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Featured researches published by Pierre Yot.


The EMBO Journal | 1999

Aphid transmission of cauliflower mosaic virus requires the viral PIII protein.

Véronique Leh; Emmanuel Jacquot; Angèle Geldreich; Thomas Hermann; Denis Leclerc; Martine Cerutti; Pierre Yot; Mario Keller; Stéphane Blanc

The open reading frame (ORF) III product (PIII) of cauliflower mosaic virus is necessary for the infection cycle but its role is poorly understood. We have used in vitro protein binding (‘far Western’) assays to demonstrate that PIII interacts with the cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) ORF II product (PII), a known aphid transmission factor. Aphid transmission of purified virions of the PII‐defective strain CM4‐184 was dependent upon added PII, but complementation was efficient only in the presence of PIII, demonstrating the requirement of PIII for transmission. Deletion mutagenesis mapped the interaction domains of PIII and PII to the 30 N‐terminal and 61 C‐terminal residues of PIII and PII, respectively. A model for interaction between PIII and PII is proposed on the basis of secondary structure predictions. Finally, a direct correlation between the ability of PIII and PII to interact and aphid transmissibility of the virus was demonstrated by using mutagenized PIII proteins. Taken together, these data argue strongly that PIII is a second ‘helper’ factor required for CaMV transmission by aphids.


Molecular Plant Pathology | 2002

Cauliflower mosaic virus: still in the news

Muriel Haas; Marina Bureau; Angèle Geldreich; Pierre Yot; Mario Keller

SUMMARY Taxonomic relationship: Cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) is the type member of the Caulimovirus genus in the Caulimoviridae family, which comprises five other genera. CaMV replicates its DNA genome by reverse transcription of a pregenomic RNA and thus belongs to the pararetrovirus supergroup, which includes the Hepadnaviridae family infecting vertebrates. Physical properties: Virions are non-enveloped isometric particles, 53 nm in diameter (Fig. 1). They are constituted by 420 capsid protein subunits organized following T= 7 icosahedral symmetry (Cheng, R.H., Olson, N.H. and Baker, T.S. (1992) Cauliflower mosaic virus: a 420 subunit (T= 7), multilayer structure. Virology, 16, 655-668). The genome consists of a double-stranded circular DNA of approximately 8000 bp that is embedded in the inner surface of the capsid. Viral proteins: The CaMV genome encodes six proteins, a cell-to-cell movement protein (P1), two aphid transmission factors (P2 and P3), the precursor of the capsid proteins (P4), a polyprotein precursor of proteinase, reverse transcriptase and ribonuclease H (P5) and an inclusion body protein/translation transactivator (P6). Hosts: The host range of CaMV is limited to plants of the Cruciferae family, i.e. Brassicae species and Arabidopsis thaliana, but some viral strains can also infect solanaceous plants. In nature, CaMV is transmitted by aphids in a non-circulative manner.


The Plant Cell | 2005

The Open Reading Frame VI Product of Cauliflower mosaic virus Is a Nucleocytoplasmic Protein: Its N Terminus Mediates Its Nuclear Export and Formation of Electron-Dense Viroplasms

Muriel Haas; Angèle Geldreich; Marina Bureau; Laurence Dupuis; Véronique Leh; Guillaume Vetter; Kappei Kobayashi; Thomas Hohn; Lyubov A. Ryabova; Pierre Yot; Mario Keller

The Cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) open reading frame VI product (P6) is essential for the viral infection cycle. It controls translation reinitiation of the viral polycistronic RNAs and forms cytoplasmic inclusion bodies (viroplasms) where virus replication and assembly occur. In this study, the mechanism involved in viroplasm formation was investigated by in vitro and in vivo experiments. Far protein gel blot assays using a collection of P6 deletion mutants demonstrated that the N-terminal α-helix of P6 mediates interaction between P6 molecules. Transient expression in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) BY-2 cells of full-length P6 and P6 mutants fused to enhanced green fluorescent protein revealed that viroplasms are formed at the periphery of the nucleus and that the N-terminal domain of P6 is an important determinant in this process. Finally, this study led to the unexpected finding that P6 is a nucleocytoplasmic shuttle protein and that its nuclear export is mediated by a Leu-rich sequence that is part of the α-helix domain implicated in viroplasm formation. The discovery that P6 can localize to the nucleus opens new prospects for understanding yet unknown roles of this viral protein in the course of the CaMV infection cycle.


Journal of Virology | 2001

Interaction between the Open Reading Frame III Product and the Coat Protein Is Required for Transmission of Cauliflower Mosaic Virus by Aphids

Véronique Leh; Emmanuel Jacquot; Angèle Geldreich; Muriel Haas; Stéphane Blanc; Mario Keller; Pierre Yot

ABSTRACT Transmission of cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) by aphids requires two viral nonstructural proteins, the open reading frame (ORF) II and ORF III products (P2 and P3). An interaction between a C-terminal domain of P2 and an N-terminal domain of P3 is essential for transmission. Purified particles of CaMV are efficiently transmitted only if aphids, previously fed a P2-containing solution, are allowed to acquire a preincubated mixture of P3 and virions in a second feed, thus suggesting a direct interaction between P3 and coat protein. Herein we demonstrate that P3 directly interacts with purified viral particles and unassembled coat protein without the need for any other factor and that P3 mediates the association of P2 with purified virus particles. The interaction domain of P3 is located in its C-terminal half, downstream of the P3-P2 interaction domain but overlapping a region which binds nucleic acids. Mutagenesis of P3 which interferes with the interaction between P3 and virions is correlated with the loss of transmission by aphids. Taken together, our results demonstrate that P3 plays a crucial role in the formation of the CaMV transmissible complex by serving as a bridge between P2 and virus particles.


