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32 nd ANNUAL MEETING of JAPANESE SOCIETY for MICROBIAL ECOLOGY & 10 th ASIAN SYMPOSIUM on MICROBIAL ECOLOGY ( ASME ) July 11 [WED]-13 [FRI], 2018 Okinawa Convention Center, Gino-wan, Okinawa, Japan

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  • 32nd ANNUAL MEETING of JAPANESE SOCIETY for MICROBIAL ECOLOGY &10th ASIAN SYMPOSIUM on MICROBIAL ECOLOGY(ASME)

    July 11 [WED]-13 [FRI], 2018Okinawa Convention Center, Gino-wan, Okinawa, Japan

    TakashiNarihiro[Draft version Jun 21, 2018]

    TakashiNarihiro

    TakashiNarihiro

  • AS

    ME

    ASME Table of Contents

    Greetings from Chairman 30

    Venue Guide 31

    Presentation Guidelines 36

    Schedule 37

    ASME Sessions 40

    Plenary Lectures 44

    Luncheon Seminar 48

    JSME Symposium 49

    Oral Presentations 51

    Poster Presentations 58

  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

    AS

    ME

    Venue Guide

    Public transportation

    Greetings from Chairman Dear ASME members

    We would like to cordially invite all of you to the 10th Asian Symposium on Microbial Ecology that will

    be held in the Okinawa Convention Center, Ginowan-city, Okinawa, Japan on July 11-13, 2018. It will

    take place together with the 32nd Japanese Society for Microbial Ecology (JSME) annual meeting.

    The venue is located one hour from the Naha (Okinawa) International airport by public

    transportations.

    The ASME will have the 10th anniversary and we would like to take this special opportunity

    to organize exciting sessions by ASME members with our neighboring country researchers and

    students. Microbial ecology is now strongly driven by meta-omics. However, not only those

    state-of-the-art technology-based research but field-based, cultivation-based, and interdisciplinary

    studies are very important to make our societies move forward to greatly contribute to scientific

    societies and industries.

    We would welcome all type of studies connecting microbiology, bioengineering, agriculture and

    ecology together.

    We will be organizing three ASME sessions (July 11 afternoon, July 12 morning and

    afternoon). On July 13, we will have the JSME and Microbes and Environments paper award lectures

    and invited sessions,and finally have a get-together that evening. The ASME sessions will be

    organized mainly by ASME ambassadors and by the JSME office members. Your input to them would

    be highly appreciated (the earlier the better).

    The venue is just right beside the cobalt-blue ocean and a resort hotel. We expect the

    weather will be pretty fine with a clear sky and dazzling sunlight. We will have a BBQ party on July

    11 evening at the beach, and will try to arrange a sunset cruising on July 12 (the number of people

    may be limited though).

    On July 13, you may either attend the JSME sessions or have enjoyable time swimming at the beach,

    visiting a world famous aquarium or taking a walk in villages with Japanese southern islands tropical

    atmosphere and traditions (but remember that we will have a banquet so please get back to the

    venue by then). We strongly recommend that you will arrive in Okinawa on July 10 at the latest, and

    depart from

    there on July 14 at the earliest. For details, please visit our annual meeting website

    (http://meeting-jsme2018.com/asme_english.html).

    We are looking forward to seeing all of you in Okinawa.

    Sincerely yours,

    Yoichi Kamagata

    President, Japanese Society for Microbial Ecology

    We would like to cordially invite all of you to the 10th Asian Symposium on Microbial Ecology that will be held in the Okinawa Convention Center, Ginowan-city, Okinawa, Japan on July 11-13, 2018. It will take place together with the 32nd Japanese Society for Microbial Ecology ( JSME ) annual meeting. The venue is located one hour from the Naha ( Okinawa ) International airport by public transportations. The ASME will have the 10th anniversary and we would like to take this special opportunity to organize exciting sessions by ASME members with our neighboring country researchers and students. Microbial ecology is now strongly driven by meta-omics. However, not only those state-of-the-art technology-based research but field-based, cultivation-based, and interdisciplinary studies are very important to make our societies move forward to greatly contribute to scientific societies and industries.We would welcome all type of studies connecting microbiology, bioengineering, agriculture and ecology together. We will be organizing three ASME sessions ( July 11 afternoon, July 12 morning and afternoon ). On July 13, we will have the JSME and Microbes and Environments paper award lectures and invited sessions,and finally have a get-together that evening. The ASME sessions will be organized mainly by ASME ambassadors and by the JSME office members. Your input to them would be highly appreciated ( the earlier the better ). The venue is just right beside the cobalt-blue ocean and a resort hotel. We expect the weather will be pretty fine with a clear sky and dazzling sunlight. We will have a BBQ party on July 11 evening at the beach, and will try to arrange a sunset cruising on July 12 ( the number of people may be limited though ).On July 13, you may either attend the JSME sessions or have enjoyable time swimming at the beach, visiting a world famous aquarium or taking a walk in villages with Japanese southern islands tropical atmosphere and traditions ( but remember that we will have a banquet so please get back to the venue by then ). We strongly recommend that you will arrive in Okinawa on July 10 at the latest, and depart fromthere on July 14 at the earliest. For details, please visit our annual meeting website( http://meeting-jsme2018.com/asme_english.html ).We are looking forward to seeing all of you in Okinawa.Sincerely yours,

    Yoichi KamagataPresident, Japanese Society for Microbial Ecology

    30 31

  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

    AS

    ME

    Venue Guide

    Public transportation

    Venue Okinawa Convention Center 4-3-1 Mashiki, Ginowan City Okinawa 901-2224, Japan TEL 098-898-3000 / FAX 098-898-2202

    Greetings from Chairman Dear ASME members

    We would like to cordially invite all of you to the 10th Asian Symposium on Microbial Ecology that will

    be held in the Okinawa Convention Center, Ginowan-city, Okinawa, Japan on July 11-13, 2018. It will

    take place together with the 32nd Japanese Society for Microbial Ecology (JSME) annual meeting.

    The venue is located one hour from the Naha (Okinawa) International airport by public

    transportations.

    The ASME will have the 10th anniversary and we would like to take this special opportunity

    to organize exciting sessions by ASME members with our neighboring country researchers and

    students. Microbial ecology is now strongly driven by meta-omics. However, not only those

    state-of-the-art technology-based research but field-based, cultivation-based, and interdisciplinary

    studies are very important to make our societies move forward to greatly contribute to scientific

    societies and industries.

    We would welcome all type of studies connecting microbiology, bioengineering, agriculture and

    ecology together.

    We will be organizing three ASME sessions (July 11 afternoon, July 12 morning and

    afternoon). On July 13, we will have the JSME and Microbes and Environments paper award lectures

    and invited sessions,and finally have a get-together that evening. The ASME sessions will be

    organized mainly by ASME ambassadors and by the JSME office members. Your input to them would

    be highly appreciated (the earlier the better).

    The venue is just right beside the cobalt-blue ocean and a resort hotel. We expect the

    weather will be pretty fine with a clear sky and dazzling sunlight. We will have a BBQ party on July

    11 evening at the beach, and will try to arrange a sunset cruising on July 12 (the number of people

    may be limited though).

    On July 13, you may either attend the JSME sessions or have enjoyable time swimming at the beach,

    visiting a world famous aquarium or taking a walk in villages with Japanese southern islands tropical

    atmosphere and traditions (but remember that we will have a banquet so please get back to the

    venue by then). We strongly recommend that you will arrive in Okinawa on July 10 at the latest, and

    depart from

    there on July 14 at the earliest. For details, please visit our annual meeting website

    (http://meeting-jsme2018.com/asme_english.html).

    We are looking forward to seeing all of you in Okinawa.

    Sincerely yours,

    Yoichi Kamagata

    President, Japanese Society for Microbial Ecology

    30 31

  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

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    Okinawa Convention Center (OCC)

    Conference Information

    Shuttle bus Shuttle buses from Omoromachi station of Yui rail(monorail running in Naha city) to Okinawa

    Convention Center (OCC) will run according to the schedule below. Please pay \500 to the staff

    before riding (Only Japanese yen is acceptable). It takes around 40 min (depending on the traffic).

    Okinawa Convention Center (OCC) Omoromachi stationNaha

    Parking (OCC) Free parking is available. Please follow the instructions of parking staff because parking area is

    restricted.

    Shuttle bus operating schedule

    Day Time Departure Arrival Cars

    July 11th (Wed) 09:00 - 09:15 Omoromachi OCC 2

    July 11th (Wed) 18:15 - 18:30 OCC Omoromachi 3

    July 11th (Wed) 20:50 - 21:10 OCC Omoromachi 5

    July 12th (Thu) 07:45 - 08:25 Omoromachi OCC 8

    July 12th (Thu) 18:15 - 18:30 OCC Omoromachi 4

    July 12th (Thu) 20:10 - 20:25 OCC Omoromachi 3

    July 12th (Thu) 22:45 OCC Omoromachi 1

    July 13th (Fri) 07:45 - 08:25 Omoromachi OCC 8 July 13th (Fri) 17:15 - 17:30 OCC Omoromachi 4

    July 13th (Fri) 20:15- 20:30 Laguna Garden Hotel Omoromachi 4

    32 33

  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

    AS

    ME

    Okinawa Convention Center (OCC)

    Conference Information

    Shuttle bus Shuttle buses from Omoromachi station of Yui rail(monorail running in Naha city) to Okinawa

    Convention Center (OCC) will run according to the schedule below. Please pay \500 to the staff

    before riding (Only Japanese yen is acceptable). It takes around 40 min (depending on the traffic).

    Okinawa Convention Center (OCC) Omoromachi stationNaha

    Parking (OCC) Free parking is available. Please follow the instructions of parking staff because parking area is

    restricted.

    Shuttle bus operating schedule

    Day Time Departure Arrival Cars

    July 11th (Wed) 09:00 - 09:15 Omoromachi OCC 2

    July 11th (Wed) 18:15 - 18:30 OCC Omoromachi 3

    July 11th (Wed) 20:50 - 21:10 OCC Omoromachi 5

    July 12th (Thu) 07:45 - 08:25 Omoromachi OCC 8

    July 12th (Thu) 18:15 - 18:30 OCC Omoromachi 4

    July 12th (Thu) 20:10 - 20:25 OCC Omoromachi 3

    July 12th (Thu) 22:45 OCC Omoromachi 1

    July 13th (Fri) 07:45 - 08:25 Omoromachi OCC 8 July 13th (Fri) 17:15 - 17:30 OCC Omoromachi 4

    July 13th (Fri) 20:15- 20:30 Laguna Garden Hotel Omoromachi 4

    32 33

  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

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    Web site http://meeting-jsme2018.com/

    Reception (Main Entrance of "Conference Building A") Advanced registration

    Please receive your participation certificate and congress bag at the reception desk.

    Onsite registration of banquet is acceptable (Mixer was closed).

    Onsite registration

    Please pay registration fees by cash (only JPY is acceptable).

    Please fill in your name and affiliation on participation certificate and wear it during the conference.

    Congress bag will be prepared for all participants.

    Registration/Banquet/Mixer fees (on site) Registration Banquet Mixer (BBQ)

    Regular

    participant

    ASME member 12,000 9,000

    Closed Non-member 13,000

    Student all 8,000 7,000

    Proceedings Only PDF is available through the conference web site (http://meeting-jsme2018.com/).

    Internet Internet service (free WiFi) is available using the SSID below in OCC Convention building A&B.

    Please note that the Internet connection using the SSID will be problematic when the connection is

    busy

    SSID Free_WiFi-Convention_Center

    Cloak room Cloak room will be opened in the following schedule. The conference office will not bear any

    responsibility for loss or breakage of items.

    July 11th (Wed) July 12th (Thu) July 13th (Fri)

    Time 9:3020:45 8:3020:30 8:3017:30 17:3020:30

    Site Reception desk Reception desk Reception desk Laguna Garden Hotel

    Eexhibition room Companies will setup exhibition booth in room A2. Please visit exhibition room at least once during

    the conference.

    Lunch Restraint, Self-caf TAIYO-ICHIBA (70 seats), in OCC is available during the conference.

    Lunch on seminar is scheduled at room B1 on July 12th12:0012:50.

    Lunch box will be prepared on July 13th (100 meals). Please purchase lunch box coupon at the

    reception desk in advance.

    Otherwise, Ginowan Convention City, large shopping mall contains several restraints (500

    meters to the south from OCC).

    Mixer (BBQ) Date and Time: July 11th (Wed) 18302030

    Site: Ginowan Tropical beach

    Banquet Date and Time: July 13th (Fri) 18002000

    Site: Laguna Garden Hotel (400 meters to the north from OCC)

    Precautions against the heat Please avoid prolonged exposure to the sun light and make sure to drink of water frequently to

    prevent heatstroke.

    34 35

  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

    AS

    ME

    Web site http://meeting-jsme2018.com/

    Reception (Main Entrance of "Conference Building A") Advanced registration

    Please receive your participation certificate and congress bag at the reception desk.

    Onsite registration of banquet is acceptable (Mixer was closed).

    Onsite registration

    Please pay registration fees by cash (only JPY is acceptable).

    Please fill in your name and affiliation on participation certificate and wear it during the conference.

    Congress bag will be prepared for all participants.

    Registration/Banquet/Mixer fees (on site) Registration Banquet Mixer (BBQ)

    Regular

    participant

    ASME member 12,000 9,000

    Closed Non-member 13,000

    Student all 8,000 7,000

    Proceedings Only PDF is available through the conference web site (http://meeting-jsme2018.com/).

    Internet Internet service (free WiFi) is available using the SSID below in OCC Convention building A&B.

    Please note that the Internet connection using the SSID will be problematic when the connection is

    busy

    SSID Free_WiFi-Convention_Center

    Cloak room Cloak room will be opened in the following schedule. The conference office will not bear any

    responsibility for loss or breakage of items.

    July 11th (Wed) July 12th (Thu) July 13th (Fri)

    Time 9:3020:45 8:3020:30 8:3017:30 17:3020:30

    Site Reception desk Reception desk Reception desk Laguna Garden Hotel

    Eexhibition room Companies will setup exhibition booth in room A2. Please visit exhibition room at least once during

    the conference.

    Lunch Restraint, Self-caf TAIYO-ICHIBA (70 seats), in OCC is available during the conference.

    Lunch on seminar is scheduled at room B1 on July 12th12:0012:50.

    Lunch box will be prepared on July 13th (100 meals). Please purchase lunch box coupon at the

    reception desk in advance.

    Otherwise, Ginowan Convention City, large shopping mall contains several restraints (500

    meters to the south from OCC).

    Mixer (BBQ) Date and Time: July 11th (Wed) 18302030

    Site: Ginowan Tropical beach

    Banquet Date and Time: July 13th (Fri) 18002000

    Site: Laguna Garden Hotel (400 meters to the north from OCC)

    Precautions against the heat Please avoid prolonged exposure to the sun light and make sure to drink of water frequently to

    prevent heatstroke.

    34 35

  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

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    Presentation Guidelines

    Oral presentation Please use your own PC to lecture.

    Only mini D-sub 15-pin (see below) is available on site. If necessary, please prepare a connector

    to mini D-sub 15-pin terminal by yourself.

    Please connect your PC to the monitor cable in 1-minute interval between presentations.

    Presentation time in Oral sessions 1-6 is 15 min (presentation 11 min, discussion 3 min, PC

    change 1 min). Note that the presentation times in ASME sessions 1-3 are different depending

    on the sessions.

    Laser pointer will be prepared in the room. D-sub 15-pin

    Best presenter award Best presenters in Oral sessions 1-6 and ASME young scientist session will be commended; all

    presenters in the sessions will be candidates. The best presenters will give make presentations in

    Best Presenter session (Jul. 13th 16:00-17:00).

    Poster presentation Schedule of poster presentation is as follows.

    Poster size should be within 90 cm (W) X 190 cm (H).

    Please use push pin prepared in the room for potting up posters.

    Please remove your poster in the poster removal time below; posters remaining after the time

    will be removed by 32th JSME/10th ASME office.

    No. Posting Presentationa) Poster removal

    P1-001 - 150 July 11th 11:30 - July 11th 15:30-18:00 July 12th 12:00-12:30

    P2-001 - 150 July 12th 12:30 - July 12th 15:30-18:00 July 13th 13:00-13:30

    a) Odd number: 15:3016:45; even number: 16:4518:00

    Excellent poster award Excellent poster presenters will be commended; the presenters who entered the award will be

    candidates. The excellent poster presenters will be announced and commended in Banquet (Jul.

    13th 18:00-20:00).

    Symposium Presentation guidelines are the same as for Oral presentation. Symposium organizer will manage the

    session.

    36 37

  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

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    321711()

    Roomno. A1 A2 B1 B2 B3 B4

    11:00

    12:00

    13:00

    14:00

    15:00

    16:00

    17:00

    18:00

    19:00

    20:00

    Mixer (BBQ on the beach)

    Move to Ginowan Tropical Beach (just behind OCC)

    Conference buiding A Conference building B

    Oral session 3

    "Symbiosis& Interaction"13:00-15:15

    Short break (15:15/20 - 15:30)

    Companiesexhibition

    Oral session 1

    "Genomics/Phylogeny

    & Taxonomy"13:00-15:15

    Okinawa Convention Center (OCC)

    Poster session 1Even number core time

    16:45-18:00

    "ASMEbusiness meeting"

    (in English)11:30-12:45

    ASME session 1

    "Ocean &Geomicrobiology"

    (in English)13:00-15:20

    Oral session 2

    "Physiology& Metabolism"

    13:00-15:15

    Poster session 1Odd number core time 15:30-

    16:45

    JSME ElectromicrobiologyResearch Working group

    meeting(in English)

    11:30-12:45

    Poster session 1

    Schedule

    11th July, Wednesday

    Presentation Guidelines

    Oral presentation Please use your own PC to lecture.

    Only mini D-sub 15-pin (see below) is available on site. If necessary, please prepare a connector

    to mini D-sub 15-pin terminal by yourself.

    Please connect your PC to the monitor cable in 1-minute interval between presentations.

    Presentation time in Oral sessions 1-6 is 15 min (presentation 11 min, discussion 3 min, PC

    change 1 min). Note that the presentation times in ASME sessions 1-3 are different depending

    on the sessions.

    Laser pointer will be prepared in the room. D-sub 15-pin

    Best presenter award Best presenters in Oral sessions 1-6 and ASME young scientist session will be commended; all

    presenters in the sessions will be candidates. The best presenters will give make presentations in

    Best Presenter session (Jul. 13th 16:00-17:00).

    Poster presentation Schedule of poster presentation is as follows.

    Poster size should be within 90 cm (W) X 190 cm (H).

    Please use push pin prepared in the room for potting up posters.

    Please remove your poster in the poster removal time below; posters remaining after the time

    will be removed by 32th JSME/10th ASME office.

    No. Posting Presentationa) Poster removal

    P1-001 - 150 July 11th 11:30 - July 11th 15:30-18:00 July 12th 12:00-12:30

    P2-001 - 150 July 12th 12:30 - July 12th 15:30-18:00 July 13th 13:00-13:30

    a) Odd number: 15:3016:45; even number: 16:4518:00

    Excellent poster award Excellent poster presenters will be commended; the presenters who entered the award will be

    candidates. The excellent poster presenters will be announced and commended in Banquet (Jul.

    13th 18:00-20:00).

    Symposium Presentation guidelines are the same as for Oral presentation. Symposium organizer will manage the

    session.

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    322712()

    Roomno. A1 A2 B1 B2 B3 B4

    9:00

    10:00

    11:00

    12:00

    13:00

    14:00

    15:00

    16:00

    17:00

    18:00

    19:00

    20:00

    Poster session 2Odd number core time

    15:30-16:45

    Poster session 2Even number core time

    16:45-18:00

    Companiesexhibition

    ASME session 2

    "Frontier in MicrobialEcology & YoungScientist Session"

    (in English)

    9:00-11:45

    Oral session 4

    "Extreme environment/Wastewater treatment

    /Material cycling

    9:00-11:45

    Oral session 5

    Aquaticecosystem

    9:00-11:45

    Oral session 6

    Plant & Soil

    9:00-11:45

    Luncheon symposium"Unconsious Bias in

    Academia"12:00-12:50

    Lunch time 75 min

    8:30 Open Open

    JSME symposium 2

    Expedition tosubmillimetre habitat:

    Microscale technologiesto unveil microbial

    dynamics in naturein English13:00-15:20

    Okinawa Convention Center

    Conference buiding A Conference building B

    Poster session 1

    Poster session 2

    Poster remove 12:00-12:30

    JSME symposium 1

    "Cutting-edge techniquesin

    evolutionary/communityecology and frontiers in

    microbiology"13:00-15:20

    ASME session 3

    "Syntrophy"(in English)

    13:00-15:20

    JSME symposium 3

    "Soil-Plant-Microbe:Moving beyond

    conventional approachestoward further

    understanding of plantholobiont"

    13:00-15:20

    Short Break (15:20 - 15:30)

    12th July, Thursday

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    323713()

    Roomno. A1 A2

    9:00

    10:00

    11:00

    12:00

    13:00

    14:00

    15:00

    16:00

    17:00

    18:00

    19:00

    Okinawa Convention Center

    Open

    Conference buiding A

    Companiesexhibition

    Theater

    8:30 Open

    Poster session 2

    Banquetat Laguna Garden Hotel

    Best presenter award/Excellent poster award ceremonyClosing ceremony

    Move to Laguna Garden Hotel (10 minutes' walk)

    JSME business meeting9:00-10:00

    JSME Encouragement awardMicrobes and Environments paper award

    Ceremony Presentation10:00-12:00

    Plenary Lectures1. YuZhang (Chinese Academy of Science)2. Jongsik Chun (Seoul National University)

    3. Yuji Sekiguchi(National Institute of AdvancedIndustrial Science and Technology)

    4. Ken Kurokawa (National Institute of Genetics)13:30-16:30

    Best presenters' session16:00-17:00

    Lunch time 90 minPoster romove13:00-13:30

    13th July, Friday

    38 39

  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

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    Distinctive microbial assemblages and their ecological function in permanently ice-covered lakes of the Dry Valleys, AntarticaOk-Seun KimKorea Polar Research Institute

    Evolutionary genetic traits for thermal adaptation in BacillalesDong-woo LeeYonsei University

    Steep redox gradient and biogeochemical processes driven by deeply-rooted fluids in a terrestrial mud volcanoLi-Hung LinNational Taiwan University

    H2 accumulation by Ni limitation in CyanotheceSing-how TuoAcademia Sinica

    A primordial and reversible TCA cycle in a facultatively chemolithoautotrophic thermophileTakuro NunouraJAMSTEC

    Deep microbial ecosystems within Cretaceous igneous rocksYohey SuzukiThe University of Tokyo

    ASME session 1"Ocean & Geomicrobiology"

    Invited speakers:

    Date and timeJuly 11th Wed 13001520RoomB1

    Conveners: Sung-Geun Rhee, Chungbuk National University Yin-Ru Chiang, Academia SinicaYuki Morono, JAMSTEC

    13:00-

    13:23-

    13:46-

    14:09-

    14:32-

    14:55-

    A1-1

    A1-2

    A1-3

    A1-4

    A1-5

    A1-6

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  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

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    ASME session 2"Frontier in Microbial Ecology & Young Scientist Session"

    Invited speakers for "Frontier in Microbial Ecology"

    Date and timeJuly 12th Thu 9001145RoomB1

    Conveners: Woojun Park, Korea UniversityHsion-Wen David Kuo, Tunghai UniversiryRyosuke Nakai, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

