Shane Hogle
 Ph.D


shane.hogle@utu.fi



Office342


ORCID identifierhttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-2595-3863

Lab Group Homepage

Google Scholar



Areas of expertise
Microbial Ecology; Microbial Evolution; Genomics; Metagenomics; Bioinformatics

Biography

Shane is a microbial evolutionary ecologist seeking to understand how microorganisms interact and evolve and how community interaction networks can change over time. He is particularly interested in how microbial ecological dynamics scale to influence entire ecosystems and biogeochemical cycles. His science links field observations and the synthesis of existing datasets with experimental manipulations of model microbial model communities in the laboratory. Shane aspires to develop a mechanistic and quantitative understanding of microbial communities and microbial evolution. He draws from many academic disciplines, including microbiology, ecology, evolution, computational genomics, biogeochemistry, and molecular biology to pursue his research questions.

Background:

  • Research Council of Finland Academy Research Fellow
  • Docent University of Turku
  • Postdoctoral research University of Turku
  • Postdoctoral research Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
  • Ph.D. in Oceanography from UCSD
  • B.A. in Chemistry from Earlham College



    Research

    Host microbiome interactions and community assembly: Plants host beneficial, commensal, and pathogenic microbes. Much of what is known about plant microbiome interactions comes from our understanding of pairwise interactions between a host and pathogens/mutualists under optimal conditions. However, the host microbiota's final composition and community-integrated traits (e.g., harmful or beneficial to the host) are not necessarily a simple linear function of the constituent microbial species. Thus, predicting the final trait configuration and functional outcomes of host-associated communities may become increasingly challenging as microbial diversity changes and abiotic conditions become less favorable.

    We are working with the model aquatic plant, Lemna minor, and its associated microbiota to understand how community-integrated traits and ecological function arise during the microbiome assembly process. We are particularly interested in the context-dependence of this process and how global change can modulate biological interactions between the host and its microbiota. This knowledge will be essential if we are to anticipate and mitigate the forthcoming consequences of global change on critical ecosystem services provided by plants.

    Predator/prey trophic interactions in microbial ecosystems: Microbes form the base of aquatic and terrestrial food webs. Bacteria, in particular, are important prey items for microfaunal predators such as single-celled protists and nematode worms (e.g., Caenorhabditis elegans, shown in the adjacent picture), the activities of which ensure soil fertility and ecosystem function. However, little is currently understood about how predation modulates microbial community composition and function and how this may, in turn, impact key ecosystem processes or community-level traits.

    We use microfaunal predators (primarily C. elegans) to understand how top-down controls regulate bacterial density, bacterial community composition, and the reciprocal arms-race evolution between predator and prey. In particular, we are interested in how predators influence important community-level microbiome traits. Because antibiotics are widely used in agriculture and livestock are an important reservoir of human pathogens, we are interested in how predators control the distribution of bacterial traits such as virulence and antimicrobial resistance in human impacted terrestrial and aquatic microbiome.

    Microbial biogeochemistry: Matter and energy are neither created nor destroyed but continuously transition through different forms. Microscopic unicellular organisms (bacteria, archaea, protists) are Earth's most ancient and ubiquitous life forms, and their collective activities and metabolisms direct this energy and matter through the closed Earth system, driving biogeochemical cycles and making life as we know it possible. Our team works to understand the molecular mechanisms underlying different microbial metabolisms, the distribution of these metabolic processes in the environment, and the implications of these processes for the fluxes of matter and energy at a planetary scale.

    Many environmentally relevant microbes have yet to be cultured, and those that have can be very challenging to grow in the lab. To partially circumvent this challenge, we use DNA sequencing and computational approaches to study microbial genomes obtained directly from the environment. Using the information encoded in DNA, we aim to identify selective pressures driving the evolution of gene content variation between natural microbial populations, uncover novel metabolic potential encoded within microbial communities, and ultimately link these patterns to biogeochemical processes. Our prior work in this area has focused on microbes from the oligotrophic surface ocean, e.g., Prochlorococcus (the most abundant photosynthetic cell) and SAR11 (the most abundant organism in the sea and possibly the planet).



    Teaching

    I mentor both PhD and Master's students. UTU Biology students can fulfill the requirements of the Master's degree by completing their thesis in the Hogle Lab. I usually take one or two Master's students per year. Please get in touch if you are interested in working on a Master in our lab.



    Publications
      
    Go to first page
      
    Go to previous page
      
    1 of 2
      
    Go to next page
      
    Go to last page
      


    Last updated on 2025-14-04 at 11:04