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Dive into the research topics where Sabine Fillinger is active.

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Featured researches published by Sabine Fillinger.


PLOS Pathogens | 2009

Fungicide-driven evolution and molecular basis of multidrug resistance in field populations of the grey mould fungus Botrytis cinerea

Matthias Kretschmer; Michaela Leroch; Andreas Mosbach; Anne-Sophie Walker; Sabine Fillinger; Dennis Mernke; Henk-jan Schoonbeek; Jean-Marc Pradier; Pierre Leroux; Maarten A. De Waard; Matthias Hahn

The grey mould fungus Botrytis cinerea causes losses of commercially important fruits, vegetables and ornamentals worldwide. Fungicide treatments are effective for disease control, but bear the risk of resistance development. The major resistance mechanism in fungi is target protein modification resulting in reduced drug binding. Multiple drug resistance (MDR) caused by increased efflux activity is common in human pathogenic microbes, but rarely described for plant pathogens. Annual monitoring for fungicide resistance in field isolates from fungicide-treated vineyards in France and Germany revealed a rapidly increasing appearance of B. cinerea field populations with three distinct MDR phenotypes. All MDR strains showed increased fungicide efflux activity and overexpression of efflux transporter genes. Similar to clinical MDR isolates of Candida yeasts that are due to transcription factor mutations, all MDR1 strains were shown to harbor activating mutations in a transcription factor (Mrr1) that controls the gene encoding ABC transporter AtrB. MDR2 strains had undergone a unique rearrangement in the promoter region of the major facilitator superfamily transporter gene mfsM2, induced by insertion of a retrotransposon-derived sequence. MDR2 strains carrying the same rearranged mfsM2 allele have probably migrated from French to German wine-growing regions. The roles of atrB, mrr1 and mfsM2 were proven by the phenotypes of knock-out and overexpression mutants. As confirmed by sexual crosses, combinations of mrr1 and mfsM2 mutations lead to MDR3 strains with higher broad-spectrum resistance. An MDR3 strain was shown in field experiments to be selected against sensitive strains by fungicide treatments. Our data document for the first time the rising prevalence, spread and molecular basis of MDR populations in a major plant pathogen in agricultural environments. These populations will increase the risk of grey mould rot and hamper the effectiveness of current strategies for fungicide resistance management.


Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2006

A Class III Histidine Kinase Acts as a Novel Virulence Factor in Botrytis cinerea

Muriel Viaud; Sabine Fillinger; Weiwei Liu; Jai S. Polepalli; Pascal Le Pêcheur; Aditya Reddy Kunduru; Pierre Leroux; Laurent Legendre

Filamentous ascomycetes contain large numbers of histidine kinases (HK) that belong to eleven classes. Members of class III from different species were previously shown to be involved in osmoregulation and resistance to dicarboximide and phenylpyrrole fungicides. We have inactivated the gene encoding the single group III HK, BOS1, in the economically important plant pathogen Botrytis cinerea. BOS1 inactivation had pleiotropic effects on the fungus. Besides the expected osmosensitivity and resistance to fungicides, null mutants presented additional characteristics indicating that BOS1 is necessary for normal macroconidiation and full virulence. On standard culture media, null mutants very rarely formed conidiophores and those few conidiophores failed to produce conidia. This defect could be partially restored with 1 M sorbitol, suggesting that another BOS1-independent signal cascade may be involved in macroconidiation. The mutants were not found to be hypersensitive to various oxidative stresses but were more resistant to menadione. Finally, pathogenicity tests showed that bos1-null mutants were significantly reduced in the ability to infect host plants. Appressorium morphogenesis was not altered; however, in planta growth was severely reduced. To our knowledge, this is the first class III HK characterized as a pathogenicity factor in a plant-pathogenic ascomycete.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2008

Genetic Analysis of Fenhexamid-Resistant Field Isolates of the Phytopathogenic Fungus Botrytis cinerea

Sabine Fillinger; Pierre Leroux; Christiane Auclair; Christian Barreau; Charbel Al Hajj; Danièle Debieu

