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Dive into the research topics where Philippe Vandenkoornhuyse is active.

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Featured researches published by Philippe Vandenkoornhuyse.


Science | 2011

Reciprocal Rewards Stabilize Cooperation in the Mycorrhizal Symbiosis

E.T. Kiers; Marie Duhamel; Beesetty Y; Mensah Ja; Franken O; Erik Verbruggen; Fellbaum Cr; George A. Kowalchuk; Miranda M. Hart; Bago A; Todd M. Palmer; Stuart A. West; Philippe Vandenkoornhuyse; Jansa J; Heike Bücking

Plants and their associated fungi reward partners that offer the best resources to sustain mutualism in complex systems. Plants and their arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal symbionts interact in complex underground networks involving multiple partners. This increases the potential for exploitation and defection by individuals, raising the question of how partners maintain a fair, two-way transfer of resources. We manipulated cooperation in plants and fungal partners to show that plants can detect, discriminate, and reward the best fungal partners with more carbohydrates. In turn, their fungal partners enforce cooperation by increasing nutrient transfer only to those roots providing more carbohydrates. On the basis of these observations we conclude that, unlike many other mutualisms, the symbiont cannot be “enslaved.” Rather, the mutualism is evolutionarily stable because control is bidirectional, and partners offering the best rate of exchange are rewarded.


New Phytologist | 2015

The importance of the microbiome of the plant holobiont

Philippe Vandenkoornhuyse; Achim Quaiser; Marie Duhamel; Amandine Lê Van; Alexis Dufresne

Plants can no longer be considered as standalone entities and a more holistic perception is needed. Indeed, plants harbor a wide diversity of microorganisms both inside and outside their tissues, in the endosphere and ectosphere, respectively. These microorganisms, which mostly belong to Bacteria and Fungi, are involved in major functions such as plant nutrition and plant resistance to biotic and abiotic stresses. Hence, the microbiota impact plant growth and survival, two key components of fitness. Plant fitness is therefore a consequence of the plant per se and its microbiota, which collectively form a holobiont. Complementary to the reductionist perception of evolutionary pressures acting on plant or symbiotic compartments, the plant holobiont concept requires a novel perception of evolution. The interlinkages between the plant holobiont components are explored here in the light of current ecological and evolutionary theories. Microbiome complexity and the rules of microbiotic community assemblage are not yet fully understood. It is suggested that the plant can modulate its microbiota to dynamically adjust to its environment. To better understand the level of plant dependence on the microbiotic components, the core microbiota need to be determined at different hierarchical scales of ecology while pan-microbiome analyses would improve characterization of the functions displayed.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2009

Fungal Diversity in Deep-Sea Hydrothermal Ecosystems

Thomas Le Calvez; Gaëtan Burgaud; Stéphane Mahé; Georges Barbier; Philippe Vandenkoornhuyse

ABSTRACT Deep-sea hydrothermal ecosystems are considered oases of life in oceans. Since the discovery of these ecosystems in the late 1970s, many endemic species of Bacteria, Archaea, and other organisms, such as annelids and crabs, have been described. Considerable knowledge has been acquired about the diversity of (micro)organisms in these ecosystems, but the diversity of fungi has not been studied to date. These organisms are considered key organisms in terrestrial ecosystems because of their ecological functions and especially their ability to degrade organic matter. The lack of knowledge about them in the sea reflects the widely held belief that fungi are terrestrial organisms. The first inventory of such organisms in deep-sea hydrothermal environments was obtained in this study. Fungal diversity was investigated by analyzing the small-subunit rRNA gene sequences amplified by culture-independent PCR using DNA extracts from hydrothermal samples and from a culture collection that was established. Our work revealed an unsuspected diversity of species in three of the five fungal phyla. We found a new branch of Chytridiomycota forming an ancient evolutionary lineage. Many of the species identified are unknown, even at higher taxonomic levels in the Chytridiomycota, Ascomycota, and Basidiomycota. This work opens the way to new studies of the diversity, ecology, and physiology of fungi in oceans and might stimulate new prospecting for biomolecules. From an evolutionary point of view, the diversification of fungi in the oceans can no longer be ignored.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Active root-inhabiting microbes identified by rapid incorporation of plant-derived carbon into RNA

Philippe Vandenkoornhuyse; Stéphane Mahé; Philip Ineson; Philip L. Staddon; Nick Ostle; J.-B. Cliquet; André-Jean Francez; A. H. Fitter; J. P. W. Young

