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Dive into the research topics where Fabienne Maillet is active.

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Featured researches published by Fabienne Maillet.


Nature | 2011

Fungal lipochitooligosaccharide symbiotic signals in arbuscular mycorrhiza

Fabienne Maillet; Véréna Poinsot; Olivier André; Virginie Puech-Pagès; Alexandra Haouy; Monique Gueunier; Laurence Cromer; Delphine Giraudet; Damien Formey; Andreas Niebel; Eduardo Andres Martinez; Hugues Driguez; Guillaume Bécard; Jean Dénarié

Arbuscular mycorrhiza (AM) is a root endosymbiosis between plants and glomeromycete fungi. It is the most widespread terrestrial plant symbiosis, improving plant uptake of water and mineral nutrients. Yet, despite its crucial role in land ecosystems, molecular mechanisms leading to its formation are just beginning to be unravelled. Recent evidence suggests that AM fungi produce diffusible symbiotic signals. Here we show that Glomus intraradices secretes symbiotic signals that are a mixture of sulphated and non-sulphated simple lipochitooligosaccharides (LCOs), which stimulate formation of AM in plant species of diverse families (Fabaceae, Asteraceae and Umbelliferae). In the legume Medicago truncatula these signals stimulate root growth and branching by the symbiotic DMI signalling pathway. These findings provide a better understanding of the evolution of signalling mechanisms involved in plant root endosymbioses and will greatly facilitate their molecular dissection. They also open the way to using these natural and very active molecules in agriculture.


The Plant Cell | 1994

Rhizobium meliloti lipooligosaccharide nodulation factors: different structural requirements for bacterial entry into target root hair cells and induction of plant symbiotic developmental responses.

M Ardourel; N. Demont; Frédéric Debellé; Fabienne Maillet; F. de Billy; Jean-Claude Promé; Jean Dénarié; Georges Truchet

Rhizobium meliloti produces lipochitooligosaccharide nodulation NodRm factors that are required for nodulation of legume hosts. NodRm factors are O-acetylated and N-acylated by specific C16-unsaturated fatty acids. nodL mutants produce non-O-acetylated factors, and nodFE mutants produce factors with modified acyl substituents. Both mutants exhibited a significantly reduced capacity to elicit infection thread (IT) formation in alfalfa. However, once initiated, ITs developed and allowed the formation of nitrogen-fixing nodules. In contrast, double nodF/nodL mutants were unable to penetrate into legume hosts and to form ITs. Nevertheless, these mutants induced widespread cell wall tip growth in trichoblasts and other epidermal cells and were also able to elicit cortical cell activation at a distance. NodRm factor structural requirements are thus clearly more stringent for bacterial entry than for the elicitation of developmental plant responses.


Cell | 1991

Molecular basis of symbiotic host specificity in rhizobium meliloti: nodH and nodPQ genes encode the sulfation of lipo-oligosaccharide signals

Philippe Roche; Frédéric Debellé; Fabienne Maillet; Patrice Lerouge; Catherine Faucher; Georges Truchet; Jean Dénarié; Jean-Claude Promé

The symbiosis between Rhizobium and legumes is highly specific. For example, R. meliloti elicits the formation of root nodules on alfalfa and not on vetch. We recently reported that R. meliloti nodulation (nod) genes determine the production of acylated and sulfated glucosamine oligosaccharide signals. We now show that the biochemical function of the major host-range genes, nodH and nodPQ, is to specify the 6-O-sulfation of the reducing terminal glucosamine. Purified Nod factors (sulfated or not) from nodH+ or nodH- strains exhibited the same plant specificity in a variety of bioassays (root hair deformations, nodulation, changes in root morphology) as the bacterial cells from which they were purified. These results provide strong evidence that the molecular mechanism by which the nodH and nodPQ genes mediate host specificity is by determining the sulfation of the extracellular Nod signals.


