Thomas Dugé de Bernonville
François Rabelais University
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Featured researches published by Thomas Dugé de Bernonville.
Molecular Microbiology | 2015
Tatiana A. Defosse; Anupam Sharma; Alok K. Mondal; Thomas Dugé de Bernonville; Jean-Paul Latgé; Richard Calderone; Nathalie Giglioli-Guivarc'h; Vincent Courdavault; Marc Clastre; Nicolas Papon
Histidine kinases (HK) sense and transduce via phosphorylation events many intra‐ and extracellular signals in bacteria, archaea, slime moulds and plants. HK are also widespread in the fungal kingdom, but their precise roles in the regulation of physiological processes remain largely obscure. Expanding genomic resources have recently given the opportunity to identify uncharacterised HK family members in yeasts and moulds and now allow proposing a complex classification of Basidiomycota, Ascomycota and lower fungi HK. A growing number of genetic approaches have progressively provided new insight into the role of several groups of HK in prominent fungal pathogens. In particular, a series of studies have revealed that members of group III HK, which occur in the highest number of fungal species and contain a unique N‐terminus region consisting of multiple HAMP domain repeats, regulate morphogenesis and virulence in various human, plant and insect pathogenic fungi. This research field is further supported by recent shape‐function studies providing clear correlation between structural properties and signalling states in group III HK. Since HK are absent in mammals, these represent interesting fungal target for the discovery of new antifungal drugs.
Nature plants | 2017
Richard M. E. Payne; Deyang Xu; Emilien Foureau; Marta Ines Soares Teto Carqueijeiro; Audrey Oudin; Thomas Dugé de Bernonville; Vlastimil Novak; Meike Burow; Carl-Erik Olsen; D. Marc Jones; Evangelos C. Tatsis; Ali Pendle; Barbara Ann Halkier; Fernando Geu-Flores; Vincent Courdavault; Hussam Hassan Nour-Eldin; Sarah E. O'Connor
Plants sequester intermediates of metabolic pathways into different cellular compartments, but the mechanisms by which these molecules are transported remain poorly understood. Monoterpene indole alkaloids, a class of specialized metabolites that includes the anticancer agent vincristine, antimalarial quinine and neurotoxin strychnine, are synthesized in several different cellular locations. However, the transporters that control the movement of these biosynthetic intermediates within cellular compartments have not been discovered. Here we present the discovery of a tonoplast localized nitrate/peptide family (NPF) transporter from Catharanthus roseus, CrNPF2.9, that exports strictosidine, the central intermediate of this pathway, into the cytosol from the vacuole. This discovery highlights the role that intracellular localization plays in specialized metabolism, and sets the stage for understanding and controlling the central branch point of this pharmacologically important group of compounds.
Nature Communications | 2017
Evangelos C. Tatsis; Inês Carqueijeiro; Thomas Dugé de Bernonville; Jakob Franke; Thu-Thuy T. Dang; Audrey Oudin; Arnaud Lanoue; Florent Lafontaine; Anna Stavrinides; Marc Clastre; Vincent Courdavault; Sarah E. O’Connor
Monoterpene indole alkaloids comprise a diverse family of over 2000 plant-produced natural products. This pathway provides an outstanding example of how nature creates chemical diversity from a single precursor, in this case from the intermediate strictosidine. The enzymes that elicit these seemingly disparate products from strictosidine have hitherto been elusive. Here we show that the concerted action of two enzymes commonly involved in natural product metabolism—an alcohol dehydrogenase and a cytochrome P450—produces unexpected rearrangements in strictosidine when assayed simultaneously. The tetrahydro-β-carboline of strictosidine aglycone is converted into akuammicine, a Strychnos alkaloid, an elusive biosynthetic transformation that has been investigated for decades. Importantly, akuammicine arises from deformylation of preakuammicine, which is the central biosynthetic precursor for the anti-cancer agents vinblastine and vincristine, as well as other biologically active compounds. This discovery of how these enzymes can function in combination opens a gateway into a rich family of natural products.The biosynthetic pathway of preakuammicine, a monoterpene precursor of the anti-cancer agent vinblastine, has remained largely unexplored. Here, the authors provide transcriptomic and biochemical data to identify two enzymes that, in tandem, convert strictosidine to akuammicine, the stable shunt product of preakuammicine.
