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Dive into the research topics where Françoise Monéger is active.

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Featured researches published by Françoise Monéger.


Nature | 2000

Low variability in a Y-linked plant gene and its implications for Y-chromosome evolution.

Dmitry A. Filatov; Françoise Monéger; Ioan Negrutiu; Deborah Charlesworth

Sex chromosomes have evolved independently in several different groups of organisms, but they share common features, including genetic degeneration of the Y chromosome. Suppression of recombination between ancestral proto-X and proto-Y chromosomes is thought to have led to their gradual divergence, and to degeneration of the Y chromosome, but the evolutionary forces responsible are unknown. In non-recombining Y chromosomes, deleterious mutations may be carried to fixation by linked advantageous mutations (“selective sweeps”). Occurrence of deleterious mutations may drive “Mullers ratchet” (stochastic loss of chromosomes with the fewest mutations). Selective elimination of deleterious mutations, causing “background selection” may accelerate stochastic fixation of mildly detrimental mutations. All these processes lower effective population sizes, and therefore reduce variability of genes in evolving Y chromosomes. We have studied DNA diversity and divergence in a recently described X- and Y-linked gene pair (SLX-1 and SLY-1) of the plant Silene latifolia to obtain evidence about the early stages of Y degeneration. Here we show that DNA polymorphism in SLY-1 is 20-fold lower than in SLX-1, but the pattern of polymorphism does not suggest a selective sweep.


The EMBO Journal | 1999

SlY1, the first active gene cloned from a plant Y chromosome, encodes a WD‐repeat protein

Catherine Delichère; Jacky Veuskens; Michel Hernould; Nicolas Barbacar; Armand Mouras; Ioan Negrutiu; Françoise Monéger

Unlike the majority of flowering plants, which possess hermaphrodite flowers, white campion (Silene latifolia) is dioecious and has flowers of two different sexes. The sex is determined by the combination of heteromorphic sex chromosomes: XX in females and XY in males. The Y chromosome of S.latifolia was microdissected to generate a Y‐specific probe which was used to screen a young male flower cDNA library. We identified five genes which represent the first active genes to be cloned from a plant Y chromosome. Here we report a detailed analysis of one of these genes, SlY1 (S.latifolia Y‐gene 1). SlY1 is expressed predominantly in male flowers. A closely related gene, SlX1, is predicted to be located on the X chromosome and is strongly expressed in both male and female flowers. SlY1 and SlX1 encode almost identical proteins containing WD repeats. Immunolocalization experiments showed that these proteins are localized in the nucleus, and that they are most abundant in cells that are actively dividing or beginning to differentiate. Interestingly, they do not accumulate in arrested sexual organs and represent potential targets for sex determination genes. These genes will permit investigation of the origin and evolution of sex chromosomes in plants.


Current Biology | 2008

Evidence for Degeneration of the Y Chromosome in the Dioecious Plant Silene latifolia

Gabriel Marais; Michael Nicolas; Roberta Bergero; Pierre Chambrier; Eduard Kejnovsky; Françoise Monéger; Roman Hobza; Alex Widmer; Deborah Charlesworth

The human Y--probably because of its nonrecombining nature--has lost 97% of its genes since X and Y chromosomes started to diverge [1, 2]. There are clear signs of degeneration in the Drosophila miranda neoY chromosome (an autosome fused to the Y chromosome), with neoY genes showing faster protein evolution [3-6], accumulation of unpreferred codons [6], more insertions of transposable elements [5, 7], and lower levels of expression [8] than neoX genes. In the many other taxa with sex chromosomes, Y degeneration has hardly been studied. In plants, many genes are expressed in pollen [9], and strong pollen selection may oppose the degeneration of plant Y chromosomes [10]. Silene latifolia is a dioecious plant with young heteromorphic sex chromosomes [11, 12]. Here we test whether the S. latifolia Y chromosome is undergoing genetic degeneration by analyzing seven sex-linked genes. S. latifolia Y-linked genes tend to evolve faster at the protein level than their X-linked homologs, and they have lower expression levels. Several Y gene introns have increased in length, with evidence for transposable-element accumulation. We detect signs of degeneration in most of the Y-linked gene sequences analyzed, similar to those of animal Y-linked and neo-Y chromosome genes.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

