Institute for Comparative Genomics Guest Lecture

Dr. Jesse McNichol (Oct 31st, 2025)

'omics-Driven Marine Microbial Ecology: Tracking Food Web Structure, Climate Change Impacts, and Ecosystem Resilience

  1. Where I come from as a scientist and what motivates me
  2. Microbiome madness, and my view on the way out
  3. The "quiver" of methods I use
  4. The kind of questions that can be asked
    1. A microbial map of the ocean with 3-domain metabarcoding
    2. Global models of "heteroprokaryotes"
    3. Subtle patterns driving phytoplankton dynamics in open-ocean ecosystems
  5. My current research in Nova Scotia in the Bras d'Or Lakes

Talk outline

If you could step back to the edge of the solar system...

...and look at the light passing through our atmosphere...

...what would you see?

Chemical signatures of a living planet!

  • Primary production
  • Nutrient cycling
  • GHG production / consumption
  • Influence geology, climate, chemistry, and biology of Earth

Microbial life

(Micro)

Kump, Kasting, and Crane, The Earth System

Microbial life keeps the big wheel turning...

Microbial life

(Micro)

Kump, Kasting, and Crane, The Earth System

My undergrad mentor Dr. Zoe Finkel introduced me to the "Earth System" and microbes' central role in it

Why do I study microbiology?

My academic background before StFX

BSc, Biology 2003-2008

PhD Biological Oceanography, 2011-2016

2009-2011 NRC (Algal Biofuels, Halifax)

Postdocs CUHK, USC, 2017-2023

My academic background before StFX

BSc, Biology 2003-2008

PhD Biological Oceanography, 2011-2016

2009-2011 NRC (Algal Biofuels, Halifax)

Postdocs CUHK, USC, 2017-2023

Earth Systems Science

Analytical Chemistry

Analytical Chemistry

Ecological Niches

Biogeochemistry

Microbial Ecology

 NGS / 'omics

Bioinformatics

My academic background before StFX

BSc, Biology 2003-2008

PhD Biological Oceanography, 2011-2016

2009-2011 NRC (Algal Biofuels, Halifax)

Postdocs CUHK, USC, 2017-2023

Earth Systems Science

Analytical Chemistry

Analytical Chemistry

Ecological Niches

Biogeochemistry

Microbial Ecology

 NGS / 'omics

Bioinformatics

Today's topic: My thoughts on how to bring all these together

My research is motivated by the elephant in the room...

Microbial life

(Micro)

Kump, Kasting, and Crane, The Earth System

What effect will anthropogenic pressures such as climate change and coastal eutrophication have on microbial "ecosystem services"?

How to Escape the "Madness of the Microbiome"

"Next Generation Sequencing" (NGS)

The era of cheap DNA sequencing

Early sequencing

An avalanche of data!

"Gee whiz!" era

"Arguing about methods" era

The era of arguing about methods

The era of arguing about methods

This gets tiring after a while (endless debates...)

  • Intercalibration using standard reference material / mock communities so we know which methods really are best

My opinion: This will only end with intercalibration

But until this gets figured out, we should "move on with life"

"Gee whiz!" era

"Arguing about methods" era

"What does it all mean?" era

Let's enter the era of "what does it all mean?"

Currently = many microbial papers focus on describing community composition (who is there)

The era of "what does it all mean?"

Currently = many microbial papers focus on describing community composition (who is there)

The era of "what does it all mean?"

My view: Composition data = a map & compass!

The era of "what does it all mean?"

Schramm (2003) / Amann et al., 1995

"Full cycle rRNA analysis"

Sebastián & Gasol (2019), 10.1098/rstb.2019.0083

Single-cell activity assays

Classical techniques for context (microscopy, chemical assays, etc.)

The era of "what does it all mean?"

My view: Composition data = a map & compass!

  • Generating sequencing data: easy
  • Developing a good question: hard

A ‘good’ hypothesis has a number of desirable properties. It should be bold, risky and meaningful, addressing an important issue and not stating the obvious."

The era of "what does it all mean?"

Methods → Meaning

Ecosystem maps from eDNA

Ecosystem DNA

A Map

Metabarcoding

Vincent and Vardi, 2023

Ecosystem maps from eDNA → tackling big questions

Image credit: Chavez et al., 2021

Ecosystem maps with "eDNA assays" ( = amplicon sequencing = metabarcoding)

I don't size fractionate my samples (> 0.2 μm) because...

