Daniel Wipf
University of Burgundy
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Featured researches published by Daniel Wipf.
Mycorrhiza | 2010
Silvio Gianinazzi; Armelle Gollotte; Marie-Noëlle Binet; Dirk Redecker; Daniel Wipf
The beneficial effects of arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi on plant performance and soil health are essential for the sustainable management of agricultural ecosystems. Nevertheless, since the ‘first green revolution’, less attention has been given to beneficial soil microorganisms in general and to AM fungi in particular. Human society benefits from a multitude of resources and processes from natural and managed ecosystems, to which AM make a crucial contribution. These resources and processes, which are called ecosystem services, include products like food and processes like nutrient transfer. Many people have been under the illusion that these ecosystem services are free, invulnerable and infinitely available; taken for granted as public benefits, they lack a formal market and are traditionally absent from society’s balance sheet. In 1997, a team of researchers from the USA, Argentina and the Netherlands put an average price tag of US
Trends in Biochemical Sciences | 2002
Daniel Wipf; Uwe Ludewig; Mechthild Tegeder; Doris Rentsch; Wolfgang Koch; Wolf B. Frommer
33 trillion a year on these fundamental ecosystem services. The present review highlights the key role that the AM symbiosis can play as an ecosystem service provider to guarantee plant productivity and quality in emerging systems of sustainable agriculture. The appropriate management of ecosystem services rendered by AM will impact on natural resource conservation and utilisation with an obvious net gain for human society.
Nature | 2006
Arthur Schüßler; Holger Martin; David Cohen; Michael Fitz; Daniel Wipf
When comparing the transporters of three completely sequenced eukaryotic genomes--Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Arabidopsis thaliana and Homo sapiens--transporter types can be distinguished according to phylogeny, substrate spectrum, transport mechanism and cell specificity. The known amino acid transporters belong to five different superfamilies. Two preferentially Na(+)-coupled transporter superfamilies are not represented in the yeast and Arabidopsis genomes, whereas the other three groups, which often function as H(+)-coupled systems, have members in all investigated genomes. Additional superfamilies exist for organellar transport, including mitochondrial and plastidic carriers. When used in combination with phylogenetic analyses, functional comparison might aid our prediction of physiological functions for related but uncharacterized open reading frames.
Trends in Plant Science | 2012
Joan Doidy; Emily Grace; Christina Kühn; Françoise Simon-Plas; Leonardo Casieri; Daniel Wipf
The symbiotic relationships between mycorrhizal fungi and plants have an enormous impact on terrestrial ecosystems. Most common are the arbuscular mycorrhizas, formed by fungi belonging to the phylum Glomeromycota. Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi facilitate the uptake of soil nutrients by plants and in exchange obtain carbohydrates, thus representing a large sink for atmospheric plant-fixed CO2. However, how carbohydrates are transported through the symbiotic interface is still unknown. Here we report the characterization of the first known glomeromycotan monosaccharide transporter, GpMST1, by exploiting the unique symbiosis of a glomeromycotan fungus (Geosiphon pyriformis) with cyanobacteria. The GpMST1 gene has a very low GC content and contains six introns with unusual boundaries. GpMST1 possesses twelve predicted transmembrane domains and functions as a proton co-transporter with highest affinity for glucose, then mannose, galactose and fructose. It belongs to an as yet uncharacterized phylogenetic monosaccharide transporter clade. This initial characterization of a new transporter family involved in fungal symbiosis will lead to a better understanding of carbon flows in terrestrial environments.
BMC Plant Biology | 2003
Elisabetta Catoni; Marcelo Desimone; Melanie Hilpert; Daniel Wipf; Reinhard Kunze; Anja Schneider; Ulf-Ingo Flügge; Karin Schumacher; Wolf B. Frommer
Sucrose and monosaccharide transporters mediate long distance transport of sugar from source to sink organs and constitute key components for carbon partitioning at the whole plant level and in interactions with fungi. Even if numerous families of plant sugar transporters are defined; efflux capacities, subcellular localization and association to membrane rafts have only been recently reported. On the fungal side, the investigation of sugar transport mechanisms in mutualistic and pathogenic interactions is now emerging. Here, we review the essential role of sugar transporters for distribution of carbohydrates inside plant cells, as well as for plant-fungal interaction functioning. Altogether these data highlight the need for a better comprehension of the mechanisms underlying sugar exchanges between fungi and their host plants.
Plant Physiology | 2008
Gilda Cappellazzo; Luisa Lanfranco; Michael Fitz; Daniel Wipf; Paola Bonfante
BackgroundArginine and citrulline serve as nitrogen storage forms, but are also involved in biosynthetic and catabolic pathways. Metabolism of arginine, citrulline and ornithine is distributed between mitochondria and cytosol. For the shuttle of intermediates between cytosol and mitochondria transporters present on the inner mitochondrial membrane are required. Yeast contains a mitochondrial translocator for ornithine and arginine, Ort1p/Arg11p. Ort1p/Arg11p is a member of the mitochondrial carrier family (MCF) essential for ornithine export from mitochondria. The yeast arg11 mutant, which is deficient in Ort1p/Arg11p grows poorly on media lacking arginine.ResultsHigh-level expression of a nuclear encoded Arabidopsis thaliana homolog (AtmBAC2) of Ort1p/Arg11p was able to suppress the growth deficiency of arg11. RT-PCR analysis demonstrated expression of AtmBAC2 in all tissues with highest levels in flowers. Promoter-GUS fusions showed preferential expression in flowers, i.e. pollen, in the vasculature of siliques and in aborted seeds. Variable expression was observed in leaf vasculature. Induction of the promoter was not observed during the first two weeks in seedlings grown on media containing NH4NO3, arginine or ornithine as sole nitrogen sources.ConclusionAtmBAC2 was isolated as a mitochondrial transporter for arginine in Arabidopsis. The absence of expression in developing seeds and in cotyledons of seedlings indicates that other transporters are responsible for storage and mobilization of arginine in seeds.
