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Constantino Vetriani Costantino Vetriani
Assistant Professor
Deep-Sea microbiology, extremophiles, molecular ecology, adaptations to extreme environments

Email:
Phone:
732-932-6555 x. 373

Education: Ph.D., University of Rome, Italy

Research Interests:
Research in my laboratory is focused on: i) the physiology, ecology and evolutionary relationships of deep-sea prokaryotes, with an emphasis on deep-sea hydrothermal vents and cold seeps, and ii) the microbial adaptations to extreme environmental conditions. More specifically, we work on the isolation and characterization of novel organisms from deep-sea environments, with an emphasis on thermophilic Archaea and Bacteria, and we look at community dynamics along chemical and physical gradients at deep-sea vents and cold seeps. Our experimental strategies include standard approaches in marine microbiology, such as enrichment cultures/isolations, and molecular ecological approaches, such as PCR, library construction and screening, sequencing, DGGE, and FISH. Furthermore, in collaboration with biochemists, we use genetic engineering and biochemical approaches, combined with comparative protein structure modeling, to study the evolutionary adaptive features that allow microorganisms to thrive in the extreme environmental conditions found in the deep-sea (e.g., extremely high temperature found at deep-sea vents). We believe that the integration of multiple approaches is critical to understand the ecology and evolution of deep-sea microorganisms.


Research Lab:
Deep-Sea Microbiology