Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Luc Cornet is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Luc Cornet.


Genome Announcements | 2017

Draft Genome Sequence of the Axenic Strain Phormidesmis priestleyi ULC007, a Cyanobacterium Isolated from Lake Bruehwiler (Larsemann Hills, Antarctica)

Yannick Lara; Benoit Durieu; Luc Cornet; Olivier Verlaine; Rosemarie Rippka; Igor Stelmach Pessi; Agnieszka Misztak; Bernard Joris; Emmanuelle Javaux; Denis Baurain; Annick Wilmotte

ABSTRACT Phormidesmis priestleyi ULC007 is an Antarctic freshwater cyanobacterium. Its draft genome is 5,684,389 bp long. It contains a total of 5,604 protein-encoding genes, of which 22.2% have no clear homologues in known genomes. To date, this draft genome is the first one ever determined for an axenic cyanobacterium from Antarctica.


The Journal of Antibiotics | 2018

High-Throughput Sequencing Analysis of the Actinobacterial Spatial Diversity in Moonmilk Deposits

Marta Maciejewska; Magdalena Calusinska; Luc Cornet; Delphine Adam; Igor Stelmach Pessi; Sandrine Malchair; Philippe Delfosse; Denis Baurain; Hazel A. Barton; Monique Carnol; Sébastien Rigali

Moonmilk are cave carbonate deposits that host a rich microbiome, including antibiotic-producing Actinobacteria, making these speleothems appealing for bioprospecting. Here, we investigated the taxonomic profile of the actinobacterial community of three moonmilk deposits of the cave “Grotte des Collemboles” via high-throughput sequencing of 16S rRNA amplicons. Actinobacteria was the most common phylum after Proteobacteria, ranging from 9% to 23% of the total bacterial population. Next to actinobacterial operational taxonomic units (OTUs) attributed to uncultured organisms at the genus level (~44%), we identified 47 actinobacterial genera with Rhodoccocus (4 OTUs, 17%) and Pseudonocardia (9 OTUs, ~16%) as the most abundant in terms of the absolute number of sequences. Streptomycetes presented the highest diversity (19 OTUs, 3%), with most of the OTUs unlinked to the culturable Streptomyces strains that were previously isolated from the same deposits. Furthermore, 43% of the OTUs were shared between the three studied collection points, while 34% were exclusive to one deposit, indicating that distinct speleothems host their own population, despite their nearby localization. This important spatial diversity suggests that prospecting within different moonmilk deposits should result in the isolation of unique and novel Actinobacteria. These speleothems also host a wide range of non-streptomycetes antibiotic-producing genera, and should therefore be subjected to methodologies for isolating rare Actinobacteria.


PLOS ONE | 2018

Consensus assessment of the contamination level of publicly available cyanobacterial genomes

Luc Cornet; Loic Meunier; Mick Van Vlierberghe; Raphaël Léonard; Benoit Durieu; Yannick Lara; Agnieszka Misztak; Damien Sirjacobs; Emmanuelle Javaux; Hervé Philippe; Annick Wilmotte; Denis Baurain

Publicly available genomes are crucial for phylogenetic and metagenomic studies, in which contaminating sequences can be the cause of major problems. This issue is expected to be especially important for Cyanobacteria because axenic strains are notoriously difficult to obtain and keep in culture. Yet, despite their great scientific interest, no data are currently available concerning the quality of publicly available cyanobacterial genomes. As reliably detecting contaminants is a complex task, we designed a pipeline combining six methods in a consensus strategy to assess the contamination level of 440 genome assemblies of Cyanobacteria. Two methods are based on published reference databases of ribosomal genes (SSU rRNA 16S and ribosomal proteins), one is indirectly based on a reference database of marker genes (CheckM), and three are based on complete genome analysis. Among those genome-wide methods, Kraken and DIAMOND blastx share the same reference database that we derived from Ensembl Bacteria, whereas CONCOCT does not require any reference database, instead relying on differences in DNA tetramer frequencies. Given that all the six methods appear to have their own strengths and limitations, we used the consensus of their rankings to infer that >5% of cyanobacterial genome assemblies are highly contaminated by foreign DNA (i.e., contaminants were detected by 5 or 6 methods). Our results will help researchers to check the quality of publicly available genomic data before use in their own analyses. Moreover, we argue that journals should make mandatory the submission of raw read data along with genome assemblies in order to facilitate the detection of contaminants in sequence databases.


bioRxiv | 2018

Metagenomic assembly of new (sub)polar Cyanobacteria and their associated microbiome from non-axenic cultures.