    Genomic insight into the predominance of candidate phylum Atribacteria JS1 lineage in marine sedimentsYung Mi Lee1Kuin Hwang1Jae Il Lee1Jongsik Chun2Soon Gyu Hong1 Seung Chul Shin11Korea Polar Research Institute2Seoul National University

    Current Progress and Challenges in Microbial Source Tracking Based on Next-Generation-SequencingTatsuya UnnoJeju National University

    Skin Microbiome: Fragile skin microbiomes in megacities are assembled by a predominantly niche-based processWoo-Jun SulChung-Ang University

    Ecology of airborne fungi associated with respiratory allergyPi-Han WangTunghai University

    Role of bacterial type VI secretion system in rhizobium-legume mutualistic symbiosisChi-Te LiuNational Taiwan University

    Challenging the dogma of bacterial membrane vesicle formationMasanori ToyofukuUniversity of Tsukuba

    Speakers for "Young Scientist Session"

    9:00-

    9:18-

    9:36-

    9:54-

    10:12-

    10:30-

    A2-1

    A2-2

    A2-3

    A2-4

    A2-5

    A2-6

    40 41

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    Uncovering the bacterial community assembly pattern and novel populations in Baltic Sea surface watersPoorna Weerarathna Vidanage 1Seungdae Oh 21Nanyang Technological University2Kyung Hee University

    Plant microbial fuel cell for remediation of hexavalent chromium contaminated soil and treating mechanismsChung-Yu Guan1Chang-Ping Yu2Graduate Institute of Environmental Engineering, National Taiwan University, Taipei 106, Taiwan

    Microbial community composition and functional capacity in a terrestrial ferruginous, sulfate-depleted mud volcanoTzu-Hsuan Tu12Li-Wei Wu24Yu-Shih Lin5Hiroyuki Imachi36Li-Hung Lin2Pei-Ling Wang11Institute of Oceanography, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan2Department of Geosciences, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan3Department of Subsurface Geobiological Analysis and Research, Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology, Yokosuka, Japan4The Experimental Forest, College of Bio-Resources and Agriculture, National Taiwan University, Nantou, Taiwan5Department of Oceanography, National Sun Yat-sen University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan,6Research and Development Center for Marine Resources, Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology, Yokosuka, Japan

    Nitrogen and oxygen isotope effect of anaerobic ammonium oxidationKanae Kobayashi1Akiko Makabe2Midori Yano3Mamoru Oshiki4Tomonori Kindaichi5Satoshi Okabe61Grad. Sch. of Eng., Hokkaido Univ.2JAMSTEC3CER, Kyoto Univ.4NIT, Nagaoka Coll.5Grad. Sch. of Eng., Hiroshima Univ.6Faculty of Eng., Hokkaido Univ.

    Nitrogen-fixing bacteria and nitrogenase activity in thermophilic chemosynthetic microbial communities at Nakabusa hot springsArisa Nishihara1Katsumi Matsuura1Shawn E McGlynn1234Vera Thiel1Marcus Tank1Shin Haruta11Dept. of Biol. Sci., TMU2ELSI, Titech3BCRT, RIKEN4BMSIS

    10:42-

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  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

    AS

    ME

    ASME session 3"Syntrophy"

    Invited speakers:

    Date and timeJuly 12th Thu 13001520RoomB3

    Conveners: Taeho Lee, Pusan National UniversityChang-Ping Yu, National Taiwan UniversityTakashi Narihiro, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

    Syntrophic association between exoelctrogenic bacteria and methanogenic archaea via granular activated carbon in anaerobic digestionHee-deung ParkKorea university

    Isolation of Methanoculleus species from deep-sea potential gas hydrate bearing area and their comparative genomic analysesSheng-Chung ChenNational Chung Hsing University

    Smithella propionica LYP uses a novel fourth pathway for syntrophic propionate degradationMasaru K NobuNational Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

    The selective enrichment of syntrophs, methanogens and exoelectrogens on granular activated carbon in stage anaerobic fluidized bed membrane bioreactors (SAF-MBRs)Giin-Yu Amy TanHong Kong Polytechnic University

    Novel energy conservation strategies and behavior of Pelotomaculum schinkii driving syntrophic propionate catabolismCatalina Hidalgo AhumadaWageningen University

    13:00-

    13:25-

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    14:15-

    14:50-

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  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

    JSMEASME

    Plenary Lectures

    The presence of high concentration antibiotics in wastewater can disturb the stability of biological wastewater treatment systems and promote generation of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) during the treatment. Therefore, it is of vital importance to understand the horizontal gene transfer behaviors of the ARGs in wastewater treatment systems. Class 1 integron (intI1 ) is thought to be the smallest genetic element and play an important role in the spread of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs). However, little is known about the response of intI1 in microbial community to different antibiotics stresses. IntI1 was found to be enriched with the increase of streptomycin and oxytetracycline concentrations. The aminoglycoside ARGs cassettes including increased from 22.4% to 57.4% with the increase of streptomycin dose from 0 to 50 mg/L. Though intI1 showed significant correlation with abundant tetracycline (tet) ARGs in oxytetracycline system, no tet genes were found as gene cassette. Further analysis of the flanking regions of intI1 showed that intI1 were found to be syntenic with tet genes, indicating co-selection contributes to the enrichment of intI1 under oxytetracycline stress. For tetE, which was found to be the most prevalent tet genes in Aeromonas isolated from the treatment system. Three novel tetE -carrying mobile genetic elements and one phage integrase were found, including Tn6433 , pAeca1-a, and pAeca2. The Tn6433 and variants were detected both in the chromosome and plasmid of Aeromonas , accounting for 75% under the oxytetracycline dose higher than 5 mg/L, indicating that Tn6433 may play a key role in the dissemination of tetE under high concentration of oxytetracycline.In order to control the spread of ARGs during the treatment, we established a pretreatment method for antibiotic production wastewater including oxytetracycline using an enhanced hydrolysis process. Both lab and pilot studies demonstrated that the COD and ARGs could be simultaneous controlled by introducing the enhanced hydrolysis pretreatment for the treatment of production wastewater.

    Yu ZhangJiaqi HuyanYanhong ShiZhe Tianand Min Yang

    State Key Lab. of Environmental Aquatic Chemistry, Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences.

    Correspondence: Yu Zhang ([email protected])

    [1] Horizontal gene transfer and management of antibiotic resistance in pharmaceutical wastewater treatment systems

    DateJuly 13th (Fri)13:30 - 16:00H a l lTheater Hall

    Keywords: Antibiotic production wastewater, Biological wastewater treatment, Antibiotic resistance genes, Horizontal gene transfer, Enhanced hydrolysis process

    44 45

  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

    JSMEASME

    Prokaryotic taxonomy has been benefited from the successful introduction of the large-scale and cost-effective DNA sequencing technologies. This enables us towards the better and more detailed understanding of taxonomy and ecology of microorganisms. Next-generation sequencing (NGS) provides affordable means of sequencing whole bacterial genomes and has great potential to enable the objective, robust and automated scheme for classification and identification of Bacteria and Archaea. The use of genome data can readily facilitate automation of identification, as well as detect new species, in routine microbiological laboratories. For such a process, the high-quality, timely updated database is essential. Here, I will introduce the unified database of nomenclature, 16S rRNA genes, genome sequences and microbiome, previously introduced as EzBioCloud (formerly called EzTaxon). In this presentation, I will present (1) genome-based classification and identification of bacteria, (2) the utility of Pacific Biosciences error-free, chimera-free, full-length 16S sequencing, and (3) application to metagenomics and microbiome study. The latest version of 16S database for open-source pipelines (e.g. QIIME) is available at https://www.ezbiocloud.net/resources/16s_download

    The presentation file will be posted for the download at https://www.ezbiocloud.net/pt/jsme (at the time of the conference).

    Jongsik Chun

    School of Biological Sciences, Seoul National University, Seoul, Republic of Korea ChunLab, Inc., Nambusunhwan-ro, Seocho-gu, Seoul, Republic of Korea

    Keywords: 16S rRNA, Genomics, Database, Identification, Microbiome

    [2] Database-driven microbiology for bacterial taxonomy and microbiome research

    44 45

  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

    JSMEASME

    Despite ecological and biotechnological significance of microorganisms, our understanding of the microbial communities underpinning every natural and human-made ecosystems are still rudimentary because most microorganisms cannot be easily cultured. The study of these microbes has often been hampered by an inability to obtain a pure culture despite repeated and long term physical cell isolation and cultivation efforts. However, emerging metagenome-based techniques, such as differential coverage binning of metagenomic data, are providing new opportunities to isolate genomes of uncultured microbial lineages in silico, allowing us to perform genome-centric metagenomics involving even low abundance population genomes. In this talk, I would like to introduce recent technological advancements of genome-centric metagenomics and show examples of their applications.

    genome-centric metagenomics

    Yuji Sekiguchi

    Biomedical Research Institute, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST)

    [3] From physical cell isolation to in silico genome isolation: genome-centric metagenomics

    in silico genome-centric metagenomics

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  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

    JSMEASME

    We have been developing an integrated database for microbes, "MicrobeDB.jp", which integrates various data related to microbes by semantic web technology. MicrobeDB.jp is the huge scale knowledge base of microbes, which can be easily accessible to non-experts of microbiology. We have applied machine learning techniques to tens of thousands of metagenomic samples in the DB and developed a new system LEA which provides whole picture of microbiomes on the earth and enables to compare user samples with existing samples. Statistical modeling for unprecedented big data of microbiomes enables to automatically extract the microbial community types in various environments and to evaluate the features of the user sample more effectively than the previous methods. Our system can quickly evaluate the microbial community structures in new samples and detect "deviations" from the states commonly found in the source environment. Therefore, our technologies can lead to new diagnosis of diseases using human microbiomes and detection of environmental pollution. Furthermore, it can be applied to various fields of industry intended to analysis or control of microbiomes.

    MicrobeDB.jpLEA (Latent Environment Allocation)MicrobeDB.jp

    Ken Kurokawa

    National Institute of GeneticsNIG

    [4] Integrated database for microbe MicrobeDB.jpMicrobeDB.jp

    46 47

  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

    JSMEASME

    Unconscious Bias in AcademiaMichele ThompsonOkinawa Institute of Science and Technology

    Luncheon SeminarWoman Scientist Roundtable (WSR) and JSME Luncheon Symposium

    Invited speaker:

    Date and timeJuly 12th (Thu) 12001250RoomB1

    Conveners: Kyung-Hwa Beak, National Biodiversity Institute of KoreaPi-Han Wang, Tunghai UniversityNaoko Yoshida, Nagoya Institute of TechnologyOrganized by ASME Woman Scientist Network and JSME Committee for the Promotion of Diversity and Gender Equality

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  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

    JSMEASME

    Generalist species drive microbial dispersion and evolutionWataru Iwasaki1231Grad. Sch. Sci., UTokyo2AORI, UTokyo3Grad. Sch. Frontier Sci., UTokyo

    S1-1

    Agroecosystem dynamics and fluctuating interaction networks of microbial communitiesMasayuki Ushio121JST, PRESTO2CER, Kyoto Univ.

    S1-2

    Microbial ecology and genome featuresHaruo SuzukiInst. Adv. Biosci., Keio Univ.

    S1-3

    Microbial ecosystem revealed by multi-lakes' comparative environmental genomicsYusuke Okazaki121Bioproduction Research Institute, AIST2JSPS Research Fellow (PD)

    S1-4

    Exploring core microbiomes for designing ecosystemsHirokazu Toju121Center for Ecological Research, Kyoto University2JST PRESTO

    S1-5

    JSME Symposium

    Cutting-edge techniques in evolutionary/community ecology and frontiers in microbiology(Speak in Japanese; Slides are written in English)

    Expedition to submillimetre habitat: Microscale technologies to unveil microbial dynamics in nature(Speak in English; Slides are written in English)

    Room B2S1-1S1-5

    Room B1S2-1S2-4

    Single-cell analysis to understand the behavior of bacterial cellsSetsu KatoAdSM, Hiroshima Univ.

