Eric Galiana
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
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Featured researches published by Eric Galiana.
Plant Physiology | 2004
Karine Hugot; Marie-Pierre Rivière; Chimène Moreilhon; Manal A. Dayem; Joseph Cozzitorto; Gilles Arbiol; Pascal Barbry; Catherine Weiss; Eric Galiana
Besides the systemic acquired resistance (SAR) induced in response to microbial stimulation, host plants may also acquire resistance to pathogens in response to endogenous stimuli associated with their own development. In tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum), the vegetative-to-flowering transition comes along with a susceptibility-to-resistance transition to the causal agent of black shank disease, the oomycete Phytophthora parasitica. This resistance affects infection effectiveness and hyphal expansion and is associated with extracellular accumulation of a cytotoxic activity that provokes in vitro cell death of P. parasitica zoospores. As a strategy to determine the extracellular events important for restriction of pathogen growth, we screened the tobacco genome for genes encoding secreted or membrane-bound proteins expressed in leaves of flowering plants. Using a signal sequence trap approach in yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae), 298 clones were selected that appear to encode for apoplastic, cell wall, or membrane-bound proteins involved in stress response, in plant defense, or in cell wall modifications. Microarray and northern-blot analyses revealed that, at late developmental stages, leaves were characterized by the coordinate up-regulation of genes involved in SAR and in peroxidative cross-linking of structural proteins to cell wall. This suggests the potential involvement of these genes in extracellular events that govern the expression of developmental resistance. The analysis of the influence of salicylic acid on mRNA accumulation also indicates a more complex network for regulation of gene expression at a later stage of tobacco development than during SAR. Further characterization of these genes will permit the formulation of hypotheses to explain resistance and to establish the connection with development.
Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2002
Karine Hugot; Michel Ponchet; Antoine Marais; Pierre Ricci; Eric Galiana
Ribonuclease (RNase) NE gene expression is induced in tobacco leaves in response to Phytophthora parasitica. Using antibodies directed against RNase NE, we demonstrate that RNase NE is extracellular at the early steps of the interaction, while the fungal tip growth is initiated in the apoplastic compartment. After production in Pichia pastoris and biochemical purification, we show that the S-like RNase NE inhibits hyphal growth from P. parasitica zoospores and from Fusarium oxysporum conidia in vitro. Conversion into an enzymatically inactive form after mutagenesis of the active site-histidine 97 residue to phenylalanine leads to the suppression of this activity, suggesting that RNase NE inhibits the elongation of germ tubes by degradation of microbial RNAs. Exogenous application of RNase NE in the extracellular space of leaves inhibits the development of P. parasitica. Based on its induction by inoculation, its localization, and its activity against two plant pathogens, we propose that RNase NE participates in tobacco defense mechanisms by a direct action on hyphal development in the extracellular space. The RNase activity-dependent antimicrobial activity of the S-like RNase NE shares similarities with the only other biological activity demonstrated for plant RNases, the inhibition of elongation of pollen tubes by the S-RNase in gametophytic self-incompatibility, suggesting a functional link between self and nonself interactions in plants.
Journal of Experimental Botany | 2008
Marie-Pierre Rivière; Antoine Marais; Michel Ponchet; William G. T. Willats; Eric Galiana
The class 1 pathogenesis-related (PR) proteins are thought to be involved in plant defence responses, but their molecular functions are unknown. The function of PR-1 was investigated in tobacco by generating stable PR-1a-silenced lines in which other acidic PR-1 genes (PR-1b and PR-1c) were silenced. Plants lacking extracellular PR-1s were more susceptible than wild-type plants to the oomycete Phytophthora parasitica but displayed unaffected systemic acquired resistance and developmental resistance to this pathogen. Treatment with salicylic acid up-regulates the PR-1g gene, encoding a basic protein of the PR-1 family, in PR-1-deficient tobacco, indicating that PR-1 expression may repress that of PR-1g. This shows that acidic PR-1s are dispensable for expression of salicylic acid-dependent acquired resistances against P. parasitica and may reveal a functional overlap in tobacco defence or a functional redundancy in the PR-1 gene family. The data also show that there is a specific increase in apoplastic beta-(1-->3)-glucanase activity and a decrease in beta-(1-->3)-glucan deposition in PR-1-silenced lines following activation of defence reactions. Complementation of the silencing by apoplastic treatment with a recombinant PR-1a protein largely restores the wild-type beta-(1-->3)-glucanase activity and callose phenotype. Taken together with the immunolocalization of PR-1a to sites of beta-(1-->3)-glucan deposition in wild-type plants, these results are indicative of a function for PR-1a in regulation of enzymatic activity of extracellular beta-(1-->3)-glucanases.
Environmental Microbiology | 2008
Eric Galiana; Sandra Fourré; Gilbert Engler
Zoospores of the oomycete Phytophthora parasitica establish microbial spheroid microcolonies and biofilms on the surface of wounded leaves of their host, Nicotiana tabacum. The formation of microcolonies involves the movement of some zoospores towards attractants from wound sites, followed by their irreversible adsorption and the formation of a cluster of cells. These cells drive the migration of a second wave of zoospores (several hundreds cells) by setting up an external chemotactic gradient leading to massive zoospore encystment and cyst-orientated germination. Zoospores that are still swimming at this stage circulate within the nascent biofilm by opening channels. Concomitantly, the cell population secretes various substances to elaborate an extracellular mucilage. Embedded within the extracellular matrix, biofilm cells are organized into a structured community as coacervates. The granular surface is composed of individual cysts, located on the outside of the microcolony. Hyphae from these cysts plunge downwards towards the dense core formed by the founder cells. This report is the first to show the installation and organization of a biofilm formed by eukaryotic cells on plant surfaces. The P. parasitica microcolonies constitute heterogeneous microenvironments for the embedded and circulating cells. They may affect plant-pathogen interactions by serving as reservoirs for pathogenic microorganisms, as protecting niche against host defences or as structures for infecting populations.
Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2011
Eric Galiana; Antoine Marais; Catherine Mura; Benoît Industri; Gilles Arbiol; Michel Ponchet
ABSTRACT The microbial community in which a pathogen evolves is fundamental to disease outcome. Species interacting with a pathogen on the host surface shape the distribution, density, and genetic diversity of the inoculum, but the role of these species is rarely determined. The screening method developed here can be used to characterize pathogen-associated species affecting disease. This strategy involves three steps: (i) constitution of the microbial community, using the pathogen as a trap; (ii) community selection, using extracts from the pathogen as the sole nutrient source; and (iii) molecular identification and the screening of isolates focusing on their effects on the growth of the pathogen in vitro and host disease. This approach was applied to a soilborne plant pathogen, Phytophthora parasitica, structured in a biofilm, for screening the microbial community from the rhizosphere of Nicotiana tabacum (the host). Two of the characterized eukaryotes interfered with the oomycete cycle and may affect the host disease. A Vorticella species acted through a mutualistic interaction with P. parasitica, disseminating pathogenic material by leaving the biofilm. A Phoma species established an amensal interaction with P. parasitica, strongly suppressing disease by inhibiting P. parasitica germination. This screening method is appropriate for all nonobligate pathogens. It allows the definition of microbial species as promoters or suppressors of a disease for a given biotope. It should also help to identify important microbial relationships for ecology and evolution of pathogens.
PLOS Pathogens | 2017
Marie Larousse; Eric Galiana
Oomycetes are filamentous eukaryotic microorganisms among which several species are plant and animal pathogens [1,2]. Those that cause plant diseases have had great impacts on human activities such as (i) the 19th century Irish famine triggered by the potato late blight (Phytophthora infestans), (ii) the associated massive North American immigration [3], and (iii) the formulation of the Bordeaux mixture, which was the first fungicide to be used worldwide [4]. Because of their ability to develop resistant against chemical treatments and to bypass plant resistance genes, they still have severe economic repercussions on modern crops. To circumvent these problems, most studies of the last ten years have reported on the coevolutionary mechanisms between the plant host immune system and the oomycete effector repertoire that promotes successful infection [5,6,7,8]. As for all other groups of plant pathogens, one of the current challenges is now to understand what is happening beyond the well-understood plant–oomycete interaction. To accomplish this, it is required to get a much broader picture of how the traits of the host and the pathogenic oomycete interact with the biotic environment to shape the evolution of plant resistance or oomycete pathogenicity. Concerning the host plant, the maintenance of a stable disease-resistance gene polymorphism appears to involve coevolution between the R gene and effector pairs but also complex and diffuse community-wide interactions [9]. The plant-associated microbiota contributes to maximize host adaptation to deal with pathogenic infection [10,11,12,13]. Concerning the pathogen, there is less understanding regarding how the pathogen–microbiota interaction accommodates the emergence of a pathogenic population, how it interferes with the expression of the effector repertoire on the plant surface, and, in fine, how it promotes or suppresses the disease. At the same time, an infectious entity is no longer only considered at the species level but also at the level of a resident microbiota or part thereof [14]. This paradigmatic inflexion helps (i) to unravel the molecular basis of interactions between plants and their pathogens in natural systems and (ii) to delineate the complex network of interactions that determine the spatial and temporal distribution of inocula and the genetic structure of the pathogen population as well as the communal virulence-associated mechanisms. This report highlights studies that establish how different aspects of the infectious process can be regulated by interactions between oomycetes or between oomycetes and other microbial species (Fig 1).
