Elisabeth Stes
Ghent University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Elisabeth Stes.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009
Ine Pertry; Kateřina Václavíková; Stephen Depuydt; Petr Galuszka; Lukáš Spíchal; Wim Temmerman; Elisabeth Stes; Thomas Schmülling; Tatsuo Kakimoto; Marc Van Montagu; Miroslav Strnad; Marcelle Holsters; Petr Tarkowski; Danny Vereecke
Decades ago, the importance of cytokinins (CKs) during Rhodococcus fascians pathology had been acknowledged, and an isopentenyltransferase gene had been characterized in the fas operon of the linear virulence plasmid, but hitherto, no specific CK(s) could be associated with virulence. We show that the CK receptors AHK3 and AHK4 of Arabidopsis thaliana are essential for symptom development, and that the CK perception machinery is induced upon infection, underlining its central role in the symptomatology. Three classical CKs [isopentenyladenine, trans-zeatin, and cis-zeatin (cZ)] and their 2-methylthio (2MeS)-derivatives were identified by CK profiling of both the pathogenic R. fascians strain D188 and its nonpathogenic derivative D188–5. However, the much higher CK levels in strain D188 suggest that the linear plasmid is responsible for the virulence-associated production. All R. fascians CKs were recognized by AHK3 and AHK4, and, although they individually provoked typical CK responses in several bioassays, the mixture of bacterial CKs exhibited clear synergistic effects. The cis- and 2MeS-derivatives were poor substrates of the apoplastic CK oxidase/dehydrogenase enzymes and the latter were not cytotoxic at high concentrations. Consequently, the accumulating 2MeScZ (and cZ) in infected Arabidopsis tissue contribute to the continuous stimulation of tissue proliferation. Based on these results, we postulate that the R. fascians pathology is based on the local and persistent secretion of an array of CKs.
Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2010
Ine Pertry; Katerina Václavíková; Markéta Gemrotová; Lukáš Spíchal; Petr Galuszka; Stephen Depuydt; Wim Temmerman; Elisabeth Stes; Annick De Keyser; Michael Riefler; Stefania Biondi; Ondrej Novak; Thomas Schmülling; Miroslav Strnad; Petr Tarkowski; Marcelle Holsters; Danny Vereecke
The phytopathogenic actinomycete Rhodococcus fascians D188 relies mainly on the linear plasmid-encoded fas operon for its virulence. The bacteria secrete six cytokinin bases that synergistically redirect the developmental program of the plant to stimulate proliferation of young shoot tissue, thus establishing a leafy gall as a niche. A yeast-based cytokinin bioassay combined with cytokinin profiling of bacterial mutants revealed that the fas operon is essential for the enhanced production of isopentenyladenine, trans-zeatin, cis-zeatin, and the 2-methylthio derivatives of the zeatins. Cytokinin metabolite data and the demonstration of the enzymatic activities of FasD (isopentenyltransferase), FasE (cytokinin oxidase/dehydrogenase), and FasF (phosphoribohydrolase) led us to propose a pathway for the production of the cytokinin spectrum. Further evaluation of the pathogenicity of different fas mutants and of fas gene expression and cytokinin signal transduction upon infection implied that the secretion of the cytokinin mix is a highly dynamic process, with the consecutive production of a tom initiation wave followed by a maintenance flow.
Annual Review of Phytopathology | 2011
Elisabeth Stes; Olivier M. Vandeputte; Mondher El Jaziri; Marcelle Holsters; Danny Vereecke
Rhodococcus fascians is a gram-positive phytopathogen that induces differentiated galls, known as leafy galls, on a wide variety of plants, employing virulence genes located on a linear plasmid. The pathogenic strategy consists of the production of a mixture of six synergistically acting cytokinins that overwhelm the plants homeostatic mechanisms, ensuring the activation of a signaling cascade that targets the plant cell cycle and directs the newly formed cells to differentiate into shoot meristems. The shoots that are formed upon infection remain immature and never convert to source tissues resulting in the establishment of a nutrient sink that is a niche for the epiphytic and endophytic R. fascians subpopulations. Niche formation is accompanied by modifications of the transcriptome, metabolome, physiology, and morphology of both host and pathogen. Here, we review a decade of research and set the outlines of the molecular basis of the leafy gall syndrome.
