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Dive into the research topics where Mondher El Jaziri is active.

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Featured researches published by Mondher El Jaziri.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2010

Identification of Catechin as One of the Flavonoids from Combretum albiflorum Bark Extract That Reduces the Production of Quorum-Sensing-Controlled Virulence Factors in Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO1

Olivier M. Vandeputte; Martin Kiendrebeogo; Sanda Rajaonson; Billo Diallo; Adeline Mol; Mondher El Jaziri; Marie Baucher

ABSTRACT Quorum-sensing (QS) regulates the production of key virulence factors in Pseudomonas aeruginosa and other important pathogenic bacteria. In this report, extracts of leaves and bark of Combretum albiflorum (Tul.) Jongkind (Combretaceae) were found to quench the production of QS-dependent factors in P. aeruginosa PAO1. Chromatographic fractionation of the crude active extract generated several active fractions containing flavonoids, as shown by their typical spectral features. Purification and structural characterization of one of the active compounds led to the identification of the flavan-3-ol catechin [(2R,3S)-2-(3,4-dihydroxyphenyl)-3,4-dihydro-1(2H)-benzopyran-3,5,7-triol]. The identity of catechin as one of the active molecules was confirmed by comparing the high-pressure liquid chromatography profiles and the mass spectrometry spectra obtained for a catechin standard and for the active C. albiflorum fraction. Moreover, standard catechin had a significant negative effect on pyocyanin and elastase productions and biofilm formation, as well as on the expression of the QS-regulated genes lasB and rhlA and of the key QS regulatory genes lasI, lasR, rhlI, and rhlR. The use of RhlR- and LasR-based biosensors indicated that catechin might interfere with the perception of the QS signal N-butanoyl-l-homoserine lactone by RhlR, thereby leading to a reduction of the production of QS factors. Hence, catechin, along with other flavonoids produced by higher plants, might constitute a first line of defense against pathogenic attacks by affecting QS mechanisms and thereby virulence factor production.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2005

Biosynthesis of auxin by the gram-positive phytopathogen Rhodococcus fascians is controlled by compounds specific to infected plant tissues

Olivier M. Vandeputte; Sevgi Öden; Adeline Mol; Danny Vereecke; Koen Goethals; Mondher El Jaziri; Els Prinsen

ABSTRACT The role and metabolism of indole-3-acetic acid in gram-negative bacteria is well documented, but little is known about indole-3-acetic acid biosynthesis and regulation in gram-positive bacteria. The phytopathogen Rhodococcus fascians, a gram-positive organism, incites diverse developmental alterations, such as leafy galls, on a wide range of plants. Phenotypic analysis of a leafy gall suggests that auxin may play an important role in the development of the symptoms. We show here for the first time that R. fascians produces and secretes the auxin indole-3-acetic acid. Interestingly, whereas noninfected-tobacco extracts have no effect, indole-3-acetic acid synthesis is highly induced in the presence of infected-tobacco extracts when tryptophan is not limiting. Indole-3-acetic acid production by a plasmid-free strain shows that the biosynthetic genes are located on the bacterial chromosome, although plasmid-encoded genes contribute to the kinetics and regulation of indole-3-acetic acid biosynthesis. The indole-3-acetic acid intermediates present in bacterial cells and secreted into the growth media show that the main biosynthetic route used by R. fascians is the indole-3-pyruvic acid pathway with a possible rate-limiting role for indole-3-ethanol. The relationship between indole-3-acetic acid production and the symptoms induced by R. fascians is discussed.


BioMed Research International | 2015

The Formation of Biofilms by Pseudomonas aeruginosa: A Review of the Natural and Synthetic Compounds Interfering with Control Mechanisms

Tsiry Rasamiravaka; Quentin Labtani; Pierre Duez; Mondher El Jaziri

P. aeruginosa is an opportunistic pathogenic bacterium responsible for both acute and chronic infections. Beyond its natural resistance to many drugs, its ability to form biofilm, a complex biological system, renders ineffective the clearance by immune defense systems and antibiotherapy. The objective of this report is to provide an overview (i) on P. aeruginosa biofilm lifestyle cycle, (ii) on the main key actors relevant in the regulation of biofilm formation by P. aeruginosa including QS systems, GacS/GacA and RetS/LadS two-component systems and C-di-GMP-dependent polysaccharides biosynthesis, and (iii) finally on reported natural and synthetic products that interfere with control mechanisms of biofilm formation by P. aeruginosa without affecting directly bacterial viability. Concluding remarks focus on perspectives to consider biofilm lifestyle as a target for eradication of resistant infections caused by P. aeruginosa.


