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Dive into the research topics where Bérengère Dalmais is active.

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Featured researches published by Bérengère Dalmais.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2008

Sesquiterpene Synthase from the Botrydial Biosynthetic Gene Cluster of the Phytopathogen Botrytis cinerea

Cristina Pinedo; Chieh-Mei Wang; Jean-Marc Pradier; Bérengère Dalmais; Mathias Choquer; Pascal Le Pêcheur; Guillaume Morgant; Isidro G. Collado; David E. Cane; Muriel Viaud

The fungus Botrytis cinerea is the causal agent of the economically important gray mold disease that affects more than 200 ornamental and agriculturally important plant species. B. cinerea is a necrotrophic plant pathogen that secretes nonspecific phytotoxins, including the sesquiterpene botrydial and the polyketide botcinic acid. The region surrounding the previously characterized BcBOT1 gene has now been identified as the botrydial biosynthetic gene cluster.Five genes including BcBOT1 and BcBOT2 were shown by quantitative reverse transcription-PCR to be co-regulated through the calcineurin signaling pathway. Inactivation of the BcBOT2 gene, encoding a putative sesquiterpene cyclase, abolished botrydial biosynthesis, which could be restored by in trans complementation.Inactivation of BcBOT2 also resulted in overproduction of botcinic acid that was observed to be strain-dependent. Recombinant BcBOT2 protein converted farnesyl diphosphate to the parent sesquiterpene of the botrydial biosynthetic pathway, the tricyclic alcohol presilphiperfolan-8beta-ol.


Molecular Plant Pathology | 2011

The Botrytis cinerea phytotoxin botcinic acid requires two polyketide synthases for production and has a redundant role in virulence with botrydial

Bérengère Dalmais; Julia Schumacher; Javier Moraga; Pascal Le Pêcheur; Bettina Tudzynski; Isidro G. Collado; Muriel Viaud

The grey mould fungus Botrytis cinerea produces two major phytotoxins, the sesquiterpene botrydial, for which the biosynthesis gene cluster has been characterized previously, and the polyketide botcinic acid. We have identified two polyketide synthase (PKS) encoding genes, BcPKS6 and BcPKS9, that are up-regulated during tomato leaf infection. Gene inactivation and analysis of the secondary metabolite spectra of several independent mutants demonstrated that both BcPKS6 and BcPKS9 are key enzymes for botcinic acid biosynthesis. We showed that BcPKS6 and BcPKS9 genes, renamed BcBOA6 and BcBO9 (for B. cinerea botcinic acid biosynthesis), are located at different genomic loci, each being adjacent to other putative botcinic acid biosynthetic genes, named BcBOA1 to BcBOA17. Putative orthologues of BcBOA genes are present in the closely related fungus Sclerotinia sclerotiorum, but the cluster organization is not conserved between the two species. As for the botrydial biosynthesis genes, the expression of BcBOA genes is co-regulated by the Gα subunit BCG1 during both in vitro and in planta growth. The loss of botcinic acid production does not affect virulence on bean and tomato leaves. However, double mutants that do not produce botcinic acid or botrydial (bcpks6Δbcbot2Δ) exhibit markedly reduced virulence. Hence, a redundant role of botrydial and botcinic acid in the virulence of B. cinerea has been demonstrated.


PLOS ONE | 2007

Genetic Evidence for a Link Between Glycolysis and DNA Replication

Laurent Jannière; Danielle Canceill; Catherine Suski; Sophie Kanga; Bérengère Dalmais; Anne-Françoise Monnier; Jérôme Chapuis; Alexander Bolotin; M. A. Titok; S. Dusko Ehrlich

Background A challenging goal in biology is to understand how the principal cellular functions are integrated so that cells achieve viability and optimal fitness in a wide range of nutritional conditions. Methodology/Principal Findings We report here a tight link between glycolysis and DNA synthesis. The link, discovered during an analysis of suppressors of thermosensitive replication mutants in bacterium Bacillus subtilis, is very strong as some metabolic alterations fully restore viability to replication mutants in which a lethal arrest of DNA synthesis otherwise occurs at a high, restrictive, temperature. Full restoration of viability by such alterations was limited to cells with mutations in three elongation factors (the lagging strand DnaE polymerase, the primase and the helicase) out of a large set of thermosensitive mutants affected in most of the replication proteins. Restoration of viability resulted, at least in part, from maintenance of replication protein activity at high temperature. Physiological studies suggested that this restoration depended on the activity of the three-carbon part of the glycolysis/gluconeogenesis pathway and occurred in both glycolytic and gluconeogenic regimens. Restoration took place abruptly over a narrow range of expression of genes in the three-carbon part of glycolysis. However, the absolute value of this range varied greatly with the allele in question. Finally, restoration of cell viability did not appear to be the result of a decrease in growth rate or an induction of major stress responses. Conclusions/Significance Our findings provide the first evidence for a genetic system that connects DNA chain elongation to glycolysis. Its role may be to modulate some aspect of DNA synthesis in response to the energy provided by the environment and the underlying mechanism is discussed. It is proposed that related systems are ubiquitous.


Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2015

The VELVET Complex in the Gray Mold Fungus Botrytis cinerea: Impact of BcLAE1 on Differentiation, Secondary Metabolism, and Virulence

Julia Schumacher; Adeline Simon; Kim C. Cohrs; Stefanie Traeger; Antoine Porquier; Bérengère Dalmais; Muriel Viaud; Bettina Tudzynski

Botrytis cinerea, the gray mold fungus, is an important plant pathogen. Field populations are characterized by variability with regard to morphology, the mode of reproduction (conidiation or sclerotia formation), the spectrum of secondary metabolites (SM), and virulence. Natural variation in bcvel1 encoding the ortholog of Aspergillus nidulans VeA, a member of the VELVET complex, was previously shown to affect light-dependent differentiation, the formation of oxalic acid (OA), and virulence. To gain broader insight into the B. cinerea VELVET complex, an ortholog of A. nidulans LaeA, BcLAE1, a putative interaction partner of BcVEL1, was studied. BcVEL1 but not its truncated versions interacts with BcLAE1 and BcVEL2 (VelB ortholog). In accordance with the expected common as well as specific functions of BcVEL1 and BcLAE1, the deletions of both genes result in similar though not identical phenotypes. Both mutants lost the ability to produce OA, to colonize the host tissue, and to form sclerotia. However, mutants differ with regard to aerial hyphae and conidia formation. Genome-wide expression analyses revealed that BcVEL1 and BcLAE1 have common and distinct target genes. Some of the genes that are underexpressed in both mutants, e.g., those encoding SM-related enzymes, proteases, and carbohydrate-active enzymes, may account for their reduced virulence.


Fungal Genetics and Biology | 2013

Screening of a Botrytis cinerea one-hybrid library reveals a Cys2His2 transcription factor involved in the regulation of secondary metabolism gene clusters.

Adeline Simon; Bérengère Dalmais; Guillaume Morgant; Muriel Viaud

Botrytis cinerea, the grey mould fungus, secretes non-host-specific phytotoxins that kill the cells of many plant species. Phytotoxic assays performed about ten years ago, have highlighted the role in the infection mechanism of one of these secondary metabolites, the sesquiterpene botrydial. We recently showed that BcBOT1 to BcBOT5 genes, which are required for botrydial biosynthesis, are organised into a physical cluster. However, this cluster includes no gene encoding a transcription factor (TF) that might specifically coregulate the expression of BcBOT genes. To identify which TF(s) are implicated in the regulation of this cluster and thereby to decipher DNA-protein interactions in the phytopathogenic fungus B. cinerea, we developed a strategy based on the yeast one-hybrid (Y1H) method. In this study, a Y1H library was generated with the TFs predicted from complete genome sequencing. The screening of this library revealed an interaction between a promoter of the botrydial biosynthesis gene cluster and a new Cys2His2 zinc finger TF, that we called BcYOH1. Inactivation of the BcYOH1 gene and expression analyses demonstrated the involvement of this TF in regulating expression of the botrydial biosynthesis gene cluster. Furthermore, whole-transcriptome analysis suggested that BcYOH1 might act as a global transcriptional regulator of phytotoxin and other secondary metabolism gene clusters, and of genes involved in carbohydrate metabolism, transport, virulence and detoxification mechanisms.


Molecular Microbiology | 2011

Life without the essential bacterial tRNAIle2–lysidine synthetase TilS: a case of tRNA gene recruitment in Bacillus subtilis

Céline Fabret; Etienne Dervyn; Bérengère Dalmais; Alain Guillot; Christian Marck; Henri Grosjean; Philippe Noirot

In eubacteria, the post‐transcriptional modification of the wobble cytidine of the CAU anticodon in a precursor tRNAIle2 to a lysidine residue (2‐lysyl‐cytidine, abbreviated as L) allows the amino acid specificity to change from methionine to isoleucine and the codon decoding specificity to shift from AUG to AUA. The tilS gene encoding the enzyme that catalyses this modification is widely distributed. However, some microbial species lack a tilS gene, indicating that an alternative strategy exists to accurately translate the AUA codon into Ile. To determine whether a TilS‐dependent bacterium, such as Bacillus subtilis, can overcome the absence of lysidine in its tRNAIle2 (CAU), we analysed the suppressor mutants of a tilS‐thermosensitive allele. These tilS‐suppressor mutants carry a substitution of the wobble guanosine into thymidine in one of the tRNAIle1 genes (the original GAT anticodon is changed to a TAT). In absence of TilS activity, the AUA codons are translated into isoleucine by the suppressor tRNAIle1, although a low level of AUA codons is also mistranslated into methionine. Results are in agreement with rare cases of eubacteria (and archaea), which naturally lack the tilS gene (or tiaS in archaea) but contain a tRNAIle2 gene containing a TAT instead of a CAT anticodon.


