extent, on our knowledge of these interactions. This review highlights the recent advances regarding molecular characterization of microbe-microbe interactions that modulate community structure, activity, and stability, and aims to illustrate how these findings have helped us reach an engineering-level understanding of microbial communities in relation to both human health and industrial biotechnology
One-dimensional models of shear wave velocity for the eastern Mediterranean obtained from the inversion of Rayleigh wave phase velocities and tectonic implications
On a SWâNE profile from the Libyan coast towards central Turkey phase velocity curves of
the fundamental Rayleigh mode were measured using a two-station method. The inversion of
phase velocity curves yields 1-D models of shear wave velocity down to approximately 200 km
depths that may be interpreted as estimates of average models between neighbouring stations
on the profile. Strong lateral variations in the shear wave velocity structure are imaged along
the profile.
The subducted oceanic African mantle lithosphere is indicated in 1-D models for the region
around Crete by significantly enlarged shear wave velocities. It is also imaged by an average
model of the structure between stations on Crete and Santorini. On a path crossing the Libyan
Sea south of Crete the resulting model is slower than a model expected for 110 Myr old oceanic
lithosphere. The passive African margin is thus assumed to extend northwards beneath the
Libyan Sea. Anomalous low shear wave velocities are found for the uppermost mantle beneath
central Turkey down to a depth of approximately 130 km.
Using two stations on Crete the average depth of the oceanic Moho within the subducting
slab is estimated to be at approximately 50 km beneath Crete. For this arc-parallel path, an
enlarged standard deviation of the measured phase velocities of approximately 0.2 km sâ1
between 10 and 30 mHz is observed that is probably caused by strong lateral heterogeneity
related to the subducting slab. In addition, in this frequency range an anomalous propagation
of the fundamental Rayleigh mode is detected that is indicated by measured phase velocities
that are approximately one standard deviation faster than phase velocities expected from a
great-circle approximation. An average shear wave velocity of approximately 3.5 km sâ1 is
observed above the oceanic Moho.
In order to explain the recent lithospheric structure of the Hellenic subduction zone a tectonic
model is assumed for the NEâSW striking profile considered. It is based on the calculated 1-D
models, tectonic reconstructions and on a model derived from the metamorphic history of rocks
exposed on Crete. The suggested model summarizes the tectonic development at a lithospheric
scale starting in the Late Cretaceous. Accretion of crustal material of two microcontinents to
Eurasia is assumed, while continuous subduction of the oceanic lithosphere of different ocean
basins and possibly of the mantle lithosphere of the microcontinents resulted in a single slab.
The length of the oceanic lithosphere that was subducted south of Crete is estimated to be not
greater than approximately 550 km
- âŠ