Analyses in 2012

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  • Like larger organisms, microorganisms display distinct distributions in space and time. Martiny, Hanson and colleagues propose that four processes — selection, drift, dispersal and mutation — can shape such microbial biogeographic patterns, and analyse the literature to assess the evidence for their importance in shaping one pattern, the distance–decay relationship.

    • China A. Hanson
    • Jed A. Fuhrman
    • Jennifer B. H. Martiny
    Analysis
  • Many bacteria in a variety of niches contain cellulases. Such microorganisms are primarily considered to be saprophytic, but recent evidence suggests that cellulases are also present in non-saprophytes. By examining the genomes of ∼1,500 bacteria, Henrissat and colleagues confirm this observation and reveal unusual roles for some cellulases.

    • Felix Mba Medie
    • Gideon J. Davies
    • Bernard Henrissat
    Analysis