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Dive into the research topics where Alain Givaudan is active.

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Featured researches published by Alain Givaudan.


Nature Biotechnology | 2003

The genome sequence of the entomopathogenic bacterium Photorhabdus luminescens.

Eric Duchaud; Christophe Rusniok; Lionel Frangeul; Carmen Buchrieser; Alain Givaudan; Sead Taourit; Stéphanie Bocs; Caroline Boursaux-Eude; Michael Chandler; Jean-François Charles; Elie Dassa; Richard Derose; Sylviane Derzelle; Georges Freyssinet; Claudine Médigue; Anne Lanois; Kerrie Powell; Patricia Siguier; Rachel Vincent; Vincent Paul Mary Wingate; Mohamed Zouine; Philippe Glaser; Noël Boemare; Antoine Danchin; Frank Kunst

Photorhabdus luminescens is a symbiont of nematodes and a broad-spectrum insect pathogen. The complete genome sequence of strain TT01 is 5,688,987 base pairs (bp) long and contains 4,839 predicted protein-coding genes. Strikingly, it encodes a large number of adhesins, toxins, hemolysins, proteases and lipases, and contains a wide array of antibiotic synthesizing genes. These proteins are likely to play a role in the elimination of competitors, host colonization, invasion and bioconversion of the insect cadaver, making P. luminescens a promising model for the study of symbiosis and host-pathogen interactions. Comparison with the genomes of related bacteria reveals the acquisition of virulence factors by extensive horizontal transfer and provides clues about the evolution of an insect pathogen. Moreover, newly identified insecticidal proteins may be effective alternatives for the control of insect pests.


PLOS ONE | 2011

The Entomopathogenic Bacterial Endosymbionts Xenorhabdus and Photorhabdus: Convergent Lifestyles from Divergent Genomes

John M. Chaston; Garret Suen; Sarah L. Tucker; Aaron W. Andersen; Archna Bhasin; Edna Bode; Helge B. Bode; Alexander O. Brachmann; Charles E. Cowles; Kimberly N. Cowles; Creg Darby; Limaris de Léon; Kevin Drace; Zijin Du; Alain Givaudan; Erin E. Herbert Tran; Kelsea A. Jewell; Jennifer J. Knack; Karina C. Krasomil-Osterfeld; Ryan Kukor; Anne Lanois; Phil Latreille; Nancy K. Leimgruber; Carolyn M. Lipke; Renyi Liu; Xiaojun Lu; Eric C. Martens; Pradeep Reddy Marri; Claudine Médigue; Megan L. Menard

Members of the genus Xenorhabdus are entomopathogenic bacteria that associate with nematodes. The nematode-bacteria pair infects and kills insects, with both partners contributing to insect pathogenesis and the bacteria providing nutrition to the nematode from available insect-derived nutrients. The nematode provides the bacteria with protection from predators, access to nutrients, and a mechanism of dispersal. Members of the bacterial genus Photorhabdus also associate with nematodes to kill insects, and both genera of bacteria provide similar services to their different nematode hosts through unique physiological and metabolic mechanisms. We posited that these differences would be reflected in their respective genomes. To test this, we sequenced to completion the genomes of Xenorhabdus nematophila ATCC 19061 and Xenorhabdus bovienii SS-2004. As expected, both Xenorhabdus genomes encode many anti-insecticidal compounds, commensurate with their entomopathogenic lifestyle. Despite the similarities in lifestyle between Xenorhabdus and Photorhabdus bacteria, a comparative analysis of the Xenorhabdus, Photorhabdus luminescens, and P. asymbiotica genomes suggests genomic divergence. These findings indicate that evolutionary changes shaped by symbiotic interactions can follow different routes to achieve similar end points.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2004

Stages of Infection during the Tripartite Interaction between Xenorhabdus nematophila, Its Nematode Vector, and Insect Hosts

Mathieu Sicard; Karine Brugirard-Ricaud; Sylvie Pages; Anne Lanois; Noël Boemare; Michel Brehélin; Alain Givaudan