Journal of Proteome Research | 2014
Elisabeth Stes; Mathias Laga; Alan Walton; Noortje Samyn; Evy Timmerman; Ive De Smet; Sofie Goormachtig; Kris Gevaert
Here, we apply the COmbined FRActional DIagonal Chromatography (COFRADIC) technology to enrich for ubiquitinated peptides and to identify sites of ubiquitination by mass spectrometry. Our technology bypasses the need to overexpress tagged variants of ubiquitin and the use of sequence-biased antibodies recognizing ubiquitin remnants. In brief, all protein primary amino groups are blocked by chemical acetylation, after which ubiquitin chains are proteolytically and specifically removed by the catalytic core domain of the USP2 deubiquitinase (USP2cc). Because USP2cc cleaves the isopeptidyl bond between the ubiquitin C-terminus and the ε-amino group of the ubiquitinated lysine, this enzyme reintroduces primary ε-amino groups in proteins. These amino groups are then chemically modified with a handle that allows specific isolation of ubiquitinated peptides during subsequent COFRADIC chromatographic runs. This method led to the identification of over 7500 endogenous ubiquitination sites in more than 3300 different proteins in a native human Jurkat cell lysate.
Journal of Experimental Botany | 2016
Ianto Roberts; Stephanie Smith; Elisabeth Stes; Bert De Rybel; An Staes; Brigitte van de Cotte; Maria Fransiska Njo; Lise Dedeyne; Hans Demol; Dominique Audenaert; Kris Gevaert; Tom Beeckman; Ive De Smet
Highlight We identified C-TERMINALLY ENCODED PEPTIDE 5 (CEP5) as a novel, auxin-repressed and phloem pole-expressed signal assisting in the formation of lateral roots.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015
Rohit Arora; Michela Di Michele; Elisabeth Stes; Elien Vandermarliere; Lennart Martens; Kris Gevaert; Erika van Heerde; Joannes Theodorus Maria Linders; Dirk Brehmer; Edgar Jacoby; Pascal Bonnet
The V600E missense mutation in B-Raf kinase leads to an anomalous regulation of the MAPK pathway, uncontrolled cell proliferation, and initiation of tumorigenesis. While the ATP-competitive B-Raf inhibitors block the MAPK pathway in B-Raf mutant cells, they induce conformational changes to wild-type B-Raf kinase domain leading to heterodimerization with C-Raf causing a paradoxical hyperactivation of MAPK pathway. A new class of inhibitors (paradox breakers) has been developed that inhibit B-Raf(V600E) activity without agonistically affecting the MAPK pathway in wild-type B-Raf cells. In this study, we explore the structural, conformational, and cellular effects on the B-Raf kinase domain upon binding of paradox breakers and inducers. Our results indicate that a subtle structural difference between paradox inducers and breakers leads to significant conformational differences when complexed with B-Raf. This study provides a novel insight into the activation of B-Raf by ATP-competitive inhibitors and can aid in the design of more potent and selective inhibitors without agonistic function.
Plant Physiology | 2011
Elisabeth Stes; Stefania Biondi; Marcelle Holsters; Danny Vereecke
The phytopathogenic actinomycete Rhodococcus fascians drives its host to form a nutrient-rich niche by secreting a mixture of cytokinins that triggers plant cell division and shoot formation. The discrepancy between the relatively low amount of secreted cytokinins and the severe impact of R. fascians infection on plant development has puzzled researchers for a long time. Polyamine and transcript profiling of wild-type and cytokinin receptor mutant plants revealed that the bacterial cytokinins directly stimulated the biosynthesis of plant putrescine by activating arginine decarboxylase expression. Pharmacological experiments showed that the increased levels of putrescine contributed to the severity of the symptoms. Thus, putrescine functions as a secondary signal that impinges on the cytokinin-activated pathway, amplifying the hormone-induced changes that lead to the formation of a leafy gall. Exogenous putrescine and treatment with polyamine biosynthesis inhibitors combined with transcript and polyamine analyses of wild-type and mutant plants indicated that the direct target of both the bacterial cytokinins and plant putrescine was the expression of D3-type cyclins. Hence, the activated d-type cyclin/retinoblastoma/E2F transcription factor pathway integrates both external and internal hormonal signals, stimulating mitotic cell divisions and inducing pathological plant organogenesis.
