G.F.J.M. van den Ackerveken
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
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Featured researches published by G.F.J.M. van den Ackerveken.
Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1994
G.F.J.M. van den Ackerveken; R.M. Dunn; Anton J. Cozijnsen; J.P.M.J. Vossen; H.W.J. van den Broek; P.J.G.M. de Wit
The avirulence gene avr9 of the fungal tomato pathogen Cladosporium fulvum encodes a race-specific peptide elicitor that induces the hypersensitive response in tomato plants carrying the complementary resistance gene Cf9. The avr9 gene is not expressed under optimal growth conditions in vitro, but is highly expressed when the fungus grows inside the tomato leaf. In this paper we present evidence for the induction of avr9 gene expression in C. fulvum grown in vitro under conditions of nitrogen limitation. Only growth medium with very low amounts of nitrogen (nitrate, ammonium, glutamate or glutamine) induced the expression of avr9. Limitation of other macronutrients or the addition of plant factors did not induce the expression of avr9. The induced expression of avr9 is possibly mediated by a positive-acting nitrogen regulatory protein, homologous to the Neurospora crassa NIT2 protein, which induces the expression of many genes under conditions of nitrogen limitation. The avr9 promoter contains several putative NIT2 binding sites. The expression of avr9 during the infection process was explored cytologically using transformants of C. fulvum carrying an avr9 promoter-β-glucuronidase reporter gene fusion. The possibility that expression of avr9 in C. fulvum growing in planta is caused by nitrogen limitation in the apoplast of the tomato leaf is discussed.
Plant Physiology | 1993
G.F.J.M. van den Ackerveken; P.J.M.J. Vossen; P.J.G.M. de Wit
The avirulence gene avr9 of the fungal tomato pathogen Cladosporium fulvum encodes a race-specific peptide elicitor that induces a hypersensitive response in tomato plants carrying the complementary resistance gene Cf9. The avr9 gene is highly expressed when C. fulvum is growing in the plant and the elicitor accumulates in infected leaves as a 28-amino acid (aa) peptide. In C. fulvum grown in vitro, the peptide elicitor is not produced in detectable amounts. To produce significant amounts of the AVR9 elicitor in vitro, the coding and termination sequences of the avr9 gene were fused to the constitutive gpd-promoter (glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase) of Aspergillus nidulans. Transformants of C. fulvum were obtained that highly expressed the avr9 gene in vitro and produced active AVR9 peptide elicitors. These peptides were partially sequenced from the N terminus and appeared to consist of 32, 33, and 34 aas, respectively, and are the precursors of the mature 28-aa AVR9 peptide. We demonstrated that plant factors process the 34-aa peptide into the mature 28-aa peptide. We present a model for the processing of AVR9 involving cleavage of a signal peptide during excretion and further maturation by fungal and plant proteases into the stable 28-aa peptide elicitor.
Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 1997
R. Laug; M.H.A.J. Joosten; G.F.J.M. van den Ackerveken; H.W.J. van den Broek; P.J.G.M. de Wit
The two extracellular proteins ECP1 and ECP2 are abundantly secreted by the plant-pathogenic fungus Cladosporium fulvum during colonization of the intercellular space of tomato leaves. We examined the involvement of both proteins in pathogenicity and virulence of this fungus. ECP1-deficient, ECP2-deficient, and ECP1/ECP2- deficient isogenic C. fulvum strains were created by targeted gene replacement. Upon inoculation onto susceptible 6-week-old tomato plants, all three mutants showed reduced virulence. Deficiency in ECP2 resulted in a strain that poorly colonized the leaf tissue and secreted lower amounts of the in planta-produced ECP3, AVR4, and AVR9 proteins than the wild-type strain. The ECP2-deficient strain produced little emerging mycelium and few conidia. Deficiency in ECP1 did not significantly modify colonization of the leaf tissue, but reduced secretion of in planta-produced proteins. The ECP1-deficient strain emerged from stomata of the lower epidermis, but failed to sporulate as abundantly as ...