ABSTRACT Bacteria of the genus Xenorhabdus are mutually associated with entomopathogenic nematodes of the genus Steinernema and are pathogenic to a broad spectrum of insects. The nematodes act as vectors, transmitting the bacteria to insect larvae, which die within a few days of infection. We characterized the early stages of bacterial infection in the insects by constructing a constitutive green fluorescent protein (GFP)-labeled Xenorhabdus nematophila strain. We injected the GFP-labeled bacteria into insects and monitored infection. We found that the bacteria had an extracellular life cycle in the hemolymph and rapidly colonized the anterior midgut region in Spodoptera littoralis larvae. Electron microscopy showed that the bacteria occupied the extracellular matrix of connective tissues within the muscle layers of the Spodoptera midgut. We confirmed the existence of such a specific infection site in the natural route of infection by infesting Spodoptera littoralis larvae with nematodes harboring GFP-labeled Xenorhabdus. When the infective juvenile (IJ) nematodes reached the insect gut, the bacterial cells were rapidly released from the intestinal vesicle into the nematode intestine. Xenorhabdus began to escape from the anus of the nematodes when IJs were wedged in the insect intestinal wall toward the insect hemolymph. Following their release into the insect hemocoel, GFP-labeled bacteria were found only in the anterior midgut region and hemolymph of Spodoptera larvae. Comparative infection assays conducted with another insect, Locusta migratoria, also showed early bacterial colonization of connective tissues. This work shows that the extracellular matrix acts as a particular colonization site for X. nematophila within insects.


Cellular Microbiology | 2005

Site-specific antiphagocytic function of the Photorhabdus luminescens type III secretion system during insect colonization.

Karine Brugirard-Ricaud; Eric Duchaud; Alain Givaudan; Pierre Girard; Frank Kunst; Noël Boemare; Michel Brehélin; Robert Zumbihl

Photorhabdus is an entomopathogenic bacterium belonging to the Enterobacteriaceae. The genome of the TT01 strain of Photorhabdus luminescens was recently sequenced and a large number of toxin‐encoding genes were found. Genomic analysis predicted the presence on the chromosome of genes encoding a type three secretion system (TTSS), the main role of which is the delivery of effector proteins directly into eukaryotic host cells. We report here the functional characterization of the TTSS. The locus identified encodes the secretion/translocation apparatus, gene expression regulators and an effector protein – LopT – homologous to the Yersinia cysteine protease cytotoxin YopT. Heterologous expression in Yersinia demonstrated that LopT was translocated into mammal cells in an active form, as shown by the appearance of a form of the RhoA GTPase with modified electrophoretic mobility. In vitro study showed that recombinant LopT was able to release RhoA and Rac from human and insect cell membrane. In vivo assays of infection of the cutworm Spodoptera littoralis and the locust Locusta migratoria with a TT01 strain carrying a translational fusion of the lopT gene with the gfp reporter gene revealed that the lopT gene was switched on only at sites of cellular defence reactions, such as nodulation, in insects. TTSS‐mutant did not induce nodule formation and underwent phagocytosis by insect macrophage cells, suggesting that the LopT effector plays an essential role in preventing phagocytosis and indicating an unexpected link between TTSS expression and the nodule reaction in insects.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2004

The PhoP-PhoQ Two-Component Regulatory System of Photorhabdus luminescens Is Essential for Virulence in Insects

Sylviane Derzelle; Evelyne Turlin; Eric Duchaud; Sylvie Pages; Frank Kunst; Alain Givaudan; Antoine Danchin

Photorhabdus luminescens is a symbiont of entomopathogenic nematodes. Analysis of the genome sequence of this organism revealed a homologue of PhoP-PhoQ, a two-component system associated with virulence in intracellular bacterial pathogens. This organism was shown to respond to the availability of environmental magnesium. A mutant with a knockout mutation in the regulatory component of this system (phoP) had no obvious growth defect. It was, however, more motile and more sensitive to antimicrobial peptides than its wild-type parent. Remarkably, the mutation eliminated virulence in an insect model. No insect mortality was observed after injection of a large number of the phoP bacteria, while very small amounts of parental cells killed insect larvae in less than 48 h. At the molecular level, the PhoPQ system mediated Mg(2+)-dependent modifications in lipopolysaccharides and controlled a locus (pbgPE) required for incorporation of 4-aminoarabinose into lipid A. Mg(2+)-regulated gene expression of pbgP1 was absent in the mutant and was restored when phoPQ was complemented in trans. This finding highlights the essential role played by PhoPQ in the virulence of an entomopathogen.


