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Dive into the research topics where François-Didier Boyer is active.

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Featured researches published by François-Didier Boyer.


Plant Physiology | 2012

Structure-Activity Relationship Studies of Strigolactone-Related Molecules for Branching Inhibition in Garden Pea: Molecule Design for Shoot Branching

François-Didier Boyer; Alexandre de Saint Germain; Jean-Paul Pillot; Jean-Bernard Pouvreau; Victor Xiao Chen; Suzanne Ramos; Arnaud Stévenin; Philippe Simier; Philippe Delavault; Jean-Marie Beau; Catherine Rameau

Initially known for their role in the rhizosphere in stimulating the seed germination of parasitic weeds such as the Striga and Orobanche species, and later as host recognition signals for arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi, strigolactones (SLs) were recently rediscovered as a new class of plant hormones involved in the control of shoot branching in plants. Herein, we report the synthesis of new SL analogs and, to our knowledge, the first study of SL structure-activity relationships for their hormonal activity in garden pea (Pisum sativum). Comparisons with their action for the germination of broomrape (Phelipanche ramosa) are also presented. The pea rms1 SL-deficient mutant was used in a SL bioassay based on axillary bud length after direct SL application on the bud. This assay was compared with an assay where SLs were fed via the roots using hydroponics and with a molecular assay in which transcript levels of BRANCHED1, the pea homolog of the maize TEOSINTE BRANCHED1 gene were quantified in axillary buds only 6 h after application of SLs. We have demonstrated that the presence of a Michael acceptor and a methylbutenolide or dimethylbutenolide motif in the same molecule is essential. It was established that the more active analog 23 with a dimethylbutenolide as the D-ring could be used to control the plant architecture without strongly favoring the germination of P. ramosa seeds. Bold numerals refer to numbers of compounds.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2016

An histidine covalent receptor and butenolide complex mediates strigolactone perception

Alexandre de Saint Germain; Guillaume Clavé; Marie-Ange Badet-Denisot; Jean-Paul Pillot; David Cornu; Jean-Pierre Le Caer; Marco Bürger; Frank Pelissier; Pascal Retailleau; Colin Turnbull; Sandrine Bonhomme; Joanne Chory; Catherine Rameau; François-Didier Boyer

Strigolactone plant hormones control plant architecture and are key players in both symbiotic and parasitic interactions. They contain an ABC tricyclic lactone connected to a butenolide group, the D-ring. The DWARF14 (D14) strigolactone receptor belongs to the superfamily of α/β-hydrolases and is known to hydrolyze the bond between the ABC lactone and the D-ring. Here we characterize the binding and catalytic functions of RAMOSUS3 (RMS3), the pea (Pisum sativum) ortholog of rice (Oryza sativa) D14 strigolactone receptor. Using novel profluorescent probes with strigolactone-like bioactivity, we show that RMS3 acts as a single-turnover enzyme that explains its apparent low enzymatic rate. We further demonstrate the formation of a covalent RMS3/D-ring complex, essential for bioactivity, in which the D-ring is attached to Histidine 247 of the catalytic triad. These results reveal an undescribed mechanism of plant hormone reception where the receptor performs an irreversible enzymatic reaction to generate its own ligand.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2015

From lateral root density to nodule number, the strigolactone analogue GR24 shapes the root architecture of Medicago truncatula

Carolien De Cuyper; Justine Fromentin; Rosita Endah Yocgo; Annick De Keyser; Bruno Guillotin; Karl J. Kunert; François-Didier Boyer; Sofie Goormachtig

In the rhizosphere, strigolactones not only act as crucial signalling molecules in the communication of plants with parasitic weeds and arbuscular mycorrhiza, but they also play a key role in regulating different aspects of the root system. Here we investigated how strigolactones influence the root architecture of Medicago truncatula. We provide evidence that addition of the synthetic strigolactone analogue GR24 has an inhibitory effect on the lateral root density. Moreover, treatment with GR24 of Sinorhizobium meliloti-inoculated M. truncatula plants affects the nodule number both positively and negatively, depending on the concentration. Plants treated with 0.1 µM GR24 had a slightly increased number of nodules, whereas concentrations of 2 and 5 µM strongly reduced it. This effect was independent of the autoregulation of nodulation mechanism that is controlled by SUPER NUMERIC NODULE. Furthermore, we demonstrate that GR24 controls the nodule number through crosstalk with SICKLE-dependent ethylene signalling. Additionally, because the expression of the nodulation marker EARLY NODULATION11 was strongly reduced in GR24-treated plants, we concluded that strigolactones influence nodulation at a very early stage of the symbiotic interaction.


