Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Amel Salhi-Hannachi is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Amel Salhi-Hannachi.


New Phytologist | 2013

Male‐specific DNA markers provide genetic evidence of an XY chromosome system, a recombination arrest and allow the tracing of paternal lineages in date palm

Emira Cherif; Salwa Zehdi; Karina Castillo; Nathalie Chabrillange; Sabira Abdoulkader; Jean-Christophe Pintaud; Sylvain Santoni; Amel Salhi-Hannachi; Sylvain Glémin; Frédérique Aberlenc-Bertossi

Whether sex chromosomes are differentiated is an important aspect of our knowledge of dioecious plants, such as date palm (Phoenix dactylifera). In this crop plant, the female individuals produce dates, and are thus the more valuable sex. However, there is no way to identify the sex of date palm plants before reproductive age, and the sex-determining mechanism is still unclear. To identify sex-linked microsatellite markers, we surveyed a set of 52 male and 55 female genotypes representing the geographical diversity of the species. We found three genetically linked loci that are heterozygous only in males. Male-specific alleles allowed us to identify the gender in 100% of individuals. These results confirm the existence of an XY chromosomal system with a nonrecombining XY-like region in the date palm genome. The distribution of Y haplotypes in western and eastern haplogroups allowed us to trace two male ancestral paternal lineages that account for all known Y diversity in date palm. The very low diversity associated with Y haplotypes is consistent with clonal paternal transmission of a nonrecombining male-determining region. Our results establish the date palm as a biological model with one of the most ancient sex chromosomes in flowering plants.


Annals of Botany | 2015

Genetic structure of the date palm (Phoenix dactylifera) in the Old World reveals a strong differentiation between eastern and western populations

Salwa Zehdi-Azouzi; Emira Cherif; Souhila Moussouni; Muriel Gros-Balthazard; Summar Abbas Naqvi; Bertha Ludeña; Karina Castillo; Nathalie Chabrillange; Nadia Bouguedoura; Malika Bennaceur; Farida Si-Dehbi; Sabira Abdoulkader; Abdourahman Daher; Jean-Frédéric Terral; Sylvain Santoni; Marco Ballardini; Antonio Mercuri; Mohamed Ben Salah; Karim Kadri; Ahmed Othmani; Claudio Littardi; Amel Salhi-Hannachi; Jean-Christophe Pintaud; Frédérique Aberlenc-Bertossi

BACKGROUND AND AIMS Date palms (Phoenix dactylifera, Arecaceae) are of great economic and ecological value to the oasis agriculture of arid and semi-arid areas. However, despite the availability of a large date palm germplasm spreading from the Atlantic shores to Southern Asia, improvement of the species is being hampered by a lack of information on global genetic diversity and population structure. In order to contribute to the varietal improvement of date palms and to provide new insights on the influence of geographic origins and human activity on the genetic structure of the date palm, this study analysed the diversity of the species. METHODS Genetic diversity levels and population genetic structure were investigated through the genotyping of a collection of 295 date palm accessions ranging from Mauritania to Pakistan using a set of 18 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and a plastid minisatellite. KEY RESULTS Using a Bayesian clustering approach, the date palm genotypes can be structured into two different gene pools: the first, termed the Eastern pool, consists of accessions from Asia and Djibouti, whilst the second, termed the Western pool, consists of accessions from Africa. These results confirm the existence of two ancient gene pools that have contributed to the current date palm diversity. The presence of admixed genotypes is also noted, which points at gene flows between eastern and western origins, mostly from east to west, following a human-mediated diffusion of the species. CONCLUSIONS This study assesses the distribution and level of genetic diversity of accessible date palm resources, provides new insights on the geographic origins and genetic history of the cultivated component of this species, and confirms the existence of at least two domestication origins. Furthermore, the strong genetic structure clearly established here is a prerequisite for any breeding programme exploiting the effective polymorphism related to each gene pool.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Genotyping by sequencing reveals the interspecific C. maxima / C. reticulata admixture along the genomes of modern citrus varieties of mandarins, tangors, tangelos, orangelos and grapefruits

Amel Oueslati; Amel Salhi-Hannachi; François Luro; Hélène Vignes; Pierre Mournet; Patrick Ollitrault; Randall P. Niedz

The mandarin horticultural group is an important component of world citrus production for the fresh fruit market. This group formerly classified as C. reticulata is highly polymorphic and recent molecular studies have suggested that numerous cultivated mandarins were introgressed by C. maxima (the pummelos). C. maxima and C. reticulata are also the ancestors of sweet and sour oranges, grapefruit, and therefore of all the “small citrus” modern varieties (mandarins, tangors, tangelos) derived from sexual hybridization between these horticultural groups. Recently, NGS technologies have greatly modified how plant evolution and genomic structure are analyzed, moving from phylogenetics to phylogenomics. The objective of this work was to develop a workflow for phylogenomic inference from Genotyping By Sequencing (GBS) data and to analyze the interspecific admixture along the nine citrus chromosomes for horticultural groups and recent varieties resulting from the combination of the C. reticulata and C. maxima gene pools. A GBS library was established from 55 citrus varieties, using the ApekI restriction enzyme and selective PCR to improve the read depth. Diagnostic polymorphisms (DPs) of C. reticulata/C. maxima differentiation were identified and used to decipher the phylogenomic structure of the 55 varieties. The GBS approach was powerful and revealed 30,289 SNPs and 8,794 Indels with 12.6% of missing data. 11,133 DPs were selected covering the nine chromosomes with a higher density in genic regions. GBS combined with the detection of DPs was powerful for deciphering the “phylogenomic karyotypes” of cultivars derived from admixture of the two ancestral species after a limited number of interspecific recombinations. All the mandarins, mandarin hybrids, tangelos and tangors analyzed displayed introgression of C. maxima in different parts of the genome. C. reticulata/C. maxima admixture should be a major component of the high phenotypic variability of this germplasm opening up the way for association studies based on phylogenomics.


