• Home
  • About Us
  • Publications
  • Values
  • Methods
  • Our Perspective
  • Join Us
  • Tags
  • All Posts
Held Lab

Trichodesmium

Dynamic diel proteome of Trichodesmium January 10, 2022 less than 1 minute read

Trichodesmium is unique among nitrogen fixers. It fixes nitrogen and carbon simultaneously. This is risky behavior - why would Trichodesmium do this?

The project used cell culturing, physiology, label-free protoemics, quantitative proteomics, GC-MS, mathematical modeling and network analysis.

This work was published in 2022. There is a much larger body of literature/debate about how Trichodesmium manages nitrogen fixation and carbon fixation simultaneously during the photoperiod. You can review snippets of this debate here. Clearly there is more to understand about Trichodesmium’s molecular physiology, and we plan to continue investigating!

Project Summary read more

Trichodesmium colonies as individuals July 13, 2021 less than 1 minute read

Under the microscope, Trichodesmium colonies vary a lot! How does is this reflected in their molecular profiles?

The project used metaproteomics of single colonies, microscopy, and synchrotron-based μ-XRF to look into this question.

This work was published in 2021. We’re following up on individual heterogeneity in marine microbes using microfluidics and microscopy techniques, and using what we learned in this project to improve techniques for metaproteomics analyses of limited-biomass samples.

Project Summary

colony images A look at all the colonies we examined in this study. From Figure S1 of the publication.... read more

Colimitation in Trichodesmium April 19, 2021 less than 1 minute read

Trichodesmium, a keystone marine microbe, can fix a theoretically unlimited supply of carbon and nitrogen; therefore the next most-limiting nutrients Fe and P seem to limit its growth and activity. Which nutrient limits Trichodesmium in nature?

The project used metaproteomics, quantitative proteomics, mathematical modelling, and network analysis.

This work was published in 2020. The transcript abundances from some of the same transects reflect different patterns - an interesting comparison that can be found here (Cerdan-Garcia et al., 2021). I also recommend this nice study considering similar trade offs in nutrient acquisition by phytoplankton here (McCain et al.,... read more

biogeochemistry

Effects of wildfires on marine microbial communities February 14, 2025 1 minute read

From Jan From Jan 7-31, 2025, the highly destructive Palisades fire burned in the Santa Monica Mountains, consuming about 96 square kilometers of wildlands and built structures immediately adjacent to the California Current marine ecosystem. Hundreds of thousands of gallons of Phos-Chek fire retardant (ammonium phosphate) were deposited to fight the fire. On Jan 26-27, Feb 5-6, and Feb 12-15, significant rain washed ash, debris, and fire retardant into the ocean either directly or indirectly via creeks, groundwater, and sewer outflows. How will these sudden, massive inputs impact natural marine microbial communities in the Santa Monica Bay and beyond?

We... read more

The basis of nutrient colimitation November 11, 2022 less than 1 minute read

Nutrient availability is a key control on the growth and activity of microbes. Usually nutrient limitations are considered individually, but this ignores the reality of nature: often, many nutrients are simultaneously deplete.

Our understanding of the phenomenon of microbial growth when multiple nutrients are dilute is limited by lack of a unifed framework. Together with our collaborators at Rutgers University and ETH Zurich, we are working to fill that gap.

Further work will focus on the molecular basis and biogeochemical implications of nutrient colimitation.

The project uses mathematical modelling, concepts in theoretical biology, physiology and molecular analysis.

... read more
Dynamic diel proteome of Trichodesmium January 10, 2022 less than 1 minute read

Trichodesmium is unique among nitrogen fixers. It fixes nitrogen and carbon simultaneously. This is risky behavior - why would Trichodesmium do this?

The project used cell culturing, physiology, label-free protoemics, quantitative proteomics, GC-MS, mathematical modeling and network analysis.

