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Authors Wanek

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Wanek, Wolfgang


Publications
2

CitationNamesAbstract
Sulfoquinovose degradation by cow rumen microbiota Krasenbrink et al. (2026). The ISME Journal “Neosphaerochaeta” “Neosphaerochaeta fermentans” “Caproiciproducens ruminis” “Caproiciproducens intestini” “Limivicinus” “Mailhella”
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“Ca. Nitrosocosmicus” members are the dominant archaea associated with pepper (Capsicum annuumL.) and ginseng (Panax ginsengC.A. Mey.) plants’ rhizospheres Lee et al. (2024). Ca. Nitrosocosmicus
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Sulfoquinovose degradation by cow rumen microbiota
Abstract Sulfoquinovose, a sulfonated sugar derived from the thylakoid membrane lipid sulfoquinovosyl diacylglycerol, is abundant in photosynthetic organisms and plays a key role in global sulfur cycling. Its degradation in nature is mediated by specialized bacteria, many of which rely on the enzyme sulfoquinovosidase (YihQ) to release sulfoquinovose from sulfoquinovosyl (diacyl)glycerol. Despite its ecological importance, the diversity and functional roles of sulfoquinovose-degrading microorganisms remain poorly characterized in natural environments. Here, we developed a yihQ-targeted amplicon sequencing approach to investigate the richness and distribution of SQ-degrading bacteria across selected environments. We revealed high richness of yihQ-containing microorganisms in the analyzed cow rumen samples, far exceeding that observed in human and mouse gut microbiomes, suggesting an important role of sulfoquinovose metabolism in ruminant digestion. Anoxic microcosm experiments with sulfoquinovose-amended rumen fluid revealed cooperative microbial degradation of sulfoquinovose to sulfide via isethionate cross-feeding. Amplicon sequencing and genome-resolved metagenomics and metatranscriptomics identified yet undescribed and uncultured sulfoquinovose-degrading taxa. Members of Caproiciproducens (Acutalibacteraceae), Candidatus Limivicinus (Oscillospiraceae), and Sphaerochaetaceae transcribed the isethionate-producing sulfo-transketolase pathway, whereas isethionate was likely respired by a Candidatus Mailhella bacterium (Desulfovibrionaceae). This study presents a functional gene-based assay for tracking environmental yihQ richness, highlights sulfoquinovose degradation as a central metabolic process in the cow rumen, describes previously unknown sulfoquinovose-metabolizing bacteria, and advances understanding of sulfur physiology in complex microbial communities.
“Ca. Nitrosocosmicus” members are the dominant archaea associated with pepper (Capsicum annuumL.) and ginseng (Panax ginsengC.A. Mey.) plants’ rhizospheres
AbstractBackgroundAlthough archaea are widespread in terrestrial environments, little is known about the selection forces that shape their composition, functions, survival, and proliferation strategies in the rhizosphere. The ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA), which are abundant in soil environments, catalyze the first step of nitrification and have the potential to influence plant growth and development significantly.ResultsBased on archaeal 16S rRNA andamoAgene (encoding the ammonia monooxygenase subunit A) amplicon sequencing analysis, distinct archaeal communities dominated by AOA were found to be associated with the root systems of pepper (Capsicum annuumL.) and ginseng (Panax ginsengC.A. Mey.) plants compared to bulk soil not penetrated by roots. AOA related to “CandidatusNitrosocosmicus”, which, unlike most other AOA, harbor genes encoding manganese catalase (MnKat), dominated rhizosphere soils, and thus contributed to the development of distinct archaeal communities in rhizospheres. Accordingly, for both plant species, the copy number ratios of AOA MnKat genes toamoAgenes were significantly higher in rhizosphere soils than in bulk soils. In contrast to MnKat-negative strains from other AOA clades, the catalase activity of a representative isolate of “Ca.Nitrosocosmicus” was demonstrated. Members of this clade were enriched in H2O2-amended bulk soils, and constitutive expression of their MnKat gene was observed in both bulk and rhizosphere soils.ConclusionsDue to their abundance, “Ca.Nitrosocosmicus” members can be considered key players mediating the nitrification process in rhizospheres. The selection of this MnKat-containing AOA in rhizospheres of several agriculturally important plants hints at a previously overlooked AOA-plant interaction. For additional mechanistic analyses of the interaction, this key clade of AOA with cultured representatives can be employed.
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