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Authors Séneca

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Séneca, Joana


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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Co-occurring nitrifying symbiont lineages are vertically inherited and widespread in marine sponges Glasl et al. (2024). The ISME Journal 18 (1) Nitrosokoinonia Nitrosymbium Nitrosokoinonia keratosae Ts Nitrosymbium coscinodermae Ts
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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.
Co-occurring nitrifying symbiont lineages are vertically inherited and widespread in marine sponges
Abstract Ammonia-oxidizing archaea and nitrite-oxidizing bacteria are common members of marine sponge microbiomes. They derive energy for carbon fixation and growth from nitrification—the aerobic oxidation of ammonia to nitrite and further to nitrate—and are proposed to play essential roles in the carbon and nitrogen cycling of sponge holobionts. In this study, we characterize two novel nitrifying symbiont lineages, Candidatus Nitrosokoinonia and Candidatus Nitrosymbion in the marine sponge Coscinoderma matthewsi using a combination of molecular tools, in situ visualization, and physiological rate measurements. Both represent a new genus in the ammonia-oxidizing archaeal class Nitrososphaeria and the nitrite-oxidizing bacterial order Nitrospirales, respectively. Furthermore, we show that larvae of this viviparous sponge are densely colonized by representatives of Ca. Nitrosokoinonia and Ca. Nitrosymbion indicating vertical transmission. In adults, the representatives of both symbiont genera are located extracellularly in the mesohyl. Comparative metagenome analyses and physiological data suggest that ammonia-oxidizing archaeal symbionts of the genus Ca. Nitrosokoinonia strongly rely on endogenously produced nitrogenous compounds (i.e. ammonium, urea, nitriles/cyanides, and creatinine) rather than on exogenous ammonium sources taken up by the sponge. Additionally, the nitrite-oxidizing bacterial symbionts of the genus Ca. Nitrosymbion may reciprocally support the ammonia-oxidizers with ammonia via the utilization of sponge-derived urea and cyanate. Comparative analyses of published environmental 16S rRNA gene amplicon data revealed that Ca. Nitrosokoinonia and Ca. Nitrosymbion are widely distributed and predominantly associated with marine sponges and corals, suggesting a broad relevance of our findings.
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