Current Opinion in Microbiology | 2012

How the insect pathogen bacteria Bacillus thuringiensis and Xenorhabdus/Photorhabdus occupy their hosts

Christina Nielsen-LeRoux; Nalini Ramarao; Didier Lereclus; Alain Givaudan

Insects are the largest group of animals on earth. Like mammals, virus, fungi, bacteria and parasites infect them. Several tissue barriers and defense mechanisms are common for vertebrates and invertebrates. Therefore some insects, notably the fly Drosophila and the caterpillar Galleria mellonella, have been used as models to study host-pathogen interactions for several insect and mammal pathogens. They are excellent tools to identify pathogen determinants and host tissue cell responses. We focus here on the comparison of effectors used by two different groups of bacterial insect pathogens to accomplish the infection process in their lepidopteran larval host: Bacillus thuringiensis and the nematode-associated bacteria, Photorhabdus and Xenorhabdus. The comparison reveals similarities in function and expression profiles for some genes, which suggest that such factors are conserved during evolution in order to attack the tissue encountered during the infection process.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

The xaxAB Genes Encoding a New Apoptotic Toxin from the Insect Pathogen Xenorhabdus nematophila Are Present in Plant and Human Pathogens

Fabienne Vigneux; Robert Zumbihl; Grégory Jubelin; Carlos Ribeiro; Joël Poncet; Stephen Baghdiguian; Alain Givaudan; Michel Brehélin

Xenorhabdus nematophila, a member of the Enterobacteriaceae, kills many species of insects by strongly depressing the immune system and colonizing the entire body. A peptide cytotoxin has been purified from X. nematophila broth growth, and the cytolytic effect on insect immunocytes and hemolytic effect on mammalian red blood cells of this toxin have been described (Ribeiro, C., Vignes, M., and Brehélin, M. (2003) J. Biol. Chem. 278, 3030–3039). We show here that this toxin, Xenorhabdus α-xenorhabdolysin (Xax), triggers apoptosis in both insect and mammalian cells. We also report the cloning and sequencing of two genes, xaxAB, encoding this toxin in X. nematophila. The expression of both genes in recombinant Escherichia coli led to the production of active cytotoxin/hemolysin. However, hemolytic activity was observed only if the two peptides were added in the appropriate order. Furthermore, we report here that inactivation of xaxAB genes in X. nematophila abolished the major cytotoxic activity present in broth growth, called C1. We also show that these genes are present in various entomopathogenic bacteria of the genera Xenorhabdus and Photorhabdus, in Pseudomonas entomophila, in the human pathogens Yersinia enterocolitica and Proteus mirabilis, and in the plant pathogen Pseudomonas syringae. This toxin cannot be classified in any known family of cytotoxins on the basis of amino acid sequences, locus organization, and activity features. It is, therefore, probably the prototype of a new family of binary toxins.


Environmental Microbiology | 2010

The major outer membrane protein OmpU of Vibrio splendidus contributes to host antimicrobial peptide resistance and is required for virulence in the oyster Crassostrea gigas

Marylise Duperthuy; Johan Binesse; Frédérique Le Roux; Bernard Romestand; Audrey Caro; Patrice Got; Alain Givaudan; Didier Mazel; Evelyne Bachère; Delphine Destoumieux-Garzón

Vibrio splendidus, strain LGP32, is an oyster pathogen associated with the summer mortalities affecting the production of Crassostrea gigas oysters worldwide. Vibrio splendidus LGP32 was shown to resist to up to 10 microM Cg-Def defensin and Cg-BPI bactericidal permeability increasing protein, two antimicrobial peptides/proteins (AMPs) involved in C. gigas immunity. The resistance to both oyster Cg-Def and Cg-BPI and standard AMPs (polymyxin B, protegrin, human BPI) was dependent on the ompU gene. Indeed, upon ompU inactivation, minimal bactericidal concentrations decreased by up to fourfold. AMP resistance was restored upon ectopic expression of ompU. The susceptibility of bacterial membranes to AMP-induced damages was independent of the ompU-mediated AMP resistance. Besides its role in AMP resistance, ompU proved to be essential for the adherence of V. splendidus LGP32 to fibronectin. Interestingly, in vivo, ompU was identified as a major determinant of V. splendidus pathogenicity in oyster experimental infections. Indeed, the V. splendidus-induced oyster mortalities dropped from 56% to 11% upon ompU mutation (Kaplan-Meier survival curves, P < 0.01). Moreover, in co-infection assays, the ompU mutant was out competed by the wild-type strain with competitive indexes in the range of 0.1-0.2. From this study, ompU is required for virulence of V. splendidus. Contributing to AMP resistance, conferring adhesive properties to V. splendidus, and being essential for in vivo fitness, the OmpU porin appears as an essential effector of the C. gigas/V. splendidus interaction.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2001

Two Distinct Hemolytic Activities in Xenorhabdus nematophila Are Active against Immunocompetent Insect Cells

Julien Brillard; Carlos Ribeiro; T. Noël Boemare; Michel Brehélin; Alain Givaudan

ABSTRACT Xenorhabdus spp. and Photorhabdus spp. are major insect bacterial pathogens symbiotically associated with nematodes. These bacteria are transported by their nematode hosts into the hemocoel of the insect prey, where they proliferate within hemolymph. In this work we report that wild strains belonging to different species of both genera are able to produce hemolysin activity on blood agar plates. Using a hemocyte monolayer bioassay, cytolytic activity against immunocompetent cells from the hemolymph ofSpodoptera littoralis (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) was found only in supernatants of Xenorhabdus; none was detected in supernatants of various strains of Photorhabdus. During in vitro bacterial growth of Xenorhabdus nematophila F1, two successive bursts of cytolytic activity were detected. The first extracellular cytolytic activity occurred when bacterial cells reached the stationary phase. It also displayed a hemolytic activity on sheep red blood cells, and it was heat labile. Among insect hemocyte types, granulocytes were the preferred target. Lysis of hemocytes by necrosis was preceded by a dramatic vacuolization of the cells. In contrast the second burst of cytolytic activity occurred late during stationary phase and caused hemolysis of rabbit red blood cells, and insect plasmatocytes were the preferred target. This second activity is heat resistant and produced shrinkage and necrosis of hemocytes. Insertional inactivation of flhD gene in X. nematophilaleads to the loss of hemolysis activity on sheep red blood cells and an attenuated virulence phenotype in S. littoralis (A. Givaudan and A. Lanois, J. Bacteriol. 182:107–115, 2000). This mutant was unable to produce the early cytolytic activity, but it always displayed the late cytolytic effect, preferably active on plasmatocytes. Thus, X. nematophila produced two independent cytolytic activities against different insect cell targets known for their major role in cellular immunity.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2002

The PhlA Hemolysin from the Entomopathogenic Bacterium Photorhabdus luminescens Belongs to the Two-Partner Secretion Family of Hemolysins

Julien Brillard; Eric Duchaud; Noël Boemare; Frank Kunst; Alain Givaudan

Photorhabdus is an entomopathogenic bacterium symbiotically associated with nematodes of the family Heterorhabditidae. Bacterial hemolysins found in numerous pathogenic bacteria are often virulence factors. We describe here the nucleotide sequence and the molecular characterization of the Photorhabdus luminescens phlBA operon, a locus encoding a hemolysin which shows similarities to the Serratia type of hemolysins. It belongs to the two-partner secretion (TPS) family of proteins. In low-iron conditions, a transcriptional induction of the phlBA operon was observed by using the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase reporter gene, causing an increase in PhlA hemolytic activity compared to iron-rich media. A spontaneous phase variant of P. luminescens was deregulated in phlBA transcription. The phlA mutant constructed by allelic exchange remained highly pathogenic after injection in the lepidopteran Spodoptera littoralis, indicating that PhlA hemolysin is not a major virulence determinant. Using the gene encoding green fluorescent protein as a reporter, phlBA transcription was observed in hemolymph before insect death. We therefore discuss the possible role of PhlA hemolytic activity in the bacterium-nematode-insect interactions.

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Anne Lanois

University of Montpellier

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Noël Boemare

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Sylvie Pages

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Sylvie Pagès

University of Montpellier

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Eric Duchaud

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Grégory Jubelin

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Jean-Claude Ogier

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Robert Zumbihl

University of Montpellier

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Maxime Gualtieri

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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