Euphytica | 1994
G. Honée; G.F.J.M. van den Ackerveken; H.W.J. van den Broek; T. J. Cozijnsen; M.H.A.J. Joosten; M. Kooman-Gersmann; J. Vervoort; R. Vogelsang; P.J.M.J. Vossen; J.P. Wubben; P.J.G.M. de Wit
The fungus Cladosprium fulvum is a biotrophic leaf pathogen of tomato. The fungus develops in the intercellular space without forming specialized feeding structures and does not affect the leaf tissue. The outcome of the C. fulvum-tomato interaction can be described by the gene-for-gene model. Failure of infection is expressed by a hypersensitive response. Two fungal proteins, ECP1 and ECP2, have been isolated and their corresponding genes have been cloned. In a compatible interaction including many physiological races ECP1 and ECP2 are highly produced and a role in pathogenicity is suggestive. The ecp1 gene shows some homology with tumor necrosis factor receptors (TNFRs) while the ecp2 gene shows no homology with sequences known in data bases. However, disruption of one of the two genes showed no reduced pathogenicity of the fungus. Two race-specific elicitors, AVR4 and AVR9, have been isolated and their corresponding genes have been cloned. The avirulence genes Avr4 and Avr9 are only present in C. fulvum avirulent on Cf-4 and Cf-9 cultivars, respectively. The expression of these two genes is, like the expression of the ecp genes, highly induced when the fungus grows in planta. Disruption of the Avr9 gene in wild type avirulent races leads to virulence on tomato genotypes carrying the complementary resistance gene Cf-9. A single base-pair change in the avirulence gene Avr4 leads to virulence on tomato genotypes carrying the Cf-4 resistance gene. Isolation, characterization and possible function of ECP1, ECP2, AVR4, and AVR9 will be discussed.
Current Genetics | 1994
R. Marmeisse; G.F.J.M. van den Ackerveken; T. Goosen; P.J.G.M. de Wit; H.W.J. van den Broek
During the colonization of tomato leaves, the fungal pathogen Cladosporium fulvum excretes low-molecular-weight proteins in the intercellular spaces of the host tissue. These proteins are encoded by the ecp genes which are highly expressed in C. fulvum while growing in planta but are not, or are only weakly, expressed in C. fulvum grown in vitro. To investigate the function of the putative pathogenicity gene ecp2, encoding the 17-kDa protein ECP2, we performed two successive disruptions of the gene. In the first of these, the ecp2 gene was interrupted by a hygromycin B resistance gene cassette. In the second gene disruption, the ecp2 gene was completely deleted from the genome, and replaced by a phleomycin resistance gene cassette. Both disruption mutants were still pathogenic on tomato seedlings, indicating that the C. fulvum ecp2 gene is not essential for pathogenicity in tomato.
Antonie Van Leeuwenhoek International Journal of General and Molecular Microbiology | 1994
P.J.G.M. de Wit; M.H.A.J. Joosten; G. Honée; J.P. Wubben; G.F.J.M. van den Ackerveken; H.W.J. van den Broek
Host genotype specificity in interactions between biotrophic fungal pathogens and plants in most cases complies with the gene-for-gene model. Success or failure of infection is determined by absence or presence of complementary genes, avirulence and resistance genes, in the pathogen and the host plant, respectively. Resistance, expressed by the induction of a hypersensitive response followed by other defence responses in the host, is envisaged to be based on recognition of the pathogen, mediated through direct interaction between products of avirulence genes of the pathogen (the so-called race-specific elicitors) and receptors in the host plant, the putative products of resistance genes. The interaction between the biothrophic fungusCladosporium fulvum and its only host tomato is a model system to study fungus-plant gene-for-gene relationships. Here we report on isolation, characterization and biological function of putative pathogenicity factors ECP1 and ECP2 and the race-specific elicitors AVR4 and AVR9 ofC. fulvum and cloning and regulation of their encoding genes. Disruption ofecp1 andecp2 genes has no clear effect on pathogenicity ofC. fulvum. Disruption of theavr9 gene, which codes for the race-specific 28 amino acid AVR9 elicitor, in wild type avirulent races, leads to virulence on tomato genotypes carrying the complementary resistance geneCf9. The avirulence geneavr4 encodes a 105 amino acid race-specific elicitor. A single basepair change in the avirulence geneavr4 leads to virulence on tomato genotypes carrying theCf4 resistance gene.
Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 1993
R. Marmeisse; G.F.J.M. van den Ackerveken; T. Goosen; P.J.G.M. de Wit; H.W.J. van den Broek
Archive | 1994
R. Laugé; G.F.J.M. van den Ackerveken; R. Marmeisse; T. Goosen; P.J.G.M. de Wit; H.W.J. van den Broek
Archive | 1995
H.W.J. van den Broek; T. Goosen; R. Laugé; S.S. Snoeijers; L.M.J. Wennekes; G.F.J.M. van den Ackerveken; P.J.G.M. de Wit
Archive | 1994
H.W.J. van den Broek; R. Marmeisse; G.F.J.M. van den Ackerveken; T. Goosen; P.J.G.M. de Wit