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Featured researches published by Bruno Hamon.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2009

The Group III Two-Component Histidine Kinase of Filamentous Fungi Is Involved in the Fungicidal Activity of the Bacterial Polyketide Ambruticin

Anita Dongo; Nelly Bataillé-Simoneau; Claire Campion; Thomas Guillemette; Bruno Hamon; Béatrice Iacomi-Vasilescu; Leonard Katz; Philippe Simoneau

ABSTRACT We have shown that the plant pathogen Alternaria brassicicola exhibited very high susceptibility to ambruticin VS4 and to a lesser extent to the phenylpyrrole fungicide fludioxonil. These compounds are both derived from natural bacterial metabolites with antifungal properties and are thought to exert their toxicity by interfering with osmoregulation in filamentous fungi. Disruption of the osmosensor group III histidine kinase gene AbNIK1 (for A. brassicola NIK1) resulted in high levels of resistance to ambruticin and fludioxonil, while a mutant isolate characterized by a single-amino-acid substitution in the HAMP domain of the kinase only exhibited moderate resistance. Moreover, the natural resistance of Saccharomyces cerevisiae to these antifungal molecules switched to sensitivity in strains expressing AbNIK1p. We also showed that exposure to fludioxonil and ambruticin resulted in abnormal phosphorylation of a Hog1-like mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) in A. brassicicola. Parallel experiments carried out with wild-type and mutant isolates of Neurospora crassa revealed that, in this species, ambruticin susceptibility was dependent on the OS1-RRG1 branch of the phosphorelay pathway downstream of the OS2 MAPK cascade but independent of the yeast Skn7-like response regulator RRG2. These results show that the ability to synthesize a functional group III histidine kinase is a prerequisite for the expression of ambruticin and phenylpyrrole susceptibility in A. brassicicola and N. crassa and that, at least in the latter species, improper activation of the high-osmolarity glycerol-related pathway could explain their fungicidal properties.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Dehydrin-like Proteins in the Necrotrophic Fungus Alternaria brassicicola Have a Role in Plant Pathogenesis and Stress Response

Stéphanie Pochon; Philippe Simoneau; Sandrine Pigné; Samuel Balidas; Nelly Bataillé-Simoneau; Claire Campion; Emmanuel Jaspard; Benoît Calmes; Bruno Hamon; Romain Berruyer; Marjorie Juchaux; Thomas Guillemette

In this study, the roles of fungal dehydrin-like proteins in pathogenicity and protection against environmental stresses were investigated in the necrotrophic seed-borne fungus Alternaria brassicicola. Three proteins (called AbDhn1, AbDhn2 and AbDhn3), harbouring the asparagine-proline-arginine (DPR) signature pattern and sharing the characteristic features of fungal dehydrin-like proteins, were identified in the A. brassicicola genome. The expression of these genes was induced in response to various stresses and found to be regulated by the AbHog1 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway. A knock-out approach showed that dehydrin-like proteins have an impact mainly on oxidative stress tolerance and on conidial survival upon exposure to high and freezing temperatures. The subcellular localization revealed that AbDhn1 and AbDhn2 were associated with peroxisomes, which is consistent with a possible perturbation of protective mechanisms to counteract oxidative stress and maintain the redox balance in AbDhn mutants. Finally, we show that the double deletion mutant ΔΔabdhn1-abdhn2 was highly compromised in its pathogenicity. By comparison to the wild-type, this mutant exhibited lower aggressiveness on B. oleracea leaves and a reduced capacity to be transmitted to Arabidopsis seeds via siliques. The double mutant was also affected with respect to conidiation, another crucial step in the epidemiology of the disease.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2018

Aldaulactone – an original phytotoxic secondary metabolite involved in the aggressiveness of Alternaria dauci on carrot

Julia Courtial; Latifa Hamama; Jean-Jacques Helesbeux; Mickaël Lecomte; Yann Renaux; Esteban Guichard; Linda Voisine; Claire Yovanopoulos; Bruno Hamon; Laurent Ogé; Pascal Richomme; Mathilde Briard; Tristan Boureau; Séverine Gagné; Pascal Poupard; Romain Berruyer