This work was published in 2022. There is a much larger body of literature/debate about how Trichodesmium manages nitrogen fixation and carbon fixation simultaneously during the photoperiod. You can review snippets of this debate here. Clearly there is more to understand about Trichodesmium’s molecular physiology, and we plan to continue investigating!

Project Summary read more

biomarkers

Protein modification in marine microbes November 11, 2022 less than 1 minute read

Proteins are the literal molecular machines that perform biochemical transformations within cells and connect the inner life of cells to the external environment. Protein activity, particularly of key enzymes such as the photosynthetic enzymes and nitrogenase, is an important biogeochemical parameter.

Protein activity can be modulated by changes in protein concentration (as we can measure through proteomics), but also through changes in protein 3D shape. Protein 3D shape can change dynamically over time due to protein-metabolite interactions, protein-protein interactions, and post translational modifications.

We are developing conceptually simple strategies to measure protein conformational changes in marine microbes. We work with... read more

Colimitation in Trichodesmium April 19, 2021 less than 1 minute read

Trichodesmium, a keystone marine microbe, can fix a theoretically unlimited supply of carbon and nitrogen; therefore the next most-limiting nutrients Fe and P seem to limit its growth and activity. Which nutrient limits Trichodesmium in nature?

The project used metaproteomics, quantitative proteomics, mathematical modelling, and network analysis.

This work was published in 2020. The transcript abundances from some of the same transects reflect different patterns - an interesting comparison that can be found here (Cerdan-Garcia et al., 2021). I also recommend this nice study considering similar trade offs in nutrient acquisition by phytoplankton here (McCain et al.,... read more

Two component systems as biomarkers January 1, 2019 less than 1 minute read

Two component sensors are the biochemical senses of the cell. It is the most common form of molecular bacterial sensing. How do these systems work in marine bacteria and what is their role in biogeochemical cycles?

The project used genome analysis, metaproteomics, and statistical surveys to look into this question.

This work was published in 2019. No current follow up projects are started, but the concept remains of interest!

Project Summary

read more

cellular decision-making

Two component systems as biomarkers January 1, 2019 less than 1 minute read

Two component sensors are the biochemical senses of the cell. It is the most common form of molecular bacterial sensing. How do these systems work in marine bacteria and what is their role in biogeochemical cycles?

The project used genome analysis, metaproteomics, and statistical surveys to look into this question.

This work was published in 2019. No current follow up projects are started, but the concept remains of interest!

Project Summary

read more

colimitation

The basis of nutrient colimitation November 11, 2022 less than 1 minute read

Nutrient availability is a key control on the growth and activity of microbes. Usually nutrient limitations are considered individually, but this ignores the reality of nature: often, many nutrients are simultaneously deplete.

Our understanding of the phenomenon of microbial growth when multiple nutrients are dilute is limited by lack of a unifed framework. Together with our collaborators at Rutgers University and ETH Zurich, we are working to fill that gap.

Further work will focus on the molecular basis and biogeochemical implications of nutrient colimitation.

The project uses mathematical modelling, concepts in theoretical biology, physiology and molecular analysis.

... read more
Colimitation in Trichodesmium April 19, 2021 less than 1 minute read

Trichodesmium, a keystone marine microbe, can fix a theoretically unlimited supply of carbon and nitrogen; therefore the next most-limiting nutrients Fe and P seem to limit its growth and activity. Which nutrient limits Trichodesmium in nature?

The project used metaproteomics, quantitative proteomics, mathematical modelling, and network analysis.

This work was published in 2020. The transcript abundances from some of the same transects reflect different patterns - an interesting comparison that can be found here (Cerdan-Garcia et al., 2021). I also recommend this nice study considering similar trade offs in nutrient acquisition by phytoplankton here (McCain et al.,... read more

current

Effects of wildfires on marine microbial communities February 14, 2025 1 minute read

From Jan From Jan 7-31, 2025, the highly destructive Palisades fire burned in the Santa Monica Mountains, consuming about 96 square kilometers of wildlands and built structures immediately adjacent to the California Current marine ecosystem. Hundreds of thousands of gallons of Phos-Chek fire retardant (ammonium phosphate) were deposited to fight the fire. On Jan 26-27, Feb 5-6, and Feb 12-15, significant rain washed ash, debris, and fire retardant into the ocean either directly or indirectly via creeks, groundwater, and sewer outflows. How will these sudden, massive inputs impact natural marine microbial communities in the Santa Monica Bay and beyond?