    S2-1

    Miniscule space designing for microbial cultivationYoshiteru AoiDept. Molecular Biotechnol., Hiroshima Univ.

    S2-2

    Probing phytoplankton-bacteria interactions with in situ microtechnologyBennett Lambert12Jean-Baptiste Raina3Lauren Messer4Nachshon Siboni3Donovan Parks4Vicente Fernandez2Christian Rinke4Sammy Frenk4 Philip Hugenholtz4Gene Tyson4Justin Seymour3Roman Stocker21MIT-WHOI Joint Program in Ocean Science and Engineering2ETH Zurich 3University of Technology Sydney4University of Queensland

    S2-3

    Integrating microfluidics, robotics and noninvasive cell analysis tehcnologies: Toward controlled ecophysiological studies at single-cell resolutionYutaka YawataFaculty of Life and Environmental Sciences, Univ. of Tsukuba

    S2-4

    12th July, Thursday

    49

  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

    JSMEASME

    Considering plant-microbe interactions at the cellular level ~a journey to understand a thousand microbes begins with a single microbe~Shigeyuki BetsuyakuFac. Life & Env. Sci., Univ. Tsukuba

    S3-1

    An approach to stipulate the rhizosphere: analysis of the dynamics of isoflavones in soybean rhizosphere ~~Akifumi SugiyamaRISH, Kyoto Univ.

    S3-2

    Pathogenic R-body-production in legume symbiont Azorhizobium caulinodansR-bodyToshihiro AonoBRC, The Univ. of Tokyo

    S3-3

    Transmission of plant-associated microbes through soil and seed Nobutaka SomeyaNIVFS/NARO

    S3-4

    Plant microbiome: Can we find key interactions between plant and microbe from holobiome?Kiwamu MinamisawaGraduate School of Life Sciences, Tohoku Univ.

    S3-5

    Soil-Plant-Microbe: Moving beyond conventional approaches toward further understanding of plant holobiont-- (Speak in Japanese; Slides are written in English)

    Room B4S3-1S3-5

    50

  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

    JSMEASME

    Oral Presentation(Speak in Japanese or English; Slides are written in English)

    11th July, Wednesday13:0015:15

    Session 1: Genomics / Phylogeny & Taxonomy 1

    Room B2O1-1O1-9

    Non-invasive lipid productivity analysis by single-cell innate fluorescent signatureTomohiro Hirayama1Shiomi Yawata3Yuhki Kawamura2Nobuhiko Nomura3Yutaka Yawata31Sch. Life Environ. Sci. , Univ. Tsukuba2Grad. Sch. Life Environ. Sci. , Univ. Tsukuba3Fac. Life Environ. Sci., Univ. Tsukuba

    O1-1

    Molecular mechanism of methylotaxis in Methylobacterium aquaticum strain 22AYuuki HarunaAkio TaniIPSR, Okayama Univ

    O1-2

    Comparative metatranscriptomics reveals extracellular electron transfer pathways in electrogenic microbiomes conferring microbial adaptivity to surface redox potential changesShun'ichi Ishii1Shino Suzuki2Kenneth H. Nealson31R&D Center for Submaribe Resources, JAMSTEC2KCC, JAMSTEC3USC

    O1-3

    Algal polysaccharide degrading bacteria isolation and genetic background characterizationTetsushi Mori1Yasuhito Yokoi2Toshiyuki Shibata3Reiji Tanaka3Hideo Miyake3Mitsuyoshi Ueda41Grad. Sch. Engr., Tokyo Univ. Agric. Technol.2Dept. Life Sci. & Biotech., Tokyo Univ. Agric. Technol.3Grad. Sch. Bioresour., Mie Univ.4Grad. Sch. Agric., Kyoto Univ.

    O1-4

    Phylogenomic analysis of catalase genes of lactic acid bacteria in the order LactobacillalesLactobacillalescatalaseDaisuke Fukuda1Kouhei Mizuno21GlaxoSmithKline2National institute of technology, Kitakyushu college

    O1-5

    Morphological and genomic characterization of a novel phagotrophic bacterium Candidatus "Uab amorphum"Candidatus "Uab amorphum" Takashi Shiratori13Shigekatsu Suzuki2Yukako Kakizawa1Ken-ichiro Ishida11Univ. of Tsukuba2NIES3JAMSTEC

    O1-6

    Molecular phylogenetic analysis of Acanthamoeba castellanii medusavirusAcanthamoeba castellanii medusavirus Masaharu Takemura1Genki Yoshikawa2Keita Aoki1Tomohiro Mochizuki3Romain Blanc-Mathieu2Chihong Song4Kazuyoshi Murata4Hiroyuki Ogata21Fac. of Sci., Tokyo Univ. of Sci.2Inst. for Chem. Res., Kyoto Univ. 3ELSI, Tokyo Inst. of Technol.4Nat. Inst. for Physiol. Sci.

    O1-7

    ASMESkin biofilm-derived Propionibacterium acnes genotypes are unique to each individualJiayue Yang14Mia Yoshikawa1Tomoya Tsukimi1Kenta Suzuki2Masaru Tomita1 Shinji Fukuda134561Inst. Adv. Biosci., Keio Univ.2NIES3KISTEC-KAST4TMRC, Tsukuba Univ. 5JST PRESTO6Metabologenomics, Inc.

    O1-8

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  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

    JSMEASME

    Session 2: Physiology and Metabolism2

    Room B3O2-1O2-9

    Metaepigenomic analysis reveals an unexplored diversity of DNA methylations in environmental prokaryotic communityDNASatoshi Hiraoka12Yusuke Okazaki3Mizue Anda4Shin-ichi Nakano3 Wataru Iwasaki1451Deep-sea Bio OIP, R&D Center for Marine Biosciences, JAMSTEC2CBMS, Graduate School of Frontier Sciences, UTokyo3CER, Kyoto Univ.4Department of Biological Sciences, Graduate School of Science, UTokyo5AORI, UTokyo

    O1-9

    Glycogen Metabolism of Anammox Bacteria Candidatus Brocadia sinica: Comparison of Growing, Stationary, and Starvation PhaseAmrini ShafdarSatoshi OkabeHokkaido University

    O2-1

    Isolation Process and Genomic Analysis of Nitrite Oxidizer Nitrotoga sp. Provide Insights on Physiological Characteristics and Clues to Promote the GrowthNitrotoga Kento Ishii1Hirotsugu Fujitani23Yuji Sekiguchi4Satoshi Tsuneda121Grad. Sch. Adv. Sci. Eng., Waseda Univ.2NLR, Waseda Univ.3Environ., DTU 4AIST

    O2-2

    Unveiling acetate- and CO2-utilizing microbiota under methanogenic conditions in Sasa- - invaded wetland soilsTomo Aoyagi1Cuong Ho2Takashi Narihiro3Daisuke Mayumi4Atsushi Ogata1Hiroshi Habe1Tomoyuki Hori11EMRI, AIST2IET, VAST3BPRI, AIST4GREEN, AIST

    O2-3

    Is the retinal-synthesizing gene (blh) essential for rhodopsin-containing bacteria?(blh)Yu Nakajima12Satoko Doi3Keiichi Kojima3Yuki Sudo3Kazuhiro Kogure12Susumu Yoshizawa121AORI, UTokyo2Grad. Sch. Front. Sci., UTokyo3Grad. Sch. Med. Den. Pharm., Okayama Univ.

    O2-4

    Characterization of E.coli drug efflux pump involved in bisphenol A resistanceATsunemoto KagaToshiyuki NikataYasuzo SakaiEng., Utsunomiya Univ.

    O2-5

    ASMEExogenous addition of biosurfactants to disrupt Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO1 biofilmsBac V.G NguyenAndrew S. UtadaNobuhiko NomuraGraduate School of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Tsukuba

    O2-6

    Microbiome in awamori moromi (mash) affecting the flavours and its application of awamori productionKaoru Nakasone1Takato Saeki1Akifumi Nishida2Masayuki Yamamura21Sch. Eng., Kindai Univ.2Info., Tokyo Tech

    O2-7

    Visualization of temporal dynamics of single-cell innate fluorescence signatureYuhki Kawamura1Tomohiro Hirayama1Hiroki Watanabe1Tatsunori Kiyokawa1Nobuhiko Nomura2Yutaka Yawata21Grad.Sch.Life Environ.Sci., Univ.Tsukuba2Fac.Life Environ.Sci., Univ.Tsukuba

    O2-8

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  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

    JSMEASME

    ASMEAnalysis on the single-cell metabolic pathway of electrogenic bacteria with nanoscale secondary ion mass spectrometryJunki Saito1Kazuhito Hashimoto2Akihiro Okamoto31Engineering, The Univ. of Tokyo2NIMS3NIMS, MANA

    O2-9

    Session 3: Symbiosis and Interaction3

    Room B4O3-1O3-9

    Metatranscriptomics reveals ecology of chemosynthetic ectosymbiosis of the deep-sea squat lobster, Shinkaia crosnieriKaori Motoki12Tomo-o Watsuji2Yoshihiro Takaki2Maki Tokuda3 Takafumi Kasaya4Ken Takai2Wataru Iwasaki151GSS, UTokyo2D-SUGAR, JAMSTEC3R&D Center, JAMSTEC4CEAT, JAMSTEC 5AORI, UTokyo

    O3-1

    Microbial community structure in gastrointestinal tracts of wood-eating crabYasunori Baba1Nobuhiro Goto1Yumi Baba (Mori)1Takasei Kusube1Katsuhide Miyake121Res. Inst. Biores. Biotech., Ishikawa Pref. Univ.2Dept. Environ. Sci. Technol., Meijo Univ.

    O3-2

    ASMELand snail Macrochlamys hippocastaneum has Mycoplasma-dominated gut microbiota surrounded by chitinous peritrophic matrix-like layerHan-Chen Ho1Yen-Tse Liu2Hsin-Chien Cheng2Li-Chuen Lin2Wen-Chin Huang2Yu-Rou Deng2Hon-Yun Chen2Nien-Yun Wu2Shu-Mei Chang2Chun-Yao Chen31Department of Anatomy, Tzu Chi University2Hua-Lien Girls High School 3Department of Life Sciences, Tzu Chi University

    O3-3

    Single spore analysis reveals diverse host-parasite relationships between phytoplankton and fungiSingle spore PCRMaiko Kagami123Silke van den Wyngaert3Kensuke Seto123Keilor Rojas3Christian Wurzbacher45Hans-Peter Grossart31Yokohama National University2Toho University3IGB-Berlin4Univ. of Gothenburg5Technical University of Munich

    O3-4

    Comparative genome analysis of two endosymbiotic Treponema species of cellulolytic protists in the termite gutTreponema Masahiro Yuki1Hirokazu Kuwahara2Satoko Noda13Yuichi Hongoh12Moriya Ohkuma11JCM, RIKEN-BRC2Life Sci. Technol, Tokyo Tech3Life Environ. Sci, Univ. of Yamanashi

    O3-5

    Single cell transcriptome analyses of the symbiotic protists in termite gutYuki Nishimura1Masato Otagiri2Masahiro Yuki1Michiru Shimizu1Nagisa Sato1Shigeharu Moriya3Moriya Ohkuma11BRC, RIKEN2RAP, RIKEN3CSRC, RIKEN

    O3-6

    Endosymbiotic interaction in anaerobic ciliates with methanogens and bacteriaKazutaka Takeshita1Takanori Yamada1Yuto Kawahara1Takashi Narihiro2Yoichi Kamagata2Naoya Shinzato121TBRC, Univ. of the Ryukyus2Bioprocess Res. Inst., AIST

