Amélie Cirou
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
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Featured researches published by Amélie Cirou.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009
Elise Haudecoeur; S. Planamente; Amélie Cirou; M. Tannières; Barry J. Shelp; Solange Moréra; Denis Faure
Plants accumulate free L-proline (Pro) in response to abiotic stresses (drought and salinity) and presence of bacterial pathogens, including the tumor-inducing bacterium Agrobacterium tumefaciens. However, the function of Pro accumulation in host-pathogen interaction is still unclear. Here, we demonstrated that Pro antagonizes plant GABA-defense in the A. tumefaciens C58-induced tumor by interfering with the import of GABA and consequently the GABA-induced degradation of the bacterial quorum-sensing signal, 3-oxo-octanoylhomoserine lactone. We identified a bacterial receptor Atu2422, which is implicated in the uptake of GABA and Pro, suggesting that Pro acts as a natural antagonist of GABA-signaling. The Atu2422 amino acid sequence contains a Venus flytrap domain that is required for trapping GABA in human GABAB receptors. A constructed atu2422 mutant was more virulent than the wild type bacterium; moreover, transgenic plants with a low level of Pro exhibited less severe tumor symptoms than did their wild-type parents, revealing a crucial role for Venus flytrap GABA-receptor and relative abundance of GABA and Pro in host-pathogen interaction.
Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2009
Elise Haudecoeur; Mélanie Tannières; Amélie Cirou; Aurélie Raffoux; Yves Dessaux; Denis Faure
The phytopathogen Agrobacterium tumefaciens C58 expresses two lactonases, AttM and AiiB. We showed that expression of the aiiB gene was controlled by agrocinopines A and B and required the agrocinopine-ABC transporter Acc, but was not affected by the level of quorum-sensing (QS) signal 3-oxo-octanoylhomoserine lactone (OC8-HSL). In the presence of agrocinopines, a constructed aiiB mutant accumulated OC8-HSL at a level 10-fold higher than that of the wild-type strain, and showed an exacerbated expression of a key QS-regulated function, conjugation of Ti plasmid (in vitro and in planta), as well as an increase of the number of emerging tumors on the host plant. The expression and acyl-HSL-degrading activity of AttM were evident in the presence of wounded tissues; however, in unwounded plant tumors, the QS-regulated functions were weakly affected in an attM mutant. By contrast, we observed that attM conferred a selective advantage in the course of colonization of plant tumors. Finally, polymerase chain reaction survey of genes attM and aiiB showed that they were not strictly conserved in the genus Agrobacterium. This work proved that the lactonases AttM and AiiB are regulated by different plant signals and are implicated in different functions in the course of the A. tumefaciens C58-host interaction.
Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2012
Amélie Cirou; Samuel Mondy; Shu An; Amélie Charrier; Amélie Sarrazin; Odile Thoison; Michael DuBow; Denis Faure
ABSTRACT Degradation of the quorum-sensing (QS) signals known as N-acylhomoserine lactones (AHL) by soil bacteria may be useful as a beneficial trait for protecting crops, such as potato plants, against the worldwide pathogen Pectobacterium. In this work, analytical chemistry and microbial and molecular approaches were combined to explore and compare biostimulation of native and introduced AHL-degrading Rhodococcus erythropolis populations in the rhizosphere of potato plants cultivated in farm greenhouses under hydroponic conditions. We first identified gamma-heptalactone (GHL) as a novel biostimulating agent that efficiently promotes plant root colonization by AHL-degrading R. erythropolis population. We also characterized an AHL-degrading biocontrol R. erythropolis isolate, R138, which was introduced in the potato rhizosphere. Moreover, root colonization by AHL-degrading bacteria receiving different combinations of GHL and R138 treatments was compared by using a cultivation-based approach (percentage of AHL-degrading bacteria), pyrosequencing of PCR-amplified rrs loci (total bacterial community), and quantitative PCR (qPCR) of the qsdA gene, which encodes an AHL lactonase in R. erythropolis. Higher densities of the AHL-degrading R. erythropolis population in the rhizosphere were observed when GHL treatment was associated with biocontrol strain R138. Under this condition, the introduced R. erythropolis population displaced the native R. erythropolis population. Finally, chemical analyses revealed that GHL, gamma-caprolactone (GCL), and their by-products, gamma-hydroxyheptanoic acid and gamma-hydroxycaproic acid, rapidly disappeared from the rhizosphere and did not accumulate in plant tissues. This integrative study highlights biostimulation as a potential innovative approach for improving root colonization by beneficial bacteria.