Journal of Evolutionary Biology | 2016

Evolution of sex chromosomes prior to speciation in the dioecious Phoenix species

Emira Cherif; S. Zehdi-Azouzi; A. Crabos; Karina Castillo; Nathalie Chabrillange; Jean-Christophe Pintaud; Amel Salhi-Hannachi; Sylvain Glémin; Frédérique Aberlenc-Bertossi

Understanding the driving forces and molecular processes underlying dioecy and sex chromosome evolution, leading from hermaphroditism to the occurrence of male and female individuals, is of considerable interest in fundamental and applied research. The genus Phoenix, belonging to the Arecaceae family, consists uniquely of dioecious species. Phylogenetic data suggest that the genus Phoenix has diverged from a hermaphroditic ancestor which is also shared with its closest relatives. We have investigated the cessation of recombination in the sex‐determination region within the genus Phoenix as a whole by extending the analysis of P. dactylifera SSR sex‐related loci to eight other species within the genus. Phylogenetic analysis of a date palm sex‐linked PdMYB1 gene in these species has revealed that sex‐linked alleles have not clustered in a species‐dependent way but rather in X and Y‐allele clusters. Our data show that sex chromosomes evolved from a common autosomal origin before the diversification of the extant dioecious species.


Breeding Science | 2016

SSR marker-assisted screening of commercial tomato genotypes under salt stress

Charfeddine Gharsallah; Ahmed Ben Abdelkrim; H. Fakhfakh; Amel Salhi-Hannachi; Faten Gorsane

Salt stress was applied to tomato commercial genotypes to study adverse effects on their phenotypic traits. Three were saline tolerant (San Miguel, Romelia and Llanero), two were mildly tolerant (Perfect peel HF1 and Heinz 1350) whereas the remaining were sensitive. Genotyping cultivars using 19 polymorphic SSRs out of 25 tested produced a total of 70 alleles with an average of 3.68 alleles per locus and PIC values ranging from 0.22 (SSR 26, 92, 66 and TG35) to 0.82 (SSR 356). Principal component analysis (PCA) showed two contrasting panels discriminating tolerant and sensitive groups and one panel with scattered genotypes. STRUCTURE analysis clustered genotypes within three groups in accordance with their salt stress behavior. The success of tomato salt-tolerance breeding programs can be enhanced through molecular characterization of diversity within commercial cultivars that adapt differently to stress conditions. To this end, we combined phenotypes and SSR marker-genotypes to seek sources of salt tolerance that might be tomato species-specific. We integrated and represented genotype-phenotype associations from multiple loci into a multi-layer network representation. It is a systemic view linking discriminating genotypes to salt stress phenotypes, which may guide strategies for the introgression of valuable traits in target tomato varieties to overcome salinity.


Scientia Horticulturae | 2009

Genetic analysis of Tunisian fig (Ficus carica L.) cultivars using amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) markers

Ghada Baraket; Khaled Chatti; Olfa Saddoud; Messaoud Mars; Mohamed Marrakchi; Mokhtar Trifi; Amel Salhi-Hannachi


Scientia Horticulturae | 2009

Sequence analysis of the internal transcribed spacers (ITSs) region of the nuclear ribosomal DNA (nrDNA) in fig cultivars (Ficus carica L.)

Ghada Baraket; Olfa Saddoud; Khaled Chatti; Messaoud Mars; Mohamed Marrakchi; Mokhtar Trifi; Amel Salhi-Hannachi


Scientia Horticulturae | 2013

Assessment of genetic diversity of Tunisian Barbary fig (Opuntia ficus indica) cultivars by RAPD markers and morphological traits

Monia Bendhifi; Ghada Baraket; Lazhar Zourgui; Sami Souid; Amel Salhi-Hannachi


Acta Biologica Cracoviensia Series Botanica | 2011

USING MORPHOLOGICAL CHARACTERS AND SIMPLE SEQUENCE REPEAT (SSR) MARKERS TO CHARACTERIZE TUNISIAN FIG (FICUS CARICA L.) CULTIVARS

Olfa Saddoud; Ghada Baraket; Khaled Chatti; Mokhtar Trifi; Mohamed Marrakchi; Messoud Mars; Amel Salhi-Hannachi


Phytopathologia Mediterranea | 2010

Molecular detection and characterization of Hop stunt viroid sequence variants from naturally infected pomegranate (Punica granatum L.) in Tunisia

Faten Gorsane; Amine Elleuch; Imène Hamdi; Amel Salhi-Hannachi; H. Fakhfakh

Collaboration


Dive into the Amel Salhi-Hannachi's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Frédérique Aberlenc-Bertossi

Institut de recherche pour le développement

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jean-Christophe Pintaud

Institut de recherche pour le développement

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nathalie Chabrillange

Institut de recherche pour le développement

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge