Welcome to Archaea Biology and Ecogenomics

We belong to the Faculty of Life Sciences of the University of Vienna and are part of the Vienna Ecology Centre. Since April 1, 2013 we are the Archaea Biology and Ecogenomics Division of the Department of Ecogenomics and Systems Biology. 

 

 

Archaea arose together with Bacteria as the first organisms on this planet about 3.5 billion years ago. They form a separate domain of life beside Bacteria and Eukaryotes and inhabit virtually all environments on Earth, including the most extreme environments that can sustain life.
Our division studies the Biology of Archaea as well as bacterial symbioses with a focus on ecological, physiological and evolutionary aspects to shed light on the diversity and fundamental distinctions between these two prokaryotic groups.

In particular we are interested in:

- The ecological distribution of archaea from terrestrial, aquatic and hot environments

- The phylogeny of archaea

- The metabolism and genomes of ammonia oxidizing thaumarchaeota

- virus-defense (CRISPR-) systems of hyperthermophilic archaea

- physiology and biotechnological application of methanogenic archaea

- bacterium-nematode symbioses

We thus attempt to improve the understanding of the role of microorganisms, in particular of archaea, in global biogeochemical cycles and in early evolution.

 

19.08.2020
 

"Metagenome assembled‐genomes reveal similar functional profiles of CPR/Patescibacteria phyla in soils"

17.08.2020
 

Independent interdomain transfers lead to the current distribution of sulfate reduction in Archaea

14.08.2020
 

"Biohydrogen production beyond the Thauer limit by precision design of artificial microbial consortia"

07.08.2020
 

„Towards a genetic system for the Thaumarchaeon Nitrososphaera viennensis"

28.07.2020
 

"Nitrogen Isotope Fractionation During Archaeal Ammonia Oxidation: Coupled Estimates From Measurements of Residual Ammonium and Accumulated Nitrite"

23.07.2020
 

"Sulfate-Reducing Bacteria of the Oral Cavity and Their Relation with Periodontitis—Recent Advances"

Guest Lectures

28.07.2020
 

Join in for our second talk in our VBC Climate Lecture Series!

14.01.2020
 

"Evolution of archaeal gene regulatory networks under extreme stress"

13.01.2020
 

"CRISPR-Cas self-targeting in Haloarchaea"