Advances in Botanical Research | 2013
Benoit St-Pierre; Sébastien Besseau; Marc Clastre; Vincent Courdavault; Martine Courtois; Joël Crèche; Eric Ducos; Thomas Dugé de Bernonville; Christelle Dutilleul; Gaëlle Glévarec; Nadine Imbault; Arnaud Lanoue; Audrey Oudin; Nicolas Papon; Olivier Pichon; Nathalie Giglioli-Guivarc’h
Monoterpene indole alkaloids (MIAs) constitute a large group of specialised metabolites with many potent pharmaceutical properties, including the antitumoral vinblastine and hypotensive ajmalicine. Hence a large body of phytochemical investigation delineates the distribution and diversity of various MIA structural classes in Gentianales families. The biosynthetic pathway of these secondary metabolites involves several specific branches, including indole and monoterpenoid formations, secoiridoid assembly, central MIA biosynthesis and branch-specific reactions, as well as supply of primary metabolite precursors by the methylerythritol phosphate and shikimate pathways. Several genes and enzymatic activities involved in these pathways have been characterised, allowing detailed analysis of the molecular biology of this system in model plants such as Catharanthus roseus and Rauvolfia serpentina. With the prospects of improving production of MIAs in plant and cell culture, regulations of biosynthetic capacities have been thoroughly investigated. This pathway also presents a high degree of spatial organisation at the organ, cellular and subcellular levels. This chapter presents an overview of the structural diversity, the complexity of MIA biosynthesis, and regulation with an evolutionary perspective.
Journal of Experimental Botany | 2015
Carolina Elejalde-Palmett; Thomas Dugé de Bernonville; Gaëlle Glévarec; Olivier Pichon; Nicolas Papon; Vincent Courdavault; Benoit St-Pierre; Nathalie Giglioli-Guivarc’h; Arnaud Lanoue; Sébastien Besseau
Phenolamides, so called hydroxycinnamic acid amides, are specialized metabolites produced in higher plants, involved in development, reproduction and serve as defence compounds in biotic interactions. Among them, trihydroxycinnamoyl spermidine derivatives were initially found to be synthetized by a spermidine hydroxycinnamoyltransferase (AtSHT) in Arabidopsis thaliana and to accumulate in the pollen coat. This study reports the identification, in Malus domestica, of an acyltransferase able to complement the sht mutant of Arabidopsis. The quantitative RT-PCR expression profile of MdSHT reveals a specific expression in flowers coordinated with anther development and tapetum cell activities. Three phenolamides including N (1),N (5),N (10)-tricoumaroyl spermidine and N (1),N (5)-dicoumaroyl-N (10)-caffeoyl spermidine identified by LC/MS, were shown to accumulate specifically in pollen grain coat of apple tree. Moreover, in vitro biochemical characterization confirmed MdSHT capacity to synthesize tri-substituted spermidine derivatives with a substrate specificity restricted to p-coumaroyl-CoA and caffeoyl-CoA as an acyl donor. Further investigations of the presence of tri-substituted hydroxycinnamoyl spermidine conjugates in higher plants were performed by targeted metabolic analyses in pollens coupled with bioinformatic analyses of putative SHT orthologues in a wide range of available plant genomes. This work highlights a probable early evolutionary appearance in the common ancestral core Eudicotyledons of a novel enzyme from the BAHD acyltransferase superfamily, dedicated to the synthesis of trihydroxycinnamoyl spermidines in pollen coat. This pathway was maintained in most species; however, recent evolutionary divergences have appeared among Eudicotyledons, such as an organ reallocation of SHT gene expression in Fabales and a loss of SHT in Malvales and Cucurbitales.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Thomas Dugé de Bernonville; Inês Carqueijeiro; Arnaud Lanoue; Florent Lafontaine; Paloma Sánchez Bel; Franziska Liesecke; Karine Musset; Audrey Oudin; Gaëlle Glévarec; Olivier Pichon; Sébastien Besseau; Marc Clastre; Benoit St-Pierre; Victor Flors; Stéphane Maury; Elisabeth Huguet; Sarah E. O’Connor; Vincent Courdavault