    O3-7

    Analysis of gene functions related to quorum sensing in Roseomonas sp. TAS13 isolated from an activated sludgeRoseomonas sp. TAS13Quorum sensingEri Nasuno1Yuya Sasaki1Tomohiro Suzuki2Norihiro Kato11Utsunomiya University2Utsunomiya University, C-Bio

    O3-8

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  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

    JSMEASME

    Analyses of Adapting Processes for Growth Repressing Effects by Pseudomonas sp. strain C8Pseudomonas sp. C8Masahiro Honjo1Kenshi Suzuki2Tomoka Nishimura3Fatma Azwani4Kensei Masuda3Ayaka Minoura3Yosuke Tashiro12Hiroyuki Futamata1251Grad. Schol. of Eng., Univ. of the Shizuoka2Grad. Schol. of Sci. and Technol., Univ. of the Shizuoka3Dept. of Appl. Chem. and Biochem., Eng. Univ. of the Shizuoka 4Lab. of Food crops, Inst. of Trop. Agri. UPM5Inst. of Green Sci. and Technol., Univ. of the Shizuoka

    O3-9

    Session 4: Extreme Environment / Material Cycling / Wastewater Treatment4

    Room B2O4-1O4-11

    12th July, Thursday9:0011:45

    Deep-sea geochemist meets microbial ecologistShinsuke KawagucciHiroyuki YamamotoJAMSTEC

    O4-1

    Vertical profiles of chemical state of inorganic sulfur and sulfur-oxidizing bacteria in launched marine sediment by tsunamiHideyuki Ihara1Tomoyuki Hori1Tomo Aoyagi1Mitsuru Takasaki2Yoko Katayama31EMRI, AIST2Faculty of Science and Engineering, Ishinomaki Senshu University 3Center for Conservation Science, Tokyo National Research Institute for Cultural Properties

    O4-2

    ASMESyntrophic association between sulfur disproportionating bacterium and anoxygenic photosynthetic bacterium, Chloroflexus aggregnasChloroflexus aggregans Shigeru KawaiKatsumi MatsuuraShin HarutaDept. Biol. Sci., Tokyo Metropolitan Univ.

    O4-3

    Microbial adaptive evolution to the extreme geochemistry occurring at the serpentinization systemsShino Suzuki1Shun'ichi Ishii2J. Gijs Kuenen3Kenneth H. Nealson41KCC, JAMSTEC2JAMSTEC3TU Delft4USC

    O4-4

    Crude oil biodegradation and methane production in a high-temperature oil fieldHanako Mochimaru1Daisuke Mayumi1Susumu Sakata1Hideyoshi Yoshioka1Hideyuki Tamaki2Yoichi Kamagata21AIST2 AIST

    O4-5

    ASMEEnrichment and Function Study of A High-temperature Methanogenic n-alkane Degrading Microbial CommunityBo Tu12Laiyan Liu12Lirong Dai12Hui Zhang12Lei Cheng121Key Laboratory of Development and Application of Rural Renewable Energy 2Biogas Institute of Ministry of Agriculture

    O4-6

    ASMEInterspecies electron transfer driving syntrophy in mesophilic and thermophilic propionate-degrading anaerobic chemostatsYating Chen1Masaru Konishi Nobu2Takashi Narihiro2Dan Zheng1Huizhong Wang1Yueqin Tang11College of Architecture and Environment, Sichuan University2Bioproduction Research Institute, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST)

    O4-7

    ASMEHydrogen production using hybrid MEC with TiO2 photoanodeKinam KimHwapyong KimSu-il InDGIST, Daegu Gyeongbuk Institute of Science and Technology

    O4-8

    9:00-

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  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

    JSMEASME

    Effect of lactate and riboflavin on arsenic-mobilizing microbial communitiesShigeki Yamamura1Yuta Kashiwabara2Tomoyuki Hori3Tomo Aoyagi3 Seigo Amachi21NIES2Fac. Horticul., Chiba Univ.3AIST

    O4-9

    Enrichment of bacterial community that precipitates antimony in water phaseMasashi Kuroda1Kentaro Mori1Hisaaki Hosokawa1Hiroshi Nishikawa2 Daisuke Inoue1Satoshi Soda3Michihiko Ike11Grad. Sch. Eng., Osaka Univ.2JWRI, Osaka Univ.3Coll. Sci. Eng., Ritsumeikan Univ.

    O4-10

    Metabolic strategy of predatory bacteria in a complex microbiomeYuya SatoTomohiro InabaTomoyuki HoriHiroshi HabeEMRI, AIST

    O4-11

    Session 5: Aquatic Ecosystem5

    Room B3O5-1O5-11

    To use light or to avoid it? Light-adaptation strategies in marine FlavobacteriaSusumu Yoshizawa12Yohei Kumagai1Kazuhiro Kogure1Wataru Iwasaki1231AORI, UTokyo2Grad. Sch. Front. Sci., UTokyo3Grad. Sch. Sci., UTokyo

    O5-1

    Ecological effects of labyrinthulean protists in the marine environment estimated from their biomassYoko Hamamoto12Takanori Shono3Ryosuke Nakai4Mayumi Ueda5Daiske Honda231Graduate School of Natural Science, Konan University2Institute for Integrative Neurobiology, Konan University3Faculty of Science and Engineering, Konan University 4Bioproduction Research Institute, AIST5Rresearch inst of environment, agriculture and fisheries, osaka prefecture

    O5-2

    Viruses of eukaryotic plankton: insight into their diversity, host range and role in carbon export: Romain Blanc-MathieuHiroto KanekoRodrigo Hernandez-VelazquezHisashi Endo Hiroyuki OgataKyoto University

    O5-3

    Metagenomic insights into the microbial life in the oligotrophic Pacific OceanKoji Hamasaki1Shotaro Suzuki1Yuya Tada23Wataru Arai3Yoshitoshi Ogura4Tetsuya Hayashi4Hiroshi Mori5Ken Kurokawa5Hideto Takami31AORI, The Univ. of Tokyo2National Institute for Minamata Disease3JAMSTEC 4Graduate School of Medical Science, Kyushu Univ.5National Institute of Genetics

    O5-4

    ASMEBiodiversity of the coral-killing sponge Terpios hoshinota-associated Bacteria in the western Pacific OceanHsing-Ju Chen1Daphne Z. Hoh123Wenhua Savanna Chow123 Chaolun Allen Chen12James D. Reimer4Euichi Hirose4Budhi Hascaryo Iskandar5Hui Huang6Peter J. Schupp7Jia-Ho Shiu1Ming-Hui Liao1Pei-Wen Chiang1 Sen-Lin Tang121Biodiversity Research Center, Academia Sinica2Biodiversity Program, Taiwan International Graduate Program, Academia Sinica and National Taiwan Normal University3Department of Life Science, National Taiwan Normal University 4Department of Chemistry, Biology and Marine Science, University of the Ryukyus 5Department of Fishery Resources Utilization, Borgor Agricultural University 6Tropical Marine Biological Research Station in Hainan, Chinese Academy of Sciences 7Institute of Chemistry and Biology of the Marine Environment, University of Oldenburg

    O5-5

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  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

    JSMEASME

    Transcriptome analysis of immune response in the coral Acropora digitifera against infection of pathogenic bacterium Vibrio coralliilyticusVibrio coralliilyticus Acropora digitifera Toshiyuki Takagi1Yuki Yoshioka1Yoshikazu Ohno2Yuna Zayasu2Noriyuki Satoh2Chuya Shinzato11AORI, Univ. of the Tokyo2MGU, OIST

    O5-6

    ASMEPreliminary Results of the Stagnant Water Microbiome Project [SWaMP]Matan ShelomiNational Taiwan University

    O5-7

    Distribution and predicted origin(s) of macrolide resistance genes mef(C)-mph(G) in Taiwan watersmef(C)-mph(G)Yuta Sugimoto1Jer-Horng Wu2Hsin-Yiu Chou3Satoru Suzuki 11CMES, Ehime University2National Cheng Kung University3National Taiwan Ocean University

    O5-8

    Ecological and hygenical roles of bacteria selection at a blackish water areaTsukasa Ito1Naoki Kuribara1Shota Inagaki2Yuta Koyama2Naoki Noguchi2Yu Yamanashi11Dept. of Env. Eng. Sci., Gunma Univ.2Dept. of Env. Eng. Sci., Gunma Univ.

    O5-9

    Characterization and Producing Process of Bio-minerals Produced by Sulfate-Reducing BacteriaYuki Kudo1Shota Ando 1Kazuki Yasuike2Yuki Wakebe2Yosuke Tashiro1Hiroyuki Futamata1341Grad. Sch. Int. Sci. Tech., Shizuoka Univ.2Fac. Eng., Shizuoka Univ.3Grad. Sch. Sci. Tech., Shizuoka Univ. 4Inst. Green Sci. Tech., Shizuoka Univ.

    O5-10

    Dispersal of microbes to the deep subseafloor biosphere to the hydrosphere through mud volcanoesTatsuhiko Hoshino1Tomohiro Toki2Akira Ijiri1Yuki Morono1Juichiro Ashi3Fumio Inagaki11KCC, Jamstec2Faculty of Science, Univ. of the Ryukyus3AORI, The Univ. of Tokyo

    O5-11

    Session 6: Soil and Forest Ecosystem6

    Room B4O6-1O6-11

    ASMEIdentification and isolation of a keystone species in the rhizosphere microbiome of tomato resistant to bacterial wiltJihyun F. Kim Kim1Min-Jung Kwak1Soon-Kyeong Kwon1Ju-Yeon Song1 Seon-Woo Lee21Yonsei Univerisity2Dong-A University

    O6-1

    Traits of Burkholderia kururiensis , an important diazotrophic endophyte inhabited the root of a rice line, pLIA-1 derived from a cross between Oryza longistaminata and O. sativa ssp. japonica Oryza longistaminata O. sativa ssp. japonica pLIA-1 Burkholderia kururiensis Yasuyuki Hashidoko1Seiji Tachibana1Gyeryeong Bak1Masahiko Maekawa21Res. Fac. of Agric., Hokkaido Univ.2IPSR, Okayama Univ.

    O6-2

    Illumina-based analysis of Rhizosphere and Endosphere Bacterial Communities related to Halophytes Glaux maritima and Salicornia europaea Kosuke Yamamoto1Yuh Shiwa1Taichiro Ishige2Hikaru Sakamoto3Masataka Uchino1Naoto Tanaka1Suguru Oguri3Hiromasa Saitoh1Seiya Tsushima11Dept. Mol. Microbiol., Tokyo Univ. of Agr.2NODAI Genome Research Center, Tokyo Univ. of Agr.3 Dept. Northern Biosphere Agr., Tokyo Univ. of Agr.

    O6-3

    9:00-

    9:15-

    9:30-

    10:15-

    10:30-

    10:45-

    11:00-

    11:15-

    11:30-

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  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

    JSMEASME

    Phylogeny and physiological characteristics of a novel Bacteroidetes bacterium KFE18 promoting microalgae growthBacteroidetes KFE18Ayaka Makino1Ryosuke Nakai1Yasuko Yoneda1Yasuhiro Tanaka3 Tadashi Toyama4Kazuhiro Mori4Michihiko Ike5Masaaki Morikawa2 Yoichi Kamagata1Hideyuki Tamaki11BRI., AIST2Grad. Sch. Environ. Sci., Hokkaido Univ.3Fac. Life Environ. Sci., Univ. of Yamanashi4Fac. Engineer., Univ. of Yamanashi5Grad. Sch. Eng., Osaka Univ.

    O6-4

    ASMEDenitrification is lower in Bradyrhizboum japonicum than in B. diazoefficiens due to impaired nitrate reductase activityFernandes Siqueira ArthurMinamisawa KiwamuSanchez CristinaMicrobial Symbiosis Lab, Tohoku Univ.

