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Dive into the research topics where Martina Kyselková is active.

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Featured researches published by Martina Kyselková.


The ISME Journal | 2009

Comparison of rhizobacterial community composition in soil suppressive or conducive to tobacco black root rot disease.

Martina Kyselková; Jan Kopecký; Michele Frapolli; Geneviève Défago; Marketa Sagova-Mareckova; Geneviève L. Grundmann; Yvan Moënne-Loccoz

Work on soils suppressive to Thielaviopsis basicola-mediated tobacco black root rot has focused on antagonistic pseudomonads to date. The role of non-Pseudomonas rhizosphere populations has been neglected, and whether they differ in black root rot-suppressive versus -conducive soils is unknown. To assess this possibility, tobacco was grown in a suppressive and a conducive soil of similar physicochemical properties, and rhizobacterial community composition was compared using a 16S rRNA taxonomic microarray. The microarray contains 1033 probes and targets 19 bacterial phyla. Among them, 398 probes were designed for Proteobacteria, Firmicutes, Actinomycetes, Cyanobacteria and Bacteroidetes genera/species known to include strains relevant for plant protection or plant growth promotion. Hierarchical clustering as well as principal component analysis of microarray data discriminated clearly between black root rot-suppressive and -conducive soils. In contrast, T. basicola inoculation had no impact on rhizobacterial community composition. In addition to fluorescent Pseudomonas, the taxa Azospirillum, Gluconacetobacter, Burkholderia, Comamonas and Sphingomonadaceae, which are known to comprise strains with plant-beneficial properties, were more prevalent in the suppressive soil. Mycobacterium, Bradyrhizobium, Rhodobacteraceae, Rhodospirillum and others were more prevalent in the conducive soil. For selected taxa, microarray results were largely corroborated by quantitative PCR and cloning/sequencing. In conclusion, this work identified novel bacterial taxa that could serve as indicators of disease suppressiveness in soil-quality assessments, and it extends the range of bacterial taxa hypothesized to participate in black root rot suppression.


Molecular Ecology | 2012

Is diversification history of maize influencing selection of soil bacteria by roots

Marie-Lara Bouffaud; Martina Kyselková; Brigitte Gouesnard; Geneviève L. Grundmann; Daniel Muller; Yvan Moënne-Loccoz

A wide range of plant lines has been propagated by farmers during crop selection and dissemination, but consequences of this crop diversification on plant‐microbe interactions have been neglected. Our hypothesis was that crop evolutionary history shaped the way the resulting lines interact with soil bacteria in their rhizospheres. Here, the significance of maize diversification as a factor influencing selection of soil bacteria by seedling roots was assessed by comparing rhizobacterial community composition of inbred lines representing the five main genetic groups of maize, cultivated in a same European soil. Rhizobacterial community composition of 21‐day‐old seedlings was analysed using a 16S rRNA taxonomic microarray targeting 19 bacterial phyla. Rhizobacterial community composition of inbred lines depended on the maize genetic group. Differences were largely due to the prevalence of certain Betaproteobacteria and especially Burkholderia, as confirmed by quantitative PCR and cloning/sequencing. However, these differences in bacterial root colonization did not correlate with plant microsatellite genetic distances between maize genetic groups or individual lines. Therefore, the genetic structure of maize that arose during crop diversification (resulting in five main groups), but not the extent of maize diversification itself (as determined by maize genetic distances), was a significant factor shaping rhizobacterial community composition of seedlings.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2010

Comparison of Barley Succession and Take-All Disease as Environmental Factors Shaping the Rhizobacterial Community during Take-All Decline

Karin Schreiner; Alexandra Hagn; Martina Kyselková; Yvan Moënne-Loccoz; Gerhard Welzl; Jean Charles Munch; Michael Schloter

ABSTRACT The root disease take-all, caused by Gaeumannomyces graminis var. tritici, can be managed by monoculture-induced take-all decline (TAD). This natural biocontrol mechanism typically occurs after a take-all outbreak and is believed to arise from an enrichment of antagonistic populations in the rhizosphere. However, it is not known whether these changes are induced by the monoculture or by ecological rhizosphere conditions due to a disease outbreak and subsequent attenuation. This question was addressed by comparing the rhizosphere microflora of barley, either inoculated with the pathogen or noninoculated, in a microcosm experiment in five consecutive vegetation cycles. TAD occurred in soil inoculated with the pathogen but not in noninoculated soil. Bacterial community analysis using terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism of 16S rRNA showed pronounced population shifts in the successive vegetation cycles, but pathogen inoculation had little effect. To elucidate rhizobacterial dynamics during TAD development, a 16S rRNA-based taxonomic microarray was used. Actinobacteria were the prevailing indicators in the first vegetation cycle, whereas the third cycle—affected most severely by take-all—was characterized by Proteobacteria, Bacteroidetes, Chloroflexi, Planctomycetes, and Acidobacteria. Indicator taxa for the last cycle (TAD) belonged exclusively to Proteobacteria, including several genera with known biocontrol traits. Our results suggest that TAD involves monoculture-induced enrichment of plant-beneficial taxa.


Antonie Van Leeuwenhoek International Journal of General and Molecular Microbiology | 2008

Development of a 16S rRNA gene-based prototype microarray for the detection of selected actinomycetes genera

Martina Kyselková; Jan Kopecký; Tamás Felföldi; Ladislav Cermak; Marek Omelka; Geneviève L. Grundmann; Yvan Moënne-Loccoz; Marketa Sagova-Mareckova

Actinomycetes are known for their secondary metabolites, which have been successfully used as drugs in human and veterinary medicines. However, information on the distribution of this group of Gram-positive bacteria in diverse ecosystems and a comprehension of their activities in ecosystem processes are still scarce. We have developed a 16S rRNA-based taxonomic microarray that targets key actinomycetes at the genus level. In total, 113 actinomycete 16S rRNA probes, corresponding to 55 of the 202 described genera, were designed. The microarray accuracy was evaluated by comparing signal intensities with probe/target-weighted mismatch values and the Gibbs energy of the probe/target duplex formation by hybridizing 17 non-actinomycete and 29 actinomycete strains/clones with the probe set. The validation proved that the probe set was specific, with only 1.3% of false results. The incomplete coverage of actinomycetes by a genus-specific probe was caused by the limited number of 16S rRNA gene sequences in databases or insufficient 16S rRNA gene polymorphism. The microarray enabled discrimination between actinomycete communities from three forest soil samples collected at one site. Cloning and sequencing of 16S rRNA genes from one of the soil samples confirmed the microarray results. We propose that this newly constructed microarray will be a valuable tool for genus-level comparisons of actinomycete communities in various ecological conditions.


FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2011

Development of bacterial community during spontaneous succession on spoil heaps after brown coal mining

Michaela Urbanová; Jan Kopecký; Vendula Valášková; Marketa Sagova-Mareckova; Dana Elhottová; Martina Kyselková; Yvan Moënne-Loccoz; Petr Baldrian

Changes in the abundance of bacteria and fungi and in the composition of bacterial communities during primary succession were investigated in a brown coal mine deposit area near Sokolov, the Czech Republic, using phospholipid fatty acids analysis, microarray and 16S rRNA gene sequencing. The study considered a chronosequence of sites undergoing spontaneous succession: 6-, 12-, 21- and 45-year-old and a 21-year-old site revegetated with Alnus glutinosa. During succession, organic carbon and the total nitrogen content increased while the pH and the C/N ratio decreased. Microbial biomass and bacterial diversity increased until 21 years and decreased later; bacteria dominated over fungi in the initial and late phases of succession. Bacterial community composition of the 6-year-old site with no vegetation cover largely differed from the older sites, especially by a higher content of Gammaproteobacteria, Cyanobacteria and some Alphaproteobacteria. Bacteria belonging to the genera Acidithiobacillus, Thiobacillus and related taxa, the CO(2) and N(2) fixers, dominated the community at this site. In the later phases, bacterial community development seemed to reflect more the changes in soil nutrient content and pH than vegetation with a decrease of Actinobacteria and an increase of Acidobacteria. The site revegetated with A. glutinosa resembled the 45-year-old primary succession site and exhibited an even lower pH and C/N ratio, indicating that recultivation is able to accelerate soil development.


FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2011

Actinobacterial community dominated by a distinct clade in acidic soil of a waterlogged deciduous forest

Jan Kopecky; Martina Kyselková; Marek Omelka; Ladislav Cermak; Jitka Novotna; Geneviève L. Grundmann; Yvan Moënne-Loccoz; Marketa Sagova-Mareckova

Members of the Actinobacteria are among the most important litter decomposers in soil. The site of a waterlogged deciduous forest with acidic soil was explored for actinobacteria because seasonality of litter inputs, temperature, and precipitation provided contrasting environmental conditions, particularly variation of organic matter quantity and quality. We hypothesized that these factors, which are known to influence decomposition, were also likely to affect actinobacterial community composition. The relationship between the actinobacterial community, soil moisture and organic matter content was assessed in two soil horizons in the summer and winter seasons using a 16S rRNA taxonomic microarray and cloning-sequencing of 16S rRNA genes. Both approaches showed that the community differed significantly between horizons and seasons, paralleling the changes in soil moisture and organic matter content. The microarray analysis further indicated that the actinobacterial community of the upper horizon was characterized by high incidence of the genus Mycobacterium. In both horizons and seasons, the actinobacterial clone libraries were dominated (by 80%) by sequences of a separate clade sharing an ancestral node with Streptosporangineae. This relatedness is supported also by some common adaptations, for example, to soil acidity and periodic oxygen deprivation or dryness.


Archive | 2012

Pseudomonas and other Microbes in Disease-Suppressive Soils

Martina Kyselková; Yvan Moënne-Loccoz

Soil-borne phytopathogens cause extensive damage to cultivated plants worldwide, resulting in yield loss worth billions of Euros each year. Soil fumigation is the most effective chemical treatment but is too expensive for many crops, and fumigants like methyl bromide are being phased out for environmental reasons. In this context, much is to be learned from disease-suppressive soils, where susceptible plants are protected from soil-borne pathogens by the indigenous microbiota, because these microbial interactions may be exploited to design sustainable crop protection strategies for ordinary farm soils. However, our knowledge of plant-protecting microorganisms and biocontrol mechanisms involved in soil suppressiveness remain very fragmented, as most knowledge on disease suppressive soils comes from studies restricted to individual plant-protecting microbial populations, mostly fluorescent Pseudomonas species. The phenomenon of disease suppressiveness remains therefore poorly understood, even in the most studied cases such as suppressiveness to wheat take-all.


Plant and Soil | 2013

Assessment of the relationship between geologic origin of soil, rhizobacterial community composition and soil receptivity to tobacco black root rot in Savoie region (France)

Juliana Almario; Martina Kyselková; Jan Kopecký; Marketa Sagova-Mareckova; Daniel Muller; Geneviève L. Grundmann; Yvan Moënne-Loccoz

Background and aimsIn Morens (Switzerland), soils formed on morainic deposits (which contain vermiculite clay and display particular tobacco rhizobacterial community) are naturally suppressive to Thielaviopsis basicola-mediated tobacco black root rot, but this paradigm was never assessed elsewhere. Here, we tested the relation between geology and disease suppressiveness in neighboring Savoie (France).MethodsTwo morainic and two sandstone soils from Savoie were compared based on disease receptivity (T. basicola inoculation tests on tobacco), clay mineralogy (X-ray diffraction), tobacco rhizobacterial community composition (16S rRNA gene-based taxonomic microarray) and phlD+Pseudomonas populations involved in 2,4-diacetylphloroglucinol production (real-time PCR and tRFLP).ResultsUnlike in Morens, in Savoie the morainic soils were receptive to disease whereas T. basicola inoculation did not increase disease level in the sandstone soils. Vermiculite was not present in Savoie soils. The difference in rhizobacterial community composition between Savoie morainic and sandstone soils was significant but modest, and there was little agreement in bacterial taxa discriminating soils of different disease receptivity levels when comparing Morens versus Savoie soils. Finally, phlD+ rhizosphere pseudomonads were present at levels comparable to those in Morens soils, but with different diversity patterns.ConclusionsThe morainic model of black root rot suppressiveness might be restricted to the particular type of moraine occurring in the Morens region, and the low disease receptivity of sandstone soils in neighboring Savoie might be related to other plant-protection mechanisms.