Plant Molecular Biology | 1992

Assaying synthetic ribozymes in plants : high-level expression of a functional hammerhead structure fails to inhibit target gene activity in transiently transformed protoplasts

Laurent Mazzolini; Michèle Axelos; Nicole Lescure; Pierre Yot

A hammerhead ribozyme designed against the mRNA coding for the Escherichia coli β-glucuronidase (GUS) reporter enzyme was constructed. The synthetic ribozyme appeared able to correctly cleave in vitro the target RNA. This catalytic molecule was then assayed for in vivo activity in plant protoplasts. Plasmids coding either for the ribozyme or for the GUS target gene were cotransfected into the cells by the PEG-calcium procedure and GUS gene expression monitored following transient expression by measuring the intracellular GUS enzymatic activity. Expression of the ribozyme to high molar excess over the GUS transcript did not lead to any significant decrease of GUS activity in the transfected protoplasts. Insertion of the ribozyme sequence in the 3′-untranslated region of the GUS mRNA also had no detectable effect on GUS reporter gene expression whereas the corresponding RNA appeared able to self-cleave in vitro.These results indicate that the ability of ribozymes to perform catalytic cleavage of their substrate mRNA in vitro is essential but clearly not sufficient to ensure that efficient inhibition of the corresponding target gene will occur upon endogenous expression of this catalytic RNA in the plant cell.


Journal of Virological Methods | 2001

Early detection of cacao swollen shoot virus using the polymerase chain reaction.

Emmanuelle Muller; Emmanuel Jacquot; Pierre Yot

A polymerase chain reaction assay was developed which allows early detection of cacao swollen shoot virus (CSSV) in DNA extracts from cacao plantlets agroinoculated with the Togolese isolate Agou 1. The primers used were derived from badnavirus conserved sequences and nucleic acid was extracted with the Plant DNeasy extraction kit (Qiagen). CSSV genome was detectable between 6 and 20 days after inoculation. The first leaf symptoms appeared after 4 weeks and the first shoot swelling symptoms after 8 weeks.


Archives of Virology | 1999

In situ localization of cacao swollen shoot virus in agroinfected Theobroma cacao

Emmanuel Jacquot; L. S. Hagen; P. Michler; O. Rohfritsch; C. Stussi-Garaud; M. Keller; Pierre Yot

SummaryCacao swollen shoot virus (CSSV) is a small non-enveloped bacilliform virus with a double-stranded DNA genome. A very restricted host range and difficulties in transmitting the virus, either mechanically or via its natural vector, have hindered the study of cacao swollen shoot disease. As an alternative to the particle-bombardment method previously reported, we investigated another approach to infect Theobroma cacao. A greater-than-unit length copy (1.2) of the CSSV DNA genome was cloned into the Agrobacterium binary vector pBin19 and was transferred into young plants via Agrobacterium tumefaciens. Typical leaf symptoms and stem swelling were observed seven and eleven weeks post inoculation, respectively. Viral DNA, CSSV coat protein and virions were detected in leaves with symptoms. Agroinfected plants were used to study the in situ localization of CSSV and its histopathologic effects in planta. In both leaves and petioles, virions were only seen in the cytoplasm of phloem companion cells and of a few xylem parenchyma cells. Light microscopy showed that stem swelling results from a proliferation of the xylem, phloem and cortex cells.


Gene | 1995

Sequence of a cauliflower mosaic virus strain infecting solanaceous plants

Martin Piqué; Jean-Luc Mougeot; Angèle Geldreich; Thierry Guidasci; Jean-Michel Mesnard; Geneviève Lebeurier; Pierre Yot

The complete nucleotide sequence (8031 bp) of the DNA of cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) strain B29 is reported. This strain is unusual, since it infects both cruciferous and solanaceous plants. So far, from data of sequence comparisons between B29 and other CaMV strains there is no evidence for any obvious correlation between host range and distinct sequence features.


Virology | 1996

The Open Reading Frame 2 Product of Cacao Swollen Shoot Badnavirus Is a Nucleic Acid-Binding Protein

Emmanuel Jacquot; Lynda Hagen; Pierre Yot


Virology | 2000

The cauliflower mosaic virus translational transactivator interacts with the 60S ribosomal subunit protein L18 of Arabidopsis thaliana.

Véronique Leh; Pierre Yot; Mario Keller

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Emmanuel Jacquot

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Mario Keller

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Angèle Geldreich

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Véronique Leh

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Muriel Haas

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Marina Bureau

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Geneviève Lebeurier

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jean-Luc Mougeot

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Martin Piqué

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Stéphane Blanc

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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