    O6-5

    Genetic and biochemical diversity for N-acylhomoserine lactone biosynthesis in plant pathogen Pectobacterium carotovorumPectobacterium carotovorum Tomohiro Morohoshi1Yuto Ogasawara1Yudai Ito1Xiaonan Xie2 Nobutaka Someya31Grad. Sch. Eng., Utsunomiya Univ.2Bio. Sci. Cent., Utsunomiya Univ.3NARO

    O6-6

    Solidification of soil using microbial functionTakamichi NakamuraMasaharu EndouEri TaniguchiKUMAGAIGUMI

    O6-7

    Isolation and taxonomic classification of novel ktedonobacterial strains from a soil in Mt. zao and Tengu-no-mugimeshiChiung-Mei Wang1Yu Zheng1Yasuteru Sakai1Hideaki Miyashita2Keietsu Abe1Akira Yokota1Shuhei Yabe11Grad. Sch. Agric Sci., Tohoku Univ.2Grad. Sch. of Human Environ. Stud., Kyoto Univ.

    O6-8

    An incubation experiment examining the carbon dynamics during the thawing of a frozen soil core collected at a black spruce forest, Interior AlaskaHirohiko Nagano12Yongwon Kim2Bang-Yong Lee3Haruka Shigeta1 Kazuyuki Inubushi11Graduate School Horticulture, Chiba Univ.2International Arctic Research Center, University of Alaska Fairbanks3Division of Polar Climate Sciences, Korea Polar Research Institute

    O6-9

    ASMEFates of Antibiotic Resistance Genes in Cattle Manure after Aerobic Composting and the Resistome Dissemination in Agricultural SoilsMin Gou1Hang-Wei Hu2Yue-Qin Tang1Ji-Zheng He21College of Architecture and Environment, Sichuan University, Chengdu, Sichuan 610065, China2Faculty of Veterinary and Agricultural Sciences, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria 3010, Australia

    O6-11

    ASMEMolecular diversity of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi along pH gradients from different habitats in HungaryIstvan Paradi12Ramona Kovacs1Tunde Takacs1Fuzy Anna1 Agnes Zold-Balogh23Attila Engloner4Bernadett Berecz2Tibor Szili-Kovacs11Institute for Soil Sciences and Agricultural Chemistry, Centre for Agricultural Research, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest, Hungary2Eotvos Lorand University, Dept. Plant Physiology and Molecular Plant Biology, Budapest, Hungary 3Paluster Ltd. for Ecology and Conservation, Budapest, Hungary4Danube Research Institute of Centre for Ecological Research, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest, Hungary

    O6-10

    9:45-

    10:00-

    10:15-

    10:30-

    10:45-

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    56 57

  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

    JSMEASME

    Difference in microbial community structure of lotus production soil by influence of replant problemHazuki Kurashita1Yuga Hirakata2Motonori Takagi3Masashi Hatamoto2Shinya Maki2Takashi Yamaguchi2Toru Aoi4Kyohei Kuroda11NIT, Miyakonojo College2Nagaoka Univ. of Tech.3Ibaraki Agric. Cent.4NIT, Gunma College

    P1-001

    Microflora in Arctic Wetland Soils of a Taiga-Tundra Ecotone in Northeastern Siberia - Jun Murase1Atsuko Sugimoto2Ryo Shingubara3Trofim C. Maximov41Grad. Sch. Bioagr. Sci., Nagoya Univ.2Fac. Earth Environ. Sci., Hokkaido Univ. 3Grad. Sch. Environ. Sci., Hokkaido Univ.4Inst. for Biol. Problems of Cryolithozone SB RAS

    P1-002

    Environmental factors affecting the activities of nitrogen fixation and denitrification in the peatland of Ozegahara Mire, Central JapanHaruka Shigeta1Kazuyuki Inubushi1Mitsuru Sakamoto21Soil Sciense, Chiba Uni.2Environmental Science, Univ. of Shiga Pref.

    P1-003

    Cultivation of Novel Nitrite Oxidizer Nitrospira from Acidic SoilNitrospira Yu Takahashi1Hirotsugu Fujitani23Yuhei Hirono4Masahito Hayatsu4Satoshi Tsuneda121Grad. Sch. Adv. Sci. Eng., Waseda Univ.2NLR, Waseda Univ.3Environ., DTU 4NARO

    P1-004

    A study on the effect of application of different organic materials on soil bacterial communities under flooded conditionKazuki Suzuki1Aya Kaneko2Natsumi Wada3Naoki Harada41Center for Transdisciplinary Research, Institute for Research Promotion, Niigata Univ. 2Graduate School of Science and Technology, Niigata Univ.3Faculty of Agriculture, Niigata Univ.4Institute of Science and Technology, Niigata Univ.

    P1-005

    Effect of drying and rewetting on greenhouse gas emission in different fertility soils with biocharManami Shiga1Ktai Jnos2Andrea Balln Kovcs2Imre Vgo2 Magdolna Tallai2Kazuyuki Inubushi11laboratory of soil science, Chiba University2University of Debrecen

    P1-006

    Poster Presentation

    11th July (Wednesday), Room A1 : Poster award candidates

    Soil EcosystemP1-001P1-009

    Session 1P1-: 11th July Wednesday11:30 12th July Thursday 12:00Core time : odd number 11th July 15:30 16:45 / even number 11th July 16:45 18:00

    Session 2P2-: 12th July Thursday12:30 13th July Friday 13:00Core time : odd number 12th July 15:30 16:45 / even number 12th July 16:45 18:00

    58 59

  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

    JSMEASME

    ASMESemi-ubiquitous presence of iron reducing bacterial nif genes in terrestrial soils!?Yoko Masuda1Hideomi Itoh2Yutaka Shiratori3Seigo Amachi4Keishi Senoo151Graduate school of agricultural and life sciences, The University of Tokyo 2AIST, Hokkaido3Niigata Agricultural Research Institute4Graduate school of Horticulture, Chiba University5Collaborative Research Institute for Innovative Microbiology, The University of Tokyo

    P1-008

    Assessment of soil fertility using voltage of microbial fuel cellHiroshi YukimotoShohei EbeTatsuya OhikeMasahiro OkanamiTakashi AnoGrad. Sch. BOST, Kindai Univ.

    P1-009

    Succession of bathymetric microbial community in deep-sea hydrothermal plumesMichinari SunamuraEPS, Univ. of Tokyo

    P1-010

    Quantification of single-stranded viruses in the marine environmentDNAMitsuhiro Yoshida1Yukari Yoshida-Takashima1Miho Hirai2Yoshihiro Takaki1Takuro Nunoura2Ken Takai11D-SUGAR, JAMSTEC2R&D Center for MB, JAMSTEC

    P1-011

    Aquatic EcosystemP1-010P1-021

    Abundance, diversity and cultivation of anaerobic protists in anoxic lacustrine sedimentsRyuji KondoTakafumi KataokaDept. Marine Sci. Tech., Fukui Pref. Univ

    P1-012

    Contribution of the polyphosphate accumulating bacteria to phosphorus dynamics in river waterKeiji Watanabe1Wataru Suda2Sho Morohoshi3Tadao Kunihiro31CESS2RIKEN IMS3TechnoSuruga Lab.

    P1-013

    Enrichment of marine bacteria with adding a halocarbon, Bromoform (CHBr3)Takafumi Kataoka1Atsushi Ooki2Daiki Nomura21MST, Fukui Pref. Univ.2Faculty of Fisheries Sci., Hokkaido Univ.

    P1-014

    Transitions of dissolved organic matter composition and bacterial community structure in long-term biodegradation assay of lake waterTaisuke Nakajima1Ikuro Kasuga1Futoshi Kurisu2Hiroaki Furumai21dUE, Grad. Univ. of Tokyo2RECWET, Grad. Univ. of Tokyo

    P1-015

    Temporal variation of microbial community in the biodegradable plastic film-buried soilPBSAShun Tsuboi1Yuko Takada Hoshino1Hirohide Uenishi2Natsuki Oomae3Tomotake Morita3Kimiko Yamamoto-Tamura1Yuka Sameshima-Yamashita1 Ayaka Kishimoto-Mo1Hiroko Kitamoto11NIAES, NARO2NIAS, NARO3ISC, AIST

    P1-007

    Changes in sediment bacterial community composition in response to seasonal hypoxia in an enclosed bay, for four consecutive yearsFumiaki Mori1Yu Umezawa2Ryuji Kondo3Minoru Wada11GFES, Nagasaki Univ.2GSA, Tokyo Univ. Agr. and Tech.3MST, Fukui Prefectural Univ.

    P1-016

    58 59

  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

    JSMEASME

    Significant decrease in nitrification rates by Arctic environment changesTakuhei Shiozaki1Minoru Ijichi2Akiko Makabe3Amane Fujiwara4Koji Sugie1Shigeto Nishino4Chisato Yoshikawa5Naomi Harada11RCGC, JAMSTEC2AORI, UTokyo3SIP, JAMSTEC4IACE, JAMSTEC 5Department of Biogeochemistry, JAMSTEC

    P1-017

    ASMEElevational patterns and hierarchical environmental determinants of biodiversity across taxonomic scalesChih-Fu Yeh13Jianjun Wang12Janne Soininen1Anette Teittinen11Department of Geosciences and Geography, University of Helsinki2Nanjing Institute of Geography and Limnology, Chinese Academy of Sciences3Institute of ecology and evolution, National Taiwan Univ

    P1-018

    ASMEKibdelomycin A, a novel natural algicide with low toxicity to nontarget organismsYing XuShenzhen Engineering Laboratory for Marine Algal Biotechnology, College of Life Sciences and Oceanography, Shenzhen University

    P1-019

    ASMELysing activity of Aeromonas sp. L23 against cyanobacteria and green algae under varying nutrient conditionsSusmita Das Nishu1Yunhee Kang1Han Il 2Tae Kwon Lee31Student, Department of Environmental Engineering, Yonsei University, Wonju 26493, Republic of Korea2Postdoctoral Researcher ,Department of Environmental Engineering, Yonsei University, Wonju 26493, Republic of Korea3Assistant Professor, Department of Environmental Engineering, Yonsei University, Wonju 26493, Republic of Korea

    P1-020

    Finding viruses in the deep biosphere: Improved extraction and enumeration from subseafloor sedimentDonald Pan1, Yuki Morono2, Fumio Inagaki2, Ken Takai11Department of Subsurface Geobiological Analysis & Research, JAMSTEC2 Kochi Core Center, JAMSTEC

    P1-021

    Wastewater TreatmentP1-022P1-037

    Visualization of uncultured microorganisms in sludge of the EGSB reactor by using HCR-FISHEGSBHCR-FISHYuki Okazaki1Jun Harada2Takeshi Yamada2Atsushi Nakano3 Tsuyoshi Yamaguchi11NIT, Matsue College Dept. of Civil and Environ.2Toyohashi Univ. of Tech. Dept. of Environ. and Life Sci.3Sumitomo Heavy Industries Environment Co., Ltd.

    P1-022

    Hydrogen anaerobic denitrification and its microbial community structureTatsuru Kamei1Yuya Tsutsumi2Rawintra Eamrat1Yuki Yoneyama1 Yasuhiro Tanaka3Tadashi Toyama1Futaba Kazama11ICRE, Univ. of Yamanashi2Integ., Grad., Sch. of Med., Eng., & Agri., Sci., Univ. of Yamanashi3Dept. of Life Env., Univ. of Yamanashi

    P1-023

    Energy recovery from sewage wastewater by microbial fuel cellMari Sugioka1Naoko Yoshida1Akihiro Iwata3Hirokazu Matsubara2 Mitsuhiro Sakoda3Yoshinori Genda3Kazuki Iida21Dept. Civil. Eng., Nitech2Nippon Koei Co.,Ltd.3Tamano Consultants Co., Ltd.

