Publications by authors named "Sebastien Duplessis"

Background: Transposable elements (TEs) play a crucial role in genome evolution, influencing gene regulation, diversity, and genome architecture. Rust fungi of the order Pucciniales (Subphylum Pucciniomycotina) are the largest group of obligate biotrophic plant pathogens and harbor some of the largest and most TE-rich genomes-up to 1.2 Gb-compared to other fungi.

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Rust fungi comprise thousands of species many of which cause disease on important crop plants. The flax rust fungus has been a model species for the genetic dissection of plant immunity since the 1940s, however the highly fragmented and incomplete reference genome has so far hindered progress in effector gene discovery. Here, we generate a fully-phased, chromosome-scale assembly of the two nuclear genomes of strain CH5, resolving an additional 320 Mbp of sequence.

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Phakopsora pachyrhizi, an obligate biotrophic rust fungus, is the causal agent of Asian Soybean Rust (ASR) disease. Here, we utilized whole-genome data to explore the evolutionary patterns and population structure across 45 P. pachyrhizi isolates collected from 1972 to 2017 from diverse geographic regions worldwide.

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Phytocytokines regulate plant immunity by cooperating with cell-surface proteins. Populus trichocarpa RUST INDUCED SECRETED PEPTIDE 1 (PtRISP1) exhibits an elicitor activity in poplar, as well as a direct antimicrobial activity against rust fungi. PtRISP1 gene directly clusters with a gene encoding a leucine-rich repeat receptor protein (LRR-RP), that we termed RISP-ASSOCIATED LRR-RP (PtRALR).

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The poplar rust fungus is part of one of the most devastating group of fungi (Pucciniales) and causes important economic losses to the poplar industry. Because is a heteroecious obligate biotroph, its spread depends on its ability to carry out its reproductive cycle through larch and then poplar parasitism. Genomic approaches have identified more than 1,000 candidate secreted effector proteins (CSEPs) from the predicted secretome of that are potentially implicated in the infection process.

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Article Synopsis
  • The order of rust fungi includes over 7,000 species that significantly affect agriculture, horticulture, forestry, and ecosystems.
  • Phakopsora pachyrhizi, the fungus responsible for Asian soybean rust disease, is a prime example of this impact and has a complex genome that has been challenging to assemble accurately.
  • Researchers sequenced three genomes of P. pachyrhizi, revealing a size of up to 1.25 Gb and a high transposable element content (~93%), demonstrating the role of these elements in host adaptation, stress responses, and genetic variability.
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Plant effector biology is a research area that describes how plant-associated organisms modulate host structures and function to promote colonization by using small molecules (effectors). In this article, we analyzed 249 highly cited publications focused on plant pathogen effectors (, Highly Influential studies on plant Pathogen Effectors; thereafter HIPEs) published between 2000 and 2020. This analysis identifies countries, organizations, and journals that contributed HIPEs, and reveals the evolution of research trends, model molecules, and model organisms over the last two decades.

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Pucciniales (rust fungi) are one of the largest fungal order of plant pathogens. They collectively infect key crops such as wheat and soybean, and threaten global food security. In the early 2010s, the genome sequences of three rust fungi were released: (the poplar leaf rust fungus), f.

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Nutrient acquisition by rust fungi during their biotrophic growth has been assigned to a few transporters expressed in haustorial infection structures. We performed a comparative genomic analysis of all transporter genes (hereafter termed transportome) classified according to the Transporter Classification Database, focusing specifically on rust fungi (order Pucciniales) versus other species in the Dikarya. We also surveyed expression of transporter genes in the poplar rust fungus for which transcriptomics data are available across the whole life cycle.

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Molecular plant immunity is a dynamic research field that broadly addresses how plants interact with their associated organisms and defend themselves against pests and pathogens. Here, we aimed at providing readers with a snapshot of influential molecular plant immunity research by identifying and analyzing 170 highly influential publications in molecular plant immunity (hereafter called HIPPYs) published in this field between 2000 and 2019. Our analysis draws a broad analytical knowledge of influential scientific advances in the field as well as of the research community that made them.

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Tropospheric ozone and nitrogen deposition are two major environmental pollutants. A great deal of research has focused on the negative impacts of elevated O and the complementary effect of soil N addition on the physiological properties of trees. However, it has been overlooked how elevated O and N addition affect tree immunity in face of pathogen infection, as well as of the important roles of phyllosphere microbiome community in host-pathogen-environment interplay.

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Fungi of the order Pucciniales are obligate plant biotrophs causing rust diseases. They exhibit a complex life cycle with the production of up to five spore types, infection of two unrelated hosts and an overwintering stage. Transcription factors (TFs) are key regulators of gene expression in eukaryote cells.