Plant and Soil | 2002
Michel Chalot; Arnaud Javelle; Damien Blaudez; Raphaël Lambilliote; Richard Cooke; Hervé Sentenac; Daniel Wipf; Bernard Botton
Arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi are capable of exploiting organic nitrogen sources, but the molecular mechanisms that control such an uptake are still unknown. Polymerase chain reaction-based approaches, bioinformatic tools, and a heterologous expression system have been used to characterize a sequence coding for an amino acid permease (GmosAAP1) from the AM fungus Glomus mosseae. The GmosAAP1 shows primary and secondary structures that are similar to those of other fungal amino acid permeases. Functional complementation and uptake experiments in a yeast mutant that was defective in the multiple amino acid uptake system demonstrated that GmosAAP1 is able to transport proline through a proton-coupled, pH- and energy-dependent process. A competitive test showed that GmosAAP1 binds nonpolar and hydrophobic amino acids, thus indicating a relatively specific substrate spectrum. GmosAAP1 mRNAs were detected in the extraradical fungal structures. Transcript abundance was increased upon exposure to organic nitrogen, in particular when supplied at 2 mm concentrations. These findings suggest that GmosAAP1 plays a role in the first steps of amino acid acquisition, allowing direct amino acid uptake from the soil and extending the molecular tools by which AM fungi exploit soil resources.
FEBS Letters | 2002
Daniel Wipf; Mariam Benjdia; Mechthild Tegeder; Wolf B. Frommer
Nutrient transport, namely absorption from the soil solution as well as nutrient transfer from fungus to plant and carbon movement from plant to fungus are key features of mycorrhizal symbiosis. This review summarizes our current understanding of nutrient transport processes in ectomycorrhizal fungi and ectomycorrhizas. The identification of nutrient uptake mechanisms is a key issue in understanding nutrition of ectomycorrhizal plants. With the ongoing functional analysis of nutrient transporters, identified during sequencing of fungal and tree genomes, a picture of individual transport systems should be soon available, with their molecular functions assessed by functional characterization in, e.g., yeast mutant strains or Xenopus oocytes. Beyond the molecular function, systematic searches for knockout mutants will allow us to obtain a full understanding of the role of the individual transporter genes in the physiology of the symbionts. The mechanisms by which fungal and plant cells obtain, process and integrate information regarding nutrient levels in the external environment and the plant demand will be analyzed.
Fungal Biology | 1996
François Buscot; Daniel Wipf; Céline Di Battista; Jean-Charles Munch; Bernard Botton; Francis L. Martin
Besides a role in phosphate supply, ectomycorrhizas play a crucial role in nitrogen nutrition of plants. The ectomycorrhizal association between Hebeloma cylindrosporum and Pinus pinaster serves as a model system accessible to molecular manipulation. Hebeloma mycelium is able to take up and use amino acids as the sole nitrogen source. Suppression cloning allowed identification of a Hebeloma transporter (HcGAP1) mediating histidine uptake. HcGAP1 mediates secondary active uptake of a wide spectrum of different amino acids. The secondary active transport mechanism together with the expression in hyphae, but not in mycorrhizas, indicate a role in uptake of organic nitrogen from the soil.
Mycorrhiza | 2013
Leonardo Casieri; Nassima Ait Lahmidi; Joan Doidy; Claire Veneault-Fourrey; Aude Migeon; Laurent Bonneau; Pierre-Emmanuel Courty; Kevin Garcia; Maryse Charbonnier; Amandine Delteil; Annick Brun; Sabine Zimmermann; Claude Plassard; Daniel Wipf
As a part of investigations on heterokaryon formation in morels, a characterization of DNA polymorphism within this fungal group was attempted. In order to assess which discrimination level is necessary to trace nucleus populations in heterokaryons, but also in the context of the debatable species definition in morels, different taxa and strain types (monosporal and heterokaryons) were analysed with two polymerase chain reaction (PCR) techniques of distinct sensitivity: (i) PCR of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) and the intergenic spacer (IGS) of the ribosomal nuclear DNA coupled with restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis, (ii) microsatellite-primed PCR. The ITS and IGS PCR/RFLP appeared at first to be adequate to assess morel systematics. The microsatellite-primed PCR with the primer (GTG)5 revealed, however, that morels exhibit less intraspecific DNA polymorphism than other ascomycetes. Based upon these results, two strategies for investigating somatic strain interactions within morels using DNA analyses are proposed.