Corinne Rancurel
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
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Publication
Featured researches published by Corinne Rancurel.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2009
Brandi L. Cantarel; Pedro M. Coutinho; Corinne Rancurel; Thomas Bernard; Vincent Lombard; Bernard Henrissat
The Carbohydrate-Active Enzyme (CAZy) database is a knowledge-based resource specialized in the enzymes that build and breakdown complex carbohydrates and glycoconjugates. As of September 2008, the database describes the present knowledge on 113 glycoside hydrolase, 91 glycosyltransferase, 19 polysaccharide lyase, 15 carbohydrate esterase and 52 carbohydrate-binding module families. These families are created based on experimentally characterized proteins and are populated by sequences from public databases with significant similarity. Protein biochemical information is continuously curated based on the available literature and structural information. Over 6400 proteins have assigned EC numbers and 700 proteins have a PDB structure. The classification (i) reflects the structural features of these enzymes better than their sole substrate specificity, (ii) helps to reveal the evolutionary relationships between these enzymes and (iii) provides a convenient framework to understand mechanistic properties. This resource has been available for over 10 years to the scientific community, contributing to information dissemination and providing a transversal nomenclature to glycobiologists. More recently, this resource has been used to improve the quality of functional predictions of a number genome projects by providing expert annotation. The CAZy resource resides at URL: http://www.cazy.org/.
PLOS Genetics | 2008
Ronald M. Weiner; Larry E. Taylor; Bernard Henrissat; Loren Hauser; Miriam Land; Pedro M. Coutinho; Corinne Rancurel; Elizabeth Saunders; Atkinson G. Longmire; Haitao Zhang; Edward A. Bayer; Harry J. Gilbert; Frank W. Larimer; Igor B. Zhulin; Nathan A. Ekborg; Raphael Lamed; Paul M. Richardson; Ilya Borovok; Steven W. Hutcheson
The marine bacterium Saccharophagus degradans strain 2-40 (Sde 2-40) is emerging as a vanguard of a recently discovered group of marine and estuarine bacteria that recycles complex polysaccharides. We report its complete genome sequence, analysis of which identifies an unusually large number of enzymes that degrade >10 complex polysaccharides. Not only is this an extraordinary range of catabolic capability, many of the enzymes exhibit unusual architecture including novel combinations of catalytic and substrate-binding modules. We hypothesize that many of these features are adaptations that facilitate depolymerization of complex polysaccharides in the marine environment. This is the first sequenced genome of a marine bacterium that can degrade plant cell walls, an important component of the carbon cycle that is not well-characterized in the marine environment.
Fungal Genetics and Biology | 2008
Anthony Levasseur; François Piumi; Pedro M. Coutinho; Corinne Rancurel; Michèle Asther; Michel Delattre; Bernard Henrissat; Pierre Pontarotti; Marcel Asther; Eric Record
The breakdown of lignin by fungi is a key step during carbon recycling in terrestrial ecosystems. This process is of great interest for green and white biotechnological applications. Given the importance of these enzymatic processes, we have classified the enzymes potentially involved in lignin catabolism into sequence-based families and integrated them in a newly developed database, designated Fungal Oxidative Lignin enzymes (FOLy). Families were defined after sequence similarity searches starting from protein sequences and validated by the convergence of results with biochemical experiments reported in the literature. The resulting database was applied as a tool for the functional annotation of genomes from different fungi, namely (i) the Basidiomycota Coprinopsis cinerea, Phanerochaete chrysosporium and Ustilago maydis and (ii) the Ascomycota Aspergillus nidulans and Trichoderma reesei. Genomic comparison of the oxidoreductases of these fungi revealed significant differences in the putative enzyme arsenals. Two Ascomycota fungal genomes were annotated and new candidate genes were identified that could be useful for lignin degradation and (or) melanin synthesis, and their function investigated experimentally. This database efforts aims at providing the means to get new insights for the understanding and biotechnological exploitation of the lignin degradation. A WWW server giving access to the routinely updated FOLy classifications of enzymes potentially involved in lignin degradation can be found at http://foly.esil.univ-mrs.fr.
Genome Biology and Evolution | 2014
Sebastian Eves-van den Akker; Catherine J. Lilley; Etienne Danchin; Corinne Rancurel; Peter J. A. Cock; Peter E. Urwin; John T. Jones
Within the phylum Nematoda, plant-parasitism is hypothesized to have arisen independently on at least four occasions. The most economically damaging plant-parasitic nematode species, and consequently the most widely studied, are those that feed as they migrate destructively through host roots causing necrotic lesions (migratory endoparasites) and those that modify host root tissue to create a nutrient sink from which they feed (sedentary endoparasites). The false root-knot nematode Nacobbus aberrans is the only known species to have both migratory endoparasitic and sedentary endoparasitic stages within its life cycle. Moreover, its sedentary stage appears to have characteristics of both the root-knot and the cyst nematodes. We present the first large-scale genetic resource of any false-root knot nematode species. We use RNAseq to describe relative abundance changes in all expressed genes across the life cycle to provide interesting insights into the biology of this nematode as it transitions between modes of parasitism. A multigene phylogenetic analysis of N. aberrans with respect to plant-parasitic nematodes of all groups confirms its proximity to both cyst and root-knot nematodes. We present a transcriptome-wide analysis of both lateral gene transfer events and the effector complement. Comparing parasitism genes of typical root-knot and cyst nematodes to those of N. aberrans has revealed interesting similarities. Importantly, genes that were believed to be either cyst nematode, or root-knot nematode, “specific” have both been identified in N. aberrans. Our results provide insights into the characteristics of a common ancestor and the evolution of sedentary endoparasitism of plants by nematodes.
Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2003
Valérie Campanacci; Marie-Pierre Egloff; Sonia Longhi; François Ferron; Corinne Rancurel; Aurelia Salomoni; Cécile Durousseau; Fabienne Tocque; Nicolas Bremond; Jessika C. Dobbe; Eric J. Snijder; Bruno Canard; Christian Cambillau
The aetiologic agent of the recent epidemics of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) is a positive‐stranded RNA virus (SARS‐CoV) belonging to the Coronaviridae family and its genome differs substantially from those of other known coronaviruses. SARS‐CoV is transmissible mainly by the respiratory route and to date there is no vaccine and no prophylactic or therapeutic treatments against this agent. A SARS‐CoV whole‐genome approach has been developed aimed at determining the crystal structure of all of its proteins or domains. These studies are expected to greatly facilitate drug design. The genomes of coronaviruses are between 27 and 31.5 kbp in length, the largest of the known RNA viruses, and encode 20–30 mature proteins. The functions of many of these polypeptides, including the Nsp9–Nsp10 replicase‐cleavage products, are still unknown. Here, the cloning, Escherichia coli expression, purification and crystallization of the SARS‐CoV Nsp9 protein, the first SARS‐CoV protein to be crystallized, are reported. Nsp9 crystals diffract to 2.8 Å resolution and belong to space group P61/522, with unit‐cell parameters a = b = 89.7, c = 136.7 Å. With two molecules in the asymmetric unit, the solvent content is 60% (V M = 3.1 Å3 Da−1).
European Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2003
Corinne Rancurel; Nathalie Daro; Oscar Benedi Borobia; Eberhardt Herdtweck; Jean-Pascal Sutter
A bis(radical) derivative based on a triphenylphosphane core substituted by two nitronyl nitroxide units is reported. This compound was isolated in two forms. One consists of an H2O adduct where H2O is hydrogen-bonded to the radical units, whereas the second lacks this bridging unit. Magnetic studies revealed that the presence of the H2O bridge induces ferromagnetic exchange interaction between the spin carriers. (© Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, 69451 Weinheim, Germany, 2003)
PLOS Genetics | 2017
Romain Blanc-Mathieu; Laetitia Perfus-Barbeoch; Jean-Marc Aury; Martine Da Rocha; Jérôme Gouzy; Erika Sallet; Cristina Martin-Jimenez; Marc Bailly-Bechet; Philippe Castagnone-Sereno; Jean-François Flot; Djampa Kozlowski; Julie Cazareth; Arnaud Couloux; Corinne Da Silva; Julie Guy; Yu-Jin Kim-Jo; Corinne Rancurel; Thomas Schiex; Pierre Abad; Patrick Wincker; Etienne Danchin
Root-knot nematodes (genus Meloidogyne) exhibit a diversity of reproductive modes ranging from obligatory sexual to fully asexual reproduction. Intriguingly, the most widespread and devastating species to global agriculture are those that reproduce asexually, without meiosis. To disentangle this surprising parasitic success despite the absence of sex and genetic exchanges, we have sequenced and assembled the genomes of three obligatory ameiotic and asexual Meloidogyne. We have compared them to those of relatives able to perform meiosis and sexual reproduction. We show that the genomes of ameiotic asexual Meloidogyne are large, polyploid and made of duplicated regions with a high within-species average nucleotide divergence of ~8%. Phylogenomic analysis of the genes present in these duplicated regions suggests that they originated from multiple hybridization events and are thus homoeologs. We found that up to 22% of homoeologous gene pairs were under positive selection and these genes covered a wide spectrum of predicted functional categories. To biologically assess functional divergence, we compared expression patterns of homoeologous gene pairs across developmental life stages using an RNAseq approach in the most economically important asexually-reproducing nematode. We showed that >60% of homoeologous gene pairs display diverged expression patterns. These results suggest a substantial functional impact of the genome structure. Contrasting with high within-species nuclear genome divergence, mitochondrial genome divergence between the three ameiotic asexuals was very low, signifying that these putative hybrids share a recent common maternal ancestor. Transposable elements (TE) cover a ~1.7 times higher proportion of the genomes of the ameiotic asexual Meloidogyne compared to the sexual relative and might also participate in their plasticity. The intriguing parasitic success of asexually-reproducing Meloidogyne species could be partly explained by their TE-rich composite genomes, resulting from allopolyploidization events, and promoting plasticity and functional divergence between gene copies in the absence of sex and meiosis.
Zoologica Scripta | 2017
Marine Pratlong; Corinne Rancurel; Pierre Pontarotti; Didier Aurelle
The phylum Cnidaria is usually divided into five classes: Anthozoa, Cubozoa, Hydrozoa, Scyphozoa and Staurozoa. The class Anthozoa is subdivided into two subclasses: Hexacorallia and Octocorallia. Morphological and molecular studies based on nuclear rDNA and recent phylogenomic studies support the monophyly of Anthozoa. On the other hand, molecular studies based on mitochondrial markers, including two recent studies based on mitogenomic data, supported the paraphyly of Anthozoa, and positioned Octocorallia as sister group to Medusozoa (the monophyletic group of Cubozoa, Hydrozoa and Scyphozoa). On the basis of 51 nuclear orthologs from four hexacorallians, four octocorallians, two hydrozoans and one scyphozoan (with poriferans and Homo sapiens as out‐groups), we built a multilocus alignment of 9 873 amino acids, which aimed at minimizing missing data and hidden paralogy, in order to understand the discrepancy between nuclear and mitochondrial phylogenies. Our phylogenetic analyses strongly supported the monophyly of Anthozoa. We compared the level of substitution saturation between our data set, the data sets of two recent phylogenomic studies and one of a mitogenomic study. We found that mitochondrial DNA is more saturated than nuclear DNA at all the phylogenetic levels studied. Our results emphasize the need for a good evaluation of phylogenetic signal.
bioRxiv | 2017
Philipp H. Schiffer; Etienne Danchin; Ann M. Burnell; Anne-Marike Schiffer; Chris Creevey; Simon Wong; Ilona Dix; Georgina O'Mahony; Bridget A. Culleton; Corinne Rancurel; Gary Stier; Elizabeth A. Martínez-Salazar; Aleksandra Marconi; Urmi Trivedi; Michael Kroiher; Michael A. S. Thorne; Einhard Schierenberg; Thomas Wiehe; Mark Blaxter
Most animal species reproduce sexually, but parthenogenesis, asexual reproduction of various forms, has arisen repeatedly. Parthenogenetic lineages are usually short lived in evolution; though in some environments parthenogenesis may be advantageous, avoiding the cost of sex. Panagrolaimus nematodes have colonised environments ranging from arid deserts to arctic and antarctic biomes. Many are parthenogenetic, and most have cryptobiotic abilities, being able to survive repeated complete desiccation and freezing. It is not clear which genomic and molecular mechanisms led to the successful establishment of parthenogenesis and the evolution of cryptobiosis in animals in general. At the same time, model systems to study these traits in the laboratory are missing. We compared the genomes and transcriptomes of parthenogenetic and sexual Panagrolaimus able to survive crybtobiosis, as well as a non-cryptobiotic Propanogrolaimus species, to identify systems that contribute to these striking abilities. The parthenogens are most probably tripoids originating from hybridisation (allopolyploids). We identified genomic singularities like expansion of gene families, and selection on genes that could be linked to the adaptation to cryptobiosis. All Panagrolaimus have acquired genes through horizontal transfer, some of which are likely to contribute to cryptobiosis. Many genes acting in C. elegans reproduction and development were absent in distant nematode species (including the Panagrolaimids), suggesting molecular pathways cannot directly be transferred from the model system. The easily cultured Panagrolaimus nematodes offer a system to study developmental diversity in Nematoda, the molecular evolution of parthenogens, the effects of triploidy on genomes stability, and the origin and biology of cryptobiosis.
Genes | 2017
Etienne Danchin; Laetitia Perfus-Barbeoch; Corinne Rancurel; Peter Thorpe; Martine Da Rocha; Simon Bajew; R. Neilson; Elena Sokolova; Corinne Da Silva; Julie Guy; Karine Labadie; Daniel Esmenjaud; Johannes Helder; John T. Jones; Sebastian Eves-van den Akker
Nematodes have evolved the ability to parasitize plants on at least four independent occasions, with plant parasites present in Clades 1, 2, 10 and 12 of the phylum. In the case of Clades 10 and 12, horizontal gene transfer of plant cell wall degrading enzymes from bacteria and fungi has been implicated in the evolution of plant parasitism. We have used ribonucleic acid sequencing (RNAseq) to generate reference transcriptomes for two economically important nematode species, Xiphinema index and Longidorus elongatus, representative of two genera within the early-branching Clade 2 of the phylum Nematoda. We used a transcriptome-wide analysis to identify putative horizontal gene transfer events. This represents the first in-depth transcriptome analysis from any plant-parasitic nematode of this clade. For each species, we assembled ~30 million Illumina reads into a reference transcriptome. We identified 62 and 104 transcripts, from X. index and L. elongatus, respectively, that were putatively acquired via horizontal gene transfer. By cross-referencing horizontal gene transfer prediction with a phylum-wide analysis of Pfam domains, we identified Clade 2-specific events. Of these, a GH12 cellulase from X. index was analysed phylogenetically and biochemically, revealing a likely bacterial origin and canonical enzymatic function. Horizontal gene transfer was previously shown to be a phenomenon that has contributed to the evolution of plant parasitism among nematodes. Our findings underline the importance and the extensiveness of this phenomenon in the evolution of plant-parasitic life styles in this speciose and widespread animal phylum.