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PLOS Pathogens | 2008

Diversification of Rice Yellow Mottle Virus and Related Viruses Spans the History of Agriculture from the Neolithic to the Present

Denis Fargette; Agnès Pinel-Galzi; Drissa Sérémé; Séverine Lacombe; Eugénie Hébrard; Oumar Traoré; Gnissa Konaté

The mechanisms of evolution of plant viruses are being unraveled, yet the timescale of their evolution remains an enigma. To address this critical issue, the divergence time of plant viruses at the intra- and inter-specific levels was assessed. The time of the most recent common ancestor (TMRCA) of Rice yellow mottle virus (RYMV; genus Sobemovirus) was calculated by a Bayesian coalescent analysis of the coat protein sequences of 253 isolates collected between 1966 and 2006 from all over Africa. It is inferred that RYMV diversified approximately 200 years ago in Africa, i.e., centuries after rice was domesticated or introduced, and decades before epidemics were reported. The divergence time of sobemoviruses and viruses of related genera was subsequently assessed using the age of RYMV under a relaxed molecular clock for calibration. The divergence time between sobemoviruses and related viruses was estimated to be approximately 9,000 years, that between sobemoviruses and poleroviruses approximately 5,000 years, and that among sobemoviruses approximately 3,000 years. The TMRCA of closely related pairs of sobemoviruses, poleroviruses, and luteoviruses was approximately 500 years, which is a measure of the time associated with plant virus speciation. It is concluded that the diversification of RYMV and related viruses has spanned the history of agriculture, from the Neolithic age to the present.


Journal of Virology | 2008

Rice Yellow Mottle Virus, an RNA Plant Virus, Evolves as Rapidly as Most RNA Animal Viruses

Denis Fargette; A. Pinel; Mbolarinosy Rakotomalala; E. Sangu; Oumar Traoré; Drissa Sérémé; F. Sorho; Souley Issaka; Eugénie Hébrard; Yacouba Séré; Z. Kanyeka; Gnissa Konaté

ABSTRACT The rate of evolution of an RNA plant virus has never been estimated using temporally spaced sequence data, by contrast to the information available on an increasing range of animal viruses. Accordingly, the evolution rate of Rice yellow mottle virus (RYMV) was calculated from sequences of the coat protein gene of isolates collected from rice over a 40-year period in different parts of Africa. The evolution rate of RYMV was estimated by pairwise distance linear regression on five phylogeographically defined groups comprising a total of 135 isolates. It was further assessed from 253 isolates collected all over Africa by Bayesian coalescent methods under strict and relaxed molecular clock models and under constant size and skyline population genetic models. Consistent estimates of the evolution rate between 4 × 10−4 and 8 × 10−4 nucleotides (nt)/site/year were obtained whatever method and model were applied. The synonymous evolution rate was between 8 × 10−4 and 11 × 10−4 nt/site/year. The overall and synonymous evolution rates of RYMV were within the range of the rates of 50 RNA animal viruses, below the average but above the distribution median. Experimentally, in host change studies, substitutions accumulated at an even higher rate. The results show that an RNA plant virus such as RYMV evolves as rapidly as most RNA animal viruses. Knowledge of the molecular clock of plant viruses provides methods for testing a wide range of biological hypotheses.


PLOS Pathogens | 2007

Theme and variations in the evolutionary pathways to virulence of an RNA plant virus species.

Agnès Pinel-Galzi; Mbolarinosy Rakotomalala; Emmanuel Sangu; Fatogoma Sorho; Zakaria Kanyeka; Oumar Traoré; Drissa Sérémé; Nils Poulicard; Yvonne Rabenantoandro; Yacouba Séré; Gnissa Konaté; Alain Ghesquière; Eugénie Hébrard; Denis Fargette