Planta | 2016
Cedrick Matthys; Alan Walton; Sylwia Magdalena Struk; Elisabeth Stes; François-Didier Boyer; Kris Gevaert; Sofie Goormachtig
AbstractMain conclusionStrigolactones control various aspects of plant development, including root architecture. Here, we review how strigolactones act in the root and survey the strigolactone specificity of signaling components that affect root development. Strigolactones are a group of secondary metabolites produced in plants that have been assigned multiple roles, of which the most recent is hormonal activity. Over the last decade, these compounds have been shown to regulate various aspects of plant development, such as shoot branching and leaf senescence, but a growing body of literature suggests that these hormones play an equally important role in the root. In this review, we present all known root phenotypes linked to strigolactones. We examine the expression and presence of the main players in biosynthesis and signaling of these hormones and bring together the available information that allows us to explain how strigolactones act to modulate the root system architecture.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016
Kun Yue; Priyanka Sandal; Elisabeth L. Williams; Evan Murphy; Elisabeth Stes; Natalia Nikonorova; Priya Ramakrishna; Nathan Czyzewicz; Laura Montero-Morales; Robert P. Kumpf; Zhefeng Lin; Brigitte van de Cotte; Mudassar Iqbal; Michiel Van Bel; Eveline Van De Slijke; Matthew R. Meyer; Astrid Gadeyne; Cyril Zipfel; Geert De Jaeger; Marc Van Montagu; Daniël Van Damme; Kris Gevaert; A. Gururaj Rao; Tom Beeckman; Ive De Smet
Significance Plant growth and development are mediated through a wide range of proteins, including receptor kinases and phosphatases. The receptor kinase ARABIDOPSIS CRINKLY 4 (ACR4) is part of a mechanism controlling formative cell divisions in the Arabidopsis root. However, the regulation of ACR4 signaling and how it affects cell divisions remains completely unknown. We discovered that ACR4 phosphorylates the PROTEIN PHOSPHATASE 2A-3 (PP2A-3) catalytic subunit of the PP2A phosphatase holoenzyme and that PP2A dephosphorylates ACR4. These data exposed a tightly regulated point in the associated biochemical network regulating formative cell divisions in plant roots. In plants, the generation of new cell types and tissues depends on coordinated and oriented formative cell divisions. The plasma membrane-localized receptor kinase ARABIDOPSIS CRINKLY 4 (ACR4) is part of a mechanism controlling formative cell divisions in the Arabidopsis root. Despite its important role in plant development, very little is known about the molecular mechanism with which ACR4 is affiliated and its network of interactions. Here, we used various complementary proteomic approaches to identify ACR4-interacting protein candidates that are likely regulators of formative cell divisions and that could pave the way to unraveling the molecular basis behind ACR4-mediated signaling. We identified PROTEIN PHOSPHATASE 2A-3 (PP2A-3), a catalytic subunit of PP2A holoenzymes, as a previously unidentified regulator of formative cell divisions and as one of the first described substrates of ACR4. Our in vitro data argue for the existence of a tight posttranslational regulation in the associated biochemical network through reciprocal regulation between ACR4 and PP2A-3 at the phosphorylation level.
Journal of Experimental Botany | 2015
Elisabeth Stes; Stephen Depuydt; Annick De Keyser; Cedrick Matthys; Kris Audenaert; Koichi Yoneyama; Stefaan Werbrouck; Sofie Goormachtig; Danny Vereecke
Highlight To antagonize the developmental process initiated by Rhodococcus fascians and in response to the bacterial cytokinins, Arabidopsis activates its strigolactone response, partially suppressing shoot branching in the rosette.