Publications by authors named "Yann Denis"

Unicellular, nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria (UCYN) thrive and support primary production in oligotrophic oceans, playing a significant role in the marine nitrogen cycle. Crocosphaera sp., a model organism for studying marine nitrogen fixation, is adapted to low phosphate (P) concentrations.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Despite growing awareness of their importance in soil ecology, the genetic and physiological traits of bacterial predators are still relatively poorly understood. In the course of a predator evolution experiment, we identified a class of genotypes leading to enhanced predation against diverse species. RNA-seq analysis demonstrated that this phenotype is linked to the constitutive activation of a predation-specific program.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Mycobacterium abscessus is an emerging pathogen causing severe pulmonary infections, particularly in individuals with underlying conditions, such as cystic fibrosis or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Macrolides, such as clarithromycin (CLR) or azithromycin (AZM), represent the cornerstone of antibiotherapy against the M. abscessus species.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Autotrophic microaerophilic iron-oxidizing Zetaproteobacteria seem to play an important role in mineral weathering and metal corrosion in different environments. Here, we compare the bacterial and zetaproteobacterial communities of a mature iron-rich mat together with in situ incubations of different Fe-bearing materials at the EMSO-Ligure West seafloor observatory, which is located on the abyssal plain in the NW Mediterranean Sea. Our results on bacterial communities enable us to make a clear distinction between those growing on mild steel anthropic substrata and those developing on basaltic substrata.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Xylans are polysaccharides that are naturally abundant in agricultural by-products, such as cereal brans and straws. Microbial degradation of arabinoxylan is facilitated by extracellular esterases that remove acetyl, feruloyl, and p-coumaroyl decorations. The bacterium Ruminiclostridium cellulolyticum possesses the Xua (xylan utilization associated) system, which is responsible for importing and intracellularly degrading arabinoxylodextrins.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Cellobiose is taken up by the CuaABC transporter and broken down by the enzyme CbpA; genes for these proteins are crucial for using cellobiose and cellulose.
  • A second solute-binding protein, CuaD, works with a regulatory system CuaSR, forming a three-component system that enhances growth on cellobiose and cellulose.
  • Research indicates that both CuaDSR and CuaSR can respond to cellobiose, but CuaDSR is more effective at utilizing these sugar sources, likely due to CuaD's high affinity for cellobiose.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

strain DSM9442 and subsp. strain DSM14385 are hyperthermophilic bacteria. DSM9442 is a piezophile and was isolated from a depth of over 1600 m in an oil-producing well in Africa.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Bacterial genome diversity is influenced by prophages, which are viral genomes integrated into the bacterial chromosome. Most prophage genes are silent but those that are expressed can provide unexpected properties to their host. Using as a model E.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Myxococcus xanthus possesses two Fe-S cluster biogenesis machineries, ISC (iron-sulfur cluster) and SUF (sulfur mobilization). Here, we show that in comparison to the phylogenetically distant Enterobacteria, which also have both machineries, M. xanthus evolved an independent transcriptional scheme to coordinately regulate the expression of these machineries.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Primary degraders of polysaccharides play a key role in anaerobic biotopes, where plant cell wall accumulates, providing extracellular enzymes to release fermentable carbohydrates to fuel themselves and other non-degrader species. Ruminiclostridium cellulolyticum is a model primary degrader growing amongst others on arabinoxylan. It produces large multi-enzymatic complexes called cellulosomes, which efficiently deconstruct arabinoxylan into fermentable monosaccharides.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

, a Gram-negative zoonotic bacterium, is mainly a food-borne pathogen and the main cause of diarrhea in humans worldwide. The main reservoirs are found in poultry farms, but they are also found in wild birds. The development of antibiotic resistance in species raises concerns about the future of efficient therapies against this pathogen and revives the interest in bacteriophages as a useful therapy against bacterial infections.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Methionine residues are particularly sensitive to oxidation by reactive oxygen or chlorine species (ROS/RCS), leading to the appearance of methionine sulfoxide in proteins. This post-translational oxidation can be reversed by omnipresent protein repair pathways involving methionine sulfoxide reductases (Msr). In the periplasm of Escherichia coli, the enzymatic system MsrPQ, whose expression is triggered by the RCS, controls the redox status of methionine residues.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Copper is well known for its antimicrobial and antiviral properties. Under aerobic conditions, copper toxicity relies in part on the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), especially in the periplasmic compartment. However, copper is significantly more toxic under anaerobic conditions, in which ROS cannot be produced.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Bacteria are powerful models for understanding how cells divide and accomplish global regulatory programs. In Caulobacter crescentus, a cascade of essential master regulators supervises the correct and sequential activation of DNA replication, cell division, and development of different cell types. Among them, the response regulator CtrA plays a crucial role coordinating all those functions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Desulfovibrio fructosovorans, a sulfate-reducing bacterium, possesses six gene clusters encoding six hydrogenases catalyzing the reversible oxidation of H into protons and electrons. Among them, Hnd is an electron-bifurcating hydrogenase, coupling the exergonic reduction of NAD to the endergonic reduction of a ferredoxin with electrons derived from H . It was previously hypothesized that its biological function involves the production of NADPH necessary for biosynthetic purposes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Xyloglucan utilization by was formerly shown to imply the uptake of large xylogluco-oligosaccharides, followed by cytosolic depolymerization into glucose, galactose, xylose, and cellobiose. This raises the question of how the anaerobic bacterium manages the simultaneous presence of multiple sugars. Using genetic and biochemical approaches targeting the corresponding metabolic pathways, we observed that, surprisingly, all sugars are catabolized, collectively, but glucose consumption is prioritized.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Pathogenic bacteria use metallophores, like staphylopine and pseudopaline, to acquire essential metals in hostile environments created by the host's immune response.
  • Researchers focused on pseudopaline transport in Pseudomonas aeruginosa, demonstrating that the MexAB-OprM efflux pump is crucial for its secretion across the bacterium's outer membrane.
  • The study also explored how the bacteria recover metal from pseudopaline, revealing a modification mechanism that aids in metal release, leading to a better understanding of metallophore dynamics in bacterial survival during infections.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Cellulolytic microorganisms play a key role in the global carbon cycle by decomposing structurally diverse plant biopolymers from dead plant matter. These microorganisms, in particular anaerobes such as that are capable of degrading and catabolizing several different polysaccharides, require a fine-tuned regulation of the biosynthesis of their polysaccharide-degrading enzymes. In this study, we present a bacterial regulatory system involved in the regulation of genes enabling the metabolism of the ubiquitous plant polysaccharide xyloglucan.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The three presently known enzymes responsible for arsenic-using bioenergetic processes are arsenite oxidase (Aio), arsenate reductase (Arr) and alternative arsenite oxidase (Arx), all of which are molybdoenzymes from the vast group referred to as the Mo/W-bisPGD enzyme superfamily. Since arsenite is present in substantial amounts in hydrothermal environments, frequently considered as vestiges of primordial biochemistry, arsenite-based bioenergetics has long been predicted to be ancient. Conflicting scenarios, however, have been put forward proposing either Arr/Arx or Aio as operating in the ancestral metabolism.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: In anaerobic cellulolytic micro-organisms, cellulolysis results in the action of several cellulases gathered in extracellular multi-enzyme complexes called cellulosomes. Their action releases cellobiose and longer cellodextrins which are imported and further degraded in the cytosol to fuel the cells. In , an anaerobic and cellulolytic mesophilic bacteria, three cellodextrin phosphorylases named CdpA, CdpB, and CdpC, were identified in addition to the cellobiose phosphorylase (CbpA) previously characterized.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Desulfovibrio species are representatives of microorganisms at the boundary between anaerobic and aerobic lifestyles, since they contain the enzymatic systems required for both sulfate and oxygen reduction. However, the latter has been shown to be solely a protective mechanism. By implementing the oxygen-driven experimental evolution of Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough, we have obtained strains that have evolved to grow with energy derived from oxidative phosphorylation linked to oxygen reduction.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Like a number of anaerobic and cellulolytic Gram-positive bacteria, the model microorganism produces extracellular multi-enzymatic complexes called cellulosomes, which efficiently degrade the crystalline cellulose. Action of the complexes on cellulose releases cellobiose and longer cellodextrins but to date, little is known about the transport and utilization of the produced cellodextrins in the bacterium. A better understanding of the uptake systems and fermentation of sugars derived from cellulose could have a major impact in the field of biofuels production.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The concentration of CO in many aquatic systems is variable, often lower than the K of the primary carboxylating enzyme Rubisco, and in order to photosynthesize efficiently, many algae operate a facultative CO concentrating mechanism (CCM). Here we measured the responses of a marine diatom, Thalassiosira pseudonana, to high and low concentrations of CO at the level of transcripts, proteins and enzyme activity. Low CO caused many metabolic pathways to be remodeled.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

While a functional quorum sensing system has been identified in the acidophilic chemolithoautotrophic Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans ATCC 23270(T) and shown to modulate cell adhesion to solid substrates, nothing is known about the genes it regulates. To address the question of how quorum sensing controls biofilm formation in A. ferrooxidans (T), the transcriptome of this organism in conditions in which quorum sensing response is stimulated by a synthetic superagonist AHL (N-acyl homoserine lactones) analog has been studied.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF