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Dive into the research topics where Maryam Chaib De Mares is active.

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Featured researches published by Maryam Chaib De Mares.


FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2014

The mycosphere constitutes an arena for horizontal gene transfer with strong evolutionary implications for bacterial-fungal interactions

Miaozhi Zhang; Michele de Cassia Pereira e Silva; Maryam Chaib De Mares; Jan Dirk van Elsas

In the microhabitat that surrounds fungal hyphae in soil, coined the mycosphere, carbonaceous compounds that are released from the hyphae stimulate the growth of heterotrophic bacteria, and thus activate organism-to-organism contacts through genetic interactions. Therefore, the mycosphere is postulated to constitute a gene transfer arena, in which a plethora of genes, including locally adaptive ones, are swapped across the resident microbial communities. Such genetic transfers may have plasmids, in particular ones with broad host ranges, as the basis. Indeed, evidence is increasing for the contention that plasmids play crucial roles as accelerators of evolution in the mycosphere, serving as a horizontal gene pool and, therefore, providing competence factors to local bacteria as well as fungi. The evidence so far points at mycosphere roles for two major plasmid classes, the IncP-1 and PromA groups. Moreover, recent data indicate that bacterium-to-fungus gene transfers are detectable and have been evolutionarily important. The large gene pool present in the mycosphere, coupled with the chances for cell-to-cell contact between mycosphere dwellers allows enhanced recombination frequencies, and as such, organisms are selected locally for enhanced fitness.


Critical Reviews in Microbiology | 2018

The multi-omics promise in context: from sequence to microbial isolate

Johanna Gutleben; Maryam Chaib De Mares; Jan Dirk van Elsas; Hauke Smidt; Joerg Overmann; Detmer Sipkema

Abstract The numbers and diversity of microbes in ecosystems within and around us is unmatched, yet most of these microorganisms remain recalcitrant to in vitro cultivation. Various high-throughput molecular techniques, collectively termed multi-omics, provide insights into the genomic structure and metabolic potential as well as activity of complex microbial communities. Nonetheless, pure or defined cultures are needed to (1) decipher microbial physiology and thus test multi-omics-based ecological hypotheses, (2) curate and improve database annotations and (3) realize novel applications in biotechnology. Cultivation thus provides context. In turn, we here argue that multi-omics information awaits integration into the development of novel cultivation strategies. This can build the foundation for a new era of omics information-guided microbial cultivation technology and reduce the inherent trial-and-error search space. This review discusses how information that can be extracted from multi-omics data can be applied for the cultivation of hitherto uncultured microorganisms. Furthermore, we summarize groundbreaking studies that successfully translated information derived from multi-omics into specific media formulations, screening techniques and selective enrichments in order to obtain novel targeted microbial isolates. By integrating these examples, we conclude with a proposed workflow to facilitate future omics-aided cultivation strategies that are inspired by the microbial complexity of the environment.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2017

Host specificity for bacterial, archaeal and fungal communities determined for high- and low-microbial abundance sponge species in two genera

Maryam Chaib De Mares; Detmer Sipkema; Sixing Huang; Boyke Bunk; Joerg Overmann; Jan Dirk van Elsas

Sponges are engaged in intimate symbioses with a diversity of microorganisms from all three domains of life, namely Bacteria, Archaea and Eukarya. Sponges have been well studied and categorized for their bacterial communities, some displaying a high microbial abundance (HMA), while others show low microbial abundance (LMA). However, the associated Archaea and Eukarya have remained relatively understudied. We assessed the bacterial, archaeal and eukaryotic diversities in the LMA sponge species Dysidea avara and Dysidea etheria by deep amplicon sequencing, and compared the results to those in the HMA sponges Aplysina aerophoba and Aplysina cauliformis. D. avara and A. aerophoba are sympatric in the Mediterranean Sea, while D. etheria and A. cauliformis are sympatric in the Caribbean Sea. The bacterial communities followed a host-specific pattern, with host species identity explaining most of the variation among samples. We identified OTUs shared by the Aplysina species that support a more ancient association of these microbes, before the split of the two species studied here. These shared OTUs are suitable targets for future studies of the microbial traits that mediate interactions with their hosts. Even though the archaeal communities were not as rich as the bacterial ones, we found a remarkable diversification and specificity of OTUs of the family Cenarchaeaceae and the genus Nitrosopumilus in all four sponge species studied. Similarly, the differences in fungal communities were driven by sponge identity. The structures of the communities of small eukaryotes such as dinophytes and ciliophores (alveolates), and stramenopiles, could not be explained by either sponge host, sponge genus or geographic location. Our analyses suggest that the host specificity that was previously described for sponge bacterial communities also extends to the archaeal and fungal communities, but not to other microbial eukaryotes.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Expressed protein profile of a Tectomicrobium and other microbial symbionts in the marine sponge Aplysina aerophoba as evidenced by metaproteomics

Maryam Chaib De Mares; Diego Javier Jiménez; Giorgia Palladino; Johanna Gutleben; Laura Lebrun; Emilie Muller; Paul Wilmes; Detmer Sipkema; Jan Dirk van Elsas

Aplysina aerophoba is an emerging model marine sponge, with a well-characterized microbial community in terms of diversity and structure. However, little is known about the expressed functional capabilities of its associated microbes. Here, we present the first metaproteomics-based study of the microbiome of A. aerophoba. We found that transport and degradation of halogenated and chloroaromatic compounds are common active processes in the sponge microbiomes. Our data further reveal that the highest number of proteins were affiliated to a sponge-associated Tectomicrobium, presumably from the family Entotheonellaceae, as well as to the well-known symbiont “Candidatus Synechococcus spongiarium”, suggesting a high metabolic activity of these two microorganisms in situ. Evidence for nitric oxide (NO) conversion to nitrous oxide was consistently observed for Tectomicrobia across replicates, by production of the NorQ protein. Moreover, we found a potential energy-yielding pathway through CO oxidation by putative Chloroflexi bacteria. Finally, we observed expression of enzymes that may be involved in the transformation of chitin, glycoproteins, glycolipids and glucans into smaller molecules, consistent with glycosyl hydrolases predicted from analyses of the genomes of Poribacteria sponge symbionts. Thus, this study provides crucial links between expressed proteins and specific members of the A. aerophoba microbiome.


Archive | 2018

BluePharmTrain: Biology and Biotechnology of Marine Sponges

Georg Steinert; Carla Huete Stauffer; Nele Aas-Valleriani; Erik Borchert; Agneya Bhushan; Alexandra Campbell; Maryam Chaib De Mares; Margarida Costa; Johanna Gutleben; Stephen Knobloch; Robert Lee; Stephanie Munroe; Deepak Naik; Eike Edzard Peters; Ellen Stokes; Wanlin Wang; Eydís Einarsdóttir; Detmer Sipkema

BluePharmTrain is a Marie Curie Initial Training Network of 17 European academic and industrial partners collaborating to train young scientists in multidisciplinary aspects of blue biotechnology. Harvesting marine sponges for the extraction of bioactive compounds is often highly unsustainable, and the chemical synthesis of promising compounds is often either too complex or very expensive. To find sustainable and economically feasible production methods of sponge-derived compounds, individual BluePharmTrain research projects explore innovative techniques, focusing on selected sponge species shown to harbour interesting active metabolites. The different techniques include sponge cell cultivation, cultivation of microbial symbionts, next-generation sequencing approaches (i.e. metagenomics and metatranscriptomics), in situ and ex situ cultivation of sponges, life cycle characterisation, chemical structure elucidation of compounds and compound metabolic pathway description. Altogether, these consorted efforts and collaborations lead to new insights on sponge metabolism, sponge-microbe interactions and bioactive compound production.


