Elisabetta Lupotto
Rice University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Elisabetta Lupotto.
Environmental Microbiology | 2009
Claudia Lüke; Sascha Krause; Stefano Cavigiolo; Diego Greppi; Elisabetta Lupotto; Peter Frenzel
We focused on the functional guild of methane oxidizing bacteria (MOB) as model organisms to get deeper insights into microbial biogeography. The pmoA gene was used as a functional and phylogenetic marker for MOB in two approaches: (i) a pmoA database (> 4000 sequences) was evaluated to obtain insights into MOB diversity in Italian rice paddies, and paddy fields worldwide. The results show a wide geographical distribution of pmoA genotypes that seem to be specifically adapted to paddy fields (e.g. Rice Paddy Cluster 1 and Rice Paddy Cluster 2). (ii) On the smaller geographical scale, we designed a factorial experiment including three different locations, two rice varieties and two habitats (soil and roots) within each of three rice fields. Multivariate analysis of terminal restriction fragment analysis profiles revealed different community patterns at the three field sites, located 10-20 km apart. Root samples were characterized by high abundance of type I MOB whereas the rice variety had no effect. With the agronomical practice being nearly identical, historical contingencies might be responsible for the field site differences. Considering a large reservoir of viable yet inactive MOB cells acting as a microbial seed bank, environmental conditions might have selected and activated a different subset at a time thereby shaping the community.
Molecular Breeding | 2011
Odile Faivre-Rampant; Gianluca Bruschi; Pamela Abbruscato; Stefano Cavigiolo; Anna Maria Picco; Laetitia Borgo; Elisabetta Lupotto; Pietro Piffanelli
Italy is the only country in Europe with a significant land area used for rice production. In this paper, the genetic diversity of 172 national varieties and 47 foreign accessions (ITALORYZA collection) was investigated using a set of neutral markers evenly distributed throughout the 12 chromosomes. Out of the 218 alleles detected in our analysis, 17 and 29% were specific to the Italian and foreign accessions, respectively. From the neighbour-joining tree generated, six sub-groups of temperate japonica germplasm were identified. Plant height and grain type measured in the source collection were fitted to the phylogenetic tree, along with the period of variety registration. This integrated genotype–phenotype analysis revealed that specific sub-groups are characterized by uniform classes of grain type, or by similar plant size, or by period of release in the market. The whole collection was also evaluated for leaf blast resistance by inoculating the plants with three strains of Magnaporthe oryzae, representing the pathogen genetic diversity existing in Italy. Only 15 out of 172 Italian accessions (8.7%) were resistant to all three fungal strains. The correlation between genotype and leaf blast phenotype revealed that the most highly resistant Italian varieties are included in a single germplasm sub-group derived from US varieties. This study represents the starting point for carrying out detailed phenotype–genotype whole-genome association studies and identification of the genetic basis of important agronomic traits for rice cultivation in temperate climates.
Environmental Microbiology Reports | 2011
Claudia Lüke; Levente Bodrossy; Elisabetta Lupotto; Peter Frenzel
Rice plants play a key role in regulating methane emissions from paddy fields by affecting both underlying processes: methane production and oxidation. Specific differences were reported for methane oxidation rates; however, studies on the bacterial communities involved are rare. Here, we analysed the methanotrophic community on the roots of 18 different rice cultivars by pmoA-based terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP) and microarray analysis. Both techniques showed comparable and consistent results revealing a high diversity dominated by type II and type Ib methanotrophs. pmoA microarrays have been successfully used to study methane-oxidizing bacteria in various environments. However, the microarrays full potential resolving community structure has not been exploited yet. Here, we provide an example on how to include this information into multivariate statistics. The analysis revealed a rice cultivar effect on the methanotroph community composition that could be affiliated to the plant genotype. This effect became only significant by including the specific phylogenetic resolution provided by the microarray into the statistical analysis.
First Cereals & Europe Spring Meeting, Montpellier, France, 2-4 May, 2007. | 2008
Elisabetta Lupotto; Barbara Cavagna; Federica Corana; Chiara Giorgio Mellerio; Chiara Lanzanova; Stefano Cavigiolo; Diego Greppi
ABSTRACT Headspace solid phase micro-extraction (HS-SPME) coupled with gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC-MS) was assessed as a technique to analyze the volatile aroma profile of Italian aromatic rice varieties. The HS-SPME/GC-MS technique gives data comparable to data obtained with conventional extraction methods but produces samples with higher compound concentration, lower levels of contamination, and shorter sample preparation time. The technique might prove useful in helping to assess the commercial potential of aromatic rice varieties on the international market.
Crop Science | 2012
Brigitte Courtois; Julien Frouin; Raffaella Greco; Gianluca Bruschi; Gaëtan Droc; Chantal Hamelin; Manuel Ruiz; Guy Clément; Jean-Charles Evrard; Sylvie van Coppenole; Dimitrios Katsantonis; Margarida Oliveira; Sónia Negrão; Celina Matos; Stefano Cavigiolo; Elisabetta Lupotto; Pietro Piffanelli; Nourollah Ahmadi
Molecular Breeding | 2010
G. Tacconi; V. Baldassarre; C. Lanzanova; Odile Faivre-Rampant; Stefano Cavigiolo; S. Urso; Elisabetta Lupotto; Giampiero Valè
Plant Genetic Resources | 2011
Brigitte Courtois; Raffaella Greco; Gianluca Bruschi; Julien Frouin; Nourollah Ahmadi; Gaëtan Droc; Chantal Hamelin; Manuel Ruiz; Jean-Charles Evrard; Dimitrios Katsantonis; Margarida Oliveira; Sónia Negrão; Stefano Cavigiolo; Elisabetta Lupotto; Pietro Piffanelli
Archive | 2012
Laura Crispino; M. Rodolfi; Anna Maria Picco; Odile Faivre-Rampant; Didier Tharreau; Elisabetta Lupotto; Pietro Piffanelli; Pamela Abbruscato
Archive | 2012
Christos Dramalis; Dimitrios Katsantonis; Spyridon D. Koutroubas; Elisabetta Lupotto; Nourollah Ahmadi; Brigitte Courtois; Pietro Piffanelli
Archive | 2010
Sónia Negrão; Brigitte Courtois; Nourollah Ahmadi; P. Babo; Julien Frouin; Rafaella Greco; Gianluca Bruschi; Sylvie Vancoppenolle; Dimitrios Katsantonis; Elisabetta Lupotto; Margarida Oliveira; Pietro Piffanelli
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Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement
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