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Dive into the research topics where Frédérique Mahéo is active.

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Featured researches published by Frédérique Mahéo.


Molecular Ecology Resources | 2013

Permanent Genetic Resources added to Molecular Ecology Resources Database 1 April 2010-31 May 2010

Cecilia Agostini; Rafael G. Albaladejo; Abelardo Aparicio; Wolfgang Arthofer; Patrick Berrebi; Peter T. Boag; Ignazio Carbone; Gabriel Conroy; Anne-Marie Cortesero; Evonnildo Costa Gonçalves; Diogo Costa; Alvarina Couto; Mirko De Girolamo; Hao Du; Shi-Jian Fu; T. Garrido-Garduño; L. Gettova; André Gilles; Igor Guerreiro Hamoy; Carlos M. Herrera; Carina Heussler; Eduardo Isidro; Céline Josso; Patrick Krapf; Robert W. Lamont; Anne Le Ralec; Susana Lopes; Carla Luís; Hui Luo; Frédérique Mahéo

This article documents the addition of 396 microsatellite marker loci to the Molecular Ecology Resources Database. Loci were developed for the following species: Anthocidaris crassispina, Aphis glycines, Argyrosomus regius, Astrocaryum sciophilum, Dasypus novemcinctus, Delomys sublineatus, Dermatemys mawii, Fundulus heteroclitus, Homalaspis plana, Jumellea rossii, Khaya senegalensis, Mugil cephalus, Neoceratitis cyanescens, Phalacrocorax aristotelis, Phytophthora infestans, Piper cordulatum, Pterocarpus indicus, Rana dalmatina, Rosa pulverulenta, Saxifraga oppositifolia, Scomber colias, Semecarpus kathalekanensis, Stichopus monotuberculatus, Striga hermonthica, Tarentola boettgeri and Thermophis baileyi. These loci were cross‐tested on the following species: Aphis gossypii, Sooretamys angouya, Euryoryzomys russatus, Fundulus notatus, Fundulus olivaceus, Fundulus catenatus, Fundulus majalis, Jumellea fragrans, Jumellea triquetra Jumellea recta, Jumellea stenophylla, Liza richardsonii, Piper marginatum, Piper aequale, Piper darienensis, Piper dilatatum, Rana temporaria, Rana iberica, Rana pyrenaica, Semecarpus anacardium, Semecarpus auriculata, Semecarpus travancorica, Spondias acuminata, Holigarna grahamii, Holigarna beddomii, Mangifera indica, Anacardium occidentale, Tarentola delalandii, Tarentola caboverdianus and Thermophis zhaoermii.


Molecular Ecology | 2012

Genome scans reveal candidate regions involved in the adaptation to host plant in the pea aphid complex

Julie Jaquiéry; Solenn Stoeckel; Pierre Nouhaud; Lucie Mieuzet; Frédérique Mahéo; Fabrice Legeai; Bernard N; Bonvoisin A; Renaud Vitalis; Jean-Christophe Simon

A major goal in evolutionary biology is to uncover the genetic basis of adaptation. Divergent selection exerted on ecological traits may result in adaptive population differentiation and reproductive isolation and affect differentially the level of genetic divergence along the genome. Genome‐wide scan of large sets of individuals from multiple populations is a powerful approach to identify loci or genomic regions under ecologically divergent selection. Here, we focused on the pea aphid, a species complex of divergent host races, to explore the organization of the genomic divergence associated with host plant adaptation and ecological speciation. We analysed 390 microsatellite markers located at variable distances from predicted genes in replicate samples of sympatric populations of the pea aphid collected on alfalfa, red clover and pea, which correspond to three common host‐adapted races reported in this species complex. Using a method that accounts for the hierarchical structure of our data set, we found a set of 11 outlier loci that show higher genetic differentiation between host races than expected under the null hypothesis of neutral evolution. Two of the outliers are close to olfactory receptor genes and three other nearby genes encoding salivary proteins. The remaining outliers are located in regions with genes of unknown functions, or which functions are unlikely to be involved in interactions with the host plant. This study reveals genetic signatures of divergent selection across the genome and provides an inventory of candidate genes responsible for plant specialization in the pea aphid, thereby setting the stage for future functional studies.


