Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Gabriel Cornic is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Gabriel Cornic.


New Phytologist | 2009

Metabolic origin of the δ13C of respired CO2 in roots of Phaseolus vulgaris

Camille Bathellier; Guillaume Tcherkez; Richard Bligny; Elizabeth Gout; Gabriel Cornic; Jaleh Ghashghaie

Root respiration is a major contributor to soil CO2 efflux, and thus an important component of ecosystem respiration. But its metabolic origin, in relation to the carbon isotope composition (delta13C), remains poorly understood. Here, 13C analysis was conducted on CO2 and metabolites under typical conditions or under continuous darkness in French bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) roots. 13C contents were measured either under natural abundance or following pulse-chase labeling with 13C-enriched glucose or pyruvate, using isotope ratio mass spectrometer (IRMS) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) techniques. In contrast to leaves, no relationship was found between the respiratory quotient and the delta13C of respired CO2, which stayed constant at a low value (c. -27.5 per thousand) under continuous darkness. With labeling experiments, it is shown that such a pattern is explained by the 13C-depleting effect of the pentose phosphate pathway; and the involvement of the Krebs cycle fueled by either the glycolytic input or the lipid/protein recycling. The anaplerotic phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPc) activity sustained glutamic acid (Glu) synthesis, with no net effect on respired CO2. These results indicate that the root delta13C signal does not depend on the availability of root respiratory substrates and it is thus plausible that, unless the 13C photosynthetic fractionation varies at the leaf level, the root delta13C signal hardly changes under a range of natural environmental conditions.


Plant Cell and Environment | 2013

Plastid terminal oxidase (PTOX) has the potential to act as a safety valve for excess excitation energy in the alpine plant species Ranunculus glacialis L.

Constance Laureau; Rosine De Paepe; Gwendal Latouche; Maria Moreno-Chacón; Giovanni Finazzi; Marcel Kuntz; Gabriel Cornic; Peter Streb

Ranunculus glacialis leaves were tested for their plastid terminal oxidase (PTOX) content and electron flow to photorespiration and to alternative acceptors. In shade-leaves, the PTOX and NAD(P)H dehydrogenase (NDH) content were markedly lower than in sun-leaves. Carbon assimilation/light and Ci response curves were not different in sun- and shade-leaves, but photosynthetic capacity was the highest in sun-leaves. Based on calculation of the apparent specificity factor of ribulose 1.5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco), the magnitude of alternative electron flow unrelated to carboxylation and oxygenation of Rubisco correlated to the PTOX content in sun-, shade- and growth chamber-leaves. Similarly, fluorescence induction kinetics indicated more complete and more rapid reoxidation of the plastoquinone (PQ) pool in sun- than in shade-leaves. Blocking electron flow to assimilation, photorespiration and the Mehler reaction with appropriate inhibitors showed that sun-leaves were able to maintain higher electron flow and PQ oxidation. The results suggest that PTOX can act as a safety valve in R.u2009glacialis leaves under conditions where incident photon flux density (PFD) exceeds the growth PFD and under conditions where the plastoquinone pool is highly reduced. Such conditions can occur frequently in alpine climates due to rapid light and temperature changes.


Planta | 2012

Respiratory complex I deficiency induces drought tolerance by impacting leaf stomatal and hydraulic conductances

Reda Djebbar; Touhami Rzigui; Pierre Pétriacq; Caroline Mauve; Pierrick Priault; Chantal Fresneau; Marianne De Paepe; Igor Florez-Sarasa; Ghouziel Benhassaine-Kesri; Peter Streb; Bertrand Gakière; Gabriel Cornic; Rosine De Paepe

To investigate the role of plant mitochondria in drought tolerance, the response to water deprivation was compared between Nicotiana sylvestris wild type (WT) plants and the CMSII respiratory complex I mutant, which has low-efficient respiration and photosynthesis, high levels of amino acids and pyridine nucleotides, and increased antioxidant capacity. We show that the delayed decrease in relative water content after water withholding in CMSII, as compared to WT leaves, is due to a lower stomatal conductance. The stomatal index and the abscisic acid (ABA) content were unaffected in well-watered mutant leaves, but the ABA/stomatal conductance relation was altered during drought, indicating that specific factors interact with ABA signalling. Leaf hydraulic conductance was lower in mutant leaves when compared to WT leaves and the role of oxidative aquaporin gating in attaining a maximum stomatal conductance is discussed. In addition, differences in leaf metabolic status between the mutant and the WT might contribute to the low stomatal conductance, as reported for TCA cycle-deficient plants. After withholding watering, TCA cycle derived organic acids declined more in CMSII leaves than in the WT, and ATP content decreased only in the CMSII. Moreover, in contrast to the WT, total free amino acid levels declined whilst soluble protein content increased in CMSII leaves, suggesting an accelerated amino acid remobilisation. We propose that oxidative and metabolic disturbances resulting from remodelled respiration in the absence of Complex I activity could be involved in bringing about the lower stomatal and hydraulic conductances.