Microbiology | 2011

The flavanone naringenin reduces the production of quorum sensing-controlled virulence factors in Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO1

Olivier M. Vandeputte; Martin Kiendrebeogo; Tsiry Rasamiravaka; Caroline Stevigny; Pierre Duez; Sanda Rajaonson; Billo Diallo; Adeline Mol; Marie Baucher; Mondher El Jaziri

Preliminary screening of the Malagasy plant Combretum albiflorum for compounds attenuating the production of quorum sensing (QS)-controlled virulence factors in bacteria led to the identification of active fractions containing flavonoids. In the present study, several flavonoids belonging to the flavone, flavanone, flavonol and chalcone structural groups were screened for their capacity to reduce the production of QS-controlled factors in the opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa (strain PAO1). Flavanones (i.e. naringenin, eriodictyol and taxifolin) significantly reduced the production of pyocyanin and elastase in P. aeruginosa without affecting bacterial growth. Consistently, naringenin and taxifolin reduced the expression of several QS-controlled genes (i.e. lasI, lasR, rhlI, rhlR, lasA, lasB, phzA1 and rhlA) in P. aeruginosa PAO1. Naringenin also dramatically reduced the production of the acylhomoserine lactones N-(3-oxododecanoyl)-L-homoserine lactone (3-oxo-C12-HSL) and N-butanoyl-L-homoserine lactone (C4-HSL), which is driven by the lasI and rhlI gene products, respectively. In addition, using mutant strains deficient for autoinduction (ΔlasI and ΔrhlI) and LasR- and RhlR-based biosensors, it was shown that QS inhibition by naringenin not only is the consequence of a reduced production of autoinduction compounds but also results from a defect in the proper functioning of the RlhR-C4-HSL complex. Widely distributed in the plant kingdom, flavonoids are known for their numerous and determinant roles in plant physiology, plant development and in the success of plant-rhizobia interactions, but, as shown here, some of them also have a role as inhibitors of the virulence of pathogenic bacteria by interfering with QS mechanisms.


Planta | 2000

The Rhodococcus fascians-plant interaction: morphological traits and biotechnological applications.

Danny Vereecke; Sylvia Burssens; Carmen Simón-Mateo; Dirk Inzé; Marc Van Montagu; Koen Goethals; Mondher El Jaziri

Abstract.Rhodococcus fascians is a Gram-positive bacterium that infects dicotyledonous and monocotyledonous plants, leading to an alteration in the normal growth process of the host. The disease results from the modulation of the plant hormone balances, and cytokinins are thought to play an important role in the induction of symptoms. Generally, on the aerial parts of the plants, existing meristems were found to be most sensitive to the action of R. fascians, but, depending on the infection procedure, differentiated tissues as well gave rise to shoots. Similarly, in roots not only actively dividing cells, but also cells with a high competence to divide were strongly affected by R. fascians. The observed symptoms, together with the determined hormone levels in infected plant tissue, suggest that auxins and molecules of bacterial origin are also involved in leafy gall formation. The complexity of symptom development is furthermore illustrated by the necessary and continuous presence of the bacteria for symptom persistence. Indeed, elimination of the bacteria from a leafy gall results in the further development of the multiple embryonic buds of which it consists. This interesting characteristic offers novel biotechnological applications: a leafy gall can be used for germplasm storage and for plant propagation. The presented procedure proves to be routinely applicable to a very wide range of plants, encompassing several recalcitrant species.


Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2001

The plant pathogen Rhodococcus fascians colonizes the exterior and interior of the aerial parts of plants.

Karen Cornelis; Tita Ritsema; Jaap Nijsse; Marcelle Holsters; Koen Goethals; Mondher El Jaziri

Rhodococcus fascians is a plant-pathogenic bacterium that causes malformations on aerial plant parts, whereby leafy galls occur at axillary meristems. The colonization behavior on Nicotiana tabacum and Arabidopsis thaliana plants was examined. Independent of the infection methods, R. fascians extensively colonized the plant surface where the bacteria were surrounded by a slime layer. R. fascians caused the collapse of epidermal cells and penetrated intercellularly into the plant tissues. The onset of symptom development preceded the extensive colonization of the interior. The meristematic regions induced by pathogenic strain D188 were surrounded by bacteria. The nonpathogenic strain, D188-5, colonized the exterior of the plant equally well, but the linear plasmid (pFiD188) seemed to be involved in the penetration efficiency and colonization of tobacco tissues.


