Edward F. DeLong, Ph.D.
Professor, Department of Biological Engineering &
Department of Civil and Environmental
Engineering
Ph.D. Marine Biology 1986
Email: delong@mit.edu
Office: 48-427
Phone: (617) 253-5271
Research
Microbial life has been integral to the history
and function of life on Earth for over 3.5 billion years. As such,
microbes have evolved to be the fundamental engines that drive
the cycles of energy and matter on Earth, past and present. Additionally,
microbes represent the single largest source of evolutionary and
biochemical diversity on the planet. Despite their significance,
our understanding of the evolution and ecology, and the structure
and function of natural microbial communities is limited both
conceptually and technologically. Yet the potential of this vast
reservoir of genetic and biochemical diversity is enormous, from
the perspective of both basic knowledge creation, as well as that
of synthetic applications. For these reasons, a major focus of
our lab centers on devising and applying new approaches to describe,
quantify and model the complexity of natural microbial assemblages,
in particular bacteria and archaea, and understand its natural
significance and applied potential.
Our lab is currently engaged in applying contemporary
genomic technologies to dissect complex microbial assemblages.
While biotic processes that occur within natural microbial communities
are diverse and complex, much of this complexity is encoded in
the nature, identity, structure, and dynamics of interacting genomes
in situ. This genomic information can now be rapidly and generically
extracted from the genomes of co-occurring microbes in natural
habitats, using standard genomic technologies. We are now exploring
and applying these and related technologies, to better describe
and exploit the genetic, biochemical, and metabolic potential
that is contained in the natural microbial world. Our central
focus is on marine systems, due to the fundamental environmental
significance of the oceans, as well their suitability for enabling
development of new technologies, methods, and theory.
Representative Publications
K.-U. Hinrichs, J. M. Hayes, S. P. Sylva, P. G. Brewer, and E.
F. DeLong, 1999. Methane-consuming archaea Molecular-isotopic
and phylogenetic evidence, Nature 398:802-805.
Béjà, O., L. Aravind, E. V. Koonin, M. T. Suzuki,
A. Hadd, L. P. Nguyen, S. B. Jovanovich, C. Gates, R. A. Feldman,
J. L. Spudich, E. N. Spudich, and E. F. DeLong. 2000. Bacterial
rhodopsin: evidence for a new type of phototrophy in the sea.
Science 289: 1902-1906.
DeLong, E. F. and N. R. Pace. 2001. Environmental Diversity of
Bacteria & Archaea, Systematic Biol. 50:1-9.
Béjà, O., E. N.. Spudich, J. L. Spudich, M. LeClerc,
and E. F. DeLong. 2001. Proteorhodopsin phototrophy in the ocean.
Nature 411:786-789.
Karner, M, E. F. DeLong, and D. M. Karl. 2001. Archaeal dominance
in the mesopelagic zone of the Pacific Ocean. Nature 409:507-510.
de la Torre, J. R, Christianson, L.M., Béjà , O.,
Heidelberg, J., Karl D.M., and E. F. DeLong. 2003. Proteorhodopsin
genes are distributed among divergent marine bacterial taxa..
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 100:12830-12835.
Orphan, V. J., C. House, K. U. Hinrichs, K. McKeegan, and E.F.
DeLong. 2001. Methane-consuming archaea revealed by directly coupled
isotopic and phylogenetic analysis. Science 293:484
487.
Béjà O., Suzuki, M. T., Heidelberg, J.F., Nelson,
W.C., Preston, C.M., Hamada T., Eisen, J.A., Fraser, C., and E.
F. DeLong. 2002. Unexpected diversity among marine aerobic anoxygenic
phototrophs. Nature 415:630-633.
Hallam, S. J., Putnam, N.. Preston, C.M., Detter, J.C., Richardson,
P. M., Rokhsar, D., and E. F. DeLong. 2004. Reverse methanogenesis:
testing the hypothesis with environmental genomics, Science,
305: 1457-1462.
DeLong E. F. 2004. Microbial population genomics and ecology:
a new frontier. In Microbial Genomics, ed. C.M. Fraser,
K. E. Nelson, T.D. Read, Human Press Inc., Totowa, N.J., pp 419-442.