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The recent availability of genome-wide sequencing techniques has allowed systematic screening for molecular signatures of adaptation, including in nonmodel organisms. Host-pathogen interactions constitute good models due to the strong selective pressures that they entail. We focused on an adaptive event which affected the poplar rust fungus Melampsora larici-populina when it overcame a resistance gene borne by its host, cultivated poplar.

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Several effectors from phytopathogens usually target various cell organelles to interfere with plant defenses, and they generally contain sequences that direct their translocation into organelles, such as chloroplasts. In this study, we characterized a different mechanism for effectors to attack chloroplasts in wheat (Triticum aestivum). Two effectors from Puccinia striiformis f.

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The deployment of plant varieties carrying resistance genes (R) exerts strong selection pressure on pathogen populations. Rapidly evolving avirulence genes (Avr) allow pathogens to escape R-mediated plant immunity through a variety of mechanisms, leading to virulence. The poplar rust fungus Melampsora larici-populina is a damaging pathogen of poplars in Europe.

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Rust fungi (Pucciniales, Basidiomycota) are obligate biotrophic pathogens that cause rust diseases in plants, inflicting severe damage to agricultural crops. Pucciniales possess the most complex life cycles known in fungi. These include an alternation of generations, the development of up to five different sporulating stages, and, for many species, the requirement of infecting two unrelated host plants during different parts of their life cycle, termed heteroecism.

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Living organisms respond to their immediate environment by modulating their genetic programme to perform adapted functions. Eukaryotic organisms that associate with plants (fungi, oomycetes, insects, …) alter their transcriptome in a host-specific manner. Recent comparative transcriptomic studies revealed that host-specialized transcriptomes consist of a limited set of genes.

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Rust fungi are plant pathogens that secrete an arsenal of effector proteins interfering with plant functions and promoting parasitic infection. Effectors are often species-specific, evolve rapidly, and display low sequence similarities with known proteins. How rust fungal effectors function in host cells remains elusive, and biochemical and structural approaches have been scarcely used to tackle this question.

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Article Synopsis
  • Apple rust disease poses a significant risk to apple orchards, and the study utilizes dual RNA-seq to analyze gene expression in infected leaves during critical stages of fungus development.
  • Findings reveal that the apple plant activates detoxication processes early on and later induces secondary metabolism pathways, highlighting a general response to rust infections shared across various rust pathosystems.
  • The research uncovers a conserved genetic pattern in the fungus's reproductive stages, along with specific effector proteins involved in the infection process, and also indicates that the rust infection can alter the fungal community on apple leaves.
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  • The study focused on three Gymnosporangium fungi species, which are known plant pathogens, by sequencing the transcriptome of G. japonicum during its life stage on Juniperus chinensis.
  • The analysis revealed a conserved genetic program across the species with high expression in energy, translation, and signaling processes, highlighting the active metabolic state of the teliospore stage.
  • Specific genes encoding carbohydrate-active enzymes and potential pathogenesis proteins were identified, indicating significant differences and similarities between the species' responses, thus providing insights into the biology of rust fungi and their infective mechanisms.
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Article Synopsis
  • * Advances in genomics and sequencing technology have allowed for the identification of candidate effector genes critical for rust pathogenicity, revealing thousands of secreted proteins linked to host infection.
  • * New research methodologies, such as effectoromics, are enhancing our understanding of rust biology and could lead to better strategies for managing rust diseases in the future.
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The basidiomycete Melampsora larici-populina causes poplar rust disease by invading leaf tissues and secreting effector proteins through specialized infection structures known as haustoria. The mechanisms by which rust effectors promote pathogen virulence are poorly understood. The present study characterized Mlp124478, a candidate effector of M.

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Article Synopsis
  • Oaks are important trees that have been helpful to humans for a very long time, providing food and shelter.
  • There are about 450 species of oaks around the world, and they can live for hundreds of years, which is why they hold cultural significance.
  • Researchers studied the oak genome to understand why they live so long and found that they can have different genetic traits that help them resist diseases over their long lives.
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Background: Heterobasidion parviporum is an economically most important fungal forest pathogen in northern Europe, causing root and butt rot disease of Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) Karst.).

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For years, the study of rust fungal effectors has been impeded by the lack of molecular genetic tools in rust pathosystems. The recent use of heterologous plants to perform effector screens (effectoromics)-including effector localisation (cellular targets) and protein interactors (molecular targets) in plant cells-has changed the game. These screens revealed that many candidate effectors from various rust fungi target specific plant cell compartments, including chloroplasts, and associate with specific plant protein complexes.

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