Microbe art: @claudia_traboni

Many size fractions complicate interpretation of metabarcoding data

Ecosystem maps from eDNA should be comprehensive

  • Comprehensive ("Parada" primers target all rRNA from cellular life, including zooplankton & organelles)

Microbe art: @claudia_traboni

Ecosystem maps from eDNA should be comprehensive

plastid

16S rRNA

mito 16S

rRNA

nuclear 18S rRNA

A eukaryotic phytoplankter

Bacterium

16S rRNA

Archaeon 16S

rRNA

Bacteria and Archaea (prokaryotes)

mito 16S

rRNA

nuclear 18S rRNA

A eukaryotic protist or zooplankton cell

Ecosystem maps from eDNA should be comprehensive

p16S

e16S

18S

  • Comprehensive community data from single PCR assay:
    • p(rokaryotic)16S
    • e(ukaryotic)16S
    • Eukaryotic 18S

Microbe art: @claudia_traboni

Sample x: dominated by prokaryotes (e.g. Sargasso Sea)

Ecosystem maps from eDNA should be comprehensive

Microbe art: @claudia_traboni

18S

p16S

e16S

  • Comprehensive community data from single PCR assay:
    • p(rokaryotic)16S
    • e(ukaryotic)16S
    • Eukaryotic 18S

Sample y: dominated by eukaryotes (e.g. Southern Ocean)

Ecosystem maps from eDNA should be comprehensive

Ecosystem maps from eDNA should be comprehensive - validation with metagenomes

Image credit: Chavez et al., 2021

Ecosystem maps from "3 domain metabarcoding"- a mix of "eDNA" and "amplicon sequencing"

Ecosystem maps from "3 domain metabarcoding" - bioinformatic methods

Ecosystem maps can be cheaply generated from a "quiver" of DIY methods that I like to use

*Other methods for as little as 1 µL exist

Application of 3DMB → GRUMP

GRUMP = a global ecosystem map

GRUMP: No size fractionation

Microbe art: @claudia_traboni

TARA: Many size fractions (complicates interpretation)

GRUMP = a global ecosystem map... of whole seawater

GRUMP = a global ecosystem map... across depth!

  • Comprehensive ("Parada" primers target all rRNA from cellular life, including zooplankton & organelles)
  • Sensitive with deep sequencing (~200,000 reads per sample)
  • Specific with "denoising" algorithms (→ "ASVs")

Microbe art: @claudia_traboni

GRUMP = a global ecosystem map with many uses

With 200k sequences per sample, practical detection limit = 1 copy nifH / mL

nifH  gene copies / L (x 106)

16S ASV relative abundance

UCYN-A (AMT 20)

Kendra Turk-Kubo, Rosie Gradoville, Jon Zehr, UCSC

AMT

Glen Tarran, Andy Rees, PML

GRUMP = a global ecosystem map... with good detection limits

Jesse McNichol, Nathan Williams, Yubin Raut, Craig Carlson, Elisa Halewood, Kendra Turk-Kubo, Jonathan Zehr, Andrew Rees, Glen Tarran, Mary Gradoville, Matthias Wietz, Christina Bienhold, Katja Metfies, Sinhué Torres-Valdés, Thomas Mock, Sarah Lena Eggers, Wade Jeffrey, Joseph Moss, Paul Berube, Steven Biller, Levente Bodrossy, Jodie Van De Kamp, Mark Brown, Swan Sow, E. Virginia Armbrust, Jed Fuhrman

AMT

GRUMP = a global ecosystem map built on collaborations

  • Nathan has assembled a core set of covariates common to all cruises in GRUMP (T, S, Oxygen, Nutrients, Chlorophyll)
  • Also, Longhurst Provinces, Ocean Basin, Depth Categories, Predicted Euphotic Depth
  • Also... some of the campaigns also have their own unique data products you may be interested in

Jesse McNichol, Nathan Williams, Yubin Raut, Craig Carlson, Elisa Halewood, Kendra Turk-Kubo, Jonathan Zehr, Andrew Rees, Glen Tarran, Mary Gradoville, Matthias Wietz, Christina Bienhold, Katja Metfies, Sinhué Torres-Valdés, Thomas Mock, Sarah Lena Eggers, Wade Jeffrey, Joseph Moss, Paul Berube, Steven Biller, Levente Bodrossy, Jodie Van De Kamp, Mark Brown, Swan Sow, E. Virginia Armbrust, Jed Fuhrman

AMT

GRUMP = a global ecosystem map with high-quality metadata

Ecologically-relevant annotations aggregate complex ASV data into sensible groupings (makes plotting, intercomparison easier)

  • Bacterioplankton
  • Phytoplankton
    • Prochlorococcus  (ecotype)

GRUMP = a global ecosystem map with ecologically-relevant annotations

Vast majority of Prochlorococcus ASVs consistent with genome phylogeny and associated with a particular ecotype

*Berube et al. eLife 2019;8:e41043.

ASV hits to clade

GRUMP = a global ecosystem map with ecologically-relevant annotations

Yes, that means you!

