Issa Wonni
University of Montpellier
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Publication
Featured researches published by Issa Wonni.
Phytopathology | 2012
Shuai Zhao; Lucie Poulin; Luis M. Rodríguez-R; Natalia Forero Serna; Shu-Yan Liu; Issa Wonni; Boris Szurek; Valérie Verdier; Jan E. Leach; Yong-Qiang He; Jia-Xun Feng; Ralf Koebnik
Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzicola is an important bacterial pathogen responsible for outbreaks of bacterial leaf streak (BLS) on rice, mostly occurring in Asia and parts of Africa. To better monitor epidemics and assess population structures, efficient tools that allow the precise identification and diagnosis of pathogenic populations are needed. In this study, we explored variable numbers of tandem repeats (VNTR) as a fast, reliable, and cost-effective molecular typing tool. Screening of three X. oryzae pv. oryzicola genome sequences (Philippine strain BLS256, Chinese strain GX01, and Malian strain MAI10) predicted 28 candidate VNTR loci. Primer pairs for polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification of all 28 loci were designed and applied to a panel of 20 X. oryzae pv. oryzicola strains originating from Asia and Africa. Sequencing of PCR amplicons revealed 25 robust and polymorphic VNTR loci that are shared among Asian and African X. oryzae pv. oryzicola strains. A dendrogram constructed from 25 VNTR loci indicated that most Asian strains are clearly discriminated from African strains. However, in agreement with previous reports, one strain from Mali is related to Asian strains, pointing to a possible introduction of Asian strains to the African continent. The new VNTR-based tool described here is useful for studies of population structures and epidemiological monitoring of X. oryzae pv. oryzicola.
Environmental Microbiology | 2015
Alice Leduc; Yaya Nadia Traoré; Karine Boyer; Maxime Magne; Pierre Grygiel; C.C. Juhasz; Claudine Boyer; Fabien Guérin; Issa Wonni; Léonard Ouédraogo; Christian Vernière; Virginie Ravigné; Olivier Pruvost
Molecular epidemiology studies further our understanding of migrations of phytopathogenic bacteria, the major determining factor in their emergence. Asiatic citrus canker, caused by Xanthomonas citri pv. citri, was recently reported in Mali and Burkina Faso, a region remote from other contaminated areas. To identify the origin and pathways of these emergences, we used two sets of markers, minisatellites and microsatellites, for investigating different evolutionary scales. Minisatellite typing suggested the introduction of two groups of strains in Mali (DAPC 1 and DAPC 2), consistent with microsatellite typing. DAPC 2 was restricted to Bamako district, whereas DAPC 1 strains were found much more invasive. The latter strains formed a major clonal complex based on microsatellite data with the primary and secondary founders detected in commercial citrus nurseries and orchards. This suggests that human activities played a major role in the spread of DAPC 1 strains via the movement of contaminated propagative material, further supported by the frequent lack of differentiation between populations from geographically distant nurseries and orchards. Approximate Bayesian Computation analyses supported the hypothesis that strains from Burkina Faso resulted from a bridgehead invasion from Mali. Multi-locus variable number of tandem repeat analysis and Approximate Bayesian Computation are useful for understanding invasion routes and pathways of monomorphic bacterial pathogens.
Plant Disease | 2015
Issa Wonni; Léonard Ouédraogo; S. Dao; Cheick Tekete; Ousmane Koita; G. Taghouti; Perrine Portier; Boris Szurek; Valérie Verdier
First Report of Cassava Bacterial Blight Caused by Xanthomonas axon... http://apsjournals.apsnet.org/doi/10.1094/PDIS-03-14-0302-PDN 1 sur 2 23/03/2016 08:44 cassava and confirmation as X. axonopodis pv. manihotis by PCR assay as described above. Three strains (CFBP7945, CFBP7946, CFBP7947) were deposited in the French Collection for Plant-Associated Bacteria (CIRM-CFBP). Information on Xam strains as well as gyrB and rpoD sequences are available through CIRM-CFBP http://www6.inra.fr/cirm_eng /CFBP-Plant-Associated-Bacteria. To our knowledge, this is the first report of CBB in Burkina Faso. Since cassava is becoming a crop of importance for human consumption in Burkina-Faso, CBB may limit productivity. Further surveys will be necessary to evaluate the geographic distribution and prevalence of CBB in Burkina-Faso and neighboring countries.
Frontiers in Plant Science | 2017
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.
Plant Disease | 2016
C. Zombré; Philippe Sankara; Souleymane Ouédraogo; Issa Wonni; Karine Boyer; Claudine Boyer; Marie Annabelle Terville; Stéphanie Javegny; Agathe Allibert; Christian Vernière; Olivier Pruvost
Xanthomonas citri pv. mangiferaeindicae is the causal agent of bacterial canker of mango (Mangifera indica, Anacardiaceae), a disease of international importance. Since the original description of the bacterium in the 1940s, the status of cashew (Anacardium occidentale, Anacardiaceae) as a host species has been unclear. Here, we report the first outbreak of a cashew bacterial disease in Burkina Faso (Western Africa) where X. citri pv. mangiferaeindicae recently emerged on mango. A comprehensive molecular characterization, based on multilocus sequence analysis, supplemented with pathogenicity assays of isolates obtained during the outbreak, indicated that the causal agent on cashew in Burkina Faso is X. citri pv. mangiferaeindicae and not X. citri pv. anacardii, which was previously reported as the causal agent of a cashew bacterial leaf spot in Brazil. Pathogenicity data supported by population biology in Burkina Faso suggest a lack of host specialization. Therefore, the inoculum from each crop is potentially harmful to both host species. Symptoms induced on cashew leaves and fruit by X. citri pv. mangiferaeindicae and nonpigmented strains of X. citri pv. anacardii are similar, although the causative bacteria are genetically different. Thus, xanthomonads pathogenic on cashew may represent a new example of pathological convergence in this bacterial genus.
