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Dive into the research topics where Anne-Laure Fanciullino is active.

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Featured researches published by Anne-Laure Fanciullino.


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2010

Health Benefits of Vitamins and Secondary Metabolites of Fruits and Vegetables and Prospects To Increase Their Concentrations by Agronomic Approaches

Florine Poiroux-Gonord; Luc P. R. Bidel; Anne-Laure Fanciullino; Hélène Gautier; Félicie Lauri-Lopez; Laurent Urban

Fruits and vegetables (FAVs) are an important part of the human diet and a major source of biologically active substances such as vitamins and secondary metabolites. The consumption of FAVs remains globally insufficient, so it should be encouraged, and it may be useful to propose to consumers FAVs with enhanced concentrations in vitamins and secondary metabolites. There are basically two ways to reach this target: the genetic approach or the environmental approach. This paper provides a comprehensive review of the results that have been obtained so far through purely agronomic approaches and brings them into perspective by comparing them with the achievements of genetic approaches. Although agronomic approaches offer very good perspectives, the existence of variability of responses suggests that the current understanding of the way regulatory and metabolic pathways are controlled needs to be increased. For this purpose, more in-depth study of the interactions existing between factors (light and temperature, for instance, genetic factors × environmental factors), between processes (primary metabolism and ontogeny, for example), and between organs (as there is some evidence that photooxidative stress in leaves affects antioxidant metabolism in fruits) is proposed.


Plant Cell and Environment | 2014

Carotenoid responses to environmental stimuli: integrating redox and carbon controls into a fruit model.

Anne-Laure Fanciullino; Luc P. R. Bidel; Laurent Urban

Carotenoids play an important role in plant adaptation to fluctuating environments as well as in the human diet by contributing to the prevention of chronic diseases. Insights have been gained recently into the way individual factors, genetic, environmental or developmental, control the carotenoid biosynthetic pathway at the molecular level. The identification of the rate-limiting steps of carotenogenesis has paved the way for programmes of breeding, and metabolic engineering, aimed at increasing the concentration of carotenoids in different crop species. However, the complexity that arises from the interactions between the different factors as well as from the coordination between organs remains poorly understood. This review focuses on recent advances in carotenoid responses to environmental stimuli and discusses how the interactions between the modulation factors and between organs affect carotenoid build-up. We develop the idea that reactive oxygen species/redox status and sugars/carbon status can be considered as integrated factors that account for most effects of the major environmental factors influencing carotenoid biosynthesis. The discussion highlights the concept of carotenoids or carotenoid-derivatives as stress signals that may be involved in feedback controls. We propose a conceptual model of the effects of environmental and developmental factors on carotenoid build-up in fruits.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2013

Buffering growth variations against water deficits through timely carbon usage.

Florent Pantin; Anne-Laure Fanciullino; Catherine Massonnet; Myriam Dauzat; Thierry Simonneau; Bertrand Muller

Water stresses reduce plant growth but there is no consensus on whether carbon metabolism has any role in this reduction. Sugar starvation resulting from stomatal closure is often proposed as a cause of growth impairment under long-term or severe water deficits. However, growth decreases faster than photosynthesis in response to drought, leading to increased carbohydrate stores under short-term or moderate water deficits. Here, we addressed the question of the role of carbon availability on growth under moderate water deficits using two different systems. Firstly, we monitored the day/night pattern of leaf growth in Arabidopsis plants. We show that a moderate soil water deficit promotes leaf growth at night in mutants severely disrupted in their nighttime carbohydrate availability. This suggests that soil water deficit promotes carbon satiation. Secondly, we monitored the sub-hourly growth variations of clementine fruits in response to daily, natural fluctuations in air water deficit, and at contrasting source–sink balances obtained by defoliation. We show that high carbohydrate levels prevent excessive, hydraulic shrinkage of the fruit during days with high evaporative demand, most probably through osmotic adjustment. Together, our results contribute to the view that growing organs under moderate soil or air water deficit are not carbon starved, but use soluble carbohydrate in excess to partly release a hydromechanical limitation of growth.


