Publications by authors named "Martyna Marynowska"

Article Synopsis
  • Termites are highly successful insects with a complex gut system, including a diverse microbiome, which allows them to feed on various organic matter, particularly in soil environments.
  • A study using multi-omics techniques examined the gut of a soil-feeding termite, Labiotermes labralis, revealing that its gut microbiome is mainly dominated by Firmicutes but also includes other bacterial groups as gut segments change.
  • The research found that these termites possess a diverse range of enzymes for breaking down cellulose and hemicellulose, indicating their gut could have significant biotechnological applications due to its unique enzymatic capabilities.
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Background: Termites are among the most successful insect lineages on the globe and are responsible for providing numerous ecosystem services. They mainly feed on wood and other plant material at different stages of humification. Lignocellulose is often a principal component of such plant diet, and termites largely rely on their symbiotic microbiota and associated enzymes to decompose their food efficiently.

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Article Synopsis
  • Miscanthus sp. biomass holds potential for biorefinery use, but its application is limited by its resistance to breakdown.
  • Researchers are exploring how the termite Cortaritermes sp. and its gut microbiome can adapt to digest Miscanthus, aiming to improve the degradation of its lignocellulosic structure.
  • Findings indicate shifts in gut bacterial gene expression towards breaking down cellulose and arabinoxylan components, supporting a strong relationship between the termite host and its gut microbes, which could inform future biotechnological applications for biomass processing.
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Termites are eusocial insects having evolved several feeding, nesting and reproductive strategies. Among them, inquiline termites live in a nest built by other termite species: some of them do not forage outside the nest, but feed on food stored by the host or on the nest material itself. In this study, we characterized some dimensions of the ecological niche of Cavitermes tuberosus (Termitidae: Termitinae), a broad-spectrum inquiline termite with a large neotropical distribution, to explain its ecological success.

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Wolbachia has deeply shaped the ecology and evolution of many arthropods, and interactions between the two partners are a continuum ranging from parasitism to mutualism. Non-dispersing queens of the termite Cavitermes tuberosus are parthenogenetically produced through gamete duplication, a mode of ploidy restoration generally induced by Wolbachia. These queens display a bacteriome-like structure in the anterior part of the mesenteron.

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Background: Thanks to specific adaptations developed over millions of years, the efficiency of lignin, cellulose and hemicellulose decomposition of higher termite symbiotic system exceeds that of many other lignocellulose utilizing environments. Especially, the examination of its symbiotic microbes should reveal interesting carbohydrate-active enzymes, which are of primary interest for the industry. Previous metatranscriptomic reports (high-throughput mRNA sequencing) highlight the high representation and overexpression of cellulose and hemicelluloses degrading genes in the termite hindgut digestomes, indicating the potential of this technology in search for new enzymes.

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Although viruses are not the key players of the anaerobic digestion process, they may affect the dynamics of bacterial and archaeal populations involved in biogas production. Until now viruses have received very little attention in this specific habitat; therefore, as a first step towards their characterization, we optimized a virus filtration protocol from anaerobic sludge. Afterwards, to assess dsDNA and RNA viral diversity in sludge samples from nine different reactors fed either with waste water, agricultural residues or solid municipal waste plus agro-food residues, we performed metagenomic analyses.

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Background: Volatile fatty acid intoxication (acidosis), a common process failure recorded in anaerobic reactors, leads to drastic losses in methane production. Unfortunately, little is known about the microbial mechanisms underlining acidosis and the potential to recover the process. In this study, triplicate mesophilic anaerobic reactors of 100 L were exposed to acidosis resulting from an excessive feeding with sugar beet pulp and were compared to a steady-state reactor.

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