  • Ecosystem modellers
  • Physical oceanographers
  • Satellite ocean colour experts
  • Math / stats nerds
  • Fellow "gene jockeys"
  • Other ocean enthusiasts

GRUMP is "live" and we want people to use it!

TO USE GRUMP DATA

What else can we do with these maps?

  • Develop global models of heterotrophic prokaryotes!

A story about ecosystem maps + meta'omics + models

OK! I'm generating some data...

Let's collaborate! I'm building a model...

Emily Zakem, Carnegie

A story about ecosystem maps + meta'omics + models

Hey guys, can I join? I'm a stats / metagenome whiz

JL Weissman, Stony Brook

Emily Zakem, Carnegie

A story about ecosystem maps + meta'omics + models

Emily Zakem, Carnegie

JL Weissman, Stony Brook

Hey guys, I'm good at comparing models and data!

Yubin Raut, MIT

A story about ecosystem maps + meta'omics + models

  • Street map = GRUMP data
  • Detail in between = MAG/SAG/genome data, derived from BLASTing @ 95% ID vs GTDB
    • Genome size, growth rate, CAZymes → "index of copiotrophy"
  • Compared with a biogeochemical model (DARWIN + heteroproks)

A story about ecosystem maps + meta'omics + models

Emily's model:

DARWIN

+ "heteroprokaryotes"

+ DOM

  • Emily's model showed "emergent complexity" and had high qualitative correspondence to meta'omics data
  • Analysis revealed insight into new metabolic classification in deep ocean → "slowiotrophs"
  • Predictions of growth rates, could be tested experimentally

A story about ecosystem maps + meta'omics + models

A story about ecosystem maps + meta'omics + models

What else can we do with these maps?

  • Make them quantitative to find subtle biological patterns
  • Near perfect match between high-quality flow cytometry data and our eDNA quantification method with internal standards
  • Workshop on internal standard methods with Dr. Julie Laroche, rescheduled date TBA

GRUMP 2.0 = a story about absolute units

GRUMP 2.0 = a story about absolute units

Slide credits: Dr. Lexi Jones-Kellett (aejk@alum.mit.edu)

GRUMP 2.0 = a story about absolute units

Slide credits: Dr. Lexi Jones-Kellett (aejk@alum.mit.edu)

GRUMP 2.0 = a story about absolute units

Slide credits: Dr. Lexi Jones-Kellett (aejk@alum.mit.edu)

GRUMP 2.0 = a story about absolute units

Slide credits: Dr. Lexi Jones-Kellett (aejk@alum.mit.edu)

GRUMP 2.0 = a story about absolute units

Slide credits: Dr. Lexi Jones-Kellett (aejk@alum.mit.edu)

GRUMP 2.0 = a story about absolute units

Slide credits: Dr. Lexi Jones-Kellett (aejk@alum.mit.edu)

GRUMP 2.0 = a story about absolute units

Slide credits: Dr. Lexi Jones-Kellett (aejk@alum.mit.edu)

GRUMP 2.0 = a story about absolute units

Slide credits: Dr. Lexi Jones-Kellett (aejk@alum.mit.edu)

GRUMP 2.0 = a story about absolute units

Slide credits: Dr. Lexi Jones-Kellett (aejk@alum.mit.edu)

Bringing it all together

  • (What I'm doing in NS)

 NASA PACE

Coastal systems are now my research focus

Bedford basin

Saanich inlet

SPOT (Los Angeles)

Minas basin

Coastal systems make great "model ecosystems"

A "model ecosystem" in Cape Breton

  • Stratified basin with anoxic, sulfidic waters ~ 17 m (historically ~1000 μM H2S)
  • Temperature and oxygen gradients very steep at redoxcline
  • Beginning time-series (2024-present)
  • With Katherine Rutherford (StFX) we are using metabarcoding, metagenomics to understand taxa present, dynamics, functional potential

Whycocomagh Bay (WB)

A "model ecosystem" in Cape Breton

A "model ecosystem" in Cape Breton

Me aboard Dr. Bruce Hatcher's research vessel Exocet in 2024

A "model ecosystem" to ask questions about the link between diversity and function

Microbes have a lot of genetic diversity, but we know little about the relationship between this diversity and function outside of a few model species (e.g. Prochlorococcus)

A "model ecosystem" to ask questions about the link between diversity and function

...it is unclear and controversial how multiple disturbances affect microbial community stability and what consequences this has for ecosystem functions."