We... read more

The basis of nutrient colimitation November 11, 2022 less than 1 minute read

Nutrient availability is a key control on the growth and activity of microbes. Usually nutrient limitations are considered individually, but this ignores the reality of nature: often, many nutrients are simultaneously deplete.

Our understanding of the phenomenon of microbial growth when multiple nutrients are dilute is limited by lack of a unifed framework. Together with our collaborators at Rutgers University and ETH Zurich, we are working to fill that gap.

Further work will focus on the molecular basis and biogeochemical implications of nutrient colimitation.

The project uses mathematical modelling, concepts in theoretical biology, physiology and molecular analysis.

... read more
Protein modification in marine microbes November 11, 2022 less than 1 minute read

Proteins are the literal molecular machines that perform biochemical transformations within cells and connect the inner life of cells to the external environment. Protein activity, particularly of key enzymes such as the photosynthetic enzymes and nitrogenase, is an important biogeochemical parameter.

Protein activity can be modulated by changes in protein concentration (as we can measure through proteomics), but also through changes in protein 3D shape. Protein 3D shape can change dynamically over time due to protein-metabolite interactions, protein-protein interactions, and post translational modifications.

We are developing conceptually simple strategies to measure protein conformational changes in marine microbes. We work with... read more

heterogeneity

Dynamic diel proteome of Trichodesmium January 10, 2022 less than 1 minute read

Trichodesmium is unique among nitrogen fixers. It fixes nitrogen and carbon simultaneously. This is risky behavior - why would Trichodesmium do this?

The project used cell culturing, physiology, label-free protoemics, quantitative proteomics, GC-MS, mathematical modeling and network analysis.

This work was published in 2022. There is a much larger body of literature/debate about how Trichodesmium manages nitrogen fixation and carbon fixation simultaneously during the photoperiod. You can review snippets of this debate here. Clearly there is more to understand about Trichodesmium’s molecular physiology, and we plan to continue investigating!

Project Summary read more

protein modifications

Protein modification in marine microbes November 11, 2022 less than 1 minute read

Proteins are the literal molecular machines that perform biochemical transformations within cells and connect the inner life of cells to the external environment. Protein activity, particularly of key enzymes such as the photosynthetic enzymes and nitrogenase, is an important biogeochemical parameter.

Protein activity can be modulated by changes in protein concentration (as we can measure through proteomics), but also through changes in protein 3D shape. Protein 3D shape can change dynamically over time due to protein-metabolite interactions, protein-protein interactions, and post translational modifications.

We are developing conceptually simple strategies to measure protein conformational changes in marine microbes. We work with... read more

proteomics

Effects of wildfires on marine microbial communities February 14, 2025 1 minute read

From Jan From Jan 7-31, 2025, the highly destructive Palisades fire burned in the Santa Monica Mountains, consuming about 96 square kilometers of wildlands and built structures immediately adjacent to the California Current marine ecosystem. Hundreds of thousands of gallons of Phos-Chek fire retardant (ammonium phosphate) were deposited to fight the fire. On Jan 26-27, Feb 5-6, and Feb 12-15, significant rain washed ash, debris, and fire retardant into the ocean either directly or indirectly via creeks, groundwater, and sewer outflows. How will these sudden, massive inputs impact natural marine microbial communities in the Santa Monica Bay and beyond?

We... read more

Protein modification in marine microbes November 11, 2022 less than 1 minute read

Proteins are the literal molecular machines that perform biochemical transformations within cells and connect the inner life of cells to the external environment. Protein activity, particularly of key enzymes such as the photosynthetic enzymes and nitrogenase, is an important biogeochemical parameter.