PLOS ONE | 2011

New ABA-Hypersensitive Arabidopsis Mutants Are Affected in Loci Mediating Responses to Water Deficit and Dickeya dadantii Infection

Anne Plessis; Raphael Cournol; Delphine Effroy; Viridiana Silva Pérez; Lucy Botran; Yvan Kraepiel; Anne Frey; Bruno Sotta; Gabriel Cornic; Jeffrey Leung; Jérôme Giraudat; Annie Marion-Poll; Helen M. North

On water deficit, abscisic acid (ABA) induces stomata closure to reduce water loss by transpiration. To identify Arabidopsis thaliana mutants which transpire less on drought, infrared thermal imaging of leaf temperature has been used to screen for suppressors of an ABA-deficient mutant (aba3-1) cold-leaf phenotype. Three novel mutants, called hot ABA-deficiency suppressor (has), have been identified with hot-leaf phenotypes in the absence of the aba3 mutation. The defective genes imparted no apparent modification to ABA production on water deficit, were inherited recessively and enhanced ABA responses indicating that the proteins encoded are negative regulators of ABA signalling. All three mutants showed ABA-hypersensitive stomata closure and inhibition of root elongation with little modification of growth and development in non-stressed conditions. The has2 mutant also exhibited increased germination inhibition by ABA, while ABA-inducible gene expression was not modified on dehydration, indicating the mutated gene affects early ABA-signalling responses that do not modify transcript levels. In contrast, weak ABA-hypersensitivity relative to mutant developmental phenotypes suggests that HAS3 regulates drought responses by both ABA-dependent and independent pathways. has1 mutant phenotypes were only apparent on stress or ABA treatments, and included reduced water loss on rapid dehydration. The HAS1 locus thus has the required characteristics for a targeted approach to improving resistance to water deficit. In contrast to has2, has1 exhibited only minor changes in susceptibility to Dickeya dadantii despite similar ABA-hypersensitivity, indicating that crosstalk between ABA responses to this pathogen and drought stress can occur through more than one point in the signalling pathway.


New Phytologist | 2017

Leaf day respiration : low CO2 flux but high significance for metabolism and carbon balance

Guillaume Tcherkez; Paul P. G. Gauthier; Thomas N. Buckley; Florian A. Busch; Margaret M. Barbour; Dan Bruhn; Mary A. Heskel; Xiao Ying Gong; Kristine Y. Crous; Kevin L. Griffin; Danielle A Way; Matthew H. Turnbull; Mark A. Adams; Owen K. Atkin; Graham D. Farquhar; Gabriel Cornic

Contents 986 I. 987 II. 987 III. 988 IV. 991 V. 992 VI. 995 VII. 997 VIII. 998 References 998 SUMMARY: It has been 75xa0yr since leaf respiratory metabolism in the light (day respiration) was identified as a low-flux metabolic pathway that accompanies photosynthesis. In principle, it provides carbon backbones for nitrogen assimilation and evolves CO2 and thus impacts on plant carbon and nitrogen balances. However, for a long time, uncertainties have remained as to whether techniques used to measure day respiratory efflux were valid and whether day respiration responded to environmental gaseous conditions. In the past few years, significant advances have been made using carbon isotopes, omics analyses and surveys of respiration rates in mesocosms or ecosystems. There is substantial evidence that day respiration should be viewed as a highly dynamic metabolic pathway that interacts with photosynthesis and photorespiration and responds to atmospheric CO2 mole fraction. The view of leaf day respiration as a constant and/or negligible parameter of net carbon exchange is now outdated and it should now be regarded as a central actor of plant carbon-use efficiency.


Physiologia Plantarum | 2012

Thermoluminescence and P700 redox kinetics as complementary tools to investigate the cyclic/chlororespiratory electron pathways in stress conditions in barley leaves