Journal of Plant Pathology & Microbiology | 2015
Issa Wonni; Gustave Djedatin; Léonard Ouédraogo; Valérie Verdier
Bacterial leaf streak caused by Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzicola (Xoc) is a rice disease emerging in West Africa. Its emergence is correlated with the recent expansion of rice cultivation and the introduction of new rice varieties. Our goal is to identify resistance sources to control BLS in rice. We evaluated six Oryza sativa and two Oryza glaberrima accessions for resistance to bacterial leaf streak under greenhouse conditions. Three week-old plants were inoculated with different Xoc strains originated from Mali and the Philippines. Two Oryza sativa accessions (FKR14 and ITA306) show a high level of resistance to African Xoc while are susceptible to the Philippines one. The others accessions tested are susceptible to all Xoc strains tested. We identify new resistance sources to X. oryzae pv. oryzicola that could be used by breeders, thus improving yield of rice crops in West Africa.
PLOS Pathogens | 2018
Tuan Tu Tran; Alvaro L. Pérez-Quintero; Issa Wonni; Sara C. D. Carpenter; Yanhua Yu; Li Wang; Jan E. Leach; Valérie Verdier; Sébastien Cunnac; Adam J. Bogdanove; Ralf Koebnik; Mathilde Hutin; Boris Szurek
Most Xanthomonas species translocate Transcription Activator-Like (TAL) effectors into plant cells where they function like plant transcription factors via a programmable DNA-binding domain. Characterized strains of rice pathogenic X. oryzae pv. oryzae harbor 9–16 different tal effector genes, but the function of only a few of them has been decoded. Using sequencing of entire genomes, we first performed comparative analyses of the complete repertoires of TAL effectors, herein referred to as TALomes, in three Xoo strains forming an African genetic lineage different from Asian Xoo. A phylogenetic analysis of the three TALomes combined with in silico predictions of TAL effector targets showed that African Xoo TALomes are highly conserved, genetically distant from Asian ones, and closely related to TAL effectors from the bacterial leaf streak pathogen Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzicola (Xoc). Nine clusters of TAL effectors could be identified among the three TALomes, including three showing higher levels of variation in their repeat variable diresidues (RVDs). Detailed analyses of these groups revealed recombination events as a possible source of variation among TAL effector genes. Next, to address contribution to virulence, nine TAL effector genes from the Malian Xoo strain MAI1 and four allelic variants from the Burkinabe Xoo strain BAI3, thus representing most of the TAL effector diversity in African Xoo strains, were expressed in the TAL effector-deficient X. oryzae strain X11-5A for gain-of-function assays. Inoculation of the susceptible rice variety Azucena lead to the discovery of three TAL effectors promoting virulence, including two TAL effectors previously reported to target the susceptibility (S) gene OsSWEET14 and a novel major virulence contributor, TalB. RNA profiling experiments in rice and in silico prediction of EBEs were carried out to identify candidate targets of TalB, revealing OsTFX1, a bZIP transcription factor previously identified as a bacterial blight S gene, and OsERF#123, which encodes a subgroup IXc AP2/ERF transcription factor. Use of designer TAL effectors demonstrated that induction of either gene resulted in greater susceptibility to strain X11-5A. The induction of OsERF#123 by BAI3Δ1, a talB knockout derivative of BAI3, carrying these designer TAL effectors increased virulence of BAI3Δ1, validating OsERF#123 as a new, bacterial blight S gene.
Phytopathology | 2014
Issa Wonni; Bart Cottyn; L. Detemmerman; S. Dao; Léonard Ouédraogo; S. Sarra; Cheick Tekete; Stéphane Poussier; Rene Corral; Lindsay R. Triplett; Ousmane Koita; Ralf Koebnik; Jan E. Leach; Boris Szurek; Martine Maes; Valérie Verdier
Deepen Knowledge in Plant Pathology for Innovative Agro-Ecology. Book of Abstracts of the 12th European Fondation for Plant Pathology (EFPP) and the 10th French Society for Plant Pathology (SFP) | 2017
M. Kanté; Karim Dagno; Carolina Flores; Laurence Blondin; Issa Wonni; Ralf Koebnik; Valérie Verdier; Ousmane Koita; Christian Vernière; Boris Szurek
Advances in Plants and Agriculture Research | 2017
Issa Wonni; Drissa Sérémé; Ibrahima Ouedraogo; Abalo Itolou Kassankagno; Issouf Dao; Léonard Ouédraogo; Souleymane Nacro
Collaboration
Dive into the Issa Wonni's collaboration.
Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement
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