News

May 2024 - 5th Euro C1 & BVOC Meet­ing at NIOO-KNAW

We had a fant­astic time at the 5th Euro C1 & BVOC Meet­ing at NIOO-KNAW in the Neth­er­lands! It was great to see so many pas­sion­ate re­search­ers and sci­ent­ists come to­gether to share their latest dis­cov­er­ies.


A big shoutout to our PhD stu­dent, Kristina, who presen­ted her poster titled “Be­neath the Waves: Ex­plor­ing Or­gano­sul­fur Cyc­ling in Medi­ter­ranean Chemo­syn­thetic Sym­bi­oses.” Her work caught a lot of at­ten­tion and sparked some really in­ter­est­ing con­ver­sa­tions.

Con­grats to Kristina and every­one who made this event so amaz­ing!


We are also happy to an­nounce that the next meet­ing will take place at the MPI in Bre­men. So stay tuned.

February 2024 - Kristina joins the team

Kristina joined the Organosulfur Cycling Group as new PhD candidate working on the biochemical pathways of organosulfur compound metabolism and cycling in gutless oligocheates and lucinid clams.

https://www.biospektrum.de/magazinartikel/versteckte-mitesser-chemosynthetische-symbionten-schwefeliger-umgebung?dl=1

September 2023 - New Article about our research in BIOSpektrum

April 2023 - Eileen Kröber appointed as Emmy Noether junior research group leader

Scientist Eileen Kröber, currently a PostDoc in the Symbiosis Department at the Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology in Bremen, Germany, has successfully applied for the establishment of an Emmy Noether Junior Research Group. The German Research Foundation (DFG) will fund the new group for six years with a total of almost 1.8 million euros. We sincerely congratulate on this great achievement and look forward to working together!

 

Eileen Kröber’s re­search fo­cuses on or­ganic sul­fur com­pounds which are pro­duced in our oceans and play an im­port­ant role in cli­mate reg­u­la­tion. These com­pounds are pro­duced in large quant­it­ies in seagrass beds, man­groves and coral reefs – hab­it­ats where nu­mer­ous worms and mus­sels ob­tain their nu­tri­tion with the help of sym­bi­otic bac­teria. This is where Kröber’s re­search comes in: To date, it is not known to what ex­tent such sym­bi­oses use the cli­mate-cool­ing sul­fur com­pounds as a source of en­ergy and sul­fur and thus re­duce their re­lease into the en­vir­on­ment.

“I am very pleased to be able to ad­vance my re­search in the frame­work of an Emmy No­ether group,” says Kröber. “The feed­back from the re­view­ers has been pos­it­ive throughout.” For ex­ample, one re­viewer as­sessed the pro­posal as fol­lows: “I give this pro­ject my whole­hearted en­dorse­ment as one of the best pro­pos­als that I have read in a long time, highly worthy of fund­ing.” The fund­ing agency, the Deutsche Forschungs­ge­meinsch­aft (DFG, Ger­man Re­search Found­a­tion), also em­phas­izes that Kröber’s topic is “highly in­ter­est­ing and top­ical, and ad­dresses ex­tremely rel­ev­ant, pre­vi­ously neg­lected is­sues in the field of mar­ine eco­logy.”

“We con­grat­u­late Eileen Kröber on this well-de­served grant and are proud to host such an out­stand­ing sci­ent­ist at our in­sti­tute,” says Nicole Du­bilier, Dir­ector at the Max Planck In­sti­tute for Mar­ine Mi­cro­bi­o­logy. “We are look­ing for­ward to the ex­cit­ing re­search we can now con­duct to­gether.”

Spe­cific­ally, in the Emmy No­ether ju­nior re­search group that will now be es­tab­lished, Kröber wants to in­vest­ig­ate how or­ganic sul­fur com­pounds con­trib­ute to the nu­tri­tion of sym­bi­oses. “Al­though the im­port­ance of these com­pounds for mar­ine bio­logy and eco­logy is be­com­ing in­creas­ingly clear, it is sur­pris­ingly not known whether they can be used by sym­bi­oses between bac­teria and mar­ine an­im­als,” Kröber ex­plains. “My ini­tial res­ults show that or­ganic sul­fur com­pounds are im­port­ant for the nu­tri­tion of sym­bi­otic part­ners. To gain a deeper un­der­stand­ing of their im­port­ance, I will use a vari­ety of dif­fer­ent state-of-the-art meth­ods, such as meta­tran­scrip­tom­ics, -pro­teo­m­ics and -bo­lo­m­ics, coupled with ex­per­i­ments in the lab.”

After study­ing in Sen­ften­berg and Dresden, Eileen Kröber com­pleted her PhD at the Uni­versity of War­wick in the UK in 2016. Since then, she has been work­ing as a PostDoc at the Leib­niz Cen­ter for Ag­ri­cul­tural Land­scape Re­search (ZALF) in Müncheberg and at the Max Planck In­sti­tute in Bre­men. In total, Kröber was able to se­cure 1.77 mil­lion euros for her planned re­search at the Max Planck In­sti­tute for Mar­ine Mi­cro­bi­o­logy with this pro­ject. The grant in­cludes fund­ing for four doc­toral stu­dents who will sup­port Kröber in her work.

 
 

Pro­ject part­ners

  • Prof. Dr. Nicole Dubilier, Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology, Department of Symbiosis, Bremen, Germany
  • Dr. Manuel Liebeke, Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology, Microbial Metabolism Research Group, Bremen, Germany
  • Prof. Dr. Hendrik Schäfer, University of Warwick School of Life Sciences, Gibbet Hill Campus, CV4 7AL Coventry, UK
  • Prof. Dr. Jonathen Todd, University of East Anglia School of Biological Sciences, Norwich Research Park, NR4 7TJ Norwich, United Kingdom.
  • Prof. Dr. Jillian Petersen, University of Vienna, Department of Microbiology and Ecosystem Science, 1030 Vienna, Austria
 

About the Emmy No­ether Pro­gram

The Emmy No­ether Pro­gramme gives ex­cep­tion­ally qual­i­fied early ca­reer re­search­ers the chance to qual­ify for the post of pro­fessor at a uni­versity by lead­ing an in­de­pend­ent ju­nior re­search group for a period of six years. Emmy No­ether (1882–1935) was a renowned math­em­atician from the 20th cen­tury. Al­though the the­orem named after her is part of the basis for math­em­at­ical phys­ics and she was one of the first fe­male Ger­man math­em­aticians to qual­ify as a pro­fessor, she never re­ceived a full pro­fess­or­ship in Ger­many. She was also one of the many re­search­ers who had to emig­rate from Ger­many be­cause of their Jew­ish an­ces­try. Today, the DFG’s Emmy No­ether Pro­gramme provides out­stand­ing sci­ent­ists and early ca­reer re­search­ers with an al­tern­at­ive path to pro­fess­or­ship.

 

Source: https://www.mpi-bremen.de/en/Eileen-Kroeber-appointed-as-Emmy-Noether-Junior-Research-Group-Leader.html

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