Protist | 2014
Marie Larousse; Benjamin Govetto; Aurélie Séassau; Catherine Etienne; Benoît Industri; Nicolas Theodorakopoulos; Emeline Deleury; Michel Ponchet; Franck Panabières; Eric Galiana
The plant pathogen Phytophthora parasitica forms a biofilm on the host surface. The biofilm transcriptome is characterized by the expression of PPMUCL1/2/3 (PHYTOPHTHORA PARASITICA MUCIN-LIKE) genes, which we report here to be members of a new, large mucin-like gene family restricted to the oomycete lineage. These genes encode secreted proteins organized into two domains. The NH2-terminal domain is highly conserved, but of unknown function. The second domain is a mucin-like domain enriched in threonine and serine residues, with a large number of putative O-glycosylation sites and a repeated motif defining 15 subgroups among the 315 members of the family. The second domain was found to be glycosylated in the recombinant rPPMUCL1 and rPPMUCL2 proteins. An analysis of PPMUCL1/2/3 gene expression indicated that these genes were expressed in a specific and coordinated manner in the biofilm. A novel cis-motif (R) bound to nuclear proteins, suggesting a possible role in PPMUCL1/2/3 gene regulation. Immunohistochemical staining revealed that the PPMUCL1/2 proteins were secreted and accumulated on the surface of the biofilm. Our data demonstrate that PPMUCL1/2/3 belong to a new oomycete-specific family of mucin-like proteins playing a structural role in the biofilm extracellular matrix.
Mbio | 2017
Marie Larousse; Corinne Rancurel; Camille Syska; Ferran Palero; Catherine Etienne; Benoît Industri; Xavier Nesme; Marc Bardin; Eric Galiana
BackgroundInteractions between pathogenic oomycetes and microbiota residing on the surface of the host plant root are unknown, despite being critical to inoculum constitution. The nature of these interactions was explored for the polyphagous and telluric species Phytophthora parasitica.ResultsComposition of the rhizospheric microbiota of Solanum lycopersicum was characterized using deep re-sequencing of 16S rRNA gene to analyze tomato roots either free of or partly covered with P. parasitica biofilm. Colonization of the host root surface by the oomycete was associated with a shift in microbial community involving a Bacteroidetes/Proteobacteria transition and Flavobacteriaceae as the most abundant family. Identification of members of the P. parasitica-associated microbiota interfering with biology and oomycete infection was carried out by screening for bacteria able to (i) grow on a P. parasitica extract-based medium (ii), exhibit in vitro probiotic or antibiotic activity towards the oomycete (iii), have an impact on the oomycete infection cycle in a tripartite interaction S. lycopersicum-P. parasitica-bacteria. One Pseudomonas phylotype was found to exacerbate disease symptoms in tomato plants. The lack of significant gene expression response of P. parasitica effectors to Pseudomonas suggested that the increase in plant susceptibility was not associated with an increase in virulence. Our results reveal that Pseudomonas spp. establishes commensal interactions with the oomycete. Bacteria preferentially colonize the surface of the biofilm rather than the roots, so that they can infect plant cells without any apparent infection of P. parasitica.ConclusionsThe presence of the pathogenic oomycete P. parasitica in the tomato rhizosphere leads to a shift in the rhizospheric microbiota composition. It contributes to the habitat extension of Pseudomonas species mediated through a physical association between the oomycete and the bacteria.
Archive | 2011
Marie-Pierre Rivière; Michel Ponchet; Eric Galiana
Marie-Pierre Riviere1, 2, 3, Michel Ponchet1, 2, 3 and Eric Galiana1, 2, 3 1INRA (Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique), Unite Mixte de Recherche 1301 Interactions Biotiques et Sante Vegetale, F-06903 Sophia Antipolis, 2CNRS (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Unite Mixte de Recherche 6243 Interactions Biotiques et Sante Vegetale, F-06903 Sophia Antipolis, 3Universite de Nice-Sophia Antipolis, Unite Mixte de Recherche Interactions Biotiques et Sante Vegetale, F-06903 Sophia Antipolis France
New Phytologist | 2007
Marie‐Pierre Develey‐Rivière; Eric Galiana