ABSTRACT The hydroxyanilide fenhexamid, one of the latest antibotrytis fungicides, active especially against leotiomycete plant-pathogenic fungi, inhibits 3-ketoreductase of the C-4-demethylation enzyme complex during ergosterol biosynthesis. We isolated Botrytis cinerea strains resistant to various levels of fenhexamid from French and German vineyards. The sequence of the gene encoding 3-ketoreductase, erg27, varied according to levels of resistance. Highly resistant isolates, termed HydR3+, all presented a modification of the phenylalanine at the C terminus of the putative transmembrane domain at position 412, either to serine (85% of the isolates), to isoleucine (11.5% of the isolates), or to valine (3.5% of the isolates). The introduction of the batchmode documentclass[fleqn,10pt,legalpaper]{article} usepackage{amssymb} usepackage{amsfonts} usepackage{amsmath} pagestyle{empty} begin{document} (erg27^{HydR3^{{+}}}) end{document} allele into a fenhexamid-sensitive strain by means of a replicative plasmid conferred fenhexamid resistance on the resulting transformants, showing that the mutations at position 412 are responsible for fenhexamid resistance. Weakly to moderately resistant isolates, termed HydR3−, showed different point mutations between the strains in the sequenced regions of the erg27 gene, corresponding to amino acid changes between positions 195 and 400 of the protein. The batchmode documentclass[fleqn,10pt,legalpaper]{article} usepackage{amssymb} usepackage{amsfonts} usepackage{amsmath} pagestyle{empty} begin{document} (erg27^{HydR3^{{-}}}) end{document} alleles on the replicative vector introduced into a sensitive strain did not confer resistance to fenhexamid. Genetic crosses between HydR3− and sensitive strains showed strict correlation between the sequenced mutation in the erg27 gene and the resistance phenotypes, suggesting that these mutations are linked to fenhexamid resistance. The HydR3 mutations possibly modify the affinity of the 3-ketoreductase enzyme for its specific inhibitor, fenhexamid.


Archive | 2016

Botrytis – the Fungus, the Pathogen and its Management in Agricultural Systems

Sabine Fillinger; Yigal Elad

Botrytis spp. are effi cient pathogens, causing devastating diseases and signifi cant crop losses in a wide variety of plant species. Here we outline our review of these pathogens, as well as highlight the major advances of the past 10 years in studying Botrytis in interaction with its hosts. Progress in molecular genetics and the development of relevant phylogenetic markers in particular, has resulted in the characterisation of approximately 30 species. The host range of Botrytis spp. includes plant species that are members of 170 families of cultivated plants.


Archive | 2016

Chemical Control and Resistance Management of Botrytis Diseases

Sabine Fillinger; Anne-Sophie Walker

Chemical control remains the easiest way to manage Botrytis epidemics on many crops. Nevertheless, actual concerns about the environment, human health and control sustainability invite to a smarter use of fungicides, aiming to delay resistance evolution in pathogen populations. This chapter deals with the mode of action of botryticides (including multi-site toxicants and molecules affecting specifically respiration, cytoskeleton, osmoregulation, sterol and amino-acid biosynthesis) and associated resistance cases, mostly due to target site modifications. We also present original resistance mechanisms for fungi such as detoxification and multidrug resistance. Finally, this chapter introduces strategies available to decrease selection pressure exerted by fungicides on Botrytis spp. populations with the long-term aim to improve resistance management in the field.


Archive | 2016

Botrytis, the Good, the Bad and the Ugly

Yigal Elad; Melané A. Vivier; Sabine Fillinger

Botrytis spp. are efficient pathogens, causing devastating diseases and significant crop losses in a wide variety of plant species. Here we outline our review of these pathogens, as well as highlight the major advances of the past 10 years in studying Botrytis in interaction with its hosts. Progress in molecular genetics and the development of relevant phylogenetic markers in particular, has resulted in the characterisation of approximately 30 species. The host range of Botrytis spp. includes plant species that are members of 170 families of cultivated plants.


Phytopathologia Mediterranea | 2012

Phenotypic and genetic characterization of Chilean isolates of Botrytis cinerea with different levels of sensitivity to fenhexamid

M. Esterio; Cecilia Ramos; Anne-Sophie Walker; Sabine Fillinger; Pierre Leroux; J. Auger


Trends in Plant Science | 2016

Trends and Challenges in Pesticide Resistance Detection

Benoit Barres; Annie Micoud; Marie-France Corio-Costet; Danièle Debieu; Sabine Fillinger; Anne-Sophie Walker; Christophe Délye; Jacques Grosman; Myriam Siegwart


Phytoma-La Défense des végétaux | 2010

Le fenhexamid et la vigne, mécanismes de résistance décryptés chez l'agent de la pourriture grise: Quelles conséquences pratiques au vignoble ?

Alexis Billard; Anne-Sophie Walker; Sabine Fillinger; Pierre Leroux; Hélène Lachaise; Roland Beffa; Danièle Debieu


Book of Abstracts 9th International Congress of Plant Pathology, Torino, Italy, 24-29 August 2008 | 2008

Overexpression of efflux transporters leads to multidrug resistance in Botrytis cinerea field strains

Matthias Kretschmer; Anne-Sophie Walker; Michaela Leroch; M. Wiwiorra; Henk-jan Schoonbeek; Pierre Leroux; Sabine Fillinger; M. de Waard; Matthias Hahn

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Danièle Debieu

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Matthias Hahn

Kaiserslautern University of Technology

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Matthias Kretschmer

Kaiserslautern University of Technology

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Michaela Leroch

Kaiserslautern University of Technology

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Andreas Mosbach

Kaiserslautern University of Technology

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Dennis Mernke

Kaiserslautern University of Technology

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