Molecular Biology and Evolution | 2018

Rapid Divergence of Genome Architectures Following the Origin of an Ectomycorrhizal Symbiosis in the Genus Amanita

Jaqueline Hess; Inger Skrede; Maryam Chaib De Mares; Matthieu Hainaut; Bernard Henrissat; Anne Pringle

Abstract Fungi are evolutionary shape shifters and adapt quickly to new environments. Ectomycorrhizal (EM) symbioses are mutualistic associations between fungi and plants and have evolved repeatedly and independently across the fungal tree of life, suggesting lineages frequently reconfigure genome content to take advantage of open ecological niches. To date analyses of genomic mechanisms facilitating EM symbioses have involved comparisons of distantly related species, but here, we use the genomes of three EM and two asymbiotic (AS) fungi from the genus Amanita as well as an AS outgroup to study genome evolution following a single origin of symbiosis. Our aim was to identify the defining features of EM genomes, but our analyses suggest no clear differentiation of genome size, gene repertoire size, or transposable element content between EM and AS species. Phylogenetic inference of gene gains and losses suggests the transition to symbiosis was dominated by the loss of plant cell wall decomposition genes, a confirmation of previous findings. However, the same dynamic defines the AS species A. inopinata, suggesting loss is not strictly associated with origin of symbiosis. Gene expansions in the common ancestor of EM Amanita were modest, but lineage specific and large gene family expansions are found in two of the three EM extant species. Even closely related EM genomes appear to share few common features. The genetic toolkit required for symbiosis appears already encoded in the genomes of saprotrophic species, and this dynamic may explain the pervasive, recurrent evolution of ectomycorrhizal associations.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2018

Temporal expression dynamics of plant biomass-degrading enzymes by a synthetic bacterial consortium growing on sugarcane bagasse

Diego Javier Jiménez; Maryam Chaib De Mares; Joana Falcão Salles

Plant biomass (PB) is an important source of sugars useful for biofuel production, whose degradation efficiency depends on synergistic and dynamic interactions of different enzymes. Here, using a metatranscriptomics-based approach, we explored the expression of PB-degrading enzymes in a five-species synthetic bacterial consortium during cultivation on sugarcane bagasse as a unique carbon source. By analyzing the temporal expression dynamics of a selection of enzymes we revealed the functional role of each consortium member and disentangled the potential interactions between them. Based on normalized expression values and the taxonomic affiliation of all the transcripts within thirty carbohydrate-active enzyme (CAZy) families, we observed a successional profile. For instance, endo-glucanases/-xylanases (e.g., GH8, GH10, and GH16) were significantly expressed at 12 h, whereas exo-glucanases (e.g., GH6 and GH48) and α-arabinosidases/β-xylosidases (e.g., GH43) were highly expressed at 48 h. Indeed, a significant peak of extracellular β-xylosidase activity was observed at this stage. Moreover, we observed a higher expression of several CAZy families at 12–48 h, suggesting easy access to the main plant polysaccharides. Based on this evidence, we predicted that the highest level of collaboration between strains takes place at the initial stages of growth. Here, Paenibacillus, Brevundimonas, and Chryseobacterium were the most important contributors, whereas Stenotrophomonas was highly active at the end of the culture (96–192 h) without contributing to a large extent to the expression of lignocellulolytic enzymes. Our results contribute to the understanding of enzymatic and ecological mechanisms within PB-degrading microbial consortia, yielding new perspectives to improve the PB saccharification processes.


Standards in Genomic Sciences | 2017

Draft genome sequences of three fungal-interactive Paraburkholderia terrae strains, BS007, BS110 and BS437

Akbar Adjie Pratama; Irshad Ul Haq; Rashid Nazir; Maryam Chaib De Mares; Jan Dirk van Elsas


Archive | 2018

Replication Data for: Expressed protein profile of a Tectomicrobium and other microbial symbionts in the marine sponge Aplysina aerophoba as evidenced by metaproteomics

Maryam Chaib De Mares; Diego Javier Jiménez; Laura Lebrun; Emilie Muller; Paul Wilmes; Detmer Sipkema; Jan Dirk van Elsas


Bothalia | 2015

ESTUDIO DEMOGRÁFICO DE Emilia sonchifolia (ASTERACEAE) EN UNA FINCA CAFETERA DE ARMENIA, QUINDÍO, COLOMBIA

Irene Duarte Gandica; Maryam Chaib De Mares; David Andrés Luna; Oscar Alexander Aguirre-Obando; Rosa María Mendez Parra

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Detmer Sipkema

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Johanna Gutleben

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Joerg Overmann

Deutsche Sammlung von Mikroorganismen und Zellkulturen

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Emilie Muller

University of Luxembourg

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Laura Lebrun

University of Luxembourg

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Paul Wilmes

University of Luxembourg

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Georg Steinert

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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