Fungal Genetics and Biology | 2016

The botrydial biosynthetic gene cluster of Botrytis cinerea displays a bipartite genomic structure and is positively regulated by the putative Zn(II)2Cys6 transcription factor BcBot6

Antoine Porquier; Guillaume Morgant; Javier Moraga; Bérengère Dalmais; Isabelle Luyten; Adeline Simon; Jean-Marc Pradier; Joelle Amselem; Isidro G. Collado; Muriel Viaud

Botrydial (BOT) is a non-host specific phytotoxin produced by the polyphagous phytopathogenic fungus Botrytis cinerea. The genomic region of the BOT biosynthetic gene cluster was investigated and revealed two additional genes named Bcbot6 and Bcbot7. Analysis revealed that the G+C/A+T-equilibrated regions that contain the Bcbot genes alternate with A+T-rich regions made of relics of transposable elements that have undergone repeat-induced point mutations (RIP). Furthermore, BcBot6, a Zn(II)2Cys6 putative transcription factor was identified as a nuclear protein and the major positive regulator of BOT biosynthesis. In addition, the phenotype of the ΔBcbot6 mutant indicated that BcBot6 and therefore BOT are dispensable for the development, pathogenicity and response to abiotic stresses in the B. cinerea strain B05.10. Finally, our data revealed that B. pseudocinerea, that is also polyphagous and lives in sympatry with B. cinerea, lacks the ability to produce BOT. Identification of BcBot6 as the major regulator of BOT synthesis is the first step towards a comprehensive understanding of the complete regulation network of BOT synthesis and of its ecological role in the B. cinerea life cycle.


Environmental Microbiology | 2018

Biosynthesis of abscisic acid in fungi: identification of a sesquiterpene cyclase as the key enzyme in Botrytis cinerea : Sesquiterpene cyclase for ABA synthesis in fungi

Inmaculada Izquierdo-Bueno; Victoria E. González-Rodríguez; Adeline Simon; Bérengère Dalmais; Jean-Marc Pradier; Pascal Le Pêcheur; Alex Mercier; Anne-Sophie Walker; Carlos Garrido; Isidro G. Collado; Muriel Viaud

While abscisic acid (ABA) is known as a hormone produced by plants through the carotenoid pathway, a small number of phytopathogenic fungi are also able to produce this sesquiterpene but they use a distinct pathway that starts with the cyclization of farnesyl diphosphate (FPP) into 2Z,4E-α-ionylideneethane which is then subjected to several oxidation steps. To identify the sesquiterpene cyclase (STC) responsible for the biosynthesis of ABA in fungi, we conducted a genomic approach in Botrytis cinerea. The genome of the ABA-overproducing strain ATCC58025 was fully sequenced and five STC-coding genes were identified. Among them, Bcstc5 exhibits an expression profile concomitant with ABA production. Gene inactivation, complementation and chemical analysis demonstrated that BcStc5/BcAba5 is the key enzyme responsible for the key step of ABA biosynthesis in fungi. Unlike what is observed for most of the fungal secondary metabolism genes, the key enzyme-coding gene Bcstc5/Bcaba5 is not clustered with the other biosynthetic genes, i.e., Bcaba1 to Bcaba4 that are responsible for the oxidative transformation of 2Z,4E-α-ionylideneethane. Finally, our study revealed that the presence of the Bcaba genes among Botrytis species is rare and that the majority of them do not possess the ability to produce ABA.


Microbiology | 2006

The replicative polymerases PolC and DnaE are required for theta replication of the Bacillus subtilis plasmid pBS72.

M. A. Titok; Suski C; Bérengère Dalmais; S.D Ehrlich; Laurent Jannière


ACS Chemical Biology | 2016

Genetic and Molecular Basis of Botrydial Biosynthesis: Connecting Cytochrome P450-Encoding Genes to Biosynthetic Intermediates.

Javier Moraga; Bérengère Dalmais; Inmaculada Izquierdo-Bueno; Josefina Aleu; James R. Hanson; Rosario Hernández-Galán; Muriel Viaud; Isidro G. Collado

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Muriel Viaud

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Adeline Simon

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Jean-Marc Pradier

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Pascal Le Pêcheur

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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M. A. Titok

Belarusian State University

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