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Dive into the research topics where Francis Eychenne is active.

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Featured researches published by Francis Eychenne.


Nature Genetics | 2006

A mutation creating a potential illegitimate microRNA target site in the myostatin gene affects muscularity in sheep

Alex Clop; Fabienne Marcq; Haruko Takeda; Dimitri Pirottin; Xavier Tordoir; Bernard Bibé; Jacques Bouix; Florian Caiment; Jean-Michel Elsen; Francis Eychenne; Catherine Larzul; Elisabeth Laville; Françoise Meish; Dragan Milenkovic; James Tobin; Carole Charlier; Michel Georges

Texel sheep are renowned for their exceptional meatiness. To identify the genes underlying this economically important feature, we performed a whole-genome scan in a Romanov × Texel F2 population. We mapped a quantitative trait locus with a major effect on muscle mass to chromosome 2 and subsequently fine-mapped it to a chromosome interval encompassing the myostatin (GDF8) gene. We herein demonstrate that the GDF8 allele of Texel sheep is characterized by a G to A transition in the 3′ UTR that creates a target site for mir1 and mir206, microRNAs (miRNAs) that are highly expressed in skeletal muscle. This causes translational inhibition of the myostatin gene and hence contributes to the muscular hypertrophy of Texel sheep. Analysis of SNP databases for humans and mice demonstrates that mutations creating or destroying putative miRNA target sites are abundant and might be important effectors of phenotypic variation.


Archives of Virology | 1999

Genetic susceptibility and transmission factors in scrapie: detailed analysis of an epidemic in a closed flock of Romanov

J.-M. Elsen; Y. Amigues; F. Schelcher; V. Ducrocq; O. Andreoletti; Francis Eychenne; J. V. Tien Khang; J.-P. Poivey; F. Lantier; J.-L. Laplanche

SummaryInformation from a scrapie epidemic in a closed INRA Romanov flock is presented. Performances, pedigree, histopathological diagnoses and PrP genotypes were recorded from the beginning of the outbreak (in 1993). Between 1st of April, 1993 and 1st of May, 1997, 1015 animals were exposed to scrapie, and 304 died from this disease. A major influence of the polymorphisms at codons 136, 154 and 171 is shown, A136H154Q171 allele carriers proving to be nearly as resistant as A136R154R171 carriers. A possible relationship between gastrointestinal parasitism and scrapie is discussed. There is evidence of maternal transmission, with a risk ratio for artificially fed lambs of 67 percent of the risk of lambs fed by their mother. Our results strongly suggest that resistant animals were not healthy carriers or at least were less infectious when comparing risk for lambs born to healthy dams either of resistant (risk = 0.431) or of susceptible (risk = 1.000) genotype.


Journal of General Virology | 2002

PrPSc accumulation in placentas of ewes exposed to natural scrapie: influence of foetal PrP genotype and effect on ewe-to-lamb transmission

Olivier Andreoletti; Caroline Lacroux; Armelle Chabert; Laurent Monnereau; Guillaume Tabouret; Frédéric Lantier; Patricia Berthon; Francis Eychenne; Sylvie Lafond-Benestad; Jean-Michel Elsen; François Schelcher

Placentas from scrapie-affected ewes are known to be infectious. Nevertheless, placenta infectivity in such ewes is not systematic. Maternal transmission to lambs is highly suspected but contamination of the foetus in utero has not been demonstrated. Using ewes from a naturally scrapie-infected flock, it was demonstrated that abnormal prion protein (PrP(Sc)) accumulation in the placenta (i) is controlled by polymorphisms at codons 136, 154 and 171 of the foetal PrP gene and (ii) is restricted mainly to placentome foetal trophoblastic cells. In order to go deeper into the role of the placenta in scrapie transmission, the pattern of PrP(Sc) dissemination was established in susceptible lambs (genotype VRQ/VRQ) sampled from 140 days post-insemination to the age of 4 months from either VRQ/VRQ ewes with PrP(Sc)-positive placentas or ARR/VRQ ewes with PrP(Sc)-negative placentas. In both VRQ/VRQ lamb groups, PrP(Sc) spatial and temporal accumulation patterns were similar, suggesting post-natal rather than in utero contamination.


Archives of Virology | 2006

Modelling the spread of scrapie in a sheep flock: evidence for increased transmission during lambing seasons

Suzanne Touzeau; Margo E. Chase-Topping; Louise Matthews; Daniel Lajous; Francis Eychenne; Nora Hunter; J. Foster; G. Simm; J.-M. Elsen; Mark E. J. Woolhouse

Summary.Presence of scrapie infectivity in the placenta suggests the possibility of increased transmission of scrapie during the lambing season. This hypothesis was explored here using a mathematical model of scrapie transmission dynamics which has previously been successfully used to study several scrapie outbreaks in Scottish sheep flocks. It was applied here to the Langlade experimental sheep flock (INRA Toulouse, France), in which a natural scrapie epidemic started in 1993. Extensive data were available, including pedigree, scrapie histopathological diagnoses and PrP genotypes. Detailed simulations of the scrapie outbreak reveal that the observed patterns of seasonality in incidence can not be accounted for by seasonality in demography alone and provide strong support for the hypothesis of increased transmission during lambing. Observations from several other scrapie outbreaks also showing seasonal incidence patterns support these conclusions.


Genetics Selection Evolution | 2004

A short-term divergent selection for resistance to Teladorsagia circumcincta in Romanov sheep using natural or artificial challenge

L. Gruner; Jacques Bouix; Jacqueline Vu Tien Khang; Nathalie Mandonnet; Francis Eychenne; Jacques Cortet; Christine Sauvé; Claude Limouzin

This experiment was conducted to assess the efficiency of selection on the basis of response to artificial challenges in order to breed sheep resistant to natural infection. A short-term divergent selection process was designed to estimate the genetic parameters of these two traits. Two flocks, including 100 Romanov ram lambs each, were challenged in 1990 when they were 6 months old. One flock received three artificial infections with 20 000 third-stage Teladorsagia circumcincta larvae, at intervals of 7 weeks. Faecal egg counts (FEC) were performed on Days 22, 25 and 28 post infection (p.i.) and the animals were drenched on Day 28 p.i. The other flock was grazed for 5 months on a pasture contaminated with the same species. Faecal samples were taken from the lambs at similar ages. About 5 rams with the lowest FEC and 5 with the highest FEC were selected in each flock and mated with unselected ewes. Their offspring (200 animals) were challenged in 1992, half in the same way as their sires, and the other half by the other method. Because of a drought in the summer of 1990, it was necessary to repeat part of the experiment, and in 1992 the 5 and 8 rams with the lowest and highest FEC, respectively, were selected from the offspring challenged on the pasture in 1992 and were mated with unselected ewes. Their progeny (about 80 animals) were challenged in 1994, half by natural infection, half by artificial infection. The mean FEC of the flock increased from the first to the third artificial infection. The natural infection was highly variable in different years, reflecting the difficulty of assessing resistance using this mode of challenge. Genetic parameters were estimated using animal models and REML solutions. The repeatabilities of the FEC following artificial and natural infection were 0.49 and 0.70 respectively within a period of one week, and 0.22 and 0.41 respectively for periods separated by intervals of 7 weeks; the heritabilities of the single egg count were 0.22 and 0.38 respectively. The genetic correlation was 0.87: the FEC recorded under natural or artificial infection appear to depend on the same genetic potential.


Parasitology Research | 2004

Nematode parasites and scrapie: experiments in sheep and mice

L. Gruner; J. M. Elsen; Jacqueline Vu Tien Khang; Francis Eychenne; Jean Claude Caritez; Philippe Jacquiet; Olivier Andreoletti; Pierre Sarradin; Jacques Cortet; Nicolas Richer; Hervé Leroux

To demonstrate the possible role of nematode parasites in the modification of host susceptibility to scrapie, experiments were conducted using sheep naturally exposed to scrapie, chosen by their genotype at the PrP gene, and infected with Teladorsagia circumcincta. Two 4-year duration experiments demonstrated that the nematode infection shortened the development of scrapie with a significant regression between the level of infection and age at first scrapie symptoms (P<0.006). Investigations by ELISA tests in different species of nematode parasites of the digestive tract collected from scrapie infected ewes did not reveal the presence of PrPSc. In scrapie-infected C57BL mice, infected or not with Heligmosoides polygyrus at various times, parasitized animals showed a slight but significantly longer survival period. Assays on transmission by the larvae hatching from eggs collected from scrapie-infected mice were unsuccessful. We concluded that nematodes modify host susceptibility to scrapie, but their role in the horizontal transmission of the disease was not demonstrated.


Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology | 2006

Polymorphic MicroRNA-Target Interactions: A Novel Source of Phenotypic Variation

Michel Georges; Alex Clop; Fabienne Marcq; Haruko Takeda; Dimitri Pirottin; Samuel Hiard; Xavier Tordoir; Florian Caiment; F. Meish; Bernard Bibé; Jacques Bouix; J.M. Elsen; Francis Eychenne; Elisabeth Laville; Catherine Larzul; D. Milenkovic; J. Tobin; And C. Charlier


Journal of Animal Science | 2004

Effects of a quantitative trait locus for muscle hypertrophy from Belgian Texel sheep on carcass conformation and muscularity

Elisabeth Laville; Jacques Bouix; Thierry Sayd; Bernard Bibé; J. M. Elsen; Catherine Larzul; Francis Eychenne; Fabienne Marcq; Michel Georges


Genetics Selection Evolution | 2002

Segregation of a major gene influencing ovulation in progeny of Lacaune meat sheep

Loys Bodin; Magali SanCristobal; Frédéric Lecerf; Philippe Mulsant; Bernard Bibé; Daniel Lajous; Jean-Pierre Belloc; Francis Eychenne; Yves Amigues; Jean-Michel Elsen


Proceedings of the 7th World Congress on Genetics Applied to Livestock Production, Montpellier, France, August, 2002. Session 2. | 2002

Preliminary results of a whole-genome scan targeting QTL for carcass traits in a Texel × Romanov intercross.

Fabienne Marcq; Catherine Larzul; V. Marot; Jacques Bouix; Francis Eychenne; Elisabeth Laville; Bernard Bibé; Pascal Leroy; Michel Georges; J. M. Elsen

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Bernard Bibé

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Jacques Bouix

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Elisabeth Laville

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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J. M. Elsen

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Jean-Michel Elsen

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Catherine Larzul

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Daniel Lajous

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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