Molecular Plant | 2014

New Strigolactone Analogs as Plant Hormones with Low Activities in the Rhizosphere

François-Didier Boyer; Alexandre de Saint Germain; Jean-Bernard Pouvreau; Guillaume Clavé; Jean-Paul Pillot; Amélie Roux; Amanda Rasmussen; Stephen Depuydt; Dominique Lauressergues; Nicolas Frei dit Frey; Thomas S. A. Heugebaert; Christian V. Stevens; Danny Geelen; Sofie Goormachtig; Catherine Rameau

Strigolactones (SLs) are known not only as plant hormones, but also as rhizosphere signals for establishing symbiotic and parasitic interactions. The design of new specific SL analogs is a challenging goal in understanding the basic plant biology and is also useful to control plant architectures without favoring the development of parasitic plants. Two different molecules (23 (3-methyl-GR24), 31 (thia-3-methyl-debranone-like molecule)) already described, and a new one (AR36), for which the synthesis is presented, are biologically compared with the well-known GR24 and the recently identified CISA-1. These different structures emphasize the wide range of parts attached to the D-ring for the bioactivity as a plant hormone. These new compounds possess a common dimethylbutenolide motif but their structure varies in the ABC part of the molecules: 23 has the same ABC part as GR24, while 31 and AR36 carry, respectively, an aromatic ring and an acyclic carbon chain. Detailed information is given for the bioactivity of such derivatives in strigolactone synthesis or in perception mutant plants (pea rms1 and rms4, Arabidopsis max2 and, max4) for different hormonal functions along with their action in the rhizosphere on arbuscular mycorrhizal hyphal growth and parasitic weed germination.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2016

Strigolactones spatially influence lateral root development through the cytokinin signaling network

Lingxiang Jiang; Cedrick Matthys; Belén Márquez-García; Carolien De Cuyper; Lien De Smet; Annick De Keyser; François-Didier Boyer; Tom Beeckman; Stephen Depuydt; Sofie Goormachtig

Highlight Strigolactones monitor lateral root development in a spatiotemporal manner by an interplay with cytokinin.


Planta | 2016

The Whats, the Wheres and the Hows of strigolactone action in the roots

Cedrick Matthys; Alan Walton; Sylwia Magdalena Struk; Elisabeth Stes; François-Didier Boyer; Kris Gevaert; Sofie Goormachtig

AbstractMain conclusionStrigolactones control various aspects of plant development, including root architecture. Here, we review how strigolactones act in the root and survey the strigolactone specificity of signaling components that affect root development.n Strigolactones are a group of secondary metabolites produced in plants that have been assigned multiple roles, of which the most recent is hormonal activity. Over the last decade, these compounds have been shown to regulate various aspects of plant development, such as shoot branching and leaf senescence, but a growing body of literature suggests that these hormones play an equally important role in the root. In this review, we present all known root phenotypes linked to strigolactones. We examine the expression and presence of the main players in biosynthesis and signaling of these hormones and bring together the available information that allows us to explain how strigolactones act to modulate the root system architecture.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2016

The Response of the Root Proteome to the Synthetic Strigolactone GR24 in Arabidopsis.

Alan Walton; Elisabeth Stes; Geert Goeminne; Lukas Braem; Marnik Vuylsteke; Cedrick Matthys; Carolien De Cuyper; An Staes; Jonathan Vandenbussche; François-Didier Boyer; Ruben Vanholme; Justine Fromentin; Wout Boerjan; Kris Gevaert; Sofie Goormachtig

Strigolactones are plant metabolites that act as phytohormones and rhizosphere signals. Whereas most research on unraveling the action mechanisms of strigolactones is focused on plant shoots, we investigated proteome adaptation during strigolactone signaling in the roots of Arabidopsis thaliana. Through large-scale, time-resolved, and quantitative proteomics, the impact of the strigolactone analog rac-GR24 was elucidated on the root proteome of the wild type and the signaling mutant more axillary growth 2 (max2). Our study revealed a clear MAX2-dependent rac-GR24 response: an increase in abundance of enzymes involved in flavonol biosynthesis, which was reduced in the max2–1 mutant. Mass spectrometry-driven metabolite profiling and thin-layer chromatography experiments demonstrated that these changes in protein expression lead to the accumulation of specific flavonols. Moreover, quantitative RT-PCR revealed that the flavonol-related protein expression profile was caused by rac-GR24-induced changes in transcript levels of the corresponding genes. This induction of flavonol production was shown to be activated by the two pure enantiomers that together make up rac-GR24. Finally, our data provide much needed clues concerning the multiple roles played by MAX2 in the roots and a comprehensive view of the rac-GR24-induced response in the root proteome.


ChemInform | 2014

Chapter 7:Recent results in synthetic glycochemistry with iron salts at Orsay-Gif

Jean-Marie Beau; Yann Bourdreux; François-Didier Boyer; Stéphanie Norsikian; Gilles Doisneau; Boris Vauzeilles; Aurélie Lemétais; Aurélie Mathieu; Jean-François Soulé; Arnaud Stévenin; Amandine Xolin

This review particularly emphasizes synthetic applications resulting from cascade or one-pot transformations and a glycosylation reaction promoted by ferric salts. These easy to handle, cheap and environment-friendly salts have been examined for their ability to induce, as a Lewis acid, fast carbohydrate-based modifications in our laboratories at Orsay and Gif sur Yvette. A short synthetic route to the dihydropyran framework of anti-influenza constructs is reported by coupling the Petasis three-component condensation to an iron(iii)-promoted one-pot cascade of deprotection – C–C double bond isomerization – cyclization - oxazoline formation. We also show that iron(iii) chloride hexahydrate is most appropriate to catalyze a one-pot regioselective protection of mono- and disaccharides. This iron(iii) catalysis renders multi-step routes, such as chemical oligosaccharide syntheses, faster. In the last section, we report a catalytic glycosylation method particularly simple and straightforward leading to the important β-d-GlcNAc motif, in which the more electrophilic iron(iii) triflate activates the readily available peracetate of N-acetyl-β-d-glucosamine. This glycosylation does not necessarily require the formation of the mandatory oxazolinium intermediate.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2018

Quantitative tandem affinity purification, an effective tool to investigate protein complex composition in plant hormone signaling : strigolactones in the spotlight

Sylwia Magdalena Struk; Lukas Braem; Alan Walton; Annick De Keyser; François-Didier Boyer; Geert Persiau; Geert De Jaeger; Kris Gevaert; Sofie Goormachtig

Phytohormones tightly regulate plant growth by integrating changing environmental and developmental cues. Although the key players have been identified in many plant hormonal pathways, the molecular mechanisms and mode of action of perception and signaling remain incompletely resolved. Characterization of protein partners of known signaling components provides insight into the formed protein complexes, but, unless quantification is involved, does not deliver much, if any, information about the dynamics of the induced or disrupted protein complexes. Therefore, in proteomics research, the discovery of what actually triggers, regulates or interrupts the composition of protein complexes is gaining importance. Here, tandem affinity purification coupled to mass spectrometry (TAP-MS) is combined with label-free quantification (LFQ) to a highly valuable tool to detect physiologically relevant, dynamic protein–protein interactions in Arabidopsis thaliana cell cultures. To demonstrate its potential, we focus on the signaling pathway of one of the most recently discovered phytohormones, strigolactones.


Organic Letters | 2004

Formal Synthesis of (±)-Guanacastepene A: A Tandem Ring-Closing Metathesis Approach

François-Didier Boyer; Issam Hanna; Louis Ricard

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Issam Hanna

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jean-Marie Beau

Institut de Chimie des Substances Naturelles

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Jean-Paul Pillot

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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