Emmanuelle Lamade
Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Emmanuelle Lamade.
Plant Cell and Environment | 2016
Emmanuelle Lamade; Guillaume Tcherkez; Nuzul Hijri Darlan; Rosario Lobato Rodrigues; Chantal Fresneau; Caroline Mauve; Marlène Lamothe-Sibold; Diana Sketriené; Jaleh Ghashghaie
Oil palm has now become one of the most important crops, palm oil representing nearly 25% of global plant oil consumption. Many studies have thus addressed oil palm ecophysiology and photosynthesis-based models of carbon allocation have been used. However, there is a lack of experimental data on carbon fixation and redistribution within palm trees, and important C-sinks have not been fully characterized yet. Here, we carried out extensive measurement of natural (13) C-abundance (δ(13) C) in oil palm tissues, including fruits at different maturation stages. We find a (13) C-enrichment in heterotrophic organs compared to mature leaves, with roots being the most (13) C-enriched. The δ(13) C in fruits decreased during maturation, reflecting the accumulation in (13) C-depleted lipids. We further used observed δ(13) C values to compute plausible carbon fluxes using a steady-state model of (13) C-distribution including metabolic isotope effects ((12) v/(13) v). The results suggest that fruits represent a major respiratory loss (≈39% of total tree respiration) and that sink organs such as fruits are fed by sucrose from leaves. That is, glucose appears to be a quantitatively important compound in palm tissues, but computations indicate that it is involved in dynamic starch metabolism rather that C-exchange between organs.
Plant Cell and Environment | 2018
Jing Cui; Cyril Abadie; Adam J. Carroll; Emmanuelle Lamade; Guillaume Tcherkez
K deficiency and waterlogging are common stresses that can occur simultaneously and impact on crop development and yield. They are both known to affect catabolism, with rather opposite effects: inhibition of glycolysis and higher glycolytic fermentative flux, respectively. But surprisingly, the effect of their combination on plant metabolism has never been examined precisely. Here, we applied a combined treatment (K availability and waterlogging) to sunflower (Helianthus annuus L.) plants under controlled greenhouse conditions and performed elemental quantitation, metabolomics, and isotope analyses at different sampling times. Whereas separate K deficiency and waterlogging caused well-known effects such as polyamines production and sugar accumulation, respectively, waterlogging altered K-induced respiration enhancement (via the C5 -branched acid pathway) and polyamine production, and K deficiency tended to suppress waterlogging-induced accumulation of Krebs cycle intermediates in leaves. Furthermore, the natural 15 N/14 N isotope composition (δ15 N) in leaf compounds shows that there was a change in nitrate circulation, with less nitrate influx to leaves under low K availablity combined with waterlogging and more isotopic dilution of lamina nitrates under high K. Our results show that K deficiency and waterlogging effects are not simply additive, reshape respiration as well as nitrogen metabolism and partitioning, and are associated with metabolomic and isotopic biomarkers of potential interest for crop monitoring.
Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry | 2009
Emmanuelle Lamade; Indra Eko Setiyo; Sébastien Girard; Jaleh Ghashghaie
Archive | 1996
Emmanuelle Lamade; Indra Eko Setiyo
Archive | 1998
Emmanuelle Lamade; Indra Eko Setiyo; Abdul Razak Purba
Archive | 2002
Emmanuelle Lamade; Indra Eko Setiyo
Archive | 1996
Indra Eko Setiyo; Subronto; Emmanuelle Lamade
International Conference on Oil Palm and Environment (ICOPE 2012), Bali, Indonésie, 22-24 février 2012 | 2012
Emmanuelle Lamade; Indra Eko Setiyo
Archive | 1996
Emmanuelle Lamade; Indra Eko Setiyo
Archive | 2015
Emmanuelle Lamade; Nuzul Hijri Darlan; Eka Listia; Hasril Hasan Siregar