Phytochemistry | 1988

Tropine alkaloids production by hairy root cultures of Datura stramonium and Hyoscyamus niger

Mondher El Jaziri; Marc Legros; Jacques Homes; Maurice Vanhaelen

Abstract Hairy root were induced by inoculation of Agrobacterium rhizogenes in sterile seedlings of Datura stramonium and Hyoscyamus niger . The transformed roots cultures were established and subcultured on a Murashige and Skoog [1] hormone free medium. Several strains of hairy root were obtained from different genotypes of D. stramonium . Determination of hyoscyamine and scopolamine was performed by TLC-densitometry. A high variability of alkaloids production was observed between the different strains. Sucrose concentration as well as mineral composition of the culture medium influence the alkaloidal content of the transformed roots; scopolamine concentration expressed on a dry weight basis reached 0.56% in optimum conditions.


Annual Review of Phytopathology | 2011

A Successful Bacterial Coup d' ´ Etat: How Rhodococcus fascians Redirects Plant Development

Elisabeth Stes; Olivier M. Vandeputte; Mondher El Jaziri; Marcelle Holsters; Danny Vereecke

Rhodococcus fascians is a gram-positive phytopathogen that induces differentiated galls, known as leafy galls, on a wide variety of plants, employing virulence genes located on a linear plasmid. The pathogenic strategy consists of the production of a mixture of six synergistically acting cytokinins that overwhelm the plants homeostatic mechanisms, ensuring the activation of a signaling cascade that targets the plant cell cycle and directs the newly formed cells to differentiate into shoot meristems. The shoots that are formed upon infection remain immature and never convert to source tissues resulting in the establishment of a nutrient sink that is a niche for the epiphytic and endophytic R. fascians subpopulations. Niche formation is accompanied by modifications of the transcriptome, metabolome, physiology, and morphology of both host and pathogen. Here, we review a decade of research and set the outlines of the molecular basis of the leafy gall syndrome.


Plant Science | 1999

Induction of geranylgeranyl diphosphate synthase activity and taxane accumulation in Taxus baccata cell cultures after elicitation by methyl jasmonate

Gregory Laskaris; Mina Bounkhay; Georgios Theodoridis; Robert van der Heijden; Robert Verpoorte; Mondher El Jaziri

Abstract The results presented in this paper describe for the first time the presence of an inducible enzyme in the biosynthetic pathway leading to the anticancer drug paclitaxel. Methyl jasmonate, when administered to Taxus baccata cell suspension cultures, was found to rapidly induce geranylgeranyl diphosphate (GGPP) synthase activity. Experiments showed that after elicitation at day 7 of the subculturing period, the enzyme activity is rapidly induced during the first 6 h and reaches its maximum of 60.7 μkat/kg of protein after 5 days. The enzyme’s induction was followed by a sharp increase in taxane accumulation in the cells, which started 24 h after elicitation and reached its maximum after 5 days. In addition taxine-B was found in the medium of unelicited cultures but not in the medium of elicited cells.


Plant Cell Tissue and Organ Culture | 1997

Lawsone accumulation in normal and transformed cultures of henna, Lawsonia inermis

A.T. Bakkali; Mondher El Jaziri; A. Foriers; Y. Vander Heyden; Maurice Vanhaelen; Jacques Homes

The improvement of axillary shoot formation of Lawsonia inermis L. cultured in vitro depended on the iron concentration in the culture medium. Regenerated shoots were rooted on a hormone-free half-strength Murashige and Skoog medium (1/2 MS) before transfer to greenhouse conditions. Determination of lawsone in the plant material was investigated using a new HPLC method. The results showed that lawsone accumulation in vivo is restricted to the aerial part of the plant. In addition, the possibility of inducing lawsone biosynthesis in root cultures was studied. Hairy root cultures were established by a co-culture method using leaf segments of L. inermis and Agrobacterium rhizogenes NCIB 8196. Of several basal media tested, the production of lawsone (0.13% dry weight) was only observed in hairy roots tissues incubated in the dark and cultured in 1/2 MS or MS media.

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Jacques Homes

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Marie Baucher

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Olivier M. Vandeputte

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Adeline Mol

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Bilo Diallo

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Maurice Vanhaelen

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Yanwen Guo

Université libre de Bruxelles

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