Plants deploy distinct secondary metabolisms to cope with environment pressure and to face bio-aggressors notably through the production of biologically active alkaloids. This metabolism-type is particularly elaborated in Catharanthus roseus that synthesizes more than a hundred different monoterpene indole alkaloids (MIAs). While the characterization of their biosynthetic pathway now reaches completion, still little is known about the role of MIAs during biotic attacks. As a consequence, we developed a new plant/herbivore interaction system by challenging C. roseus leaves with Manduca sexta larvae. Transcriptomic and metabolic analyses demonstrated that C. roseus respond to folivory by both local and systemic processes relying on the activation of specific gene sets and biosynthesis of distinct MIAs following jasmonate production. While a huge local accumulation of strictosidine was monitored in attacked leaves that could repel caterpillars through its protein reticulation properties, newly developed leaves displayed an increased biosynthesis of the toxic strictosidine-derived MIAs, vindoline and catharanthine, produced by up-regulation of MIA biosynthetic genes. In this context, leaf consumption resulted in a rapid death of caterpillars that could be linked to the MIA dimerization observed in intestinal tracts. Furthermore, this study also highlights the overall transcriptomic control of the plant defense processes occurring during herbivory.
Mbio | 2017
Anaïs Hérivaux; Thomas Dugé de Bernonville; Christophe Roux; Marc Clastre; Vincent Courdavault; Amandine Gastebois; Jean-Philippe Bouchara; Timothy Y. James; Jean Paul Latgé; Francis Martin; Nicolas Papon
ABSTRACT Histidine kinases (HKs) are among the most prominent sensing proteins studied in the kingdom Fungi. Their distribution and biological functions in early diverging fungi (EDF), however, remain elusive. We have taken advantage of recent genomic resources to elucidate whether relationships between the occurrence of specific HKs in some EDF and their respective habitat/lifestyle could be established. This led to the unexpected discovery of fungal HKs that share a high degree of similarity with receptors for plant hormones (ethylene and cytokinin). Importantly, these phytohormone receptor homologs are found not only in EDF that behave as plant root symbionts or endophytes but also in EDF species that colonize decaying plant material. We hypothesize that these particular sensing proteins promoted the interaction of EDF with plants, leading to the conquest of land by these ancestral fungi.
Science | 2018
Lorenzo Caputi; Jakob Franke; Scott C. Farrow; Khoa Chung; Richard M. E. Payne; Trinh-Don Nguyen; Thu-Thuy T. Dang; Inês Carqueijeiro; Konstantinos Koudounas; Thomas Dugé de Bernonville; Belinda Ameyaw; D. Marc Jones; Ivo Jose Curcino Vieira; Vincent Courdavault; Sarah E. O’Connor
How to make bioactive alkaloids Vinblastine and vincristine are important, expensive anticancer agents that are produced by dimerization of the plant-derived alkaloids catharanthine and vindoline. The enzymes that transform tabersonine into vindoline are known; however, the mechanism by which the scaffolds of catharanthine and tabersonine are generated has been a mystery. Caputi et al. now describe the biosynthetic genes and corresponding enzymes responsible. This resolves a long-standing question of how plant alkaloid scaffolds are synthesized, which is important not only for vinblastine and vincristine biosynthesis, but also for understanding the many other biologically active alkaloids found throughout nature. Science, this issue p. 1235 Identification of enzymes reveals pathway complexity in synthesis of bioactive alkaloids from plants. Vinblastine, a potent anticancer drug, is produced by Catharanthus roseus (Madagascar periwinkle) in small quantities, and heterologous reconstitution of vinblastine biosynthesis could provide an additional source of this drug. However, the chemistry underlying vinblastine synthesis makes identification of the biosynthetic genes challenging. Here we identify the two missing enzymes necessary for vinblastine biosynthesis in this plant: an oxidase and a reductase that isomerize stemmadenine acetate into dihydroprecondylocarpine acetate, which is then deacetoxylated and cyclized to either catharanthine or tabersonine via two hydrolases characterized herein. The pathways show how plants create chemical diversity and also enable development of heterologous platforms for generation of stemmadenine-derived bioactive compounds.
