Microbial communities are essential to the functioning of ecosystems, from the oceans to the human gut. Within these communities, phages infect vast numbers of bacteria every day and outnumber bacteria about 10 to 1. Currently, we lack a quantitative understanding for how phages impact community composition and function, and conversely, how a complex community context shapes the action of phages on their specific hosts.
In this PhD project, you will study marine bacteria and their phages in isolation and in communities, from simple synthetic communities to enrichments of natural communities. Combining high-throughput characterization methods and state-of-the-art bioreactor technology with metagenomic sequencing and mathematical modelling, your research will lead to a quantitative understanding of the effects of phages on microbial communities and the ecosystem functions they provide. Beyond a better understanding of phage-bacteria interactions in marine microbial communities, this project will also yield insights and methods that will be applicable to other environments such as soils and industrially relevant communities (wastewater treatment, food microbiology), as well as for phage therapy to treat antibiotic resistant bacterial infections.
Your duties - create and quantitatively characterize a phage bank for key marine bacteria
- measure the effects of phage infection in different community and environmental contexts
- obtain and analyze amplicon and metagenomic sequencing data
- optional: construct mathematical (kinetic) models of phage-bacteria interactions in complex communities
- assist in teaching, including the supervision of BSc and MSc internship students
- communicate your research in local and international conferences
- write a dissertation leading to a PhD degree towards the end of the 4-year project