Insect Science | 2014

Inheritance patterns of secondary symbionts during sexual reproduction of pea aphid biotypes

Jean Peccoud; Joël Bonhomme; Frédérique Mahéo; Manon de la Huerta; Olivier Cosson; Jean-Christophe Simon

Herbivorous insects frequently harbor bacterial symbionts that affect their ecology and evolution. Aphids host the obligatory endosymbiont Buchnera, which is required for reproduction, together with facultative symbionts whose frequencies vary across aphid populations. These maternally transmitted secondary symbionts have been particularly studied in the pea aphid, Acyrthosiphon pisum, which harbors at least 8 distinct bacterial species (not counting Buchnera) having environmentally dependent effects on host fitness. In particular, these symbiont species are associated with pea aphid populations feeding on specific plants. Although they are maternally inherited, these bacteria are occasionally transferred across insect lineages. One mechanism of such nonmaternal transfer is paternal transmission to the progeny during sexual reproduction. To date, transmission of secondary symbionts during sexual reproduction of aphids has been investigated in only a handful of aphid lineages and 3 symbiont species. To better characterize this process, we investigated inheritance patterns of 7 symbiont species during sexual reproduction of pea aphids through a crossing experiment involving 49 clones belonging to 9 host‐specialized biotypes, and 117 crosses. Symbiont species in the progeny were detected with diagnostic qualitative PCR at the fundatrix stage hatching from eggs and in later parthenogenetic generations. We found no confirmed case of paternal transmission of symbionts to the progeny, and we observed that maternal transmission of a particular symbiont species (Serratia symbiotica) was quite inefficient. We discuss these observations in respect to the ecology of the pea aphid.


Insect Conservation and Diversity | 2015

Genetic characterisation of new host-specialised biotypes and novel associations with bacterial symbionts in the pea aphid complex

Jean Peccoud; Frédérique Mahéo; Manon de la Huerta; Cindy Laurence; Jean-Christophe Simon

The pea aphid, Acyrthosiphon pisum Harris, constitutes a complex of sympatric populations that are specialised to distinct species of Fabaceae. So far, 12 such populations have been characterised genetically as genetic clusters associated with one or few legumes species. These clusters form a continuum of genetic divergence linking host‐associated races, which show moderate hybridization, to nascent species. They are also known to be associated with different species of endosymbiotic bacteria, which have environmentally dependent effects on aphid fitness. Here, we report on the genetic characterisation of new host‐associated populations in this species complex. We sampled pea aphids in eastern France on Genista tinctoria, G. sagittalis, Onobrychis viciifolia, and Hippocrepis comosa. Bayesian clustering methods based on genotypes obtained at 25 microsatellite loci showed that each sampled plant species hosted a specific pea aphid population. Comparison with previously characterised biotypes showed that the population associated with Hippocrepis comosa was no different from that on Securigera varia. Migrant aphids from other host plants and hybrids were found at various frequencies on the newly sampled plant species. They were particularly frequent on Onobrychis viciifolia, occasional between the two Genista‐associated populations, and rare on Hippocrepis comosa. PCR‐based screening of bacterial species revealed new associations between aphid biotypes and facultative endosymbionts, chiefly the combination of Serratia symbiotica and Hamiltonella defensa within most individuals collected on Genista. The newly identified biotypes, which add up to a total of 15 within the pea aphid complex, offer new material to study the mechanisms and genetic bases of host‐specialisation and ecological speciation in this model aphid.