Research in Microbiology | 2011
Amélie Cirou; Aurélie Raffoux; Stéphanie Diallo; Xavier Latour; Yves Dessaux; Denis Faure
Bacteria degrading quorum sensing (QS) signals have been proposed as biocontrol agents able to quench QS-dependent expression of virulence symptoms caused by Pectobacterium on potato plants. We report here that gamma-caprolactone (GCL) treatment stimulated growth of the native QS-degrading bacterial community in an industrial plant hydroponic system for culturing Solanum tuberosum. Post-GCL treatment, QS-degrading bacteria were mainly identified as Rhodococcus isolates, while Agrobacterium isolates dominated under similar untreated conditions. Most of the assayed Rhodococcus isolates exhibited efficient biocontrol activity for protecting potato tubers. Analytical chemistry approach revealed the rapid degradation of GCL introduced in the plant cultures.
Journal of Proteome Research | 2012
Corinne Barbey; Alexandre Crépin; Amélie Cirou; Aurélie Budin-Verneuil; Nicole Orange; Marc Feuilloley; Denis Faure; Yves Dessaux; Jean-François Burini; Xavier Latour
Gamma-caprolactone (GCL) is well-known as a food flavor and has been recently described as a biostimulant molecule promoting the growth of bacteria with biocontrol activity against soft-rot pathogens. Among these biocontrol agents, Rhodococcus erythropolis, characterized by a remarkable metabolic versatility, assimilates various γ-butyrolactone molecules with a branched-aliphatic chain, such as GCL. The assimilative pathway of GCL in R. erythropolis was investigated by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis coupled to matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization (MALDI) mass spectrometry (MS) analysis. This analysis suggests the involvement of the lactonase QsdA in ring-opening, a feature confirmed by heterologous expression in Escherichia coli. According to proteome analysis, the open-chain form of GCL was degraded by β- and ω-oxidation coupled to the Krebs cycle and β-ketoadipate pathway. Ubiquity of qsdA gene among environmental R. erythropolis isolates was verified by PCR. In addition to a previous N-acyl homoserine lactone catabolic function, QsdA may therefore be involved in an intermediate degradative step of cyclic recalcitrant molecules or in synthesis of flavoring lactones.
Plant and Soil | 2012
Alexandre Crépin; Corinne Barbey; Amélie Cirou; Mélanie Tannières; Nicole Orange; Marc Feuilloley; Yves Dessaux; Jean-François Burini; Denis Faure; Xavier Latour
Background and aimsRecent basic knowledge on the regulation of virulence in pectinolytic bacteria revealed pathogen communication via quorum sensing signals as a crucial event for the expression of virulence and the onset of disease symptoms. In this paper, we present and discuss advances in a new biocontrol approach based on the interference of microbial communication involved in the cellular density and microenvironment sensoring.MethodsThis emerging strategy consists in the characterization of the signaling molecules used by the target pathogen, then the use of harmless structural analogs to stimulate plant associated-microflora able to degrade both molecule families.ResultsThe biocontrol method has been applied for the first time for the control of Pectobacterium atrosepticum. This psychrotrophic bacterium synthesizes N-acyl-homoserine lactones involved in cell-to-cell communication that triggers soft rot and blackleg of potato. The use of the gamma-caprolactone stimulant promotes the emergence and catabolic activity of Rhodococcus erythropolis antagonistic populations in the potato rhizosphere.ConclusionsRhodococcus bacteria have the ability to disrupt the quorum sensing-based communication of P. atrosepticum by degrading N-acyl-homoserine lactone signaling molecules and prevent disease.
Archive | 2010
Amélie Cirou; Stéphane Uroz; Emilie Chapelle; Xavier Latour; Nicole Orange; Denis Faure; Yves Dessaux
Members of the species Pectobacterium carotovorum and P. atrosepticum are pathogenic bacteria that are responsible for tissue maceration on various host plants. Pathogenicity essentially relies upon the production of plant cell wall degradation enzymes, the synthesis of which is regulated in a bacterial cell density dependent fashion, a process called quorum sensing (QS). This process involves key low molecular weight signal molecules belonging to the acyl homoserine lactone class. This paper reports on the various strategies that have been developed to prevent the expression of the pathogenicity determinants in Pectobacterium. These could target signal production, accumulation or sensing. Two approaches yield promising results in the Pectobacterium pathosystem: a biocontrol approach based on the isolation of strains able to degrade the QS signal, and a biostimulant approach based on amendment the plant environment with compounds favoring the growth of microbial consortia able to degrade the acyl homoserine lactones. The possibility to combine these two approaches is discussed.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006
Romain Chevrot; Ran Rosen; Elise Haudecoeur; Amélie Cirou; Barry J. Shelp; Eliora Z. Ron; Denis Faure
Environmental Microbiology | 2007
Amélie Cirou; Stéphanie Diallo; Caroline Kurt; Xavier Latour; Denis Faure
Archive | 2008
Denis Faure; Amélie Cirou; Yves Dessaux