Plant roots harbor a large diversity of microorganisms that have an essential role in ecosystem functioning. To better understand the level of intimacy of root-inhabiting microbes such as arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and bacteria, we provided 13CO2 to plants at atmospheric concentration during a 5-h pulse. We expected microbes dependent on a carbon flux from their host plant to become rapidly labeled. We showed that a wide variety of microbes occurred in roots, mostly previously unknown. Strikingly, the greatest part of this unsuspected diversity corresponded to active primary consumers. We found 17 bacterial phylotypes co-occurring within roots of a single plant, including five potentially new phylotypes. Fourteen phylotypes were heavily labeled with the 13C. Eight were phylogenetically close to Burkholderiales, which encompass known symbionts; the others were potentially new bacterial root symbionts. By analyzing unlabeled and 13C-enriched RNAs, we demonstrated differential activity in C consumption among these root-inhabiting microbes. Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal RNAs were heavily labeled, confirming the high carbon flux from the plant to the fungal compartment, but some of the fungi present appeared to be much more active than others. The results presented here reveal the possibility of uncharacterized root symbioses.


bioRxiv | 2016

Getting the Hologenome Concept Right: an Eco-Evolutionary Framework for Hosts and Their Microbiomes

Kevin R. Theis; Nolwenn M. Dheilly; Jonathan L. Klassen; Robert M. Brucker; John F. Baines; Thomas C. G. Bosch; John F. Cryan; Scott F. Gilbert; Charles J. Goodnight; Elisabeth A. Lloyd; Jan Sapp; Philippe Vandenkoornhuyse; Ilana Zilber-Rosenberg; Eugene Rosenberg; Seth R. Bordenstein

Given the complexity of host-microbiota symbioses, scientists and philosophers are asking questions at new biological levels of hierarchical organization—what is a holobiont and hologenome? When should this vocabulary be applied? Are these concepts a null hypothesis for host-microbe systems or limited to a certain spectrum of symbiotic interactions such as host-microbial coevolution? Critical discourse is necessary in this nascent area, but productive discourse requires that skeptics and proponents use the same lexicon. ABSTRACT Given the complexity of host-microbiota symbioses, scientists and philosophers are asking questions at new biological levels of hierarchical organization—what is a holobiont and hologenome? When should this vocabulary be applied? Are these concepts a null hypothesis for host-microbe systems or limited to a certain spectrum of symbiotic interactions such as host-microbial coevolution? Critical discourse is necessary in this nascent area, but productive discourse requires that skeptics and proponents use the same lexicon. For instance, critiquing the hologenome concept is not synonymous with critiquing coevolution, and arguing that an entity is not a primary unit of selection dismisses the fact that the hologenome concept has always embraced multilevel selection. Holobionts and hologenomes are incontrovertible, multipartite entities that result from ecological, evolutionary, and genetic processes at various levels. They are not restricted to one special process but constitute a wider vocabulary and framework for host biology in light of the microbiome.


Environmental Microbiology | 2009

Diversity of culturable marine filamentous fungi from deep-sea hydrothermal vents

Gaëtan Burgaud; Thomas Le Calvez; Danielle Arzur; Philippe Vandenkoornhuyse; Georges Barbier

As now very few studies have been carried out on deep-sea marine fungi, this field remains relatively unknown. However, their presence inside benthic microbial eukaryotes at deep-sea vents was recently pointed out from molecular microbial ecology studies. We report here an attempt to describe the culturable part of mycological communities in deep-sea vent ecosystems that is an important step in understanding their diversity, abundance and function. Physiological characterization revealed strains that are more or less adapted to deep-sea conditions. Those results suggest the presence of true marine organisms and other more ubiquitous. Phylogenetical characterization highly correlated to physiological data revealed the presence of fungi that have been previously described and unknown ones until now, belonging to new taxonomic groups. This survey encourages for further work in order to complete descriptions and also to describe the ecological role of these organisms in such extreme environments.


The ISME Journal | 2014

Microorganisms persist at record depths in the subseafloor of the Canterbury Basin

Maria Cristina Ciobanu; Gaëtan Burgaud; Alexis Dufresne; Anja Breuker; Vanessa Rédou; Sarah Ben Maamar; Frédéric Gaboyer; O. Vandenabeele-Trambouze; Julius S. Lipp; Axel Schippers; Philippe Vandenkoornhuyse; Georges Barbier; Mohamed Jebbar; Anne Godfroy; Karine Alain

The subsurface realm is colonized by microbial communities to depths of >1000 meters below the seafloor (m.b.sf.), but little is known about overall diversity and microbial distribution patterns at the most profound depths. Here we show that not only Bacteria and Archaea but also Eukarya occur at record depths in the subseafloor of the Canterbury Basin. Shifts in microbial community composition along a core of nearly 2 km reflect vertical taxa zonation influenced by sediment depth. Representatives of some microbial taxa were also cultivated using methods mimicking in situ conditions. These results suggest that diverse microorganisms persist down to 1922 m.b.sf. in the seafloor of the Canterbury Basin and extend the previously known depth limits of microbial evidence (i) from 159 to 1740 m.b.sf. for Eukarya and (ii) from 518 to 1922 m.b.sf. for Bacteria.


