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Dive into the research topics where Cyprien Guerin is active.

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Featured researches published by Cyprien Guerin.


G3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics | 2011

Deciphering the Molecular Basis of Wine Yeast Fermentation Traits Using a Combined Genetic and Genomic Approach

Chloé Ambroset; Maud Petit; Christian Brion; Isabelle Sanchez; Pierre Delobel; Cyprien Guerin; Hélène Chiapello; Pierre Nicolas; Frédéric Bigey; Sylvie Dequin; Bruno Blondin

The genetic basis of the phenotypic diversity of yeast is still poorly understood. Wine yeast strains have specific abilities to grow and ferment under stressful conditions compared with other strains, but the genetic basis underlying these traits is unknown. Understanding how sequence variation influences such phenotypes is a major challenge to address adaptation mechanisms of wine yeast. We aimed to identify the genetic basis of fermentation traits and gain insight into their relationships with variations in gene expression among yeast strains. We combined fermentation trait QTL mapping and expression profiling of fermenting cells in a segregating population from a cross between a wine yeast derivative and a laboratory strain. We report the identification of QTL for various fermentation traits (fermentation rates, nitrogen utilization, metabolites production) as well as expression QTL (eQTL). We found that many transcripts mapped to several eQTL hotspots and that two of them overlapped with QTL for fermentation traits. A QTL controlling the maximal fermentation rate and nitrogen utilization overlapping with an eQTL hotspot was dissected. We functionally demonstrated that an allele of the ABZ1 gene, localized in the hotspot and involved in p-aminobenzoate biosynthesis, controls the fermentation rate through modulation of nitrogen utilization. Our data suggest that the laboratory strain harbors a defective ABZ1 allele, which triggers strong metabolic and physiological alterations responsible for the generation of the eQTL hotspot. They also suggest that a number of gene expression differences result from some alleles that trigger major physiological disturbances.


Genome Biology and Evolution | 2015

Deciphering Genome Content and Evolutionary Relationships of Isolates from the Fungus Magnaporthe oryzae Attacking Different Host Plants

Hélène Chiapello; Ludovic Mallet; Cyprien Guerin; Gabriela Aguileta; Joelle Amselem; Thomas Kroj; Enrique Ortega-Abboud; Marc-Henri Lebrun; Bernard Henrissat; Annie Gendrault; François Rodolphe; Didier Tharreau; Elisabeth Fournier

Deciphering the genetic bases of pathogen adaptation to its host is a key question in ecology and evolution. To understand how the fungus Magnaporthe oryzae adapts to different plants, we sequenced eight M. oryzae isolates differing in host specificity (rice, foxtail millet, wheat, and goosegrass), and one Magnaporthe grisea isolate specific of crabgrass. Analysis of Magnaporthe genomes revealed small variation in genome sizes (39–43 Mb) and gene content (12,283–14,781 genes) between isolates. The whole set of Magnaporthe genes comprised 14,966 shared families, 63% of which included genes present in all the nine M. oryzae genomes. The evolutionary relationships among Magnaporthe isolates were inferred using 6,878 single-copy orthologs. The resulting genealogy was mostly bifurcating among the different host-specific lineages, but was reticulate inside the rice lineage. We detected traces of introgression from a nonrice genome in the rice reference 70-15 genome. Among M. oryzae isolates and host-specific lineages, the genome composition in terms of frequencies of genes putatively involved in pathogenicity (effectors, secondary metabolism, cazome) was conserved. However, 529 shared families were found only in nonrice lineages, whereas the rice lineage possessed 86 specific families absent from the nonrice genomes. Our results confirmed that the host specificity of M. oryzae isolates was associated with a divergence between lineages without major gene flow and that, despite the strong conservation of gene families between lineages, adaptation to different hosts, especially to rice, was associated with the presence of a small number of specific gene families. All information was gathered in a public database (http://genome.jouy.inra.fr/gemo).


PLOS ONE | 2015

Constitutive Stringent Response Restores Viability of Bacillus subtilis Lacking Structural Maintenance of Chromosome Protein.

Camille Benoist; Cyprien Guerin; Philippe Noirot; Etienne Dervyn

Bacillus subtilis mutants lacking the SMC-ScpAB complex are severely impaired for chromosome condensation and partitioning, DNA repair, and cells are not viable under standard laboratory conditions. We isolated suppressor mutations that restored the capacity of a smc deletion mutant (Δsmc) to grow under standard conditions. These suppressor mutations reduced chromosome segregation defects and abrogated hypersensitivity to gyrase inhibitors of Δsmc. Three suppressor mutations were mapped in genes involved in tRNA aminoacylation and maturation pathways. A transcriptomic survey of isolated suppressor mutations pointed to a potential link between suppression of Δsmc and induction of the stringent response. This link was confirmed by (p)ppGpp quantification which indicated a constitutive induction of the stringent response in multiple suppressor strains. Furthermore, sublethal concentrations of arginine hydroxamate (RHX), a potent inducer of stringent response, restored growth of Δsmc under non permissive conditions. We showed that production of (p)ppGpp alone was sufficient to suppress the thermosensitivity exhibited by the Δsmc mutant. Our findings shed new light on the coordination between chromosome dynamics mediated by SMC-ScpAB and other cellular processes during rapid bacterial growth.