Ecosystem

Ecosystem

Metagenomics

The fuzzy link between diversity and function

Work thus far in literature:

  • If metagenomes show different organisms have similar metabolic pathways → ecosystem resilience
  • My view: maybe, but this is "potential", not measured resilience
  • Ignores other aspects of microbial niches (T optimum, for e.g.)
  • In this ecosystem, sulfur oxidation is an "ecosystem service"
  • "Microbial firewall"
  • Prediction: stable stratification means limited functional diversity
  • If disturbance (e.g. water overturning) occurs → limited resilience of function
  • Goal: experiments to generate empirical data to test this prediction

Whycocomagh Bay (WB)

How resilient are microbial ecosystem services to disturbance?

Vincent and Vardi, 2023

A "middle way" for understanding microdiversity

Pure cultures

Pros: Highly controlled

Cons: Selects for "lab rats", reduced diversity vs. environment

Environmental 'omics

Pros: Observe everything

Cons: Static measurement, limited functional information

Vincent and Vardi, 2023

A "middle way" for understanding microdiversity

Short-term incubation experiments of seawater

Pro: Generate empirical data for testing hypotheses

Con: The longer you incubate, the less the composition resembles the natural community. Need very short-term incubations, and single-cell activity measurements

A "middle way" for understanding microdiversity

In this paper, fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH; targeted to rRNA) was used in combination with radiocarbon incubations to infer taxon-specific rates and response to different chemical conditions in short-term incubations

How we plan to do the work

[H2S]

[O2]

depth

EUX ~3°C

RXL ~10°C

SRF ~22°C

Field sampling

DNA

-3DMB

-MAGs

-FL-16S

Lab processing

OOI 

 

(function,

microdiversity)

OOI-specific measurements:

-Growth rate

-Respiration

-Resilience

Field incubations

FISH probes

 

(broad group level,

microdiverse subcluster level)

Katherine Rutherford (StFX)

Bruce Hatcher (CBU)

  • Street map = meta'omics data from Whycocomagh (which organisms are involved in sulfur cycling)
  • Allows us to design FISH probes for particular organisms (including microdiversity within clade)
  • FISH probes allows us to derive:
    • Cell size, biovolume, morphological variability
    • In situ growth rates
    • Metabolic rates during incubations

How we plan to do the work

How we plan to do the work: in situ growth rates

FISH probes + FODC method → OOI growth rate (including microdiversity)

Could be compared with MAG estimates (gRodon)

How we plan to do the work: incubations

[H2S]

[O2]

depth

EUX ~3°C

RXL ~10°C

SRF ~22°C

Simulate upwelling to surface by subjecting RXL or SRF communities to increased [H2S], temp, [O2] (or combinations of all) by mixing at different ratios and incubating at controlled temperatures for ~6-12 h. Response (compared to control) measured by:

  • Single-cell respiration rates
  • Bulk H2S oxidation
  • Bulk community respiration

in situ conditions (control)

"disturbance" conditions

How we plan to do the work: organism-specific respiration

FISH probes + Redox Sensor Green → OOI respiration rate changes after short-term incubations

Microbial life

(Micro)

Kump, Kasting, and Crane, The Earth System

What effect will anthropogenic pressures such as climate change and coastal eutrophication have on microbial "ecosystem services"?

STAY TUNED over the next 2-3 years!

Questions?

Thanks to:

  • Current and former CBIOMES collaborators (Fuhrman, Follows, Levine, Zakem labs)
  • Dr. Bruce Hatcher (CBU)
  • Katherine Rutherford and Jillian Davies (StFX)
  • All of you for listening!

stfxmicroeco.ca | jmcnicho@stfx.ca

https://slides.com/jcmcnch/icg-dal-2025

Figure 1: Overview of sampling and data processing workflow. Oxygen and sulfide depth profiles shown in blue and orange, respectively. SRF=surface, RXL=redoxcline, EUX=euxinic. 3DMB=3-domain metabarcoding, MAGs = metagenome assembled genomes, FL-16S = full-length 16S. OOI = organism of interest. FISH = fluorescence in-situ hybridzation.

[H2S]

[O2]

depth

EUX ~3°C

RXL ~10°C

SRF ~22°C

DNA

-3DMB

-MAGs

-FL-16S

OOI 

 

(function,

microdiversity)

(broad group level,

microdiverse subcluster level)

FISH probes

 

OOI-specific measurements:

-Growth rate

-Respiration

-Resilience

Field sampling

Lab processing

Field incubations

Vincent and Vardi, 2023

Coastal systems are flexible: experiment across scales, depending on question

GRUMP 2.0 = a story about absolute units

Slide credits: Dr. Lexi Jones-Kellett (aejk@alum.mit.edu)

GRUMP 2.0 = a story about absolute units

Slide credits: Dr. Lexi Jones-Kellett (aejk@alum.mit.edu)

ICG Dal Seminar 2025

By jcmcnch

ICG Dal Seminar 2025

'omics-Driven Marine Microbial Ecology

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