The diversity of a highly variable RNA plant virus was considered to determine the range of virulence substitutions, the evolutionary pathways to virulence, and whether intraspecific diversity modulates virulence pathways and propensity. In all, 114 isolates representative of the genetic and geographic diversity of Rice yellow mottle virus (RYMV) in Africa were inoculated to several cultivars with eIF(iso)4G-mediated Rymv1-2 resistance. Altogether, 41 virulent variants generated from ten wild isolates were analyzed. Nonconservative amino acid replacements at five positions located within a stretch of 15 codons in the central region of the 79-aa-long protein VPg were associated with virulence. Virulence substitutions were fixed predominantly at codon 48 in most strains, whatever the host genetic background or the experimental conditions. There were one major and two isolate-specific mutational pathways conferring virulence at codon 48. In the prevalent mutational pathway I, arginine (AGA) was successively displaced by glycine (GGA) and glutamic acid (GAA). Substitutions in the other virulence codons were displaced when E48 was fixed. In the isolate-specific mutational pathway II, isoleucine (ATA) emerged and often later coexisted with valine (GTA). In mutational pathway III, arginine, with the specific S2/S3 strain codon usage AGG, was displaced by tryptophane (TGG). Mutational pathway I never arose in the widely spread West African S2/S3 strain because G48 was not infectious in the S2/S3 genetic context. Strain S2/S3 least frequently overcame resistance, whereas two geographically localized variants of the strain S4 had a high propensity to virulence. Codons 49 and 26 of the VPg, under diversifying selection, are candidate positions in modulating the genetic barriers to virulence. The theme and variations in the evolutionary pathways to virulence of RYMV illustrates the extent of parallel evolution within a highly variable RNA plant virus species.


Journal of General Virology | 2014

Sites under positive selection modulate the RNA silencing suppressor activity of rice yellow mottle virus movement protein P1

Drissa Sérémé; Séverine Lacombe; Moumouni Konaté; Martine Bangratz; Agnès Pinel-Galzi; Denis Fargette; Alfred S. Traore; Gnissa Konaté; Christophe Brugidou

RNA silencing is a eukaryotic mechanism for RNA-based gene regulation that plays an essential role in diverse biological processes, such as defence against viral infections. The P1 of rice yellow mottle virus (RYMV) is a movement protein and displays RNA silencing suppression activity with variable efficiency, depending on the origin of the isolates. In this study, the positive selection pressure acting on the P1 protein gene was assessed. A site-by-site analysis of the dN/dS ratio was performed and 18 positively selected sites were identified. Four of these were mutated, and the ability to suppress RNA silencing was evaluated for the resulting mutants in a transient expression assay. All mutations affected quantitatively RNA silencing suppression, one caused a significant decrease in the activity and three significantly increased it. This work demonstrates, for what is to the best of our knowledge the first time, that the RYMV gene encoding the P1 RNA silencing suppressor is under adaptive evolution.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2017

Virus-Bacteria Rice Co-Infection in Africa: Field Estimation, Reciprocal Effects, Molecular Mechanisms, and Evolutionary Implications

Charlotte Tollenaere; Séverine Lacombe; Issa Wonni; Mariam Barro; Cyrielle Ndougonna; Fatoumata Gnacko; Drissa Sérémé; Jonathan M. Jacobs; Eugénie Hébrard; Sébastien Cunnac; Christophe Brugidou

Simultaneous infection of a single plant by various pathogen species is increasingly recognized as an important modulator of host resistance and a driver of pathogen evolution. Because plants in agro-ecosystems are the target of a multitude of pathogenic microbes, co-infection could be frequent, and consequently important to consider. This is particularly true for rapidly intensifying crops, such as rice in Africa. This study investigated potential interactions between pathogens causing two of the major rice diseases in Africa: the Rice yellow mottle virus (RYMV) and the bacterium Xanthomonas oryzae pathovar oryzicola (Xoc) in order to: 1/ document virus-bacteria co-infection in rice in the field, 2/ explore experimentally their consequences in terms of symptom development and pathogen multiplication, 3/ test the hypothesis of underlying molecular mechanisms of interactions and 4/ explore potential evolutionary consequences. Field surveys in Burkina Faso revealed that a significant proportion of rice fields were simultaneously affected by the two diseases. Co-infection leads to an increase in bacterial specific symptoms, while a decrease in viral load is observed compared to the mono-infected mock. The lack of effect found when using a bacterial mutant for an effector specifically inducing expression of a small RNA regulatory protein, HEN1, as well as a viral genotype-specific effect, both suggest a role for gene silencing mechanisms mediating the within-plant interaction between RYMV and Xoc. Potential implications for pathogen evolution could not be inferred because genotype-specific effects were found only for pathogens originating from different countries, and consequently not meeting in the agrosystem. We argue that pathogen-pathogen-host interactions certainly deserve more attention, both from a theoretical and applied point of view.


Journal of Bioscience and Bioengineering | 2018

Optimized transitory ectopic expression of promastigote surface antigen protein in Nicotiana benthamiana , a potential anti-leishmaniasis vaccine candidate

Séverine Lacombe; Martine Bangratz; Jean-Paul Brizard; Elodie Petitdidier; Julie Pagniez; Drissa Sérémé; Jean-Loup Lemesre; Christophe Brugidou

In recent years, plants have been shown to be an efficient alternative expression system for high-value pharmaceuticals such as vaccines. However, constitutive expression of recombinant protein remains uncertain on their level of production and biological activity. To overcome these problems, transitory expression systems have been developed. Here, a series of experiments were performed to determine the most effective conditions to enhance vaccine antigen transient accumulation in Nicotiana benthamiana leaves using the promastigote surface antigen (PSA) from the parasitic protozoan Leishmania infantum. This protein has been previously identified as the major antigen of a licensed canine anti-leishmaniasis vaccine. The classical prokaryote Escherichia coli biosystem failed in accumulating PSA. Consequently, the standard plant system based on N. benthamiana has been optimized for the production of putatively active PSA. First, the RNA silencing defense mechanism set up by the plant against PSA ectopic expression was abolished by using three viral suppressors acting at different steps of the RNA silencing pathway. Then, we demonstrated that the signal peptide at the N-terminal side of the PSA is required for its accumulation. The PSA ER signaling and retention with the PSA signal peptide and the KDEL motif, respectively were optimized to significantly increase its accumulation. Finally, we demonstrate that the production of recombinant PSA in N. benthamiana leaves allows the conservation of its immunogenic property. These approaches demonstrate that based on these optimizations, plant based systems can be used to effectively produce the biological active PSA protein.


Archives of Virology | 2008

Biological and molecular characterization of a putative new sobemovirus infecting Imperata cylindrica and maize in Africa

Drissa Sérémé; Séverine Lacombe; Moumouni Konaté; Agnès Pinel-Galzi; Valentin S.E. Traore; Eugénie Hébrard; Oumar Traoré; Christophe Brugidou; Denis Fargette; Gnissa Konaté


Plant Disease | 2014

First Report of Rice stripe necrosis virus Infecting Rice in Burkina Faso

Drissa Sérémé; Bouma James Néya; Martine Bangratz; Christophe Brugidou; I. Ouedraogo


American Journal of Plant Sciences | 2018

Molecular Variability and Genetic Structure of IYMV in Burkina Faso

Moustapha Koala; Drissa Sérémé; Florence Vignols; Eric Lacombe; Martine Bantgratz; Bouma James Néya; Christophe Brugidou; Nicolas Barro; Oumar Traoré


Agricultural sciences | 2017

Imperata yellow mottle virus: An Emerging Threat to Maize, Sorghum and Pearl Millet in Burkina Faso

Moustapha Koala; Valentin S.E. Traore; Drissa Sérémé; Bouma James Néya; Christophe Brugidou; Nicolas Barro; Oumar Traoré

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Christophe Brugidou

Institut de recherche pour le développement

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Gnissa Konaté

Institut de recherche pour le développement

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Denis Fargette

Institut de recherche pour le développement

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Oumar Traoré

University of Ouagadougou

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Eugénie Hébrard

Institut de recherche pour le développement

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Séverine Lacombe

Institut de recherche pour le développement

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Agnès Pinel-Galzi

Institut de recherche pour le développement

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Moumouni Konaté

Institut de recherche pour le développement

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Issa Wonni

University of Montpellier

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