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Featured researches published by Bertrand Hirel.


Planta | 2000

Characterization of the sink/source transition in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) shoots in relation to nitrogen management and leaf senescence

Céline Masclaux; Marie-Hélène Valadier; Norbert Brugière; Jean-François Morot-Gaudry; Bertrand Hirel

Abstract. The metabolic, biochemical and molecular events occurring during tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) leaf ageing are presented, with a particular emphasis on nitrogen metabolism. An integrated model describing the source/sink relationship existing between leaves of different developmental stages along the main plant axis is proposed. The results of our study show that a tobacco plant can be divided into two main sections with regards to sink/source relationships. Sink-to-source transition occurs at a particular leaf stage in which a breakpoint corresponding to an accumulation of carbohydrates and a depletion of both organic and inorganic nitrogen is observed. The sink/source transition is also marked by the appearence of endoproteolytic activities and the induction of both cytosolic glutamine synthetase and NAD(H)-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase transcripts, proteins and activities. The role of the newly induced enzymes and the nature of the potential metabolic and developmental signals involved in the regulation of their expression during leaf senescence are discussed.


The Plant Cell | 2006

Two Cytosolic Glutamine Synthetase Isoforms of Maize Are Specifically Involved in the Control of Grain Production

Antoine Martin; Judy Lee; Thomas Kichey; Denise Gerentes; Michel Zivy; Christophe Tatout; Frédéric Dubois; Thierry Balliau; Benoît Valot; Marlène Davanture; Thérèse Tercé-Laforgue; Isabelle Quilleré; Marie Coque; André Gallais; María-Begoña Gonzalez-Moro; Linda Bethencourt; Dimah Z. Habash; Peter J. Lea; Alain Charcosset; Pascual Perez; Alain Murigneux; Hitoshi Sakakibara; Keith J. Edwards; Bertrand Hirel

The roles of two cytosolic maize glutamine synthetase isoenzymes (GS1), products of the Gln1-3 and Gln1-4 genes, were investigated by examining the impact of knockout mutations on kernel yield. In the gln1-3 and gln1-4 single mutants and the gln1-3 gln1-4 double mutant, GS mRNA expression was impaired, resulting in reduced GS1 protein and activity. The gln1-4 phenotype displayed reduced kernel size and gln1-3 reduced kernel number, with both phenotypes displayed in gln1-3 gln1-4. However, at maturity, shoot biomass production was not modified in either the single mutants or double mutants, suggesting a specific impact on grain production in both mutants. Asn increased in the leaves of the mutants during grain filling, indicating that it probably accumulates to circumvent ammonium buildup resulting from lower GS1 activity. Phloem sap analysis revealed that unlike Gln, Asn is not efficiently transported to developing kernels, apparently causing reduced kernel production. When Gln1-3 was overexpressed constitutively in leaves, kernel number increased by 30%, providing further evidence that GS1-3 plays a major role in kernel yield. Cytoimmunochemistry and in situ hybridization revealed that GS1-3 is present in mesophyll cells, whereas GS1-4 is specifically localized in the bundle sheath cells. The two GS1 isoenzymes play nonredundant roles with respect to their tissue-specific localization.


The Plant Cell | 1999

Glutamine Synthetase in the Phloem Plays a Major Role in Controlling Proline Production

Norbert Brugière; Frédéric Dubois; Anis M. Limami; Maud Lelandais; Yvette Roux; Rajbir S. Sangwan; Bertrand Hirel

To inhibit expression specifically in the phloem, a 274-bp fragment of a cDNA (Gln1-5) encoding cytosolic glutamine synthetase (GS1) from tobacco was placed in the antisense orientation downstream of the cytosolic Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase promoter of Nicotiana plumbaginifolia. After Agrobacterium-mediated transformation, two transgenic N. tabacum lines exhibiting reduced levels of GS1 mRNA and GS activity in midribs, stems, and roots were obtained. Immunogold labeling experiments allowed us to verify that the GS protein content was markedly decreased in the phloem companion cells of transformed plants. Moreover, a general decrease in proline content in the transgenic plants in comparison with wild-type tobacco was observed when plants were forced to assimilate large amounts of ammonium. In contrast, no major changes in the concentration of amino acids used for nitrogen transport were apparent. A 15NH4+-labeling kinetic over a 48-hr period confirmed that in leaves of transgenic plants, the decrease in proline production was directly related to glutamine availability. After 2 weeks of salt treatment, the transgenic plants had a pronounced stress phenotype, consisting of wilting and bleaching in the older leaves. We conclude that GS in the phloem plays a major role in regulating proline production consistent with the function of proline as a nitrogen source and as a key metabolite synthesized in response to water stress.


