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Featured researches published by Bart Lambert.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Energy use efficiency is characterized by an epigenetic component that can be directed through artificial selection to increase yield

Miriam Hauben; Boris Haesendonckx; Evi Standaert; Katrien Van Der Kelen; Abdelkrim Azmi; Hervé Akpo; Frank Van Breusegem; Yves Guisez; Marc Bots; Bart Lambert; Benjamin Laga; Marc De Block

Quantitative traits, such as size and weight in animals and seed yield in plants, are distributed normally, even within a population of genetically identical individuals. For example, in plants, various factors, such as local soil quality, microclimate, and sowing depth, affect growth differences among individual plants of isogenic populations. Besides these physical factors, also epigenetic components contribute to differences in growth and yield. The network that regulates crop yield is still not well understood. Although this network is expected to have epigenetic elements, it is completely unclear whether it would be possible to shape the epigenome to increase crop yield. Here we show that energy use efficiency is an important factor in determining seed yield in canola (Brassica napus) and that it can be selected artificially through an epigenetic feature. From an isogenic canola population of which the individual plants and their self-fertilized progenies were recursively selected for respiration intensity, populations with distinct physiological and agronomical characteristics could be generated. These populations were found to be genetically identical, but epigenetically different. Furthermore, both the DNA methylation patterns as well as the agronomical and physiological characteristics of the selected lines were heritable. Hybrids derived from parent lines selected for high energy use efficiencies had a 5% yield increase on top of heterosis. Our results demonstrate that artificial selection allows the increase of the yield potential by selecting populations with particular epigenomic states.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2006

Quantitative trait analysis of seed yield and other complex traits in hybrid spring rapeseed (Brassica napus L.): 2. Identification of alleles from unadapted germplasm

Joshua A. Udall; Pablo A. Quijada; Bart Lambert; Thomas C. Osborn

Unadapted germplasm may contain alleles that could improve hybrid cultivars of spring oilseed Brassica napus. Quantitative trait loci (QTL) mapping was used to identify potentially useful alleles from two unadapted germplasm sources, a Chinese winter cultivar and a re-synthesized B. napus, that increase seed yield when introgressed into a B. napus spring hybrid combination. Two populations of 160 doubled haploid (DH) lines were created from crosses between the unadapted germplasm source and a genetically engineered male-fertility restorer line (P1804). A genetically engineered male-sterile tester line was used to create hybrids with each DH line (testcrosses). The two DH line populations were evaluated in two environments and the two testcross populations were evaluated in three or four environments for seed yield and other agronomic traits. Several genomic regions were found in the two testcross populations which contained QTL for seed yield. The map positions of QTL for days to flowering and resistance to a bacterial leaf blight disease coincided with QTL for seed yield and other agronomic traits, suggesting the occurrence of pleiotropic or linked effects. For two hybrid seed yield QTL, the favorable alleles increasing seed yield originated from the unadapted parents, and one of these QTL was detected in multiple environments and in both populations. In this QTL region, a chromosome rearrangement was identified in P1804, which may have affected seed yield.


The Plant Cell | 2013

Seed Architecture Shapes Embryo Metabolism in Oilseed Rape

Ljudmilla Borisjuk; Thomas Neuberger; Jörg Schwender; Nicolas Heinzel; Stephanie Sunderhaus; Johannes Fuchs; Jordan O. Hay; Henning Tschiersch; Hans-Peter Braun; Peter Denolf; Bart Lambert; Peter M. Jakob; Hardy Rolletschek

This work investigates how metabolism and oil storage capacity of the growing embryo of oilseed rape is adjusted to developmental changes in its architecture. It shows that locally distinct growth conditions due to the folding of cotyledons cause metabolic heterogeneity that reflects at the level of pathway activity, metabolites, and storage products (oil/protein). Constrained to develop within the seed, the plant embryo must adapt its shape and size to fit the space available. Here, we demonstrate how this adjustment shapes metabolism of photosynthetic embryo. Noninvasive NMR-based imaging of the developing oilseed rape (Brassica napus) seed illustrates that, following embryo bending, gradients in lipid concentration became established. These were correlated with the local photosynthetic electron transport rate and the accumulation of storage products. Experimentally induced changes in embryo morphology and/or light supply altered these gradients and were accompanied by alterations in both proteome and metabolome. Tissue-specific metabolic models predicted that the outer cotyledon and hypocotyl/radicle generate the bulk of plastidic reductant/ATP via photosynthesis, while the inner cotyledon, being enclosed by the outer cotyledon, is forced to grow essentially heterotrophically. Under field-relevant high-light conditions, major contribution of the ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase–bypass to seed storage metabolism is predicted for the outer cotyledon and the hypocotyl/radicle only. Differences between in vitro– versus in planta–grown embryos suggest that metabolic heterogeneity of embryo is not observable by in vitro approaches. We conclude that in vivo metabolic fluxes are locally regulated and connected to seed architecture, driving the embryo toward an efficient use of available light and space.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2006

Quantitative trait analysis of seed yield and other complex traits in hybrid spring rapeseed (Brassica napus L.): 1. Identification of genomic regions from winter germplasm

Pablo A. Quijada; Joshua A. Udall; Bart Lambert; Thomas C. Osborn


Archive | 2009

Brassica plant comprising a mutant indehiscent allele

Benjamin Laga; Bart den Boer; Bart Lambert


Archive | 2008

Plante brassica comprenant un allèle indéhiscent mutant

Benjamin Laga; Boer Bart Den; Bart Lambert


Archive | 1994

New bacillus thuringiensis strains and their insecticidal proteins

Bart Lambert; S Jansens; Katrien Van Audenhove; Marnix Peferoen; Jeroen Van Rie; Roel Van Aarssen


Archive | 2008

BRASSICA PLANT COMPRISING MUTANT FATTY ACYL-ACP THIOESTERASE ALLELES

Benjamin Laga; Bart den Boer; Bart Lambert


Procedia environmental sciences | 2015

Omics-directed Reverse Genetics Enables the Creation of New Productivity Traits for the Vegetable Oil Crop Canola

Bart Lambert; Peter Denolf; Steven Engelen; Boris Haesendonckx; Rene Ruiter; Steven Robbens; Marc Bots; Benjamin Laga


International Consultative Research Group on Rapeseed (ICRGR) | 2011

Sequence analysis of the canola genome

Jacqueline Batley; Michal T. Lorenc; Kaitao Lai; Sahana Manoli; Jiri Stiller; Paul J. Berkman; Adam Skarshewski; Lars Smits; Megan McKenzie; Emma Campbell; Michael Imelfort; Harsh Raman; Bart Lambert; Benjamin Laga; David Edwards

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Joshua A. Udall

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Pablo A. Quijada

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Thomas C. Osborn

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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