Clara Cilindre
University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne
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Publication
Featured researches published by Clara Cilindre.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009
Gérard Liger-Belair; Clara Cilindre; Régis D. Gougeon; Marianna Lucio; Istvan Gebefügi; Philippe Jeandet; Philippe Schmitt-Kopplin
As champagne or sparkling wine is poured into a glass, the myriad of ascending bubbles collapse and radiate a multitude of tiny droplets above the free surface into the form of very characteristic and refreshing aerosols. Ultrahigh-resolution MS was used as a nontargeted approach to discriminate hundreds of surface active compounds that are preferentially partitioning in champagne aerosols; thus, unraveling different chemical fingerprints between the champagne bulk and its aerosols. Based on accurate exact mass analysis and database search, tens of these compounds overconcentrating in champagne aerosols were unambiguously discriminated and assigned to compounds showing organoleptic interest or being aromas precursors. By drawing a parallel between the fizz of the ocean and the fizz in Champagne wines, our results closely link bursting bubbles and flavor release; thus, supporting the idea that rising and collapsing bubbles act as a continuous paternoster lift for aromas in every glass of champagne.
Journal of Proteome Research | 2008
Clara Cilindre; Sandrine Jégou; Agnès Hovasse; Christine Schaeffer; Antonio Jesús Castro; Christophe Clément; Alain Van Dorsselaer; Philippe Jeandet; Richard Marchal
The presence of the fungal pathogen, Botrytis cinerea, in the vineyard causes reductions in both quality and quantity of grapes and wine. Because proteins are involved in the foam stabilization of sparkling wines, we have undertaken, for the first time, a thorough proteomic analysis of two champagne base wines prepared with either healthy or botrytized Chardonnay grapes, using two-dimensional electrophoresis (2DE) coupled with immunodetection and tandem mass spectrometry. Most of the identified proteins were from grape origin: invertase and pathogenesis-related (PR) proteins. The disappearance of numerous grape proteins was observed in the botrytized wine, suggesting that they were probably degraded or even repressed or the result of a differential expression of grape proteins upon fungal infection. On the other hand, two pectinolytic enzymes secreted by B. cinerea were found in the botrytized wine.
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2009
Gérard Liger-Belair; Sandra Villaume; Clara Cilindre; Philippe Jeandet
Measurements of CO(2) fluxes outgassing from a flute poured with a standard Champagne wine initially holding about 11 g L(-1) of dissolved CO(2) were presented, in tasting conditions, all along the first 10 min following the pouring process. Experiments were performed at three sets of temperature, namely, 4 degrees C, 12 degrees C, and 20 degrees C, respectively. It was demonstrated that the lower the champagne temperature, the lower CO(2) volume fluxes outgassing from the flute. Therefore, the lower the champagne temperature, the lower its progressive loss of dissolved CO(2) concentration with time, which constitutes the first analytical proof that low champagne temperatures prolong the drinks chill and helps retains its effervescence. A correlation was also proposed between CO(2) volume fluxes outgassing from the flute poured with champagne and its continuously decreasing dissolved CO(2) concentration. Finally, the contribution of effervescence to the global kinetics of CO(2) release was discussed and modeled by the use of results developed over recent years. The temperature dependence of the champagne viscosity was found to play a major role in the kinetics of CO(2) outgassing from a flute. On the basis of this bubbling model, the theoretical influence of champagne temperature on CO(2) volume fluxes outgassing from a flute was discussed and found to be in quite good accordance with our experimental results.