Plant Physiology and Biochemistry | 2003

Glutamate dehydrogenase in plants: is there a new story for an old enzyme?

Frédéric Dubois; Thérèse Tercé-Laforgue; María-Begoña Gonzalez-Moro; José-Maria Estavillo; Rajbir S. Sangwan; André Gallais; Bertrand Hirel

Abstract Although good progress has been made to dissect and better understand both the main steps and the regulation of inorganic nitrogen assimilation in higher plants, the role of alternative metabolic pathways which are potentially able to incorporate ammonium into organic molecules is still not fully understood. One of them is the reaction catalysed by the mitochondrial enzyme glutamate dehydrogenase (NAD(H)-GDH, EC 1.4.1.2) which is either able to incorporate ammonium into 2-oxoglutarate to form glutamate or to function in the opposite direction to oxidise glutamate. Although it has been clearly demonstrated by the means of 15 N- or 13 C-labelling experiments that the later reaction occurs in the cell, it has been argued that under certain physiological conditions, when the ammonium concentration reaches a certain threshold, the enzyme is able to function in the aminating direction. More recently, it has been found that in grapes, a high proportion of the protein is located in the mitochondria of the phloem companion cells and that a significant amount of enzyme is present in the cytosolic fraction of senescing flowers. Using cytoimmunochemistry, we confirmed in the present study that, in other higher plant species, GDH protein is localised in the mitochondria of the phloem companion cells and in the cytosol of senescing organs or tissues. These findings open, therefore, new perspectives toward a better understanding of the function of GDH, particularly in relation to stress and plant development. Both transgenic studies performed in the past and the quantitative genetic approach presented in this paper strongly suggest that the reaction catalysed by NAD(H)-GDH is of major importance in the control of plant growth and productivity.


Planta | 1997

Overexpression of a soybean gene encoding cytosolic glutamine synthetase in shoots of transgenic Lotus corniculatus L. plants triggers changes in ammonium assimilation and plant development

Rémi Vincent; Vincent Fraisier; Sylvain Chaillou; M. Anis Limami; Eliane Deléens; Belinda Phillipson; Corinne Douat; Jean-Pierre Boutin; Bertrand Hirel

Abstract. A soybean cytosolic glutamine synthetase gene (GS15) was fused with the constitutive 35S cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) promoter in order to direct overexpression in Lotus corniculatus L. plants. Following transformation with Agrobacterium rhizogenes, eight independent Lotus transformants were obtained which synthesized additional cytosolic glutamine synthetase (GS) in the shoots. To eliminate any interference caused by the T-DNA from the Ri plasmid, three primary transformants were crossed with untransformed plants and progeny devoid of TL- and TR-DNA sequences were chosen for further analyses. These plants had a 50–80% increase in total leaf GS activity. Plants were grown under different nitrogen regimes (4 or 12 mM NH4+) and aspects of carbon and nitrogen metabolism were examined. In roots, an increase in free amino acids and ammonium was accompanied by a decrease in soluble carbohydrates in the transgenic plants cultivated with 12 mM NH4+ in comparison to the wild type grown under the same conditions. Labelling experiments using 15NH4+ were carried out in order to monitor the influx of ammonium and its subsequent incorporation into amino acids. This experiment showed that both ammonium uptake in the roots and the subsequent translocation of amino acids to the shoots was lower in plants overexpressing GS. It was concluded that the build up of ammonium and the increase in amino acid concentration in the roots was the result of shoot protein degradation. Moreover, following three weeks of hydroponic culture early floral development was observed in the transformed plants. As all these properties are characteristic of senescent plants, these findings suggest that expression of cytosolic GS in the shoots may accelerate plant development, leading to early senescence and premature flowering when plants are grown on an ammonium-rich medium.


