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Dive into the research topics where Jean-Jacques Bono is active.

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Featured researches published by Jean-Jacques Bono.


Trends in Plant Science | 2001

Perception of lipo-chitooligosaccharidic Nod factors in legumes

Julie V. Cullimore; Raoul Ranjeva; Jean-Jacques Bono

Lipo-chitooligosaccharides produced by rhizobia are a class of signalling molecules that mediate recognition and nodule organogenesis in the legume-rhizobia symbiosis. Their synthesis is specified by the nodulation genes of rhizobia and hence they are commonly known as Nod factors. They are amphiphilic molecules and induce a variety of responses in the roots of the legume hosts. Studies using plant and rhizobial mutants and purified molecules suggest that Nod factors are recognized by more than one receptor. In this article, we review evidence about the affinity, specificity and location of these putative receptors and describe recent studies with regard to their identification.


New Phytologist | 2013

NFP, a LysM protein controlling Nod factor perception, also intervenes in Medicago truncatula resistance to pathogens

Thomas Rey; Amaury Nars; Maxime Bonhomme; Arnaud Bottin; Stéphanie Huguet; Sandrine Balzergue; Marie-Françoise Jardinaud; Jean-Jacques Bono; Julie V. Cullimore; Bernard Dumas; Clare Gough; Christophe Jacquet

Plant LysM proteins control the perception of microbial-derived N-acetylglucosamine compounds for the establishment of symbiosis or activation of plant immunity. This raises questions about how plants, and notably legumes, can differentiate friends and foes using similar molecular actors and whether any receptors can intervene in both symbiosis and resistance. To study this question, nfp and lyk3 LysM-receptor like kinase mutants of Medicago truncatula that are affected in the early steps of nodulation, were analysed following inoculation with Aphanomyces euteiches, a root oomycete. The role of NFP in this interaction was further analysed by overexpression of NFP and by transcriptome analyses. nfp, but not lyk3, mutants were significantly more susceptible than wildtype plants to A. euteiches, whereas NFP overexpression increased resistance. Transcriptome analyses on A. euteiches inoculation showed that mutation in the NFP gene led to significant changes in the expression of c. 500 genes, notably involved in cell dynamic processes previously associated with resistance to pathogen penetration. nfp mutants also showed an increased susceptibility to the fungus Colletotrichum trifolii. These results demonstrate that NFP intervenes in M. truncatula immunity, suggesting an unsuspected role for NFP in the perception of pathogenic signals.


Plant Physiology | 2003

Characterization of Four Lectin-Like Receptor Kinases Expressed in Roots of Medicago truncatula. Structure, Location, Regulation of Expression, and Potential Role in the Symbiosis with Sinorhizobium meliloti

Maria-Téresa Navarro-Gochicoa; Sylvie Camut; Antonius C.J. Timmers; Andreas Niebel; Christine Hervé; Emmanuel Boutet; Jean-Jacques Bono; Anne Imberty; Julie V. Cullimore

To study the role of LecRK (lectin-like receptor kinase) genes in the legumerhizobia symbiosis, we have characterized the four Medicago truncatula Gaernt. LecRK genes that are most highly expressed in roots. Three of these genes, MtLecRK7;1, MtLecRK7;2, and MtLecRK7;3, encode proteins most closely related to the Class A LecRKs of Arabidopsis, whereas the protein encoded by the fourth gene, MtLecRK1;1, is most similar to a Class B Arabidopsis LecRK. All four genes show a strongly enhanced root expression, and detailed studies on MtLecRK1;1 and MtLecRK7;2 revealed that the levels of their mRNAs are increased by nitrogen starvation and transiently repressed after either rhizobial inoculation or addition of lipochitooligosaccharidic Nod factors. Studies of the MtLecRK1;1 and MtLecRK7;2 proteins, using green fluorescent protein fusions in transgenic M. truncatula roots, revealed that they are located in the plasma membrane and that their central transmembrane-spanning helix is required for correct sorting. Moreover, their lectin-like domains appear to be highly glycosylated. Of the four proteins, only MtLecRK1;1 shows a high conservation of key residues implicated in monosaccharide binding, and molecular modeling revealed that this protein may be capable of interacting with Nod factors. However, no increase in Nod factor binding was found in roots overexpressing a fusion in which the kinase domain of this protein had been replaced with green fluorescent protein. Roots expressing this fusion protein however showed an increase in nodule number, suggesting that expression of MtLecRK1;1 influences nodulation. The potential role of LecRKs in the legume-rhizobia symbiosis is discussed.


Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 1997

Identification of a High Affinity Binding Site for Lipo- oligosaccharidic NodRm Factors in the Microsomal Fraction of Medicago Cell Suspension Cultures

Andreas Niebel; Jean-Jacques Bono; Raoul Ranjeva; Julie V. Cullimore

Protease-sensitive binding sites for a 35S-labeled ligand corresponding to the major lipo-oligosaccharidic symbiotic signal of Rhizobium meliloti (NodRm factor), have been identified in the microsomal fraction of Medicago varia cell suspension culture extracts. Binding was reversible and saturable and tetra-N-acetyl chitotetraose was a poor competitor of NodRm binding. Scatchard analysis suggests the presence of a high affinity binding site, termed Nod factor binding site two (NFBS2), with a Kd of 1.9 nM, and perhaps a second site with an affinity (Kd of 70 nM) similar to that of a site (NFBS1) previously characterized in Medicago truncatula root extracts.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2013

Lipo-chitooligosaccharidic Symbiotic Signals Are Recognized by LysM Receptor-Like Kinase LYR3 in the Legume Medicago truncatula

Judith Fliegmann; Sophie Canova; Christophe Lachaud; Sandra Uhlenbroich; Virginie Gasciolli; Carole Pichereaux; Michel Rossignol; Charles Rosenberg; Marie Cumener; Delphine Pitorre; Benoit Lefebvre; Clare Gough; Eric Samain; Sébastien Fort; Hugues Driguez; Boris Vauzeilles; Jean-Marie Beau; Alessandra Nurisso; Anne Imberty; Julie V. Cullimore; Jean-Jacques Bono

While chitooligosaccharides (COs) derived from fungal chitin are potent elicitors of defense reactions, structurally related signals produced by certain bacteria and fungi, called lipo-chitooligosaccharides (LCOs), play important roles in the establishment of symbioses with plants. Understanding how plants distinguish between friend and foe through the perception of these signals is a major challenge. We report the synthesis of a range of COs and LCOs, including photoactivatable probes, to characterize a membrane protein from the legume Medicago truncatula. By coupling photoaffinity labeling experiments with proteomics and transcriptomics, we identified the likely LCO-binding protein as LYR3, a lysin motif receptor-like kinase (LysM-RLK). LYR3, expressed heterologously, exhibits high-affinity binding to LCOs but not COs. Homology modeling, based on the Arabidopsis CO-binding LysM-RLK AtCERK1, suggests that LYR3 could accommodate the LCO in a conserved binding site. The identification of LYR3 opens up ways for the molecular characterization of LCO/CO discrimination.


Development | 2012

Epidermal and cortical roles of NFP and DMI3 in coordinating early steps of nodulation in Medicago truncatula

Pauline Rival; Françoise de Billy; Jean-Jacques Bono; Clare Gough; Charles Rosenberg

Legumes have evolved the capacity to form a root nodule symbiosis with soil bacteria called rhizobia. The establishment of this symbiosis involves specific developmental events occurring both in the root epidermis (notably bacterial entry) and at a distance in the underlying root cortical cells (notably cell divisions leading to nodule organogenesis). The processes of bacterial entry and nodule organogenesis are tightly linked and both depend on rhizobial production of lipo-chitooligosaccharide molecules called Nod factors. However, how these events are coordinated remains poorly understood. Here, we have addressed the roles of two key symbiotic genes of Medicago truncatula, the lysin motif (LysM) domain-receptor like kinase gene NFP and the calcium- and calmodulin-dependent protein kinase gene DMI3, in the control of both nodule organogenesis and bacterial entry. By complementing mutant plants with corresponding genes expressed either in the epidermis or in the cortex, we have shown that epidermal DMI3, but not NFP, is sufficient for infection thread formation in root hairs. Epidermal NFP is sufficient to induce cortical cell divisions leading to nodule primordia formation, whereas DMI3 is required in both cell layers for these processes. Our results therefore suggest that a signal, produced in the epidermis under the control of NFP and DMI3, is responsible for activating DMI3 in the cortex to trigger nodule organogenesis. We integrate these data to propose a new model for epidermal/cortical crosstalk during early steps of nodulation.


Plant Physiology | 2005

The DMI1 and DMI2 Early Symbiotic Genes of Medicago truncatula Are Required for a High-Affinity Nodulation Factor-Binding Site Associated to a Particulate Fraction of Roots

Bridget V. Hogg; Julie V. Cullimore; Raoul Ranjeva; Jean-Jacques Bono

The establishment of the legume-rhizobia symbiosis between Medicago spp. and Sinorhizobium meliloti is dependent on the production of sulfated lipo-chitooligosaccharidic nodulation (Nod) factors by the bacterial partner. In this article, using a biochemical approach to characterize putative Nod factor receptors in the plant host, we describe a high-affinity binding site (Kd = 0.45 nm) for the major Nod factor produced by S. meliloti. This site is termed Nod factor-binding site 3 (NFBS3). NFBS3 is associated to a high-density fraction prepared from roots of Medicago truncatula and shows binding specificity for lipo-chitooligosaccharidic structures. As for the previously characterized binding sites (NFBS1 and NFBS2), NFBS3 does not recognize the sulfate group on the S. meliloti Nod factor. Studies of Nod factor binding in root extracts of early symbiotic mutants of M. truncatula reveals that the new site is present in Nod factor perception and does not make infections 3 (dmi3) mutants but is absent in dmi1 and dmi2 mutants. Roots and cell cultures of all these mutants still contain sites similar to NFBS1 and NFBS2, respectively. These results suggest that NFBS3 is different from NFBS2 and NFBS1 and is dependent on the common symbiotic genes DMI1 and DMI2 required for establishment of symbioses with both rhizobia and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi. The potential role of this site in the establishment of root endosymbioses is discussed.


Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry | 2004

New access to lipo-chitooligosaccharide nodulation factors

Martin Ohsten Rasmussen; Bridget V. Hogg; Jean-Jacques Bono; Eric Samain; Hugues Driguez

Sulfonated and non-sulfonated lipo-chitooligosaccharides involved in Sinorhizobium meliloti-legume symbiosis are efficiently obtained on a multi mg scale by a 2-step procedure combining biotechnological and chemical approaches.


Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2003

Identical Accumulation and Immobilization of Sulfated and Nonsulfated Nod Factors in Host and Nonhost Root Hair Cell Walls

Joachim Goedhart; Jean-Jacques Bono; Ton Bisseling; Theodorus W. J. Gadella

Nod factors are signaling molecules secreted by Rhizobium bacteria. These lipo-chitooligosaccharides (LCOs) are required for symbiosis with legumes and can elicit specific responses at subnanomolar concentrations on a compatible host. How plants perceive LCOs is unclear. In this study, using fluorescent Nod factor analogs, we investigated whether sulfated and nonsulfated Nod factors were bound and perceived differently by Medicago truncatula and Vicia sativa root hairs. The bioactivity of three novel sulfated fluorescent LCOs was tested in a root hair deformation assay on M. truncatula, showing bioactivity down to 0.1 to 1 nM. Fluorescence microscopy of plasmolyzed M. truncatula root hairs shows that sulfated fluorescent Nod factors accumulate in the cell wall of root hairs, whereas they are absent from the plasma membrane when applied at 10 nM. When the fluorescent Nod factor distribution in medium surrounding a root was studied, a sharp decrease in fluorescence close to the root hairs was observed, visualizing the remarkable capacity of root hairs to absorb Nod factors from the medium. Fluorescence correlation microscopy was used to study in detail the mobilities of sulfated and nonsulfated fluorescent Nod factors which are biologically active on M. truncatula and V. sativa, respectively. Remarkably, no difference between sulfated and nonsulfated Nod factors was observed: both hardly diffuse and strongly accumulate in root hair cell walls of both M. truncatula and V. sativa. The implications for the mode of Nod factor perception are discussed.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Aphanomyces euteiches cell wall fractions containing novel glucan-chitosaccharides induce defense genes and nuclear calcium oscillations in the plant host Medicago truncatula.

Amaury Nars; Claude Lafitte; Mireille Chabaud; Sophie Drouillard; Hugo Mélida; Saïda Danoun; Tinaïg Le Costaouëc; Thomas Rey; Julie Benedetti; Vincent Bulone; David G. Barker; Jean-Jacques Bono; Bernard Dumas; Christophe Jacquet; Laurent Heux; Judith Fliegmann; Arnaud Bottin

N-acetylglucosamine-based saccharides (chitosaccharides) are components of microbial cell walls and act as molecular signals during host-microbe interactions. In the legume plant Medicago truncatula, the perception of lipochitooligosaccharide signals produced by symbiotic rhizobia and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi involves the Nod Factor Perception (NFP) lysin motif receptor-like protein and leads to the activation of the so-called common symbiotic pathway. In rice and Arabidopsis, lysin motif receptors are involved in the perception of chitooligosaccharides released by pathogenic fungi, resulting in the activation of plant immunity. Here we report the structural characterization of atypical chitosaccharides from the oomycete pathogen Aphanomyces euteiches, and their biological activity on the host Medicago truncatula. Using a combination of biochemical and biophysical approaches, we show that these chitosaccharides are linked to β-1,6-glucans, and contain a β-(1,3;1,4)-glucan backbone whose β-1,3-linked glucose units are substituted on their C-6 carbon by either glucose or N-acetylglucosamine residues. This is the first description of this type of structural motif in eukaryotic cell walls. Glucan-chitosaccharide fractions of A. euteiches induced the expression of defense marker genes in Medicago truncatula seedlings independently from the presence of a functional Nod Factor Perception protein. Furthermore, one of the glucan-chitosaccharide fractions elicited calcium oscillations in the nucleus of root cells. In contrast to the asymmetric oscillatory calcium spiking induced by symbiotic lipochitooligosaccharides, this response depends neither on the Nod Factor Perception protein nor on the common symbiotic pathway. These findings open new perspectives in oomycete cell wall biology and elicitor recognition and signaling in legumes.

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Dive into the Jean-Jacques Bono's collaboration.

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Julie V. Cullimore

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Raoul Ranjeva

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Andreas Niebel

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Clare Gough

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Charles Rosenberg

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Hugues Driguez

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Raoul Ranjeva

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Julie V. Cullimore

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Anne Imberty

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Benoit Lefebvre

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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