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2009
Gérard Liger-Belair; Sandra Villaume; Clara Cilindre; Guillaume Polidori; Philippe Jeandet
Measurements of CO(2) fluxes outgassing from glasses containing a standard Champagne wine initially holding about 11.5 g L(-1) of dissolved CO(2) were presented, in tasting conditions, during the first 10 min following the pouring process. Experiments were performed at room temperature, with a flute and a coupe, respectively. The progressive loss of dissolved CO(2) concentration with time was found to be significantly higher in the coupe than in the flute, which finally constitutes the first analytical proof that the flute prolongs the drinks chill and helps it to retain its effervescence in contrast with the coupe. Moreover, CO(2) volume fluxes outgassing from the coupe were found to be much higher in the coupe than in the flute in the early moments following pouring, whereas this tendency reverses from about 3 min after pouring. Correlations were proposed between CO(2) volume fluxes outgassing from the flute and the coupe and their continuously decreasing dissolved CO(2) concentration. The contribution of effervescence to the global kinetics of CO(2) release was discussed and modeled by use of results developed over recent years. Due to a much shallower liquid level in the coupe, bubbles collapsing at the free surface of the coupe were found to be significantly smaller than those collapsing at the free surface of the flute, and CO(2) volume fluxes released by collapsing bubbles only were found to be approximately 60% smaller in the coupe than in the flute. Finally, the contributions of gas discharge by invisible diffusion through the free surface areas of the flute and coupe were also approached and compared for each type of drinking vessel.
Analytica Chimica Acta | 2010
Clara Cilindre; Gérard Liger-Belair; Sandra Villaume; Philippe Jeandet; Richard Marchal
A comparison of the foaming parameters of various Champagne wines was undergone with two well distinct methods: (i) a classical gas-sparging method providing standardized but artificial effervescence conditions (the so-called Mosalux), and (ii) a computer assisted viewing equipment (CAVE), much closer to the real champagne tasting conditions. The latter one is the only apparatus which enables a thorough descriptive analysis of foam behavior, during the pouring process of a sparkling wine, and from the end of its pouring. Various Champagne wines elaborated from two grape varieties (Chardonnay and Pinot Meunier) and having experienced different aging-periods (15 months and 5 years) were analyzed and compared to a model sparkling wine, elaborated from a model base wine (devoid of grape colloids). The CO(2) and protein content was also investigated to discuss the foaming behavior of these wines. A significant loss of the CO(2) content during aging was observed and might be the reason for the worse foaming properties of the old champagnes, as determined with CAVE. It is worth noting that contradictory foaming parameters were obtained through the Mosalux method, which is indeed more intrusive than the CAVE, and finally far from the real champagne tasting conditions, since it requires filtration and champagne degassing prior experiment.
Journal of Experimental Botany | 2012
Young-Shick Hong; Agathe Martinez; Gérard Liger-Belair; Philippe Jeandet; Jean-Marc Nuzillard; Clara Cilindre
Botrytis cinerea is a fungal plant pathogen of grape berries, leading to economic and quality losses in wine production. The global metabolite changes induced by B. cinerea infection in grape have not been established to date, even though B. cinerea infection is known to cause significant changes in chemicals or metabolites. In order to better understand metabolic mechanisms linked to the infection process and to identify the metabolites associated with B. cinerea infection, (1)H NMR spectroscopy was used in global metabolite profiling and multivariate statistical analysis of berries from healthy and botrytized bunches. Pattern recognition methods, such as principal component analysis, revealed clear metabolic discriminations between healthy and botrytized berries of botrytized bunches and healthy berries of healthy bunches. Significantly high levels of proline, glutamate, arginine, and alanine, which are accumulated upon plant stress, were found in healthy and botrytized berries of botrytized bunches. Moreover, largely degraded phenylpropanoids, flavonoid compounds, and sucrose together with markedly produced glycerol, gluconic acid, and succinate, all being directly associated with B. cinerea growth, were only found in botrytized berries of botrytized bunches. This study reports that B. cinerea infection causes significant metabolic changes in grape berry and highlights that both the metabolic perturbations associated with the plant defence system and those directly derived from fungal pathogen growth should be considered to better understand the interaction between metabolic variation and biotic pathogen stress in plants.
Journal of Proteome Research | 2012
Alessandro Spagnolo; Maryline Magnin-Robert; Tchilabalo Dilezitoko Alayi; Clara Cilindre; Laurence Mercier; Christine Schaeffer-Reiss; Alain Van Dorsselaer; Christophe Clément; Florence Fontaine
Among grapevine trunk diseases, esca proper and apoplexy commonly represent a threat for viticulture worldwide. To retrieve further information about the mechanisms activated in apoplectic and esca proper-affected plants, a two-dimensional gel electrophoresis (2-DE) based analysis was conducted on green stems from 26-year-old standing vines. Symptomatic and asymptomatic stems from both apoplectic (A) and esca proper-affected (E) plants compared to control (without visual symptom since 10 years) stems were studied. Thirty-three differentially expressed proteins were identified by nanoLC-MS/MS and included into three groups conceptually defined as proteins involved in (i) metabolism and energy, (ii) stress tolerance, and (iii) defense response. For nine of them, expression of the relative mRNAs was also monitored by qRT-PCR. Proteome variations were specifically related to apoplexy and esca proper but were more similar in asymptomatic stems than in the symptomatic ones. Remarkable quantitative differences were noted for several proteins in symptomatic stems according to the expressed form, A and E. Results further indicate that similar responses are likely activated in asymptomatic stems but a various quantitative expression is triggered upon onset of apoplexy or esca proper symptoms while both kind of plants are infected by the same pathogenic fungi.
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2011
Young-Shick Hong; Clara Cilindre; Gérard Liger-Belair; Philippe Jeandet; Norbert Hertkorn; Philippe Schmitt-Kopplin
Botrytis cinerea infection of grape berries leads to changes in the chemical composition of grape and the corresponding wine and, thus, affects wine quality. The metabolic effect of Botrytis infection in Champagne base wine was investigated through a (1)H NMR-based metabolomic approach. Isoleucine, leucine, threonine, valine, arginine, proline, glutamine, γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA), succinate, malate, citrate, tartarate, fructose, glucose, oligosaccharides, amino acid derivatives, 2,3-butanediol, acetate, glycerol, tyrosine, 2-phenylethanol, trigonelline, and phenylpropanoids in a grape must and wine were identified by (1)H NMR spectroscopy and contributed to metabolic differentiations between healthy and botrytized wines by using multivariate statistical analysis such as principal component analysis (PCA). Lowered levels of glycerol, 2,3-butanediol, succinate, tyrosine, valine derivative, and phenylpropanoids but higher levels of oligosaccharides in the botrytized wines were main discriminant metabolites, demonstrating that Botrytis infection of grape caused the fermentative retardation during alcoholic fermentation because the main metabolites responsible for the differentiation are fermentative products. Moreover, higher levels of several oligosaccharides in the botrytized wines also indicated the less fermentative behavior of yeast in the botrytized wines. This study highlights a metabolomic approach for better understanding of the comprehensive metabolic influences of Botrytis infection of grape berries in Champagne wines.
Analytica Chimica Acta | 2009
Sandrine Jégou; Alexandra Conreux; Sandra Villaume; Agnès Hovasse; Christine Schaeffer; Clara Cilindre; Alain Van Dorsselaer; Philippe Jeandet
Invertase is a major protein of grape juice and wine. Accordingly, in order to study the biochemical and structural characteristics of this protein and for a better understanding of its physico-chemical properties, large amounts of the pure protein are needed. A simple method for the purification of the grape vacuolar invertase in a preparative-scale is described in this work. The grape protein was isolated and purified from must by ultrafiltration and anion exchange chromatography. The identification and purity determination of the grape invertase fraction were assessed by SDS-PAGE, and were then confirmed using nanoLC-chip-MS/MS analysis. The laboratory fractionation procedure presented in this work generated large quantities of pure grape vacuolar invertase from must.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Gérard Liger-Belair; Marielle Bourget; Hervé Pron; Guillaume Polidori; Clara Cilindre
In champagne tasting, gaseous CO2 and volatile organic compounds progressively invade the headspace above glasses, thus progressively modifying the chemical space perceived by the consumer. Simultaneous quantification of gaseous CO2 and ethanol was monitored through micro-gas chromatography (μGC), all along the first 15 minutes following pouring, depending on whether a volume of 100 mL of champagne was served into a flute or into a coupe. The concentration of gaseous CO2 was found to be significantly higher above the flute than above the coupe. Moreover, a recently developed gaseous CO2 visualization technique based on infrared imaging was performed, thus confirming this tendency. The influence of champagne temperature was also tested. As could have been expected, lowering the temperature of champagne was found to decrease ethanol vapor concentrations in the headspace of a glass. Nevertheless, and quite surprisingly, this temperature decrease had no impact on the level of gaseous CO2 found above the glass. Those results were discussed on the basis of a multiparameter model which describes fluxes of gaseous CO2 escaping the liquid phase into the form of bubbles.