Physiologia Plantarum | 2013

Carbohydrate control over carotenoid build‐up is conditional on fruit ontogeny in clementine fruits

Florine Poiroux-Gonord; Anne-Laure Fanciullino; Isabelle Poggi; Laurent Urban

The final contents of primary and secondary metabolites of the ripe fruit depend on metabolic processes that are tightly regulated during fruit ontogeny. Carbohydrate supply during fruit development is known to influence these processes but, with respect to secondary metabolites, we do not really know whether this influence is direct or indirect. Here, we hypothesized that the sensitivity of clementine fruit metabolism to carbohydrate supply was conditional on fruit developmental stage. We applied treatments increasing fruit load reversibly or irreversibly at three key stages of clementine (Citrus clementina Hort. ex Tan.) fruit development: early after cell division, at the onset of fruit coloration (color break) and near maturity. The highest fruit load obtained by early defoliation (irreversible) had the highest impact on fruit growth, maturity and metabolism, followed by the highest fruit load obtained by early shading (reversible). Final fruit size decreased by 21 and 18% in these early irreversible and reversible treatments, respectively. Soluble sugars decreased by 18% in the early irreversible treatment, whereas organic acids increased by 46 and 29% in these early irreversible and reversible treatments, respectively. Interestingly, total carotenoids increased by 50 and 18%, respectively. Changes in leaf starch content and photosynthesis supported that these early treatments triggered a carbon starvation in the young fruits, with irreversible effects. Furthermore, our observations on the early treatments challenge the common view that carbohydrate supply influences positively carotenoid accumulation in fruits. We propose that early carbon starvation irreversibly promotes carotenoid accumulation.


Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture | 2012

Effect of fruit load on maturity and carotenoid content of clementine (Citrus clementina Hort. ex Tan.) fruits.

Florine Poiroux-Gonord; Anne-Laure Fanciullino; Liliane Bert; Laurent Urban

BACKGROUND Citrus fruits contain many secondary metabolites displaying valuable health properties. There is a lot of interest in enhancing citrus quality traits, especially carotenoid contents, by agronomic approaches. In this study the influence of carbohydrate availability on maturity and quality criteria was investigated in clementine fruits during ripening. Fruiting branches were girdled and defoliated after fruit set to obtain three levels of fruit load: high (five leaves per fruit), medium (15) and low (30). RESULTS Considering the soluble solid content/titratable acidity (SSC/TA) ratio, it was found that fruits of the high and medium fruit load treatments reached maturity 1.5 months later than fruits of the control. At the time of maturity the SSC/TA ratio of fruits of all treatments was about 13.6. At harvest, fruits were 23% smaller and total sugar concentration of the endocarp was 12.6% lower in the high fruit load treatment than in the control. In contrast, the concentrations of organic acids and total carotenoids were 55.4 and 93.0% higher respectively. Total carotenoids were not positively correlated with either soluble sugars or total carbohydrates. CONCLUSION Taken together, the results do not support the common view that carbohydrate availability directly determines carotenoid synthesis by influencing precursor availability.


Plant Physiology | 2017

Changes in Anthocyanin Production during Domestication of Citrus

Eugenio Butelli; Andres Garcia-Lor; C. Licciardello; Giuseppina Las Casas; Lionel Hill; Giuseppe Reforgiato Recupero; Manjunath L. Keremane; Chandrika Ramadugu; Robert R. Krueger; Qiang Xu; Xiuxin Deng; Anne-Laure Fanciullino; Yann Froelicher; Luis Navarro; Cathie Martin

Ruby, a regulatory gene encoding a MYB transcription factor, is essential for anthocyanin production, and differences in its activity determine most of the natural variation in pigmentation in Citrus and related genera. Mandarin (Citrus reticulata), citron (Citrus medica), and pummelo (Citrus maxima) are important species of the genus Citrus and parents of the interspecific hybrids that constitute the most familiar commercial varieties of Citrus: sweet orange, sour orange, clementine, lemon, lime, and grapefruit. Citron produces anthocyanins in its young leaves and flowers, as do species in genera closely related to Citrus, but mandarins do not, and pummelo varieties that produce anthocyanins have not been reported. We investigated the activity of the Ruby gene, which encodes a MYB transcription factor controlling anthocyanin biosynthesis, in different accessions of a range of Citrus species and in domesticated cultivars. A white mutant of lemon lacks functional alleles of Ruby, demonstrating that Ruby plays an essential role in anthocyanin production in Citrus. Almost all the natural variation in pigmentation by anthocyanins in Citrus species can be explained by differences in activity of the Ruby gene, caused by point mutations and deletions and insertions of transposable elements. Comparison of the allelic constitution of Ruby in different species and cultivars also helps to clarify many of the taxonomic relationships in different species of Citrus, confirms the derivation of commercial varieties during domestication, elucidates the relationships within the subgenus Papeda, and allows a new genetic classification of mandarins.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2017

Combined Effects of Irrigation Regime, Genotype, and Harvest Stage Determine Tomato Fruit Quality and Aptitude for Processing into Puree

Alexandre Arbex de Castro Vilas Boas; David Page; Robert Giovinazzo; Nadia Bertin; Anne-Laure Fanciullino

Industry tomatoes are produced under a range of climatic conditions and practices which significantly impact on main quality traits of harvested fruits. However, the quality of tomato intended for processing is currently addressed on delivery through color and Brix only, whereas other traits are overlooked. Very few works provided an integrated view of the management of tomato puree quality throughout the chain. To gain insights into pre- and post-harvest interactions, four genotypes, two water regimes, three maturity stages, and two processes were investigated. Field and glasshouse experiments were conducted near Avignon, France, from May to August 2016. Two irrigation regimes were applied: control plants were irrigated in order to match 100% of evapotranspiration (ETP); water deficit (WD) plants were irrigated as control plants until anthesis of the first flowers, then irrigation was reduced to 60 and 50% ETP in field, and glasshouse respectively. Fruits were collected at three stages during ripening. Their color, fresh weight, dry matter content, and metabolite contents were determined before processing. Pericarp cell size was evaluated in glasshouse only. Two laboratory-scaled processing methods were applied before structural and biochemical analyses of the purees. Results outlined interactive effects between crop and process management. WD hardly reduced yield, but increased dry matter content in the field, in contrast to the glasshouse. The puree viscosity strongly depended on the genotype and the maturity stage, but it was disconnected from fruit dry matter content or Brix. The process impact on puree viscosity strongly depended on water supply during fruit production. Moreover, the lycopene content of fresh fruit may influence puree viscosity. This work opens new perspectives for managing puree quality in the field showing that it was possible to reduce water supply without affecting yield and to improve puree quality.


Physiologia Plantarum | 2013

Metabolism in orange fruits is driven by photooxidative stress in the leaves

Florine Poiroux-Gonord; Jérémie Santini; Anne-Laure Fanciullino; Félicie Lopez-Lauri; Jean Giannettini; Huguette Sallanon; Liliane Berti; Laurent Urban


IHC2014 International Horticulture Conference | 2014

Quality of fruits can be improved when nearby leaves are submitted to stressing conditions. A case study of orange trees.

Florine Poiroux-Gonord; Jérémie Santini; Anne-Laure Fanciullino; Félicie Lopez-Lauri; J. Gianetti; Huguette Sallanon; Liliane Berti; Laurent Urban


Fifth International Symposium on Human Health Effects of Fruits and Vegetables | 2013

Carotenoids accumulate in the pulp of orange fruits as a consequence of photooxidative stress in nearby leaves.

Florine Poiroux-Gonord; Jérémie Santini; Anne-Laure Fanciullino; Félicie Lopez-Lauri; J. Gianetti; Huguette Sallanon; Liliane Berti; Laurent Urban

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Laurent Urban

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Florine Poiroux-Gonord

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Liliane Berti

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jérémie Santini

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Luc P. R. Bidel

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Yann Froelicher

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Alexandre Arbex de Castro Vilas Boas

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Bertrand Muller

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Catherine Massonnet

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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