Plant Physiology | 2016
Claire Parage; Emilien Foureau; Franziska Kellner; Vincent Burlat; Samira Mahroug; Arnaud Lanoue; Thomas Dugé de Bernonville; Mónica Londoño; Inês Carqueijeiro; Audrey Oudin; Sébastien Besseau; Nicolas Papon; Gaëlle Glévarec; Lucía Atehortúa; Nathalie Giglioli-Guivarc’h; Benoit St-Pierre; Marc Clastre; Sarah E. O’Connor; Vincent Courdavault
Class II cytochrome P450 reductase in Madagascar periwinkle displays a prominent contribution toward specialized metabolism by acting as the main partner of P450s dedicated to alkaloid biosynthesis. Expansion of the biosynthesis of plant specialized metabolites notably results from the massive recruitment of cytochrome P450s that catalyze multiple types of conversion of biosynthetic intermediates. For catalysis, P450s require a two-electron transfer catalyzed by shared cytochrome P450 oxidoreductases (CPRs), making these auxiliary proteins an essential component of specialized metabolism. CPR isoforms usually group into two distinct classes with different proposed roles, namely involvement in primary and basal specialized metabolisms for class I and inducible specialized metabolism for class II. By studying the role of CPRs in the biosynthesis of monoterpene indole alkaloids, we provide compelling evidence of an operational specialization of CPR isoforms in Catharanthus roseus (Madagascar periwinkle). Global analyses of gene expression correlation combined with transcript localization in specific leaf tissues and gene-silencing experiments of both classes of CPR all point to the strict requirement of class II CPRs for monoterpene indole alkaloid biosynthesis with a minimal or null role of class I. Direct assays of interaction and reduction of P450s in vitro, however, showed that both classes of CPR performed equally well. Such high specialization of class II CPRs in planta highlights the evolutionary strategy that ensures an efficient reduction of P450s in specialized metabolism.
Protoplasma | 2017
Cyrielle Corbin; Florent Lafontaine; Liuda Johana Sepúlveda; Inês Carqueijeiro; Martine Courtois; Arnaud Lanoue; Thomas Dugé de Bernonville; Sébastien Besseau; Gaëlle Glévarec; Nicolas Papon; Lucía Atehortúa; Nathalie Giglioli-Guivarc’h; Marc Clastre; Benoit St-Pierre; Audrey Oudin; Vincent Courdavault
Elucidation of the monoterpene indole alkaloid biosynthesis has recently progressed in Apocynaceae through the concomitant development of transcriptomic analyses and reverse genetic approaches performed by virus-induced gene silencing (VIGS). While most of these tools have been primarily adapted for the Madagascar periwinkle (Catharanthus roseus), the VIGS procedure has scarcely been used on other Apocynaceae species. For instance, Rauwolfia sp. constitutes a unique source of specific and valuable monoterpene indole alkaloids such as the hypertensive reserpine but are also well recognized models for studying alkaloid metabolism, and as such would benefit from an efficient VIGS procedure. By taking advantage of a recent modification in the inoculation method of the Tobacco rattle virus vectors via particle bombardment, we demonstrated that the biolistic-mediated VIGS approach can be readily used to silence genes in both Rauwolfia tetraphylla and Rauwolfia serpentina. After establishing the bombardment conditions minimizing injuries to the transformed plantlets, gene downregulation efficiency was evaluated at approximately a 70% expression decrease in both species by silencing the phytoene desaturase encoding gene. Such a gene silencing approach will thus constitute a critical tool to identify and characterize genes involved in alkaloid biosynthesis in both of these prominent Rauwolfia species.