    P1-024

    Effect of fluid flow on microbial electricity production from sewage wastewaterKohei MiyazakiKen FujiiNaoko YoshidaDept. of Civil Eng., Nitech

    P1-025

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  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

    JSMEASME

    Ammonia/Nitrite Removal Capability and Community Structures of Bacteria Attached to Wooden Plastics/Eri Kumita1Yukari Iwasaki2Akihiro Saito131Dep. Appl. Biol. Chem., Chiba Univ.2Grad. School Sci. Technol., Shizuoka Inst. Sci. Technol.3Dept. Mater. Life Sci., Shizuoka Inst. Sci. Technol.

    P1-026

    Methane production in the fed-batch Microbial Fuel CellMasaki Umetsu1Yasuhiro Fukuda1Hideyuki Takahashi2Chika Tada11Grad. Sch. Agric. Sci., Tohoku Univ.2Grad. Sch. Environ. Stud., Tohoku Univ.

    P1-027

    Mn oxidation performances of bioreactors enriched on different organic substratesTaiki Ota1Ahmad Shoiful1Akiyoshi Ohashi1Noriatsu Ozaki1 Tomonori Kindaichi1Yoshiteru Aoi21Env. Presev. Eng., Hiroshima Univ.2Met. Eng., Hiroshima Univ

    P1-028

    Bacterial consortia for textile waste water treatmentYu YamanashiMiyuki YamashitaTsukasa ItoDept Env Eng Sci, Gunma Univ

    P1-029

    Archaeal community structure of the anaerobic granular sludge developed in the UASB reactor feeding with iso-plophyl alcohol and tetramethylammonium-hydroxide containing wastewaterUASBTsuyoshi Danshita1Yuma Miyoka1Haruhiko Sumino2Akinori Iguchi3 Norihisa Matsuura4Takashi Yamaguchi1Kazuaki Syutsubo51NUT2NIT,Gifu College3NUPALS4Kanazawa Univ.5NIES

    P1-030

    Mutant strains of Pseudomonas resinovorans oxidizing Mn (II) at high Mn (II) concentrationsMnIIMnIIPseudomonas resinovorans Shuji Matsushita 1Yoshiteru Aoi2Tomonori Kindaichi1Noriatsu Ozaki1Akiyoshi Ohashi11Grad. Sch. of Eng., Hiroshima Univ.2Grad. Sch. of Adv. Sci. of Mat., Hiroshima Univ.

    P1-031

    ASMEEffects of inhibitors on the structure of acetate- and propionate-degrading methanogenic microbial communityHui-Zhong WangMin GouYue YiYue-Qin TangSichuan University

    P1-032

    ASMEWastewater is the main source of proliferation and accumulation of antibiotic resistance genes in the freshwater environmentJin Ju Kim1Hoon Je Seong1Woo Jun Sul1Jong-Chan Chae21Department of Systems Biotechnology, Chung-Ang University, Anseong, Republic of Korea2Division of Biotechnology, Chonbuk National University, Iksan 54596, Republic of Korea

    P1-033

    ASMEMicrobiomes in eleven sludges originated from four full-scale WWTPs in KoreaSunja Cho1Myeonghwa Park2Youngok Lee31Dept. of Microbiology, Pusan National University2Dept. of Environmental Engineering, Pusan National University 3Dept. of Biological Sciences, Daegu University

    P1-034

    ASMEThe study of electricity production and phosphate recycling using flat plate microbial fuel cell (FPMFC).Li-Hsun HaungChang-Ping YuGraduate institute of environmental engineering (GIEE), National Taiwan University

    P1-035

    60 61

  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

    JSMEASME

    ASMEPerformance analysis of biocathode with liter-scale membrane-less microbial fuel cells and its evaluation to drive a humidity and temperature sensor by power management systemChao-Chin ChangChang-Ping YuGraduate Institute of Environmental Engineering (GIEE),National Taiwan University

    P1-036

    High Throughput Metagenomic Analyses for Viral Communities within Reclaimed Water from Campus SewersHsion-Wen David Kuo, Shi-Le WangDepartment of Environmental Science and Engineering, Tunghai University, Taichung, Taiwan

    P1-037

    Bioaugmentation for trichloroethene- contaminated growndwater with DehalococcoidesDehalococcoidesNoriya OkutsuKURITA

    P1-038

    Search for Nitrous oxide consumption bacteria from Collapsing Palsa,FinlandYuta Takatsu1Teemu Tahvanainen2Yasuyuki Hashidoko11Ecochem, Univ of the Hokkaido2Univ of Eastern Finland

    P1-039

    BioremediationP1-038P1-046

    Microbial community analysis in degradation of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) by cooperation effect of marine oligochaete and microorganisms(PAHs)Mana ItoKatsutoshi ItoTakeshi HanoMotoharu UchidaFEIS, FRA

    P1-040

    Analysis of microbial communities involved in anaerobic biodegradation of chlorinated ethenes based on DNA and RNADNARNAMiho YoshikawaMing ZhangGeological Survey of Japan, AIST

    P1-041

    Screening of phenol-degrading bacteria indicating plant growth promoting activity for LemnoideaeTomoki Iwashita1Yasuhiro Tanaka2Hideyuki Tamaki3Yasuko Yoneda3 Ayaka Makino3Tadashi Toyama1Masaaki Morikawa4Yoichi Kamagata3Kazuhiro Mori11Fac. Engineer., Univ. of Yamanashi2Fac. Life Environ. Sci., Univ. of Yamanashi 3BRI., AIST4Grad. Sch. Environ. Sci., Hokkaido Univ.

    P1-042

    Bromate reduction by Shewanella sp.M-Br in the presence of chelated ironShewanella Hiroko FujiyaSeigo AmachiHorticul, Univ. of the Chiba

    P1-043

    Molecular characterization of opdA homologs and nmoA, genes involved in nonylphenol degradationopdA nmoA Mina Ootsuka1Yoko Yoshioka-Ikunaga1Tomoyasu Nishizawa 12 Morifumi Hasegawa12Yasurou Kurusu12Hiroyuki Ohta121Tokyo Univ. of Agric. Tech., United school of Agric. sci.2Ibaraki Univ., College of Agric.

    P1-044

    62 63

  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

    JSMEASME

    ASMEBacteroides sediment i sp. nov., a novel species of the genus Bacteroides which enhances the dechlorination of cis-chloroethene by Dehalococcoides enriched cultureMohamed Ismaeil1Naoko Yoshida2Arata Katayama1341Graduate School of Environmental Studies, Nagoya University, Japan2Graduate school of Engineering, Nagoya Institute of Technology, Japan3Department of Civil Engineering, Graduate School of Engineering, Nagoya University, Japan4Institute of Materials and Systems for Sustainability (IMaSS), Nagoya University, Japan

    P1-045

    Network and Gene Expression of Functional Dechlorinating Community in the chloroethenes-contained sitesHui-Ping Chuang1, Henry Yew2, Jia-Jun Tee2, Liang-Ming Whang1,2 Tsair-Fuh Lin1,21Sustainable Environment Research Laboratories, National Cheng Kung University, Taiwan2Department of Environmental Engineering, National Cheng Kung University, Taiwan

    P1-046

    Phylogeny and TaxonomyP1-047P1-061

    Comparison of bacterial diversity among the Awa Bancha tea leaves produced at Tokushima prefecture, JapanTakanori Satoh1Mitsuki Fujii2Seiji Arai2Daiki Komahara2Maki Takeda2 Ai Hasegawa2Mariko Nakae3Kenji Akiyoshi31Biochem. Lab.,Sci.Tech.,Tokushima Univ.2Fac. of IAS, Tokushima Univ.3Grad. Sch. of IAS, Tokushima Univ.

    P1-047

    Characterization of a novel Bacteroidetes bacterium, strain WSM2-2, isolated from soilBacteroidetes WSM2-2Masataka Aoki1Masataka Kusube2Masashi Hatamoto3Takashi Yamaguchi41Dept. Civil Eng., NIT, Wakayama College2Dept. Appl. Chem. Biochem., NIT, Wakayama College3Dept. Civil Environ. Eng., Nagaoka Univ. of Technology 4Dept. Sci. Technol. Innov., Nagaoka Univ. of Technology

    P1-048

    Cultivation-independent and -dependent analyses of rhizosphere soil- and root-associated bacteria in Pteridium aquilinum in Shonai-Asahi mountainous region, Yamagata16STsukine Hanawa 1Daisuke Arai2Yoshiaki Iiduka 2Yuniar Devi Utami3 Takumi Murakami 3Yuichi Hongoh 31Grad. Sch. Agri., Yamagata Univ.2FSC. Agri., Yamagata Univ.3Tokyo Tech. Sch. Life Sci. Tech.

    P1-049

    Microbial community structure analysis in Acer palmatum bark and isolation of bacteria belonging to Candidate division FBPCandidate division FBPKazuki KobayashiHideki AoyagiGrad. Sch. Life Environ. Sci., Univ. Tsukuba

    P1-050

    Phylogenetic position of aerobic anoxygenic phototrophic bacteria newly isolated from a river within the order RhodobacteralesRhodobacterales Setsuko HiroseShin HarutaSatoshi HanadaTokyo Metropolitan University

    P1-051

    Unveiling the diversity of osmotrophic cercozoan species Akinori Yabuki1Takashi Shiratori1Chihaya Fujii12Katsunori Fujikura11Bio-Dive, JAMSTEC2Faculty of Agriculture, Tohoku Univ.

    P1-052

    62 63

  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

    JSMEASME

    ASMEGut microbial diversity of Korean indigenous fishes and a bird revealed using culturomics and molecular taxonomic tools.Soyeon LeeWoorim KangHojun SungJuneyoung LeeNari ShinJihyun YunPilsoo KimJeongeun HanYunseok JeongMija JeongDongwook HyunHyunsik KimEunjeong TakJinwoo BaeDepartment of Life and Nanopharmaceutical Sciences and Department of Biology, Kyung Hee University

    P1-053

    ASMEThe culture-dependent analysis of the gut bacterial communities of the Korean marine invertebratesYunseok JeongWoorim KangHojun SungJuneyoung LeeJihyun YunEunjeong TakNari shinPilsoo KimSoyeon LeeJeongeun HanHyunsik KimDongwook HyunMija JeongMinsoo KimTaewoong WonJinwoo, BaeDepartment of Life and Nanopharmaceutical Sciences and Department of Biology, Kyung Hee University

    P1-054

    ASMEGut microbiota of Korean indigenous freshwater fishes investigated by culture-dependent method.Jeong Eun HanWoorim KangJune-Young LeeHojun SungJi-Hyun Yun Mi-Ja JungPil Soo KimNa-Ri ShinDong-Wook HyunHyun Sik KimUnJung TakSo-Yeon LeeYun Seok JeongTae Woong WhonMin-Soo KimJin-Woo BaeDepartment of Life and Nanopharmaceutical Sciences and Department of Biology, Kyung Hee University

    P1-055

    ASMEBlautia hominis sp. nov., isolated from human faecesNa-Ri ShinWoorim KangEuon Jung TakDong-Wook HyunPil Soo KimHyun Sik KimJune-Young LeeHojun SungTae Woong WhonJin-Woo BaeDepartment of Biology, Kyung Hee University

    P1-056

    ASMETaxonomic Diversity of Microbial Community on Cucumber (Cucumis sativus) cultivated in South KoreaDa Young Jeon1Su Jin Yum1Seung Min Kim2Hye Jin Lee1Dong Woo Seo 1 Hee Gon Jeong11Department of Food Science and Technology, Chungnam National University, Daejeon, Korea2Department of Human Ecology, Korea National Open University, Seoul, Korea

    P1-057

    ASMEDescription of Ciceribacter sp. nov., Isolated from landfill soilJi-Young Kim45So-Hyun Park1Hong-Shik Oh 2Sang Hun Byun 31Department of Aquatic Life Medicine, Jeju National University, Jeju 63243, Korea 2Department Faculty of Science Education, Jeju National University, Jeju 63243, Korea 3GL International Co., Ltd, Jeju 63309, Korea 4Research institute for basic science, Jeju National University, Jeju 63243, Korea 5Jeju Biological Resource Co., Ltd, Jeju 63242, Korea

    P1-058

    ASMEDescription of Gramella LPB144T sp. nov.Sungmi Choi1Hana Yi123Su-Kyoung Shin21Department of Public Health Sciences, Graduate School, Korea University, Seoul, Republic of Korea2School of Biosystem and Biomedical Science, Korea University, Seoul, Republic of Korea3Institute for Biomaterials, Korea University, Seoul, Republic of Korea

    P1-059

    ASMEBacterial Community Analysis and Antibacterial Activity Isolated from Umbraulva japonicaMoo-Soo HeoJi-Hyun KimSo-Hyun ParkKyung-Mi MoonMarine Applied Microbes and Aquatic Organism Disease Control Lab, Department of marine Life Science, Jeju National University, Jeju 63243, Republic of Korea

    P1-060

    ASMEEmticicia fluvii sp. nov., a species of the family Cytophagaceae isolated from fresh waterYochan JoungHye-jin JangJaeho SongJang-Cheon ChoDepartment of Biological Science, Inha University, Incheon 22212, Republic of Korea

    P1-061

    64 65

  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

    JSMEASME

    Dehalogenation of chloroform by marine anaerobic bacteriaKenji Matumura1Takeshi Terahara3Chiaki Imada3Hiroyuki Fuse21SIT2SIT3Tokyo Univ. of Marine Science and Technology

    P1-062

    Analysis of genes involved in phosphate-taxis of Stenotrophomonas maltophiliaStenotrophomonas maltophilia Yu YanagisawaToshiyuki NikataYasuzou SakaiUtsunomiya Univ.