Plant Physiology | 2002

Genetic and Physiological Analysis of Germination Efficiency in Maize in Relation to Nitrogen Metabolism Reveals the Importance of Cytosolic Glutamine Synthetase

Anis M. Limami; Clothilde Rouillon; Gaëlle Glevarec; A. Gallais; Bertrand Hirel

We have developed an approach combining physiology and quantitative genetics to enhance our understanding of nitrogen (N) metabolism during kernel germination. The physiological study highlighted the central role of glutamine (Gln) synthetase (GS) and Gln synthesis during this developmental process because a concomitant increase of both the enzyme activity and the amino acid content was observed. This result suggests that Gln is acting either as a sink for ammonium released during both storage protein degradation and amino acid deamination or as a source for amino acid de novo synthesis by transamination. In the two parental lines used for the quantitative genetics approach, we found that the increase in Gln occurred earlier in Io compared with F2, a result consistent with its faster germinating capacity. The genetic study was carried out on 140 F6 recombinant inbred lines derived from the cross between F2 and Io. Quantitative trait locus mapping identified three quantitative trait loci (QTLs) related to germination trait (T50, time at which 50% of the kernels germinated) that explain 18.2% of the phenotypic variance; three QTLs related to a trait linked to germination performance, kernel size/weight (thousand kernels weight), that explain 17% of the phenotypic variance; two QTLs related to GS activity at early stages of germination that explain 17.7% of the phenotypic variance; and one QTL related to GS activity at late stages of germination that explains 7.3% of the phenotypic variance. Coincidences of QTL for germination efficiency and its components with genes encoding cytosolic GS (GS1) and the corresponding enzyme activity were detected, confirming the important role of the enzyme during the germination process. A triple colocalization on chromosome 4 betweengln3 (a structural gene encoding GS1) and a QTL for GS activity and T50 was found; whereas on chromosome 5, a QTL for GS activity and thousand kernels weight colocalized withgln4, another structural gene encoding GS1. This observation suggests that for each gene, the corresponding enzyme activity is of major importance for germination efficiency either through the size of the grain or through its faster germinating capacity. Consistent with the possible nonoverlapping function of the two GS1 genes, we found that in the parental line Io, the expression ofGln3 was transiently enhanced during the first hours of germination, whereas that of gln4 was constitutive.


Plant Molecular Biology | 1992

Nucleotide sequence of a tobacco cDNA encoding plastidic glutamine synthetase and light inducibility, organ specificity and diurnal rhythmicity in the expression of the corresponding genes of tobacco and tomato

Thomas W. Becker; Michel Caboche; Elisa Carrayol; Bertrand Hirel

A full-length cDNA encoding glutamine synthetase (GS) was cloned from a λgt10 library of tobacco leaf RNA, and the nucleotide sequence was determined. An open reading frame accounting for a primary translation product consisting of 432 amino acids has been localized on the cDNA. The calculated molecular mass of the encoded protein is 47.2 kDa. The predicted amino acid sequence of this precursor shows higher homology to GS-2 protein sequences from other species than to a leaf GS-1 polypeptide sequence, indicating that the cDNA isolated encodes the chloroplastic isoform (GS-2) of tobacco GS. The presence of C-and N-terminal extensions which are characteristic of GS-2 proteins supports this conclusion. Genomic Southern blot analysis indicated that GS-2 is encoded by a single gene in the diploid genomes of both tomato and Nicotiana sylvestris, while two GS-2 genes are very likely present in the amphidiploid tobacco genome. Western blot analysis indicated that in etiolated and in green tomato cotyledons GS-2 subunits are represented by polypeptides of similar size, while in green tomato leaves an additional GS-2 polypeptide of higher apparent molecular weight is detectable. In contrast, tobacco GS-2 is composed of subunits of identical size in all organs examined. GS-2 transcripts and GS-2 proteins could be detected at high levels in the leaves of both tobacco or tomato. Lower amounts of GS-2 mRNA were detected in stems, corolla, and roots of tomato, but not in non-green organs of tobacco. The GS-2 transcript abundance exhibited a diurnal fluctuation in tomato leaves but not in tobacco leaves. White or red light stimulated the accumulation of GS-2 transcripts and GS-2 protein in etiolated tomato cotyledons. Far-red light cancelled this stimulation. The red light response of the GS-2 gene was reduced in etiolated seedlings of the phytochrome-deficient aurea mutant of tomato. These results indicate a phytochrome-mediated light stimulation of GS-2 gene expression during greening in tomato.


Planta | 2000

Leaf-specific overexpression of plastidic glutamine synthetase stimulates the growth of transgenic tobacco seedlings

Andrea Migge; Elisa Carrayol; Bertrand Hirel; Thomas W. Becker

Abstract. The impact of increased plastidic glutamine synthetase (GS-2; EC 6.1.3.2) activity on foliar amino-acid levels and on biomass production was examined in transgenic tobacco. For that, tobacco was transformed via Agrobacterium tumefaciens with a binary vector containing a tobacco GS-2 cDNA downstream of the leaf-specific soybean ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase small subunit gene promotor. Two transgenic tobacco lines with 15- to 18-fold higher foliar GS-2 transcript levels than the wild type were obtained. The GS-2 protein pools and the specific GS-2 activities were, however, only 2- to 2.3-fold higher in the leaves of the transgenic plants than in the leaves of the wild type. This discrepancy may reflect a post-transcriptional control of GS-2 protein accumulation. The increased GS-2 activity was correlated with a decrease in the leaf ammonium pool (3.7-fold) and an increase in the levels of some free amino acids, including glutamate (2.5-fold) and glutamine (2.3-fold). The accumulation of soluble protein per unit fresh weight, however, remained unchanged. This result indicates that a process downstream of the synthesis of the primary organic products of N-assimilation is limiting leaf protein accumulation. Nevertheless, the overexpression of GS-2 stimulated the growth rate of the transgenic tobacco seedlings which, consequently, were larger (20–30% on a fresh-weight basis) than wild-type seedlings grown under identical conditions. This result suggests that GS-2 is the rate-limiting enzyme during biomass production in tobacco seedlings. The requirement for glutamate as the ammonium acceptor in the reaction catalysed by GS-2 may imply that there is co-regulation of GS-2 and ferredoxin dependent glutamate synthase (Fd-GOGAT; EC 1.4.7.1) gene expression. Increased leaf GS-2 activity had, however, no influence on the foliar Fd-GOGAT protein abundance. This result suggests that in tobacco leaves, more Fd-GOGAT is present than required to meet the demands of primary ammonium assimilation and that there is no strong interdependence between GS-2 and Fd-GOGAT protein expression.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2008

Genetic variation for N-remobilization and postsilking N-uptake in a set of maize recombinant inbred lines. 3. QTL detection and coincidences

Marie Coque; Antoine Martin; Jean-Baptiste Veyrieras; Bertrand Hirel; A. Gallais

The objective of this study was to map and characterize QTLs for traits related to nitrogen utilization efficiency (NUE), grain N yield, N-remobilization and post-silking N-uptake. Furthermore, to examine whether QTLs detected with recombinant inbred lines (RILs) crossed to a tester are common to those detected with line per se evaluation, both types of evaluations were developed from the same set of RILs. The material was studied over two years at high N-input, and one year at low N-input. We used 15N-labelling to evaluate with accuracy the proportion of N remobilized from stover to kernels and the proportion of postsilking N-uptake allocated to kernels. With 59 traits studied in three environments, 608 QTLs were detected. Using a method of QTL clustering, 72 clusters were identified, with few QTLs being specific to one environment or to the type of plant material (lines or testcross families). However, considering each trait separately, few QTLs were common to both line per se and testcross evaluation. This shows that genetic variability is expressed differently according to the type of progeny. Studies of coincidences among QTLs within the clusters showed an antagonism between N-remobilization and N-uptake in several QTL-clusters. QTLs for N-uptake, root system architecture and leaf greenness coincided positively in eight clusters. QTLs for remobilization mainly coincided in clusters with QTLs for leaf senescence. On the whole, sign of coincidences between QTLs underlined the role of a “stay-green” phenotype in favouring N-uptake capacity, and thus grain yield and N grain yield.


Planta | 2000

Immunolocalization of glutamine synthetase in senescing tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) leaves suggests that ammonia assimilation is progressively shifted to the mesophyll cytosol.

Norbert Brugière; Frédéric Dubois; Céline Masclaux; Rajbir S. Sangwan; Bertrand Hirel

Abstract. Glutamine synthetase (GS) catalyses the formation of glutamine (a major form of nitrogen transport in plants) in an ATP-dependent reaction using ammonium and glutamate. This enzyme is present in the plastids and/or in the cytosol depending on the plant or the organ examined. In order to understand the role of GS isoforms in the remobilization of leaf nitrogen, we studied the localization of GS isoenzymes during natural senescence of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) leaves. Parallel to the progression of leaf senescence, an increase in cytosolic GS polypeptides was detected in the mesophyll cytosol of senescing leaves while a significant decrease in GS protein content was observed in the phloem companion cells. The presence of GS polypeptides in the leaf cytosol of senescing leaves appears to be the result of an induction of the Gln1-3 gene, the transcripts of which are not detected in mature leaves but are abundant in senescing leaves. Alltogether, our results suggest that during senescence, ammonia assimilation is progressively shifted from the chloroplasts to the cytosol of leaf mesophyll cells.

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Frédéric Dubois

University of Picardie Jules Verne

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Isabelle Quilleré

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Thérèse Tercé-Laforgue

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Elisa Carrayol

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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A. Gallais

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Marie-Hélène Valadier

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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