Current Biology | 2012

A GRAS-type transcription factor with a specific function in mycorrhizal signaling

Enrico Gobbato; John F. Marsh; Tatiana Vernié; Ertao Wang; Fabienne Maillet; Jiyoung Kim; J. Benjamin Miller; Jongho Sun; S. Asma Bano; Pascal Ratet; Kirankumar S. Mysore; Jean Dénarié; Michael Schultze; Giles E.D. Oldroyd

Legumes establish mutualistic associations with mycorrhizal fungi and with nitrogen-fixing rhizobial bacteria. These interactions occur following plant recognition of Nod factor from rhizobial bacteria and Myc factor from mycorrhizal fungi. A common symbiosis signaling pathway is involved in the recognition of both Nod factor and Myc factor and is required for the establishment of these two symbioses. The outcomes of these associations differ, and therefore, despite the commonality in signaling, there must be mechanisms that allow specificity. In Nod factor signaling, a complex of GRAS-domain transcription factors controls gene expression downstream of the symbiosis signaling pathway. Here, we show that a GRAS-domain transcription factor, RAM1, functions in mycorrhizal-specific signaling. Plants mutated in RAM1 are unable to be colonized by mycorrhizal fungi, with a defect in hyphopodia formation on the surface of the root. RAM1 is specifically required for Myc factor signaling and appears to have no role in Nod factor signaling. RAM1 regulates the expression of RAM2, a glycerol-3-phosphate acyl transferase that promotes cutin biosynthesis to enhance hyphopodia formation. We conclude that mycorrhizal signaling downstream of the symbiosis-signaling pathway has parallels with nodulation-specific signaling and functions to promote mycorrhizal colonization by regulating cutin biosynthesis.


Plant Physiology | 2012

Transcriptional Responses toward Diffusible Signals from Symbiotic Microbes Reveal MtNFP- and MtDMI3-Dependent Reprogramming of Host Gene Expression by Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Fungal Lipochitooligosaccharides

Lisa F. Czaja; Claudia Hogekamp; Patrick Lamm; Fabienne Maillet; Eduardo Andres Martinez; Eric Samain; Jean Dénarié; Helge Küster; Natalija Hohnjec

The formation of root nodules and arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) roots is controlled by a common signaling pathway including the calcium/calmodulin-dependent kinase Doesn’t Make Infection3 (DMI3). While nodule initiation by lipochitooligosaccharide (LCO) Nod factors is well characterized, diffusible AM fungal signals were only recently identified as sulfated and nonsulfated LCOs. Irrespective of different outcomes, the perception of symbiotic LCOs in Medicago truncatula is mediated by the LysM receptor kinase M. truncatula Nod factor perception (MtNFP). To shed light on transcriptional responses toward symbiotic LCOs and their dependence on MtNFP and Ca2+ signaling, we performed genome-wide expression studies of wild-type, Nod-factor-perception mutant1, and dmi3 mutant roots challenged with Myc- and Nod-LCOs. We show that Myc-LCOs lead to transient, quick responses in the wild type, whereas Nod-LCOs require prolonged incubation for maximal expression activation. While Nod-LCOs are most efficient for an induction of persistent transcriptional changes, sulfated Myc-LCOs are less active, and nonsulfated Myc-LCOs display the lowest capacity to activate and sustain expression. Although all symbiotic LCOs up-regulated a common set of genes, discrete subsets were induced by individual LCOs, suggesting common and specific functions for these in presymbiotic signaling. Surprisingly, even sulfated fungal Myc-LCOs and Sinorhizobium meliloti Nod-LCOs, having very similar structures, each elicited discrete subsets of genes, while a mixture of both Myc-LCOs activated responses deviating from those induced by single treatments. Focusing on the precontact phase, we identified signaling-related and transcription factor genes specifically up-regulated by Myc-LCOs. Comparative gene expression studies in symbiotic mutants demonstrated that transcriptional reprogramming by AM fungal LCOs strictly depends on MtNFP and largely requires MtDMI3.


