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Dive into the research topics where Sébastien Cecillon is active.

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Featured researches published by Sébastien Cecillon.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2011

Accessing the soil metagenome for studies of microbial diversity.

Tom O. Delmont; Patrick Robe; Sébastien Cecillon; Ian Clark; Florentin Constancias; Pascal Simonet; Penny R. Hirsch; Timothy M. Vogel

ABSTRACT Soil microbial communities contain the highest level of prokaryotic diversity of any environment, and metagenomic approaches involving the extraction of DNA from soil can improve our access to these communities. Most analyses of soil biodiversity and function assume that the DNA extracted represents the microbial community in the soil, but subsequent interpretations are limited by the DNA recovered from the soil. Unfortunately, extraction methods do not provide a uniform and unbiased subsample of metagenomic DNA, and as a consequence, accurate species distributions cannot be determined. Moreover, any bias will propagate errors in estimations of overall microbial diversity and may exclude some microbial classes from study and exploitation. To improve metagenomic approaches, investigate DNA extraction biases, and provide tools for assessing the relative abundances of different groups, we explored the biodiversity of the accessible community DNA by fractioning the metagenomic DNA as a function of (i) vertical soil sampling, (ii) density gradients (cell separation), (iii) cell lysis stringency, and (iv) DNA fragment size distribution. Each fraction had a unique genetic diversity, with different predominant and rare species (based on ribosomal intergenic spacer analysis [RISA] fingerprinting and phylochips). All fractions contributed to the number of bacterial groups uncovered in the metagenome, thus increasing the DNA pool for further applications. Indeed, we were able to access a more genetically diverse proportion of the metagenome (a gain of more than 80% compared to the best single extraction method), limit the predominance of a few genomes, and increase the species richness per sequencing effort. This work stresses the difference between extracted DNA pools and the currently inaccessible complete soil metagenome.


Current Biology | 2014

Large-Scale Metagenomic-Based Study of Antibiotic Resistance in the Environment

Joseph Nesme; Sébastien Cecillon; Tom O. Delmont; Jean-Michel Monier; Timothy M. Vogel; Pascal Simonet

Antibiotic resistance, including multiresistance acquisition and dissemination by pathogens, is a critical healthcare issue threatening our management of infectious diseases [1-3]. Rapid accumulation of resistance phenotypes implies a reservoir of transferable antibiotic resistance gene determinants (ARGDs) selected in response to inhibition of antibiotic concentrations, as found in hospitals [1, 3-5]. Antibiotic resistance genes were found in environmental isolates, soil DNA [4-6], secluded caves [6, 7], and permafrost DNA [7, 8]. Antibiotics target essential and ubiquitous cell functions, and resistance is a common characteristic of environmental bacteria [8-11]. Environmental ARGDs are an abundant reservoir of potentially transferable resistance for pathogens [9-12]. Using metagenomic sequences, we show that ARGDs can be detected in all (n=71) environments analyzed. Soil metagenomes had the most diverse pool of ARGDs. The most common types of resistances found in environmental metagenomes were efflux pumps and genes conferring resistance to vancomycin, tetracycline, or β-lactam antibiotics used in veterinary and human healthcare. Our study describes the diverse and abundant antibiotic resistance genes in nonclinical environments and shows that these genes are not randomly distributed among different environments (e.g., soil, oceans or human feces).


PLOS ONE | 2013

Soil Bacterial Community Shifts after Chitin Enrichment: An Integrative Metagenomic Approach

Samuel Jacquiod; Laure Franqueville; Sébastien Cecillon; Timothy M. Vogel; Pascal Simonet

Chitin is the second most produced biopolymer on Earth after cellulose. Chitin degrading enzymes are promising but untapped sources for developing novel industrial biocatalysts. Hidden amongst uncultivated micro-organisms, new bacterial enzymes can be discovered and exploited by metagenomic approaches through extensive cloning and screening. Enrichment is also a well-known strategy, as it allows selection of organisms adapted to feed on a specific compound. In this study, we investigated how the soil bacterial community responded to chitin enrichment in a microcosm experiment. An integrative metagenomic approach coupling phylochips and high throughput shotgun pyrosequencing was established in order to assess the taxonomical and functional changes in the soil bacterial community. Results indicate that chitin enrichment leads to an increase of Actinobacteria, γ-proteobacteria and β-proteobacteria suggesting specific selection of chitin degrading bacteria belonging to these classes. Part of enriched bacterial genera were not yet reported to be involved in chitin degradation, like the members from the Micrococcineae sub-order (Actinobacteria). An increase of the observed bacterial diversity was noticed, with detection of specific genera only in chitin treated conditions. The relative proportion of metagenomic sequences related to chitin degradation was significantly increased, even if it represents only a tiny fraction of the sequence diversity found in a soil metagenome.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Interactions between Snow Chemistry, Mercury Inputs and Microbial Population Dynamics in an Arctic Snowpack

Catherine Larose; Emmanuel Prestat; Sébastien Cecillon; Sibel Berger; Delina Lyon; Christophe Ferrari; Dominique Schneider; Aurélien Dommergue; Timothy M. Vogel

We investigated the interactions between snowpack chemistry, mercury (Hg) contamination and microbial community structure and function in Arctic snow. Snowpack chemistry (inorganic and organic ions) including mercury (Hg) speciation was studied in samples collected during a two-month field study in a high Arctic site, Svalbard, Norway (79°N). Shifts in microbial community structure were determined by using a 16S rRNA gene phylogenetic microarray. We linked snowpack and meltwater chemistry to changes in microbial community structure by using co-inertia analyses (CIA) and explored changes in community function due to Hg contamination by q-PCR quantification of Hg-resistance genes in metagenomic samples. Based on the CIA, chemical and microbial data were linked (p = 0.006) with bioavailable Hg (BioHg) and methylmercury (MeHg) contributing significantly to the ordination of samples. Mercury was shown to influence community function with increases in merA gene copy numbers at low BioHg levels. Our results show that snowpacks can be considered as dynamic habitats with microbial and chemical components responding rapidly to environmental changes.