    P1-063

    Isolation and comparative genomics of Sicyoidochytrium minutum DNA virus (SmDNAV) strains infecting ThraustochytridsSmDNAVYoshitake Takao1Takayuki Shimeki21Fukui pref. univ. Marine Science and Technology2Fukui pref. univ. Graduate School of Bioscience and Biotechnology

    P1-064

    Unusual features found in genome sequences of the halophilic photosynthetic bacterium Halorhodospira halochlorisHalorhodospira halochloris pufYusuke Tsukatani1Hitoshi Tamiakli2Yuu Hirose31MFbio, JAMSTEC2Grad. Sch. Life Sci., Ritsumeikan Univ.3EIIRIS, Toyohashi Tech.

    P1-065

    Genomics and Molecular BiologyP1-062P1-073

    Functional analysis of Bacillus subtilis`s membrane vesicleTakamitsu Soma1Tatsuya Yamamoto2Masanori Toyofuku2Nozomu Obana2Nobuhiko Nomura21Grad. Sch. Life Environ. Sci., Univ. Tsukuba2Fac. Life Environ. Sci., Univ. Tsukuba

    P1-066

    Bidirectional conversion of P.aeruginosa from social to asocialYuki Suzawa1Masasiro Toya1Masanori Toyofuku2Nozomu Obana2 Kazuhiro Kogure3Nobuhiko Nomura21Grad. Sch. Life Environ. Sci., Univ. Tsukuba2Fac. Life Environ. Sci., Univ. Tsukuba 3Atmosphere and Ocean Research Institute, Univ. Tokyo

    P1-067

    Heterogeneous production of phage-like bacteriocin in Bacillus subtilisTatsuya YamamotoMasanori ToyofukuNobuhiko NomuraFaculty of Life and Environmental Sciences, Univ. of Tsukuba

    P1-068

    Characterization of a MazEF module, a well conserved toxin-antitoxin system, in Clostridium perfringensClostridium perfringens -MazEFAkiko Yokota1Tatsuki Miyamoto12Yuri Ota12Masako Tsuruga1 Satoshi Tsuneda2Naohiro Noda121BMD, AIST2Grad. Sch. Adv. Sci. Eng., Waseda Univ.

    P1-069

    Construction of Efficient Organochlorine Pesticide Degraders by Using an Artificial Gene ClusterLijun SuHiromi KatoYoshiyuki OhtsuboMasataka TsudaYuji NagataGraduate School of Life Sciences, Tohoku Univ.

    P1-070

    ASMENovel lytic DNA virus from Methanoculleus taiwanensisMei-Chin LaiWen-Hsin WeiSheng-Chung ChenDepartment of Life Sciences, National Chung Hsing University, Taichung , Taiwan

    P1-071

    64 65

  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

    JSMEASME

    ASMEGenome analysis of Rubritalea profundi SAORIC-165T isolated from deep seawater in the northwestern Pacific OceanJaeho Song1Ilnam Kang1Yochan Joung1Susumu Yoshizawa2Ryo Kaneko3Koji Hamasaki2Jang-Cheon Cho1Kazuhiro Kogure21Inha University2Atmosphere and Ocean Research Institute, The University of Tokyo3National Institute of Polar Research

    P1-072

    Methodology and BioinformaticsP1-074P1-081

    ASMESystemic total IgE levels are determinant for dysbiosis of microbial dysbiosis occurred in inferior turbinate of nasal cavity in allergic rhinitis patientDong-Wook HyunMin-Soo KimTae Woong WhonNa-Ri ShinPil Soo KimHyun Sik KimJune Young LeeEuon Jung TakHojun SungJin-Woo BaeKyung Hee University

    P1-073

    Development of a microbial cultivation and sorting technique based on water-in-oil emulsionwater-in-oilKanako Saito12Yuri Ota12Satoko Matsukura2Taeko Takagi2 Masamune Morita2Satoshi Tsuneda1Naohiro Noda121Grad. Sch. Adv. Sci. Eng., Waseda Univ.2Biomed. Res. Inst., AIST

    P1-074

    Who is the most diverse? Cross kingdom comparison of oceanic plankton biodiversityYanze LiHiroyuki OgataICR, Kyoto Univ.

    P1-075

    X-ray computed nano-tomography for visualizing microbial cells and its surrounding environmentsX/CTYuki Morono12Goichiro Uramoto3Kentaro Uesugi4Akihisa Takeuchi4Masayuki Uesugi4Kengo Kubota5Tatsuhiko Hoshino12Fumio Inagaki1261KCC, JAMSTEC2KCC, Kochi University3KCC, Kochi University4JASRI/SPring-8 5Tohoku University6ODS, JAMSTEC

    P1-076

    Modelling and Control of Fermentation by Microbial EcosystemAkifumi Nishida1Kaoru Nakasone2Masayuki Yamamura11Info, Tokyo Tech2Biotech and Chem, Kindai Univ

    P1-077

    Detection of E.coil by a novel sensitive FISH using click chemistryClick chemistryFISHE.coliAyano YamasakiNational Institute of Technology, Matsue College

    P1-078

    Directional statistics modeling of prokaryotes genome quantityShinya SuzukiTakuji YamadaDept. of Life Science and Technology, Tokyo Tech

    P1-079

    Detection and separation of spores in subseafloor sedimentsTakeshi Terada1Yuki Morono2Fumio Inagaki21Marine Works Japan Ltd.2JAMSTEC Kochi

    P1-080

    ASMEThe novel sorting method using magnetic nanoparticles to gain the microbial populations with different utilizing rate of the substrate in a complex environmentJee Hyun NoEun Sun Lyou Soo Bin Kim Tae Kwon LeeYonsei university

    P1-081

    66 67

  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

    JSMEASME

    Unique labyrinthulomycete lineages in aquatic mosses inhabiting an Antarctic lakeRyosuke Nakai1Yuiki Takahashi23Masaki Yoshida2Megumu Tsujimoto4Atsushi C. Suzuki5Sakae Kudoh46Satoshi Imura461AIST2Univ. of Tsukuba3Toho J&H H.S.4NIPR5Keio Univ.6SOKENDAI

    P1-082

    Current generation and electron absorption by shewanella isolated from a deep-sea hydrothermal fieldMariko Shitara1Masahiro Yamamoto2Akiko Tanizaki2Hiroyuki Kashima2Takuro Nunoura2Ken Takai21Nanobio, Grad. Sch. of Yokohama City Univ.2JAMSTEC

    P1-083

    Cultivation of electrosynthetic microorganisms by using deep-sea hydrothermal power generationMasahiro YamamotoAkiko TanizakiMiwako TsudaYoshihiro TakakiKen TakaiJAMSTEC

    P1-084

    Characterization of temperate phages induced from Persephonella spPersephonella sp.Yukari YoshidaYoshihiro TakakiTakuro NunouraKen TakaiJAMSTEC

    P1-085

    Extreme EnvironmentP1-082P1-094

    Evidence for denitrification in deep aquiferKanta Ashinuma1Makoto Matsushita4Yu Sato5Masahiro Uchino2 Hiroyuki Kimura1231Graduate School of Integrated Science and Technology, Shizuoka Univ. 2Department of Geoscience faculty of Science, Shizuoka Univ.3Green Science and Technology, Shizuoka Univ.4Department of Biogeochemistry, JAMSTEC. 5Graduate School of Engineering, Osaka Univ.

    P1-086

    Ecophysiology of previously uncultivated thermophiles revealed by long-term continuous cultivation and metagenomicsShingo Kato12Sanae Sakai1Miho Hirai1Eiji Tasumi1Manabu Nishizawa1Katsuhiko Suzuki1Ken Takai11JAMSTEC2JCM, RIKEN-BRC

    P1-087

    Improvement of Terrestrial Groundwater Sampling Method Significantly Affects the Results of Microbial Community in Terrestrial Lignite SeamsAkio Ueno1Satoshi Tamazawa1Shuji Tamamura1Noritaka Aramaki1 Badrul AKM Alam1Takuma Murakami1Shinji Yamaguchi2Hideo Aoyama2 Junya Yamagishi3Hideyuki Tamaki4Daisuke Mayumi5Takeshi Naganuma6Katsuhiko Kaneko11H-RISE2Mitsubishi Material Co. Ltd.3Hokkaido University4AIST BPRI 5AIST Geo-Res. Env.6Hiroshima University

    P1-088

    Ecophysiology of a novel thermophilic N2O-reducing epsilonproteobacterium isolated from a deep-sea hydrothermal fieldN2OEpsilonproteobacteria Muneyuki Fukushi1Hirohisa Tanaka1Sayaka Mino1Satoshi Nakagawa23 Ken Takai3Tomoo Sawabe11 Faculty of Fisheries Sciences, Hokkaido University2 Graduate School of Agriculture, Kyoto University3Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC)

    P1-089

    66 67

  • 2018 JSME annual meeting & 10th ASME

    JSMEASME

    Distribution pattern of microbial communities in the shallow-water hydrothermal field off Kueishan Island, TaiwanChiaki Tominaga1Sayaka Mino1Jesse McNichol2Benny Chan3Sen-Lin Tang3Satoshi Nakagawa45Junichi Miyazaki5Ken Takai5Tomoo Sawabe11Faculty of Fisheries Sciences, Hokkaido University2Department of Biological Sciences, University of Southern California3Biodiversity Research Center, Academia Sinica4Graduate School of Agriculture, Kyoto University5Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC)

    P1-090

    Characterization of a novel mesophilic bacterium in the class Thermotogae isolated from a hydrothermal fieldThermotogae sy52Koji Mori1Kenta Sakurai1Takeshi Kakegawa2Satoshi Hanada31NBRC, NITE2Tohoku Univ.3Tokyo Metro. Univ.

    P1-091

    Polyphasic characterization of novel acidophilic bacterium strain KY-1 isolated from Yubatake, Kusatsu hot springKY-1Suzuka KajiwaraNorio KurosawaGead. Sch. Soka Univ

    P1-092

    Taxonomic study of a novel thermoacidophilic archaeon Acidianus sp. strain HS-5 isolated from Unzen hot spring in JapanAcidianus sp. HS-5Hiroyuki Sakai12Norio Kurosawa11Grad. Sch. Soka Univ.2JSPS Research Fellow DC2

    P1-093

    ASMEChanges in marine microbial communities along salinity gradientsHaneul KimHeeyoung KangInseong