The Plant Cell | 2015

Activation of Symbiosis Signaling by Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Fungi in Legumes and Rice

Jongho Sun; J. Benjamin Miller; Emma Granqvist; Audrey Wiley-Kalil; Enrico Gobbato; Fabienne Maillet; Sylvain Cottaz; Eric Samain; Muthusubramanian Venkateshwaran; Sébastien Fort; Richard J. Morris; Jean-Michel Ané; Jean Dénarié; Giles E.D. Oldroyd

Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi produce a variety of signaling molecules that are shown to promote symbiosis signaling in a range of plant species. Establishment of arbuscular mycorrhizal interactions involves plant recognition of diffusible signals from the fungus, including lipochitooligosaccharides (LCOs) and chitooligosaccharides (COs). Nitrogen-fixing rhizobial bacteria that associate with leguminous plants also signal to their hosts via LCOs, the so-called Nod factors. Here, we have assessed the induction of symbiotic signaling by the arbuscular mycorrhizal (Myc) fungal-produced LCOs and COs in legumes and rice (Oryza sativa). We show that Myc-LCOs and tetra-acetyl chitotetraose (CO4) activate the common symbiosis signaling pathway, with resultant calcium oscillations in root epidermal cells of Medicago truncatula and Lotus japonicus. The nature of the calcium oscillations is similar for LCOs produced by rhizobial bacteria and by mycorrhizal fungi; however, Myc-LCOs activate distinct gene expression. Calcium oscillations were activated in rice atrichoblasts by CO4, but not the Myc-LCOs, whereas a mix of CO4 and Myc-LCOs activated calcium oscillations in rice trichoblasts. In contrast, stimulation of lateral root emergence occurred following treatment with Myc-LCOs, but not CO4, in M. truncatula, whereas both Myc-LCOs and CO4 were active in rice. Our work indicates that legumes and non-legumes differ in their perception of Myc-LCO and CO signals, suggesting that different plant species respond to different components in the mix of signals produced by arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi.


Molecular Microbiology | 1999

Structure of the Mesorhizobium huakuii and Rhizobium galegae Nod factors: a cluster of phylogenetically related legumes are nodulated by rhizobia producing Nod factors with alpha,beta-unsaturated N-acyl substitutions.

G. P. Yang; Frédéric Debellé; Arlette Savagnac; Myriam Ferro; Odile Schiltz; Fabienne Maillet; Danielle Promé; Michel Treilhou; Corinne Vialas; Kristina Lindstrom; Jean Dénarié; Jean-Claude Promé

Rhizobia are symbiotic bacteria that synthesize lipochitooligosaccharide Nod factors (NFs), which act as signal molecules in the nodulation of specific legume hosts. Based on the structure of their N‐acyl chain, NFs can be classified into two categories: (i) those that are acylated with fatty acids from the general lipid metabolism; and (ii) those (= αU‐NFs) that are acylated by specific α,β‐unsaturated fatty acids (containing carbonyl‐conjugated unsaturation(s)). Previous work has described how rhizobia that nodulate legumes of the Trifolieae and Vicieae tribes produce αU‐NFs. Here, we have studied the structure of NFs from two rhizobial species that nodulate important genera of the Galegeae tribe, related to Trifolieae and Vicieae. Three strains of Mesorhizobium huakuii, symbionts of Astragalus sinicus, produced as major NFs, pentameric lipochitooligosaccharides O‐sulphated and partially N‐glycolylated at the reducing end and N‐acylated, at the non‐reducing end, by a C18:4 fatty acid. Two strains of Rhizobium galegae, symbionts of Galega sp., produced as major NFs, tetrameric O‐carbamoylated NFs that could be O‐acetylated on the glucosamine residue next to the non‐reducing terminal glucosamine and were N‐acylated by C18 and C20 α,β‐unsaturated fatty acids. These results suggest that legumes nodulated by rhizobia synthesizing αU‐NFs constitute a phylogenetic cluster in the Galegoid phylum.


Molecular Microbiology | 1990

Role of the nodD and syrM genes in the activation of the regulatory gene nodD3, and of the common and host‐specific nod genes of Rhizobium meliloti

Fabienne Maillet; Frédéric Debellé; Jean Dénarié

To analyse the regulation of the nodulation (nod) genes of Rhizobium meliloti RCR2011 we have isolated lacZ gene fusions to a number of common, host‐range and regulatory nod genes, using the mini‐MU‐lac bacteriophage transposon Mud II1734. Common (nodA, nodC, nod region IIa) and host‐range (nodE, nodG, nodH) genes were found to be regulated similarly. They were activated (i) by the regulatory nodD1 gene in the presence of flavones such as chrysoeriol, luteolin and 7,3′,4′‐trihydroxyflavone, (ii) by nodD2 in the presence of alfalfa root exudate but not with the NodD1‐activating flavones, and (iii) by the regulatory genes syrM‐nodD3 even in the absence of plant inducers. Thus common and host‐range nod genes belong to the same regulon. In contrast to the nodD1 gene, the regulatory nodD3 gene was not expressed constitutively and exhibited a complex regulation. It required syrM for expression, was activated by nodD1 in the presence of luteolin and was positively autoregulated.