Protein activity can be modulated by changes in protein concentration (as we can measure through proteomics), but also through changes in protein 3D shape. Protein 3D shape can change dynamically over time due to protein-metabolite interactions, protein-protein interactions, and post translational modifications.

We are developing conceptually simple strategies to measure protein conformational changes in marine microbes. We work with... read more

Dynamic diel proteome of Trichodesmium January 10, 2022 less than 1 minute read

Trichodesmium is unique among nitrogen fixers. It fixes nitrogen and carbon simultaneously. This is risky behavior - why would Trichodesmium do this?

The project used cell culturing, physiology, label-free protoemics, quantitative proteomics, GC-MS, mathematical modeling and network analysis.

This work was published in 2022. There is a much larger body of literature/debate about how Trichodesmium manages nitrogen fixation and carbon fixation simultaneously during the photoperiod. You can review snippets of this debate here. Clearly there is more to understand about Trichodesmium’s molecular physiology, and we plan to continue investigating!

Project Summary read more

publication

Dynamic diel proteome of Trichodesmium January 10, 2022 less than 1 minute read

Trichodesmium is unique among nitrogen fixers. It fixes nitrogen and carbon simultaneously. This is risky behavior - why would Trichodesmium do this?

The project used cell culturing, physiology, label-free protoemics, quantitative proteomics, GC-MS, mathematical modeling and network analysis.

This work was published in 2022. There is a much larger body of literature/debate about how Trichodesmium manages nitrogen fixation and carbon fixation simultaneously during the photoperiod. You can review snippets of this debate here. Clearly there is more to understand about Trichodesmium’s molecular physiology, and we plan to continue investigating!

Project Summary read more

Trichodesmium colonies as individuals July 13, 2021 less than 1 minute read

Under the microscope, Trichodesmium colonies vary a lot! How does is this reflected in their molecular profiles?

The project used metaproteomics of single colonies, microscopy, and synchrotron-based μ-XRF to look into this question.

This work was published in 2021. We’re following up on individual heterogeneity in marine microbes using microfluidics and microscopy techniques, and using what we learned in this project to improve techniques for metaproteomics analyses of limited-biomass samples.

Project Summary

colony images A look at all the colonies we examined in this study. From Figure S1 of the publication.... read more

Colimitation in Trichodesmium April 19, 2021 less than 1 minute read

Trichodesmium, a keystone marine microbe, can fix a theoretically unlimited supply of carbon and nitrogen; therefore the next most-limiting nutrients Fe and P seem to limit its growth and activity. Which nutrient limits Trichodesmium in nature?

The project used metaproteomics, quantitative proteomics, mathematical modelling, and network analysis.

This work was published in 2020. The transcript abundances from some of the same transects reflect different patterns - an interesting comparison that can be found here (Cerdan-Garcia et al., 2021). I also recommend this nice study considering similar trade offs in nutrient acquisition by phytoplankton here (McCain et al.,... read more

quantitative biology

The basis of nutrient colimitation November 11, 2022 less than 1 minute read

Nutrient availability is a key control on the growth and activity of microbes. Usually nutrient limitations are considered individually, but this ignores the reality of nature: often, many nutrients are simultaneously deplete.

Our understanding of the phenomenon of microbial growth when multiple nutrients are dilute is limited by lack of a unifed framework. Together with our collaborators at Rutgers University and ETH Zurich, we are working to fill that gap.

Further work will focus on the molecular basis and biogeochemical implications of nutrient colimitation.

The project uses mathematical modelling, concepts in theoretical biology, physiology and molecular analysis.

... read more
Protein modification in marine microbes November 11, 2022 less than 1 minute read

Proteins are the literal molecular machines that perform biochemical transformations within cells and connect the inner life of cells to the external environment. Protein activity, particularly of key enzymes such as the photosynthetic enzymes and nitrogenase, is an important biogeochemical parameter.