Archives of Microbiology | 2010

Subunit–subunit interactions are weakened in mutant forms of acetohydroxy acid synthase insensitive to valine inhibition

Martina Kyselková; Jiří Janata; Marketa Sagova-Mareckova; Jan Kopecký

In acetohydroxy acid synthase from Streptomyces cinnamonensis mutants affected in valine regulation, the impact of mutations on interactions between the catalytic and the regulatory subunits was examined using yeast two-hybrid system. Mutations in the catalytic and the regulatory subunits were projected into homology models of the respective proteins. Two changes in the catalytic subunit, E139A (α domain) and ΔQ217 (β domain), both located on the surface of the catalytic subunit dimer, lowered the interaction with the regulatory subunit. Three consecutive changes in the N-terminal part of the regulatory subunit were examined. Changes G16D and V17D in a loop and adjacent α-helix of ACT domain affected the interaction considerably, indicating that this region might be in contact with the catalytic subunit during allosteric regulation. In contrast, the adjacent mutation L18F did not influence the interaction at all. Thus, L18 might participate in valine binding or conformational change transfer within the regulatory subunits. Shortening of the regulatory subunit to 107 residues reduced the interaction essentially, suggesting that the C-terminal part of the regulatory subunit is also important for the catalytic subunit binding.


bioRxiv | 2018

The effect of susceptible and resistant potato cultivars on bacterial communities in the tuberosphere of potato in soil suppressive or conducive to common scab disease

Marketa Sagova-Mareckova; Jan Kopecky; Zuzana Samkova; Ensyeh Sarikhani; Martina Kyselková; Marek Omelka; Vaclav Kristufek; Jiri Divis; Geneviève L. Grundmann; Yvan Moënne-Loccoz

Connections between the structure of bacterial communities in suppressive soils and potato resistance to common scab (CS) are not well understood. In this study, one resistant and one susceptible cultivar were grown in a conducive and suppressive field to assess cultivar resistance × soil suppressiveness interactions. The resistant cultivar had a higher Mg content in periderm compare to susceptible cultivar, while suppressive soil had lower pH (5.3 vs 5.9), N, C, P, Ca contents but higher Fe and S compared with the conducive soil. Bacteria and actinobacteria numbers were higher in the conducive soil. Copy numbers of txtB gene (coding for a pathogenicity determinant) were similar in both soils but were higher in the conducive soil (for periderm samples) and in the susceptible cultivar (for conducive soil samples). Taxonomic microarray analysis and Illumina sequencing of 16S rRNA genes amplicon showed that bacterial community differed between resistant vs susceptible cultivar and to a lesser extend between suppressive vs conducive soil. Bacteria participating in soil suppression belonged to Pseudomonadaceae, Bradyrhizobiaceae, Acetobacteraceae and Paenibacillaceae, while resistant cultivars selected a bacterial community resembling that of the suppressive soil, which was enriched in Nitrospirae and Acidobacteria. Thus, the analysis of soil suppressiveness×cultivar resistance interactions enabled to gain new insight to CS control in the field. IMPORTANCE It was demonstrated that potato cultivars susceptible and resistant to common scab select differing bacterial community and above that this trait is further modified in suppressive and conducive soil. Common scab severity was diminished by either resistant cultivar or suppressive soil but without additive effect between them. Out of the two factors, potato cultivar had a more significant influence on tuberosphere bacterial community composition than soil. Results highlighted the usefulness of both cultivar resistance and soil suppressiveness traits in understanding and managing disease control of crops.

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Marek Omelka

Charles University in Prague

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Dana Elhottová

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Jan Kopecky

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Brigitte Gouesnard

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Hervé Sanguin

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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