PLOS Genetics | 2014

Genetic Control of Contagious Asexuality in the Pea Aphid

Julie Jaquiéry; Solenn Stoeckel; Chloé Larose; Pierre Nouhaud; Claude Rispe; Lucie Mieuzet; Joël Bonhomme; Frédérique Mahéo; Fabrice Legeai; Jean-Pierre Gauthier; Nathalie Prunier-Leterme; Denis Tagu; Jean-Christophe Simon

Although evolutionary transitions from sexual to asexual reproduction are frequent in eukaryotes, the genetic bases of such shifts toward asexuality remain largely unknown. We addressed this issue in an aphid species where both sexual and obligate asexual lineages coexist in natural populations. These sexual and asexual lineages may occasionally interbreed because some asexual lineages maintain a residual production of males potentially able to mate with the females produced by sexual lineages. Hence, this species is an ideal model to study the genetic basis of the loss of sexual reproduction with quantitative genetic and population genomic approaches. Our analysis of the co-segregation of ∼300 molecular markers and reproductive phenotype in experimental crosses pinpointed an X-linked region controlling obligate asexuality, this state of character being recessive. A population genetic analysis (>400-marker genome scan) on wild sexual and asexual genotypes from geographically distant populations under divergent selection for reproductive strategies detected a strong signature of divergent selection in the genomic region identified by the experimental crosses. These population genetic data confirm the implication of the candidate region in the control of reproductive mode in wild populations originating from 700 km apart. Patterns of genetic differentiation along chromosomes suggest bidirectional gene flow between populations with distinct reproductive modes, supporting contagious asexuality as a prevailing route to permanent parthenogenesis in pea aphids. This genetic system provides new insights into the mechanisms of coexistence of sexual and asexual aphid lineages.


Journal of Evolutionary Biology | 2014

Genomic regions repeatedly involved in divergence among plant‐specialized pea aphid biotypes

Pierre Nouhaud; Jean Peccoud; Frédérique Mahéo; Lucie Mieuzet; Julie Jaquiéry; Jean-Christophe Simon

Understanding the genetic bases of biological diversification is a long‐standing goal in evolutionary biology. Here, we investigate whether replicated cases of adaptive divergence involve the same genomic regions in the pea aphid, Acyrthosiphon pisum, a large complex of genetically differentiated biotypes, each specialized on different species of legumes. A previous study identified genomic regions putatively involved in host‐plant adaptation and/or reproductive isolation by performing a hierarchical genome scan in three biotypes. This led to the identification of 11 FST outliers among 390 polymorphic microsatellite markers. In this study, the outlier status of these 11 loci was assessed in eight biotypes specialized on other host plants. Four of the 11 previously identified outliers showed greater genetic differentiation among these additional biotypes than expected under the null hypothesis of neutral evolution (α < 0.01). Whether these hotspots of genomic divergence result from adaptive events, intrinsic barriers or reduced recombination is discussed.


Evolutionary Ecology | 2016

Diversity in symbiont consortia in the pea aphid complex is associated with large phenotypic variation in the insect host

Mélanie Leclair; Inès Pons; Frédérique Mahéo; Stéphanie Morlière; Jean-Christophe Simon; Yannick Outreman

Virtually all eukaryotes host microbial symbionts that influence their phenotype in many ways. In a host population, individuals may differ in their symbiotic complement in terms of symbiont species and strains. Hence, the combined expression of symbiont and host genotypes may generate a range of phenotypic diversity on which selection can operate and influence host population ecology and evolution. Here, we used the pea aphid to examine how the infection with various symbiotic complements contributes to phenotypic diversity of this insect species. The pea aphid hosts an obligate symbiont (Buchnera aphidicola) and several secondary symbionts among which is Hamiltonella defensa. This secondary symbiont confers a protection against parasitoids but can also reduce the host’s longevity and fecundity. These phenotypic effects of H. defensa infection have been described for a small fraction of the pea aphid complex which encompasses multiple plant-specialized biotypes. In this study, we examined phenotypic differences in four pea aphid biotypes where H. defensa occurs at high frequency and sometimes associated with other secondary symbionts. For each biotype, we measured the fecundity, lifespan and level of parasitoid protection in several aphid lineages differing in their symbiotic complement. Our results showed little variation in longevity and fecundity among lineages but strong differences in their protection level. These differences in protective levels largely resulted from the strain type of H. defensa and the symbiotic consortium in the host. This study highlights the important role of symbiotic complement in the emergence of phenotypic divergence among host populations of the same species.


Ecology and Evolution | 2015

Does sex-biased dispersal account for the lack of geographic and host-associated differentiation in introduced populations of an aphid parasitoid?

Francisca Zepeda-Paulo; Blas Lavandero; Frédérique Mahéo; Emilie Dion; Yannick Outreman; Jean-Christophe Simon; Christian C. Figueroa

Host recognition and use in female parasitoids strongly relies on host fidelity, a plastic behavior which can significantly restrict the host preferences of parasitoids, thus reducing the gene flow between parasitoid populations attacking different insect hosts. However, the effect of migrant males on the genetic differentiation of populations has been frequently ignored in parasitoids, despite its known impact on gene flow between populations. Hence, we studied the extent of gene flow mediated by female and male parasitoids by assessing sibship relationships among parasitoids within and between populations, and its impact on geographic and host-associated differentiation in the aphid parasitoid Aphidius ervi. We report evidences of a high gene flow among parasitoid populations on different aphid hosts and geographic locations. The high gene flow among parasitoid populations was found to be largely male mediated, suggested by significant differences in the distribution of full-sib and paternal half-sib dyads of parasitoid populations.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Bacterial Community Diversity Harboured by Interacting Species

Mikaël Bili; Anne Marie Cortesero; Christophe Mougel; Jean Pierre Gauthier; Gwennola Ermel; Jean Simon; Yannick Outreman; Sébastien Terrat; Frédérique Mahéo; Denis Poinsot

All animals are infected by microbial partners that can be passengers or residents and influence many biological traits of their hosts. Even if important factors that structure the composition and abundance of microbial communities within and among host individuals have been recently described, such as diet, developmental stage or phylogeny, few studies have conducted cross-taxonomic comparisons, especially on host species related by trophic relationships. Here, we describe and compare the microbial communities associated with the cabbage root fly Delia radicum and its three major parasitoids: the two staphylinid beetles Aleochara bilineata and A. bipustulata and the hymenopteran parasitoid Trybliographa rapae. For each species, two populations from Western France were sampled and microbial communities were described through culture independent methods (454 pyrosequencing). Each sample harbored at least 59 to 261 different bacterial phylotypes but was strongly dominated by one or two. Microbial communities differed markedly in terms of composition and abundance, being mainly influenced by phylogenetic proximity but also geography to a minor extent. Surprisingly, despite their strong trophic interaction, parasitoids shared a very low proportion of microbial partners with their insect host. Three vertically transmitted symbionts from the genus Wolbachia, Rickettsia, and Spiroplasma were found in this study. Among them, Wolbachia and Spiroplasma were found in both the cabbage fly and at least one of its parasitoids, which could result from horizontal transfers through trophic interactions. Phylogenetic analysis showed that this hypothesis may explain some but not all cases. More work is needed to understand the dynamics of symbiotic associations within trophic network and the effect of these bacterial communities on the fitness of their hosts.


Journal of Economic Entomology | 2016

Assessment of the Dominance Level of the R81T Target Resistance to Two Neonicotinoid Insecticides in Myzus persicae (Hemiptera: Aphididae).

Claire Mottet; Séverine Fontaine; Laëtitia Caddoux; Christine Brazier; Frédérique Mahéo; Jean-Christophe Simon; Annie Micoud; Lise Roy

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Jean-Christophe Simon

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Jean-Pierre Gauthier

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Julie Jaquiéry

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Lucie Mieuzet

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Pierre Nouhaud

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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André Gilles

Aix-Marseille University

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Anne-Marie Cortesero

European University of Brittany

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