Luc Cornet; Amandine R Bertrand; Marc Hanikenne; Emmanuelle Javaux; Annick Wilmotte; Denis Baurain

Cyanobacteria form one of the most diversified phyla of Bacteria. They are important ecologically as primary producers, for Earth evolution and biotechnological applications. Yet, Cyanobacteria are notably difficult to purify and grow axenically, and most strains in culture collections contain heterotrophic bacteria that were probably associated with Cyanobacteria in the environment. Obtaining cyanobacterial DNA without contaminant sequences is thus a challenging and time-consuming task. Here, we describe a metagenomic pipeline that enables the easy recovery of genomes from non-axenic cultures. We tested this pipeline on 17 cyanobacterial cultures from the BCCM/ULC public collection and generated novel genome sequences for 12 polar or subpolar strains and three temperate ones, including three early-branching organisms that will be useful for phylogenomics. In parallel, we assembled 31 co-cultivated bacteria (12 nearly complete) from the same cultures and showed that they mostly belong to Bacteroidetes and Proteobacteria, some of them being very closely related in spite of geographically distant sampling sites.


BMC Research Notes | 2018

A constrained SSU-rRNA phylogeny reveals the unsequenced diversity of photosynthetic Cyanobacteria (Oxyphotobacteria).

Luc Cornet; Annick Wilmotte; Emmanuelle Javaux; Denis Baurain

ObjectiveCyanobacteria are an ancient phylum of prokaryotes that contain the class Oxyphotobacteria. This group has been extensively studied by phylogenomics notably because it is widely accepted that Cyanobacteria were responsible for the spread of photosynthesis to the eukaryotic domain. The aim of this study was to evaluate the fraction of the oxyphotobacterial diversity for which sequenced genomes are available for genomic studies. For this, we built a phylogenomic-constrained SSU rRNA (16S) tree to pinpoint unexploited clusters of Oxyphotobacteria that should be targeted for future genome sequencing, so as to improve our understanding of Oxyphotobacteria evolution.ResultsWe show that only a little fraction of the oxyphotobacterial diversity has been sequenced so far. Indeed 31 rRNA clusters of the 60 composing the photosynthetic Cyanobacteria have a fraction of sequenced genomes < 1%. This fraction remains low (min = 1%, median = 11.1%, IQR = 7.3%) within the remaining “sequenced” clusters that already contain some representative genomes. The “unsequenced” clusters are scattered across the whole Oxyphotobacteria tree, at the exception of very basal clades. Yet, these clades still feature some (sub)clusters without any representative genome. This last result is especially important, as these basal clades are prime candidate for plastid emergence.


Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology | 2012

A Middle Devonian Callixylon (Archaeopteridales) from Ronquières, Belgium

Luc Cornet; Philippe Gerrienne; Brigitte Meyer-Berthaud; Cyrille Prestianni


Acta Mycologica | 2013

The unusual Gasteromycetes Lycogalopsis solmsii belongs to the gomphoid-phalloid group

Vincent Demoulin; Luc Cornet; Emilie Delbruyère; Denis Baurain


Archive | 2018

Genomics, Metagenomics and Phylogenomics of Cyanobacteria

Luc Cornet


Archive | 2018

The survival toolkit of the Antarctic cyanobacterium Phormidesmis priestleyi ULC007

Yannick Lara; Benoit Durieu; Igor Stelmach Pessi; Luc Cornet; Denis Baurain; Emmanuelle Javaux; Annick Wilmotte


Archive | 2018

Polar cyanobacteria in the BCCM/ULC collection : diversity and characterization

Yannick Lara; Kim Beets; Véronique Simons; Benoit Durieu; Luc Cornet; Mariano Santoro; Haywood Laughinghouse Iv; Emmanuelle Javaux; Denis Baurain; Annick Wilmotte

Collaboration


Dive into the Luc Cornet's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Véronique Simons

Université catholique de Louvain

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge