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Featured researches published by Aline Escalon.


Molecular Plant Pathology | 2013

Variations in type III effector repertoires, pathological phenotypes and host range of Xanthomonas citri pv. citri pathotypes

Aline Escalon; Stéphanie Javegny; Christian Vernière; Laurent D. Noël; Karine Vital; Stéphane Poussier; Ahmed Hajri; Tristan Boureau; Olivier Pruvost; Matthieu Arlat; Lionel Gagnevin

The mechanisms determining the host range of Xanthomonas are still undeciphered, despite much interest in their potential roles in the evolution and emergence of plant pathogenic bacteria. Xanthomonas citri pv. citri (Xci) is an interesting model of host specialization because of its pathogenic variants: pathotype A strains infect a wide range of Rutaceous species, whereas pathotype A*/A(W) strains have a host range restricted to Mexican lime (Citrus aurantifolia) and alemow (Citrus macrophylla). Based on a collection of 55 strains representative of Xci worldwide diversity assessed by amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP), we investigated the distribution of type III effectors (T3Es) in relation to host range. We examined the presence of 66 T3Es from xanthomonads in Xci and identified a repertoire of 28 effectors, 26 of which were shared by all Xci strains, whereas two (xopAG and xopC1) were present only in some A*/A(W) strains. We found that xopAG (=avrGf1) was present in all A(W) strains, but also in three A* strains genetically distant from A(W) , and that all xopAG-containing strains induced the hypersensitive response (HR) on grapefruit and sweet orange. The analysis of xopAD and xopAG suggested horizontal transfer between X. citri pv. bilvae, another citrus pathogen, and some Xci strains. A strains were genetically less diverse, induced identical phenotypic responses and possessed indistinguishable T3E repertoires. Conversely, A*/A(W) strains exhibited a wider genetic diversity in which clades correlated with geographical origin and T3E repertoire, but not with pathogenicity, according to T3E deletion experiments. Our data outline the importance of taking into account the heterogeneity of Xci A*/A(W) strains when analysing the mechanisms of host specialization.


BMC Genomics | 2015

Comparative genomics of 43 strains of Xanthomonas citri pv. citri reveals the evolutionary events giving rise to pathotypes with different host ranges

Jonathan Gordon; Pierre Lefeuvre; Aline Escalon; Valérie Barbe; Stéphane Cruveiller; Lionel Gagnevin; Olivier Pruvost

BackgroundThe identification of factors involved in the host range definition and evolution is a pivotal challenge in the goal to predict and prevent the emergence of plant bacterial disease. To trace the evolution and find molecular differences between three pathotypes of Xanthomonas citri pv. citri that may explain their distinctive host ranges, 42 strains of X. citri pv. citri and one outgroup strain, Xanthomonas citri pv. bilvae were sequenced and compared.ResultsThe strains from each pathotype form monophyletic clades, with a short branch shared by the Aw and A pathotypes. Pathotype-specific recombination was detected in seven regions of the alignment. Using Ancestral Character Estimation, 426 SNPs were mapped to the four branches at the base of the A, A*, Aw and A/Aw clades. Several genes containing pathotype-specific nonsynonymous mutations have functions related to pathogenicity. The A pathotype is enriched for SNP-containing genes involved in defense mechanisms, while A* is significantly depleted for genes that are involved in transcription. The pathotypes differ by four gene islands that largely coincide with regions of recombination and include genes with a role in virulence. Both A* and Aw are missing genes involved in defense mechanisms. In contrast to a recent study, we find that there are an extremely small number of pathotype-specific gene presences and absences.ConclusionsThe three pathotypes of X. citri pv. citri that differ in their host ranges largely show genomic differences related to recombination, horizontal gene transfer and single nucleotide polymorphism. We detail the phylogenetic relationship of the pathotypes and provide a set of candidate genes involved in pathotype-specific evolutionary events that could explain to the differences in host range and pathogenicity between them.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2015

QueTAL: a suite of tools to classify and compare TAL effectors functionally and phylogenetically

Alvaro L. Pérez-Quintero; Léo Lamy; Jonathan Gordon; Aline Escalon; Sébastien Cunnac; Boris Szurek; Lionel Gagnevin

Transcription Activator-Like (TAL) effectors from Xanthomonas plant pathogenic bacteria can bind to the promoter region of plant genes and induce their expression. DNA-binding specificity is governed by a central domain made of nearly identical repeats, each determining the recognition of one base pair via two amino acid residues (a.k.a. Repeat Variable Di-residue, or RVD). Knowing how TAL effectors differ from each other within and between strains would be useful to infer functional and evolutionary relationships, but their repetitive nature precludes reliable use of traditional alignment methods. The suite QueTAL was therefore developed to offer tailored tools for comparison of TAL effector genes. The program DisTAL considers each repeat as a unit, transforms a TAL effector sequence into a sequence of coded repeats and makes pair-wise alignments between these coded sequences to construct trees. The program FuncTAL is aimed at finding TAL effectors with similar DNA-binding capabilities. It calculates correlations between position weight matrices of potential target DNA sequence predicted from the RVD sequence, and builds trees based on these correlations. The programs accurately represented phylogenetic and functional relationships between TAL effectors using either simulated or literature-curated data. When using the programs on a large set of TAL effector sequences, the DisTAL tree largely reflected the expected species phylogeny. In contrast, FuncTAL showed that TAL effectors with similar binding capabilities can be found between phylogenetically distant taxa. This suite will help users to rapidly analyse any TAL effector genes of interest and compare them to other available TAL genes and should improve our understanding of TAL effectors evolution. It is available at http://bioinfo-web.mpl.ird.fr/cgi-bin2/quetal/quetal.cgi.


Journal of Microbiological Methods | 2015

Development and validation of a real-time quantitative PCR assay to detect Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. allii from onion seed.

Isabelle Robène; Marion Perret; Emmanuel Jouen; Aline Escalon; Marie-Véronique Maillot; Aude Chabirand; A. Moreau; Annie Laurent; Frédéric Chiroleu; Olivier Pruvost

Bacterial blight of onion is an emerging disease threatening world onion production. The causal agent Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. allii is seed transmitted and a reliable and sensitive tool is needed to monitor seed exchanges. A triplex quantitative real-time PCR assay was developed targeting two X. axonopodis pv. allii-specific markers and an internal control chosen in 5.8S rRNA gene from Alliaceae. Amplification of at least one marker indicates the presence of the bacterium in seed extracts. This real-time PCR assay detected all the 79 X. axonopodis pv. allii strains tested and excluded 85.2% of the 135 non-target strains and particularly all 39 saprophytic and pathogenic bacteria associated with onion. Cross-reactions were mainly obtained for strains assigned to nine phylogenetically related X. axonopodis pathovars. The cycle cut-off was estimated statistically at 36.3 considering a risk of false positive of 1%. The limit of detection obtained in at least 95% of the time (LOD 95%) was 5×10(3) CFU/g (colony forming unit/g). The sensitivity threshold was found to be 1 infected seed in 32,790 seeds. This real-time PCR assay should be useful for preventing the long-distance spread of X. axonopodis pv. allii via contaminated seed lots and determining the epidemiology of the bacterium.


Plant Pathology | 2015

Genetic structure analysis of strains causing citrus canker in Iran reveals the presence of two different lineages of #Xanthomonas citri# pv. #citri# pathotype A*

Olivier Pruvost; T. Goodarzi; Karine Boyer; H. Soltaninejad; Aline Escalon; S.M. Alavi; Stéphanie Javegny; Claudine Boyer; B. Cottyn; Lionel Gagnevin; Christian Vernière


Archive | 2016

CHAPTER 21: The Dynamic World of the Genus Xanthomonas

Olivier Pruvost; Isabelle Robène; Aline Escalon; Alice Leduc; Lionel Gagnevin; Christian Vernière; Nian Wang; Howard F. Schwartz; David H. Gent; Philippe Rott; Monique Royer; Anne M. Alvarez; Tomie S. Vowell; Peter J. Toves; Frank F. White; Neha Potnis; Jeffrey B. Jones


Archive | 2015

The dynamic world of the genus #Xanthomonas#

Olivier Pruvost; Isabelle Robène; Aline Escalon; Alice Leduc; Lionel Gagnevin; Christian Vernière; Nian Wang; Howard F. Schwartz; David H. Gent; Philippe Rott; Monique Royer; Anne M. Alvarez; Tomie S. Vowell; Peter J. Toves; Frank F. White; Neha Potnis; Jeffrey B. Jones


Archive | 2014

Variation in the TAL arsenal of #Xanthomonas citri pv. Citri# pathotypic specificity : Session 3- Physiologie, génétique et génomique des bactéries

Aline Escalon; Laëtitia Guardini; Stéphanie Javegny; Boris Szurek; Álvaro Luis Pérez-Quintero; Pierre Lefeuvre; Christian Vernière; Olivier Pruvost; Laurent D. Noel; Mathieu Arlat; Lionel Gagnevin


XII International Citrus Congress : Book of abstract | 2012

A new minisatellite-based scheme for the global surveillance of Xanthomonas citri pv. citri, the causal agent of Asiatic Citrus Canker. : S12O12

Maxime Magne; Alice Leduc; Christian Vernière; Karine Vital; Jonathan Gordon; Aline Escalon; Fabien Guérin; Lionel Gagnevin; Olivier Pruvost


Archive | 2012

Répertoires d'effecteurs de type III, phylogénie et pouvoir pathogène chez X. c.pv.citri

Aline Escalon; Stéphanie Javegny; Karine Vital; Claudine Boyer; Christian Vernière; Olivier Pruvost; Lionel Gagnevin

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Olivier Pruvost

University of La Réunion

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Lionel Gagnevin

University of La Réunion

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Karine Vital

University of La Réunion

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Jonathan Gordon

University of La Réunion

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Mathieu Arlat

Paul Sabatier University

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Ahmed Hajri

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Boris Szurek

University of Montpellier

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