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Dive into the research topics where François Allal is active.

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Featured researches published by François Allal.


Journal of Fish Diseases | 2017

Viral encephalopathy and retinopathy in aquaculture: a review

Quoc Khanh Doan; Marc Vandeputte; Béatrice Chatain; Thierry Morin; François Allal

Viral encephalopathy and retinopathy (VER), otherwise known as viral nervous necrosis (VNN), is a major devastating threat for aquatic animals. Betanodaviruses have been isolated in at least 70 aquatic animal species in marine and in freshwater environments throughout the world, with the notable exception of South America. In this review, the main features of betanodavirus, including its diversity, its distribution and its transmission modes in fish, are firstly presented. Then, the existing diagnosis and detection methods, as well as the different control procedures of this disease, are reviewed. Finally, the potential of selective breeding, including both conventional and genomic selection, as an opportunity to obtain resistant commercial populations, is examined.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Heritability of Boldness and Hypoxia Avoidance in European Seabass, Dicentrarchus labrax

Sébastien Ferrari; Khaled Horri; François Allal; Alain Vergnet; David Benhaïm; Marc Vandeputte; Béatrice Chatain; Marie-Laure Bégout

To understand the genetic basis of coping style in European seabass, fish from a full factorial mating (10 females x 50 males) were reared in common garden and individually tagged. Individuals coping style was characterized through behavior tests at four different ages, categorizing fish into proactive or reactive: a hypoxia avoidance test (at 255 days post hatching, dph) and 3 risk-taking tests (at 276, 286 and 304 dph). We observed significant heritability of the coping style, higher for the average of risk-taking scores (h2 = 0.45 ± 0.14) than for the hypoxia avoidance test (h2 = 0.19 ± 0.10). The genetic correlations between the three risk-taking scores were very high (rA = 0.96–0.99) showing that although their repeatability was moderately high (rP = 0.64–0.72), successive risk-taking tests evaluated the same genetic variation. A mild genetic correlation between the results of the hypoxia avoidance test and the average of risk-taking scores (0.45 ± 0.27) suggested that hypoxia avoidance and risk-taking tests do not address exactly the same behavioral and physiological responses. Genetic correlations between weight and risk taking traits showed negative values whatever the test used in our population i.e. reactive individual weights were larger. The results of this quantitative genetic analysis suggest a potential for the development of selection programs based on coping styles that could increase seabass welfare without altering growth performances. Overall, it also contributes to a better understanding of the origin and the significance of individual behavioral differences.


Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences | 2016

How could fully scaled carps appear in natural waters in Madagascar

Jean Noël Hubert; François Allal; Caroline Hervet; Monique Ravakarivelo; Zsigmond Jeney; Alain Vergnet; René Guyomard; Marc Vandeputte

The capacity of organisms to rapidly evolve in response to environmental changes is a key feature of evolution, and studying mutation compensation is a way to evaluate whether alternative routes of evolution are possible or not. Common carps (Cyprinus carpio) carrying a homozygous loss-of-function mutation for the scale cover gene fgfr1a1, causing the ‘mirror’ reduced scale cover, were introduced in Madagascar a century ago. Here we show that carps in Malagasy natural waters are now predominantly covered with scales, though they still all carry the homozygous mutation. We also reveal that the number of scales in mutated carps is under strong polygenic genetic control, with a heritability of 0.49. As a whole, our results suggest that carps submitted to natural selection could evolve a wild-type-like scale cover in less than 40 generations from standing polygenic genetic variation, confirming similar findings mainly retrieved from model organisms.


Heredity | 2018

Population-specific variations of the genetic architecture of sex determination in wild European sea bass Dicentrarchus labrax L.

Sara Faggion; Marc Vandeputte; Béatrice Chatain; Pierre-Alexandre Gagnaire; François Allal

Polygenic sex determination (PSD) may show variations in terms of genetic and environmental components between populations of fish species exposed/adapted to different environments. The European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax) is an interesting model, combining both a PSD system and a genetic subdivision into an Atlantic and a Mediterranean lineage, with genetic substructures within the Mediterranean Sea. Here, we produced experimental progeny crosses (N = 927) from broodstock sampled in four wild populations (North Atlantic, NAT; Western Mediterranean, WEM; North-Eastern Mediterranean, NEM; South-Eastern Mediterranean, SEM). We found less females than males in the progeny, both in the global dataset (32.5%) and within each paternal group (from 25.1% for NEM to 39.0% for WEM), with significant variation among populations, dams, and sires. Sex, body weight (BW), and body length (BL) showed moderate heritability (0.52 ± 0.17, 0.46 ± 0.17, 0.34 ± 0.15, respectively) and sex was genetically correlated with BW and BL, with rAsex/BW = 0.69 ± 0.12 and rA sex/BL = 0.66 ± 0.13. A weighted GWAS performed both on the global dataset and within each paternal group revealed a different genetic architecture of sex determination between Atlantic and Mediterranean populations (9 QTLs found in NAT, 7 in WEM, 5 in NEM, and 4 in SEM, with a cumulated variance explained of 27.04%, 21.87%, 15.89%, and 12.10%, respectively) and a more similar genetic architecture among geographically close populations compared to geographically distant populations, consistent with the hypothesis of a population-specific evolution of polygenic sex determination systems in different environments.


Epigenetics | 2018

Dynamic epimarks in sex-related genes predict gonad phenotype in the European sea bass, a fish with mixed genetic and environmental sex determination

Dafni Anastasiadi; Marc Vandeputte; Núria Sánchez-Baizán; François Allal; Francesc Piferrer

ABSTRACT The integration of genomic and environmental influences into methylation patterns to bring about a phenotype is of central interest in developmental epigenetics, but many details are still unclear. The sex ratios of the species used here, the European sea bass, are determined by genetic and temperature influences. We created four families from parents known to produce offspring with different sex ratios, exposed larvae to masculinizing temperatures and examined, in juvenile gonads, the DNA methylation of seven genes related to sexual development by a targeted sequencing approach. The genes most affected by both genetics and environment were cyp19a1a and dmrt1, with contrasting sex-specific methylation and temperature responses. The relationship between cyp19a1a methylation and expression is relevant to the epigenetic regulation of vertebrate sex, and we report the evidence of such relationship only below a methylation threshold, ~ 80%, and that it was sex-specific: negatively correlated in females but positively correlated in males. From parents to offspring, the methylation in gonads was midway between oocytes and sperm, with bias towards oocytes for amh-r2, er-β2, fsh-r and cyp19a1a. In contrast, dmrt1 levels resembled those of sperm. The methylation of individual CpGs from foxl2, er-β2 and nr3c1 were conserved from parents to offspring, whereas those of cyp19a1a, dmrt1 and amh-r2 were affected by temperature. Utilizing a machine-learning procedure based on the methylation levels of a selected set of CpGs, we present the first, to our knowledge, system based on epigenetic marks capable of predicting sex in an animal with ~ 90% accuracy and discuss possible applications.


Aquaculture Europe 2015 - Aquaculture, Nature and Society, October 20-23 2015, Rotterdam, The Netherlands | 2015

Combining Vitassign and Colony for pedigree reconstruction in a case of factorial mating with missing parental genotypes

François Allal; Quoc Khanh Doan; Béatrice Chatain; Alain Vergnet; Marc Vandeputte

Combining VITASSIGN and COLONY for pedigree reconstruction in a case of factorial mating with missing parental genotypes. Aquaculture Europe 2015


Aquaculture | 2017

Investigation of morphological predictors of fillet and carcass yield in European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax) for application in selective breeding

Marc Vandeputte; Antonio Puledda; Anne Sophie Tyran; Anastasia Bestin; Céline Coulombet; Aline Bajek; Gwénaëlle Baldit; Alain Vergnet; François Allal; Jérôme Bugeon; Pierrick Haffray


Reviews in Aquaculture | 2017

Improving feed efficiency in fish using selective breeding : A review

Hugues de Verdal; Hans Komen; E. Quillet; Béatrice Chatain; François Allal; John Benzie; Marc Vandeputte


Aquaculture | 2017

Genetic variation of resistance to Viral Nervous Necrosis and genetic correlations with production traits in wild populations of the European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax)

Q Khanh Doan; Marc Vandeputte; Béatrice Chatain; Pierrick Haffray; Alain Vergnet; Gilles Breuil; François Allal


Aquaculture | 2017

Estimates of genetic variability and inbreeding in experimentally selected populations of European sea bass

J.E.J. Hillen; I. Coscia; Marc Vandeputte; Koen Herten; Bart Hellemans; F. Maroso; Alain Vergnet; François Allal; Gregory E. Maes; Filip Volckaert

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Pierrick Haffray

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Quoc Khanh Doan

University of Agriculture

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Anastasia Bestin

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Frédéric Clota

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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