Protein activity can be modulated by changes in protein concentration (as we can measure through proteomics), but also through changes in protein 3D shape. Protein 3D shape can change dynamically over time due to protein-metabolite interactions, protein-protein interactions, and post translational modifications.

We are developing conceptually simple strategies to measure protein conformational changes in marine microbes. We work with... read more

Dynamic diel proteome of Trichodesmium January 10, 2022 less than 1 minute read

Trichodesmium is unique among nitrogen fixers. It fixes nitrogen and carbon simultaneously. This is risky behavior - why would Trichodesmium do this?

The project used cell culturing, physiology, label-free protoemics, quantitative proteomics, GC-MS, mathematical modeling and network analysis.

This work was published in 2022. There is a much larger body of literature/debate about how Trichodesmium manages nitrogen fixation and carbon fixation simultaneously during the photoperiod. You can review snippets of this debate here. Clearly there is more to understand about Trichodesmium’s molecular physiology, and we plan to continue investigating!

Project Summary read more

sustainability

Effects of wildfires on marine microbial communities February 14, 2025 1 minute read

From Jan From Jan 7-31, 2025, the highly destructive Palisades fire burned in the Santa Monica Mountains, consuming about 96 square kilometers of wildlands and built structures immediately adjacent to the California Current marine ecosystem. Hundreds of thousands of gallons of Phos-Chek fire retardant (ammonium phosphate) were deposited to fight the fire. On Jan 26-27, Feb 5-6, and Feb 12-15, significant rain washed ash, debris, and fire retardant into the ocean either directly or indirectly via creeks, groundwater, and sewer outflows. How will these sudden, massive inputs impact natural marine microbial communities in the Santa Monica Bay and beyond?

We... read more

systems biology

The basis of nutrient colimitation November 11, 2022 less than 1 minute read

Nutrient availability is a key control on the growth and activity of microbes. Usually nutrient limitations are considered individually, but this ignores the reality of nature: often, many nutrients are simultaneously deplete.

Our understanding of the phenomenon of microbial growth when multiple nutrients are dilute is limited by lack of a unifed framework. Together with our collaborators at Rutgers University and ETH Zurich, we are working to fill that gap.

Further work will focus on the molecular basis and biogeochemical implications of nutrient colimitation.

The project uses mathematical modelling, concepts in theoretical biology, physiology and molecular analysis.

... read more
Protein modification in marine microbes November 11, 2022 less than 1 minute read

Proteins are the literal molecular machines that perform biochemical transformations within cells and connect the inner life of cells to the external environment. Protein activity, particularly of key enzymes such as the photosynthetic enzymes and nitrogenase, is an important biogeochemical parameter.

Protein activity can be modulated by changes in protein concentration (as we can measure through proteomics), but also through changes in protein 3D shape. Protein 3D shape can change dynamically over time due to protein-metabolite interactions, protein-protein interactions, and post translational modifications.

We are developing conceptually simple strategies to measure protein conformational changes in marine microbes. We work with... read more

Trichodesmium colonies as individuals July 13, 2021 less than 1 minute read

Under the microscope, Trichodesmium colonies vary a lot! How does is this reflected in their molecular profiles?

The project used metaproteomics of single colonies, microscopy, and synchrotron-based μ-XRF to look into this question.

This work was published in 2021. We’re following up on individual heterogeneity in marine microbes using microfluidics and microscopy techniques, and using what we learned in this project to improve techniques for metaproteomics analyses of limited-biomass samples.

Project Summary

colony images A look at all the colonies we examined in this study. From Figure S1 of the publication.... read more

  • Trichodesmium (3)
  • biogeochemistry (6)
  • biomarkers (3)
  • cellular decision-making (1)
  • colimitation (2)
  • current (3)
  • heterogeneity (1)
  • protein modifications (1)
  • proteomics (6)
  • publication (4)
  • quantitative biology (4)
  • sustainability (1)
  • systems biology (3)

    2025 © Noelle Held

    Posts
    Tags
    About