Molecular Microbiology | 1995

In Rhizobium meliloti, the operon associated with the nod box n5 comprises nodL, noeA and noeB, three host-range genes specifically required for the nodulation of particular Medicago species

Maryvonne Ardourel; Gilles Lortet; Fabienne Maillet; Philippe Roche; Georges Truchet; Jean-Claude Promé; Charles Rosenberg

In Rhizobium meliloti, the genes required for nodulation of legume hosts are under the control of DNA regulatory sequences called nod boxes. In this paper, we have characterized three host‐specific nodulation genes, which form a flavonoid‐inducible operon down‐stream of the nod box n5. The first gene of this operon is identical to the nodL gene identified by Baev and Kondorosi (1992) in R. meliloti strain AK631. The product of the second gene, NoeA, presents some homology with a methyl transferase. nodL mutants synthesize Nod factors lacking the O‐acetate substituent. In contrast, in strains carrying a mutation in either noeA or noeB, no modification in Nod‐factor structure or production could be detected. On particular hosts, such as Medicago littoralis, mutants of the n5 operon showed a very weak nodule‐forming ability, associated with a drastic decrease in the number of infection threads, while nodulation of Medicago truncatula or Melilotus alba was not affected. Thus, nodL, noeA and noeB are host‐specific nodulation genes. By using a gain‐of‐function approach, we showed that the presence of nodL, and hence of O‐acetylated Nod factors, is a major prerequisite for confering the ability to nodulate alfalfa upon the heterologous bacterium Rhizobium tropici.


Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2011

Photosynthetic Bradyrhizobium Sp. Strain ORS285 Synthesizes 2-O-Methylfucosylated Lipochitooligosaccharides for nod Gene-Dependent Interaction with Aeschynomene Plants

Adeline Renier; Fabienne Maillet; Joël Fardoux; Véréna Poinsot; Eric Giraud; Nico Nouwen

Bradyrhizobium sp. strain ORS285 is a photosynthetic bacterium that forms nitrogen-fixing nodules on the roots and stems of tropical aquatic legumes of the Aeschynomene genus. The symbiotic interaction of Bradyrhizobium sp. strain ORS285 with certain Aeschynomene spp. depends on the presence of nodulation (nod) genes whereas the interaction with other species is nod gene independent. To study the nod gene-dependent molecular dialogue between Bradyrhizobium sp. strain ORS285 and Aeschynomene spp., we used a nodB-lacZ reporter strain to monitor the nod gene expression with various flavonoids. The flavanones liquiritigenin and naringenin were found to be the strongest inducers of nod gene expression. Chemical analysis of the culture supernatant of cells grown in the presence of naringenin showed that the major Nod factor produced by Bradyrhizobium sp. strain ORS285 is a modified chitin pentasaccharide molecule with a terminal N-C(18:1)-glucosamine and with a 2-O-methyl fucose linked to C-6 of the reducing glucosamine. In this respect, the Bradyrhizobium sp. strain ORS285 Nod factor is the same as the major Nod factor produced by the nonphotosynthetic Bradyrhizobium japonicum USDA110 that nodulates the roots of soybean. This suggests a classic nod gene-dependent molecular dialogue between Bradyrhizobium sp. strain ORS285 and certain Aeschynomene spp. This is supported by the fact that B. japonicum USDA110 is able to form N(2)-fixing nodules on both the roots and stems of Aeschynomene afraspera.

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Jean Dénarié

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Georges Truchet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Frédéric Debellé

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Philippe Roche

Aix-Marseille University

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Patrice Lerouge

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Catherine Faucher

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Charles Rosenberg

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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