Qualitative plant resistance mechanisms and pathogen virulence have been extensively studied since the formulation of the gene-for-gene hypothesis. The mechanisms involved in the quantitative traits of aggressiveness and plant partial resistance are less well-known. Nevertheless, they are prevalent in most plant-necrotrophic pathogen interactions, including the Daucus carota–Alternaria dauci interaction. Phytotoxic metabolite production by the pathogen plays a key role in aggressiveness in these interactions. The aim of the present study was to explore the link between A. dauci aggressiveness and toxin production. We challenged carrot embryogenic cell cultures from a susceptible genotype (H1) and two partially resistant genotypes (I2 and K3) with exudates from A. dauci strains with various aggressiveness levels. Interestingly, A. dauci-resistant carrot genotypes were only affected by exudates from the most aggressive strain in our study (ITA002). Our results highlight a positive link between A. dauci aggressiveness and the fungal exudate cell toxicity. We hypothesize that the fungal exudate toxicity was linked with the amount of toxic compounds produced by the fungus. Interestingly, organic exudate production by the fungus was correlated with aggressiveness. Hence, we further analyzed the fungal organic extract using HPLC, and correlations between the observed peak intensities and fungal aggressiveness were measured. One observed peak was closely correlated with fungal aggressiveness. We succeeded in purifying this peak and NMR analysis revealed that the purified compound was a novel 10-membered benzenediol lactone, a polyketid that we named ‘aldaulactone’. We used a new automated image analysis method and found that aldaulactone was toxic to in vitro cultured plant cells at those concentrations. The effects of both aldaulactone and fungal organic extracts were weaker on I2-resistant carrot cells compared to H1 carrot cells. Taken together, our results suggest that: (i) aldaulactone is a new phytotoxin, (ii) there is a relationship between the amount of aldaulactone produced and fungal aggressiveness, and (iii) carrot resistance to A. dauci involves mechanisms of resistance to aldaulactone.


Plant Pathology | 2008

Effect of null mutations in the AbNIK1 gene on saprophytic and parasitic fitness of Alternaria brassicicola isolates highly resistant to dicarboximide fungicides

B. Iacomi-Vasilescu; N. Bataille-Simoneau; C. Campion; A. Dongo; Emmanuelle Laurent; I. Serandat; Bruno Hamon; Philippe Simoneau


Molecular Ecology Notes | 2005

Isolation of 12 polymorphic microsatellite loci in the phytopathogenic fungus Alternaria brassicicola

Hervé Avenot; Anita Dongo; Nelly Bataillé-Simoneau; Béatrice Iacomi‐ Vasilescu; Bruno Hamon; Didier Peltier; Philippe Simoneau


Plant Pathology | 2017

Characterization of fungal pathogens (Diaporthe angelicae and D. eres) responsible for umbel browning and stem necrosis on carrot in France

F. Bastide; I. Sérandat; Julie Gombert; Emmanuelle Laurent; E. Morel; J. Kolopp; Pierre-Louis Guillermin; Bruno Hamon; Philippe Simoneau; Romain Berruyer; Pascal Poupard


Plant Disease | 2016

First Report of Tomato Early Blight Caused by Alternaria grandis in Algeria

N. Bessadat; Bruno Hamon; D. E. Henni; Philippe Simoneau


European Journal of Plant Pathology | 2017

Alternaria species associated with early blight epidemics on tomato and other Solanaceae crops in northwestern Algeria

Nabahat Bessadat; Romain Berruyer; Bruno Hamon; Nelly Bataillé-Simoneau; Soumaya Benichou; Mabrouk Kihal; Djamel Eddine Henni; Philippe Simoneau


Plant Disease | 2018

First report of early blight caused by Alternaria linariae on potato in Algeria

Djida Ayad; Bruno Hamon; Abdelaziz Kedad; Zouaoui Bouznad; Philippe Simoneau


Plant Disease | 2017

First Report of Early Blight Caused by Alternaria protenta on Potato in Algeria

Djida Ayad; Sylvie Leclerc; Bruno Hamon; Abdelaziz Kedad; Zouaoui Bouznad; Philippe Simoneau

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Abdelaziz Kedad

École Normale Supérieure

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