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Featured researches published by Mariana Silvia Cretoiu.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2012

The great screen anomaly-a new frontier in product discovery through functional metagenomics

David Matthias Ekkers; Mariana Silvia Cretoiu; Anna M. Kielak; Jan Dirk van Elsas

Functional metagenomics, the study of the collective genome of a microbial community by expressing it in a foreign host, is an emerging field in biotechnology. Over the past years, the possibility of novel product discovery through metagenomics has developed rapidly. Thus, metagenomics has been heralded as a promising mining strategy of resources for the biotechnological and pharmaceutical industry. However, in spite of innovative work in the field of functional genomics in recent years, yields from function-based metagenomics studies still fall short of producing significant amounts of new products that are valuable for biotechnological processes. Thus, a new set of strategies is required with respect to fostering gene expression in comparison to the traditional work. These new strategies should address a major issue, that is, how to successfully express a set of unknown genes of unknown origin in a foreign host in high throughput. This article is an opinionating review of functional metagenomic screening of natural microbial communities, with a focus on the optimization of new product discovery. It first summarizes current major bottlenecks in functional metagenomics and then provides an overview of the general metagenomic assessment strategies, with a focus on the challenges that are met in the screening for, and selection of, target genes in metagenomic libraries. To identify possible screening limitations, strategies to achieve optimal gene expression are reviewed, examining the molecular events all the way from the transcription level through to the secretion of the target gene product.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2013

Chitin amendment increases soil suppressiveness toward plant pathogens and modulates the actinobacterial and oxalobacteraceal communities in an experimental agricultural field.

Mariana Silvia Cretoiu; G.W. Korthals; J.H.M. Visser; Jan Dirk van Elsas

ABSTRACT A long-term experiment on the effect of chitin addition to soil on the suppression of soilborne pathogens was set up and monitored for 8 years in an experimental field, Vredepeel, The Netherlands. Chitinous matter obtained from shrimps was added to soil top layers on two different occasions, and the suppressiveness of soil toward Verticillium dahliae, as well as plant-pathogenic nematodes, was assessed, in addition to analyses of the abundances and community structures of members of the soil microbiota. The data revealed that chitin amendment had raised the suppressiveness of soil, in particular toward Verticillium dahliae, 9 months after the (second) treatment, extending to 2 years following treatment. Moreover, major effects of the added chitin on the soil microbial communities were detected. First, shifts in both the abundances and structures of the chitin-treated soil microbial communities, both of total soil bacteria and fungi, were found. In addition, the abundances and structures of soil actinobacteria and the Oxalobacteraceae were affected by chitin. At the functional gene level, the abundance of specific (family-18 glycoside hydrolase) chitinase genes carried by the soil bacteria also revealed upshifts as a result of the added chitin. The effects of chitin noted for the Oxalobacteraceae were specifically related to significant upshifts in the abundances of the species Duganella violaceinigra and Massilia plicata. These effects of chitin persisted over the time of the experiment.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2013

Bacterial chitinolytic communities respond to chitin and pH alteration in soil

Anna M. Kielak; Mariana Silvia Cretoiu; Alexander V. Semenov; Søren J. Sørensen; Jan Dirk van Elsas

ABSTRACT Chitin amendment is a promising soil management strategy that may enhance the suppressiveness of soil toward plant pathogens. However, we understand very little of the effects of added chitin, including the putative successions that take place in the degradative process. We performed an experiment in moderately acid soil in which the level of chitin, next to the pH, was altered. Examination of chitinase activities revealed fast responses to the added crude chitin, with peaks of enzymatic activity occurring on day 7. PCR-denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE)-based analyses of 16S rRNA and chiA genes showed structural changes of the phylogenetically and functionally based bacterial communities following chitin addition and pH alteration. Pyrosequencing analysis indicated (i) that the diversity of chiA gene types in soil is enormous and (i) that different chiA gene types are selected by the addition of chitin at different prevailing soil pH values. Interestingly, a major role of Gram-negative bacteria versus a minor one of Actinobacteria in the immediate response to the added chitin (based on 16S rRNA gene abundance and chiA gene types) was indicated. The results of this study enhance our understanding of the response of the soil bacterial communities to chitin and are of use for both the understanding of soil suppressiveness and the possible mining of soil for novel enzymes.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2012

Mining of unexplored habitats for novel chitinases-chiA as a helper gene proxy in metagenomics

Mariana Silvia Cretoiu; Anna M. Kielak; Waleed Abu Al-Soud; Søren J. Sørensen; Jan Dirk van Elsas

The main objective of this study was to assess the abundance and diversity of chitin-degrading microbial communities in ten terrestrial and aquatic habitats in order to provide guidance to the subsequent exploration of such environments for novel chitinolytic enzymes. A combined protocol which encompassed (1) classical overall enzymatic assays, (2) chiA gene abundance measurement by qPCR, (3) chiA gene pyrosequencing, and (4) chiA gene-based PCR-DGGE was used. The chiA gene pyrosequencing is unprecedented, as it is the first massive parallel sequencing of this gene. The data obtained showed the existence across habitats of core bacterial communities responsible for chitin assimilation irrespective of ecosystem origin. Conversely, there were habitat-specific differences. In addition, a suite of sequences were obtained that are as yet unregistered in the chitinase database. In terms of chiA gene abundance and diversity, typical low-abundance/diversity versus high-abundance/diversity habitats was distinguished. From the combined data, we selected chitin-amended agricultural soil, the rhizosphere of the Arctic plant Oxyria digyna and the freshwater sponge Ephydatia fluviatilis as the most promising habitats for subsequent bioexploration. Thus, the screening strategy used is proposed as a guide for further metagenomics-based exploration of the selected habitats.


Soil Biology & Biochemistry | 2014

Bacterial communities in chitin-amended soil as revealed by 16S rRNA gene based pyrosequencing

Mariana Silvia Cretoiu; Anna M. Kielak; Andreas Schlüter; Jan Dirk van Elsas


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2015

A novel salt-tolerant chitobiosidase discovered by genetic screening of a metagenomic library derived from chitin-amended agricultural soil

Mariana Silvia Cretoiu; Francesca Berini; Anna M. Kielak; Flavia Marinelli; Jan Dirk van Elsas


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2017

The first acidobacterial laccase-like multicopper oxidase revealed by metagenomics shows high salt and thermo-tolerance

Luka Ausec; Francesca Berini; Carmine Casciello; Mariana Silvia Cretoiu; Jan Dirk van Elsas; Flavia Marinelli; Ines Mandic-Mulec


Omics in soil science | 2014

Soil Metagenomics: Potential applications and methodological problems

Jan Dirk van Elsas; Mariana Silvia Cretoiu; Anna Kielak Butterbach; Francisco Dini Andreote


Handbook of Molecular Microbial Ecology I: Metagenomics and Complementary Approaches | 2011

The Metagenomics of Plant Pathogen‐Suppressive Soils

Jan Dirk van Elsas; Anna M. Kielak; Mariana Silvia Cretoiu


Archive | 2014

Experimental Agricultural Field Oxalobacteraceal Communities in an and Modulates the Actinobacterial and Suppressiveness toward Plant Pathogens Chitin Amendment Increases Soil

Jan Dirk van Elsas; Mariana Silvia Cretoiu; G.W. Korthals

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G.W. Korthals

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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J.H.M. Visser

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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