Premature arrest of the male flower meristem precedes sexual dimorphism in the dioecious plant Silene latifolia

Jitka Zluvova; Michael Nicolas; Adeline Berger; Ioan Negrutiu; Françoise Monéger

Most dioecious plant species are believed to derive from hermaphrodite ancestors. The regulatory pathways that have been modified during evolution of the hermaphrodite ancestors and led to the emergence of dioecious species still remain unknown. Silene latifolia is a dioecious plant species harboring XY sex chromosomes. To identify the molecular mechanisms involved in female organ suppression in male flowers of S. latifolia, we looked for genes potentially involved in the establishment of floral organ and whorl boundaries. We identified homologs of Arabidopsis thaliana SHOOTMERISTEMLESS (STM) and CUP SHAPED COTYLEDON (CUC) 1 and CUC2 genes in S. latifolia. Our phylogenetic analyses suggest that we identified true orthologs for both types of genes. Detailed expression analyses showed a conserved expression pattern for these genes between S. latifolia and A. thaliana, suggesting a conserved function of the corresponding proteins. Comparative in situ hybridization experiments between male, female, and hermaphrodite individuals reveal that these genes show a male-specific pattern of expression before any morphological difference become apparent. Our results make SlSTM and SlCUC strong candidates for being involved in sex determination in S. latifolia.


The Plant Cell | 2012

A Light-Regulated Genetic Module Was Recruited to Carpel Development in Arabidopsis following a Structural Change to SPATULA

Mathieu C. Reymond; Géraldine Brunoud; Aurélie Chauvet; Jaime F. Martínez-García; Marie-Laure Martin-Magniette; Françoise Monéger; Charles P. Scutt

This study provides insight into the evolution of flowering plants by demonstrating that a mechanism that modulates carpel margin development in Arabidopsis was recruited from light-regulated processes. A key innovation of flowering plants is the female reproductive organ, the carpel. Here, we show that a mechanism that regulates carpel margin development in the model flowering plant Arabidopsis thaliana was recruited from light-regulated processes. This recruitment followed the loss from the basic helix-loop-helix transcription factor SPATULA (SPT) of a domain previously responsible for its negative regulation by phytochrome. We propose that the loss of this domain was a prerequisite for the light-independent expression in female reproductive tissues of a genetic module that also promotes shade avoidance responses in vegetative organs. Striking evidence for this proposition is provided by the restoration of wild-type carpel development to spt mutants by low red/far-red light ratios, simulating vegetation shade, which we show to occur via phytochrome B, PHYTOCHROME INTERACTING FACTOR4 (PIF4), and PIF5. Our data illustrate the potential of modular evolutionary events to generate rapid morphological change and thereby provide a molecular basis for neo-Darwinian theories that describe this nongradualist phenomenon. Furthermore, the effects shown here of light quality perception on carpel development lead us to speculate on the potential role of light-regulated mechanisms in plant organs that, like the carpel, form within the shade of surrounding tissues.


The Plant Cell | 2011

A Data-Driven Integrative Model of Sepal Primordium Polarity in Arabidopsis

Camillo La Rota; Jérôme Chopard; Pradeep Das; Sandrine Paindavoine; Frédérique Rozier; Etienne Farcot; Christophe Godin; Jan Traas; Françoise Monéger

This study presents a new modeling approach allowing diverse types of data to be integrated in a coherent molecular regulatory network model. This was used to analyze sepal primordium development and revealed three previously unreported pathways potentially involved in polarity. Flower patterning is determined by a complex molecular network but how this network functions remains to be elucidated. Here, we develop an integrative modeling approach that assembles heterogeneous data into a biologically coherent model to allow predictions to be made and inconsistencies among the data to be found. We use this approach to study the network underlying sepal development in the young flower of Arabidopsis thaliana. We constructed a digital atlas of gene expression and used it to build a dynamical molecular regulatory network model of sepal primordium development. This led to the construction of a coherent molecular network model for lateral organ polarity that fully recapitulates expression and interaction data. Our model predicts the existence of three novel pathways involving the HD-ZIP III genes and both cytokinin and ARGONAUTE family members. In addition, our model provides predictions on molecular interactions. In a broader context, this approach allows the extraction of biological knowledge from diverse types of data and can be used to study developmental processes in any multicellular organism.


Plant Physiology | 2010

Systems Biology of Organ Initiation at the Shoot Apex

Jan Traas; Françoise Monéger

The aerial tissues and organs of the plant are initiated by populations of undifferentiated, rapidly dividing cells called shoot apical meristems (SAMs). Within one species, there are different types of these meristems depending on developmental stages and environmental conditions: (1) vegetative


Sexual Plant Reproduction | 2004

Characterization of two SEPALLATA MADS-box genes from the dioecious plant Silene latifolia

Sachihiro Matsunaga; Wakana Uchida; Eduard Kejnovsky; Erika Isono; Françoise Monéger; Boris Vyskot; Shigeyuki Kawano

Two SEPALLATA orthologs, SlSEP1 and SlSEP3, were isolated from male flower buds of the dioecious plant Silene latifolia. Both genes are located on autosomes and not on the sex chromosomes. SlSEP1 and SlSEP3 transcripts were detected specifically in male and female flower buds. Quantitative RT-PCR and in situ hybridization revealed that both genes were expressed in young flower meristems, developing petals, male anthers, and female ovules. However, neither transcript was detected in suppressed gynoecia of male flower buds or suppressed anthers of female flower buds. The genes were differentially expressed during anther development, with the SlSEP1 transcript accumulating in anther walls and tapetal cells, and the SlSEP3 transcript accumulating in tetrads as well as anther walls and tapeta. Transcripts of both genes were also detected in flower buds of mutants with deletions of some parts of the Y chromosome, suggesting that neither gene is directly involved in sex determination.


Sexual Plant Reproduction | 2000

Dioecious Silene at the X-road: the reasons Y.

Françoise Monéger; N. Barbacar; Ioan Negrutiu

Abstract Among the variety of breeding systems developed by flowering plants, those based on heteromorphic sex chromosomes are the most intellectually challenging in evolutionary terms. This is because, among other things, they enable us to compare sex determination processes between plants and animals. White campion (Silene latifolia, also named Lychnis or Melandrium) is dioecious and, much like us, females are homogametic (XX) and males are heterogametic (XY). Sexual dimorphism in white campion is controlled by two independent developmental pathways operating from the Y chromosome at very early developmental stages and within distinct regions of the flower. In addition, all basic steps in the evolution from the bisexual to the dioecious condition with heteromorphic sex chromosomes are known and available to experimentation in the genus Silene. This group of species has been under scrutiny for more than a century. Such an ideal experimental system enables us to tackle, with novel methodological tools, several classical questions in biology. These include the question of how sexual dimorphism evolved and how dimorphic development is controlled, as well as questions of how sex chromosomes evolve in the absence of meiotic recombination or how male-female genetic conflicts are generated. At the turn of the century, the time is now ripe to have a closer look.


Comptes Rendus De L Academie Des Sciences Serie Iii-sciences De La Vie-life Sciences | 2001

Molecular and evolutionary analysis of a plant Y chromosome

Françoise Monéger

Plants have evolved a great diversity of sex determination systems. Among these, the XY system, also found in mammals, is one of the most exciting since it gives the opportunity to compare the evolution of sex chromosomes in two different kingdoms. Whereas genetic and molecular mechanisms controlling sex determination in drosophila and mammals, have been well studied, very little is known about such processes in plants. White campion (Silene latifolia) is an example of plant with X and Y chromosomes. What is the origin of the X and Y chromosomes? How did they evolve from a pair of autosomes? In our laboratory, we have isolated the first active genes located on a plant Y chromosome. We are using them as markers to trace the origin and evolution of sex chromosomes in the Silene genus.

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Ioan Negrutiu

École normale supérieure de Lyon

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Catherine Delichère

École normale supérieure de Lyon

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A. Lardon

École normale supérieure de Lyon

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Michael Nicolas

École normale supérieure de Lyon

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Boris Vyskot

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Charles P. Scutt

École normale supérieure de Lyon

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