Mycologia | 1998

SSU rDNA sequencing and PCR-fingerprinting reveal genetic variation within Glomus mosseae

Philippe Vandenkoornhuyse; Corinne Leyval

Isolates of Glomus mosseae from interna- tional collections were compared using two molecu- lar techniques: PCR-fingerprinting of genomic DNA with direct amplification of microsatellite regions, and sequencing of the small subunit (SSU) rDNA. Numerical analyses of these data using parsimony models were used to calculate phylogenetic topolo- gies. The phylogenetic tree from SSU rDNA sequenc- es was similar to the phylogenetic trees obtained from genomic fingerprinting using the amplification of microsatellite regions, except for one G. mosseae isolate, DAOM221475. Another isolate was not grouped with the other G. mosseae isolates by either method and was found to be Glomus sp. a posteriori. Both analyses showed considerable genetic variation within the species G. mosseae. We suggest that molec- ular data such as SSU rDNA sequences be used in the description of Glomales species, and PCR-finger- printing could be used to study diversity within spe- cies of Glomales.


The ISME Journal | 2011

Relationship between bacterial diversity and function under biotic control: the soil pesticide degraders as a case study

Cécile Monard; Philippe Vandenkoornhuyse; Barbara Le Bot; Françoise Binet

In soil, the way biotic parameters impact the relationship between bacterial diversity and function is still unknown. To understand these interactions better, we used RNA-based stable-isotope probing to study the diversity of active atrazine-degrading bacteria in relation to atrazine degradation and to explore the impact of earthworm-soil engineering with respect to this relationship. Bulk soil, burrow linings and earthworm casts were incubated with 13C-atrazine. The pollutant degradation was quantified by liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry for 8 days, whereas active atrazine degraders were identified at 2 and 8 days by sequencing the 16S ribosomal RNA in the 13C-RNA fractions from the three soil microsites. An original diversity of atrazine degraders was found. Earthworm soil engineering greatly modified the taxonomic composition of atrazine degraders with dominance of α-, β- and γ-proteobacteria in burrow linings and of Actinobacteria in casts. Earthworm soil bioturbation increased the γ-diversity of atrazine degraders over the soil microsites generated. Atrazine degradation was enhanced in burrow linings in which primary atrazine degraders, closely related to Pelomonas aquatica, were detected only 2 days after atrazine addition. Atrazine degradation efficiency was not linearly related to the species richness of degraders but likely relied on keystone species. By enhancing soil heterogeneity, earthworms sustained high phylogenetic bacterial diversity and exerted a biotic control on the bacterial diversity–function relationships. Our findings call for future investigations to assess the ecological significance of biotic controls on the relationships between diversity and function on ecosystem properties and services (for example, soil detoxification) at larger scales.


Ecology Letters | 2010

Integration of molecular functions at the ecosystemic level: breakthroughs and future goals of environmental genomics and post-genomics

Philippe Vandenkoornhuyse; Alexis Dufresne; Achim Quaiser; Gwenola Gouesbet; Françoise Binet; André-Jean Francez; Stéphane Mahé; Myriam Bormans; Yvan Lagadeuc; Ivan Couée

Environmental genomics and genome-wide expression approaches deal with large-scale sequence-based information obtained from environmental samples, at organismal, population or community levels. To date, environmental genomics, transcriptomics and proteomics are arguably the most powerful approaches to discover completely novel ecological functions and to link organismal capabilities, organism–environment interactions, functional diversity, ecosystem processes, evolution and Earth history. Thus, environmental genomics is not merely a toolbox of new technologies but also a source of novel ecological concepts and hypotheses. By removing previous dichotomies between ecophysiology, population ecology, community ecology and ecosystem functioning, environmental genomics enables the integration of sequence-based information into higher ecological and evolutionary levels. However, environmental genomics, along with transcriptomics and proteomics, must involve pluridisciplinary research, such as new developments in bioinformatics, in order to integrate high-throughput molecular biology techniques into ecology. In this review, the validity of environmental genomics and post-genomics for studying ecosystem functioning is discussed in terms of major advances and expectations, as well as in terms of potential hurdles and limitations. Novel avenues for improving the use of these approaches to test theory-driven ecological hypotheses are also explored.

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Luc Aquilina

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Fabrice Martin-Laurent

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Nolwenn Bougon

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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