PLOS ONE | 2018

Bacillus cereus , a serious cause of nosocomial infections: Epidemiologic and genetic survey

Benjamin Glasset; Sabine Herbin; Sophie A. Granier; Laurent Cavalié; Emilie Lafeuille; Cyprien Guerin; Raymond Ruimy; Florence Casagrande-Magne; Marion Levast; Nathalie Chautemps; Jean-Winoc Decousser; Laure Belotti; Isabelle Pelloux; Jérôme Robert; Anne Brisabois; Nalini Ramarao

Bacillus cereus is the 2nd most frequent bacterial agent responsible for food-borne outbreaks in France and the 3rd in Europe. In addition, local and systemic infections have been reported, mainly describing individual cases or single hospital setting. The real incidence of such infection is unknown and information on genetic and phenotypic characteristics of the incriminated strains is generally scarce. We performed an extensive study of B. cereus strains isolated from patients and hospital environments from nine hospitals during a 5-year study, giving an overview of the consequences, sources and pathogenic patterns of B. cereus clinical infections. We demonstrated the occurrence of several hospital-cross-contaminations. Identical B. cereus strains were recovered from different patients and hospital environments for up to 2 years. We also clearly revealed the occurrence of inter hospital contaminations by the same strain. These cases represent the first documented events of nosocomial epidemy by B. cereus responsible for intra and inter hospitals contaminations. Indeed, contamination of different patients with the same strain of B. cereus was so far never shown. In addition, we propose a scheme for the characterization of B. cereus based on biochemical properties and genetic identification and highlight that main genetic signatures may carry a high pathogenic potential. Moreover, the characterization of antibiotic resistance shows an acquired resistance phenotype for rifampicin. This may provide indication to adjust the antibiotic treatment and care of patients.


PLOS ONE | 2017

PamR, a new MarR-like regulator affecting prophages and metabolic genes expression in Bacillus subtilis

Alba De San Eustaquio-Campillo; Charlène Cornilleau; Cyprien Guerin; Rut Carballido-López; Arnaud Chastanet

B. subtilis adapts to changing environments by reprogramming its genetic expression through a variety of transcriptional regulators from the global transition state regulators that allow a complete resetting of the cell genetic expression, to stress specific regulators controlling only a limited number of key genes required for optimal adaptation. Among them, MarR-type transcriptional regulators are known to respond to a variety of stresses including antibiotics or oxidative stress, and to control catabolic or virulence gene expression. Here we report the characterization of the ydcFGH operon of B. subtilis, containing a putative MarR-type transcriptional regulator. Using a combination of molecular genetics and high-throughput approaches, we show that this regulator, renamed PamR, controls directly its own expression and influence the expression of large sets of prophage-related and metabolic genes. The extent of the regulon impacted by PamR suggests that this regulator reprograms the metabolic landscape of B. subtilis in response to a yet unknown signal.


F1000Research | 2015

The GEMO project: Hitchhiking DNA in Magnaporthe oryzae

Ludovic Mallet; Cyprien Guerin; Joelle Amselem; Elisabeth Fournier; Hélène Chiapello


6. Congress of European Microbiologist FEMS 2015 | 2015

Deciphering regulatory networks of the salmonid fish pathogen flavobacterium psychrophilum by primary transcriptome mapping

Tatiana Rochat; Cyprien Guerin; Erwin van Dijk; Brigitte Kerouault; Claude Thermes; Francis Repoila; Eric Duchaud; Pierre Nicolas


PAG - Plant Animal Genome, | 2013

Comparative analysis of transposable elements in the Magnaporthe oryzae/grisea clade

Ludovic Mallet; Hélène Chiapello; Cyprien Guerin; Marc-Henri Lebrun; Elisabeth Fournier; Didier Tharreau; Joelle Amselem


27th Fungal Genetics Conference - Asilomar Conference Grounds, | 2013

Genome evolution of fungal pathogens from the Magnaporthe oryzae/grisea clade.

Hélène Chiapello; Ludovic Mallet; Cyprien Guerin; Gabriella Aguileta; François Rodolphe; Annie Gendrault; Jonathan Kreplak; Joelle Amselem; Enrique Ortega-Abboud; Marc-Henri Lebrun; Didier Tharreau; Elisabeth Fournier


27th Fungal Genetics Conference | 2013

Evolution of the pan-secretome among lineages of Magnaporthe oryzae attacking different host-plants

Elisabeth Fournier; Enrique Ortega-Abboud; Ludovic Mallet; Hélène Chiapello; Cyprien Guerin; François Rodolphe; Annie Gendrault; Jonathan Kreplak; Joelle Amselem; Marc-Henri Lebrun; Thomas Kroj; Didier Tharreau

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Hélène Chiapello

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Elisabeth Fournier

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Joelle Amselem

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Ludovic Mallet

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Jonathan Kreplak

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Annie Gendrault

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Thomas Kroj

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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François Rodolphe

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Pierre Nicolas

Université Paris-Saclay

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