Environmental Microbiology | 2015

Microbial ecology of chlorinated solvent biodegradation

Maude M. David; Sébastien Cecillon; Brett M. Warne; Emmanuel Prestat; Janet K. Jansson; Timothy M. Vogel

This study focused on the microbial ecology of tetrachloroethene (PCE) degradation to trichloroethene, cis-1,2-dichloroethene and vinyl chloride to evaluate the relationship between the microbial community and the potential accumulation or degradation of these toxic metabolites. Multiple soil microcosms supplied with different organic substrates were artificially contaminated with PCE. A thymidine analogue, bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU), was added to the microcosms and incorporated into the DNA of actively replicating cells. We compared the total and active bacterial communities during the 50-day incubations by using phylogenic microarrays and 454 pyrosequencing to identify microorganisms and functional genes associated with PCE degradation to ethene. By use of this integrative approach, both the key community members and the ecological functions concomitant with complete PCE degradation could be determined, including the presence and activity of microbial community members responsible for producing hydrogen and acetate, which are critical for Dehalococcoides-mediated PCE degradation. In addition, by correlation of chemical data and phylogenic microarray data, we identified several bacteria that could potentially oxidize hydrogen. These results demonstrate that PCE degradation is dependent on some microbial community members for production of appropriate metabolites, while other members of the community compete for hydrogen in soil at low redox potentials.


Journal of Materials Chemistry B | 2013

From protected trialkoxysilyl-peptide building blocks to bioorganic–silica hybrid materials

Said Jebors; Sébastien Cecillon; Clément Faye; Christine Enjalbal; Muriel Amblard; Ahmad Mehdi; Gilles Subra; Jean Martinez

A straightforward method for the preparation of hybrid bioorganic-inorganic materials is reported. Common strategies to synthesize such promising materials require special surface modifications of silica followed by grafting of the organic moiety via chemoselective ligation. In this context, we set up a general and bottom-up strategy relying on modified peptides functionalized with a trialkoxysilane group. Used in mixtures with TEOS and a surfactant as the structure directing agent, these hybrid building blocks allow one step direct synthesis of bioorganic-inorganic hybrid materials. Two examples were chosen to demonstrate our general approach. (1) An antifouling surface was prepared by dip coating of a sol containing an antibacterial silylated peptide. (2) Organized mesoporous silica displaying a peptide catalyst in the pores was prepared in one step and tested.


Genome Biology and Evolution | 2017

Evolution of Sphingomonad Gene Clusters Related to Pesticide Catabolism Revealed by Genome Sequence and Mobilomics of Sphingobium herbicidovorans MH

Tue Kjærgaard Nielsen; Morten Rasmussen; Sandrine Demanèche; Sébastien Cecillon; Timothy M. Vogel; Lars Hestbjerg Hansen

Abstract Bacterial degraders of chlorophenoxy herbicides have been isolated from various ecosystems, including pristine environments. Among these degraders, the sphingomonads constitute a prominent group that displays versatile xenobiotic-degradation capabilities. Four separate sequencing strategies were required to provide the complete sequence of the complex and plastic genome of the canonical chlorophenoxy herbicide-degrading Sphingobium herbicidovorans MH. The genome has an intricate organization of the chlorophenoxy-herbicide catabolic genes sdpA, rdpA, and cadABCD that encode the (R)- and (S)-enantiomer-specific 2,4-dichlorophenoxypropionate dioxygenases and four subunits of a Rieske non-heme iron oxygenase involved in 2-methyl-chlorophenoxyacetic acid degradation, respectively. Several major genomic rearrangements are proposed to help understand the evolution and mobility of these important genes and their genetic context. Single-strain mobilomic sequence analysis uncovered plasmids and insertion sequence-associated circular intermediates in this environmentally important bacterium and enabled the description of evolutionary models for pesticide degradation in strain MH and related organisms. The mobilome presented a complex mosaic of mobile genetic elements including four plasmids and several circular intermediate DNA molecules of insertion-sequence elements and transposons that are central to the evolution of xenobiotics degradation. Furthermore, two individual chromosomally integrated prophages were shown to excise and form free circular DNA molecules. This approach holds great potential for improving the understanding of genome plasticity, evolution, and microbial ecology.


Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 2016

Diversity of active microbial communities subjected to long-term exposure to chemical contaminants along a 40-year-old sediment core

Assia Kaci; Fabienne Petit; Matthieu Fournier; Sébastien Cecillon; Dominique Boust; Patrick Lesueur; Thierry Berthe


passive and active network measurement | 2013

The Dynamic Arctic Snowpack Microbial Habitat

Catherine Larose; Sébastien Cecillon; Lorrie Maccario; Laura Sanguino-Cassado; Aurélien Dommergue; Timothy M. Vogel


Archive | 2013

of Microbial Diversity Accessing the Soil Metagenome for Studies

Timothy M. Vogel; Florentin Constancias; Pascal Simonet; Patrick Robe; Sébastien Cecillon

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Maude M. David

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Sibel Berger

École centrale de Lyon

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Aurélien Dommergue

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Emmanuel Prestat

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Delina Lyon

École centrale de Lyon

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