Violeta Peeva; Szilvia Z. Tóth; Gabriel Cornic; Jean-Marc Ducruet

Cyclic electron flow around photosystem I drives additional proton pumping into the thylakoid lumen, which enhances the protective non-photochemical quenching and increases ATP synthesis. It involves several pathways activated independently. In whole barley leaves, P700 oxidation under far-red illumination and subsequent P700(+) dark reduction kinetics provide a major probe of the activation of cyclic pathways. Two intermediate and slow exponential reduction phases are always observed and they become faster after high light illumination, but dark inactivation of the Benson-Calvin cycle causes the emergence of both a transient in the P700 oxidation and a fast phase in the P700(+) reduction. We investigate here the afterglow (AG) thermoluminescence emission as another tool to detect the activation of cyclic electron pathways from stroma reductants to the acceptor side of photosystem II. This transfer is activated by warming, yielding an AG band at about 45°C. However, treatments that accelerate the intermediate and slow P700(+) reduction phases (brief anoxia, hexose infiltration, fast dehydration of excised leaves) also produced a downshift of this AG band. This pathway ascribable to NADPH dehydrogenase (NDH) would be triggered by a deficit in ATP, while the fast reduction phase corresponding to the ferredoxin plastoquinone reductase pathway is triggered by an overreduction of the photosystem I acceptor pool and is undetected in thermoluminescence. Contrastingly, slow dehydration of unwatered plants did not cause faster reduction of P700(+) nor temperature downshift of the AG band, that is no induction of the NDH pathway, whereas an increased intensity of the AG band indicated a strong NADPH + ATP assimilatory potential.


New Phytologist | 2017

Tracking the origins of the Kok effect, 70 years after its discovery

Guillaume Tcherkez; Paul P. G. Gauthier; Thomas N. Buckley; Florian A. Busch; Margaret M. Barbour; Dan Bruhn; Mary A. Heskel; Xiao Ying Gong; Kristine Y. Crous; Kevin L. Griffin; Danielle A Way; Matthew H. Turnbull; Mark A. Adams; Owen K. Atkin; Michael L. Bender; Graham D. Farquhar; Gabriel Cornic

Introduction The 18 New Phytologist Workshop was dedicated to possible causes of the Kok effect, the typical break in the light response curve of net photosynthesis. Available data obtained since its discovery in 1948 show that the effect is not purely caused by a down-regulation of respiration, contrary to the commonly accepted view. However, estimates of leaf respiratory rates obtained in various ecosystems with techniques including the Kok method appear to be widely consistent across different studies, suggesting that Kok-derived values can be used as a surrogate for actual day respiration values. Gross CO2 assimilation of photosynthetic organs of plants is accompanied by concurrent efflux of CO2 by photorespiration and day respiration (i.e. nonphotorespiratory CO2 evolution in the light).While the rate of photorespiration can be predicted using the internal CO2 mole fraction and equations that describe gas exchange (taking into account the stoichiometry of CO2 liberation with respect to O2 fixation by ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase), estimating day respiration is much more challenging because there is no equation that can predict its rate as a function of net photosynthesis, CO2 mole fraction or other environmental parameters. That is, in equations describing gas exchange (or isotopic mass balance), day respiration (Rd) has to be determined separately or simply assumed to model net carbon (C) exchange. At the leaf level, day respiration represents a C loss of c. 5% of gross-fixed CO2 but this proportion is highly variable, depending on species and conditions (see, e.g. Atkin et al., 1997). Estimates of day respiratory CO2 loss rely on specific techniques used tomeasure Rd: amongst them, the Kokmethod is certainly the most popular, because it is easy to implement in the laboratory or in the field using classical gas-exchange systems. This method takes advantage of the ‘Kok effect’, a phenomenon first described in the 1940s in unicellular algae (Kok, 1948, 1949). This effect is further described later, and in Fig. 1. The Kok effect is believed to be primarily caused by the inhibition of respiration by light and thus provides a direct way to estimate Rd. At the present date, c. 800 published works have used, or cited, the Kokmethod, representing c. 40% of articles that involve ameasurement of Rd or deal with day respiration. However, some persisting doubt remains about the validity of this method, simply because the Kok effect is inconstant and influenced by environmental conditions (such as O2 mole fraction) in ways that may not be consistent with day respiratory metabolism. Considering the wide range of applications, and the considerable number of articles that have been published, there is an urgent need to clarify the origin of the Kok effect and to evaluate its relevance to measure Rd. This was the objective of the 18 th New Phytologist Workshop that took place in July 2016 in Angers (France).


Plant Science | 2013

In the mitochondrial CMSII mutant of Nicotiana sylvestris photosynthetic activity remains higher than in the WT under persisting mild water stress.

Touhami Rzigui; Rosine De Paepe; Gabriel Cornic; Peter Streb

Photosynthetic responses to persisting mild water stress were compared between the wild type (WT) and the respiratory complex I mutant CMSII of Nicotiana sylvestris. In both genotypes, plants kept at 80% leaf-RWC (WT80 and CMSII80) had lower photosynthetic activity and stomatal/mesophyll conductances compared to well-watered controls. While the stomatal conductance and the chloroplastic CO2 molar ratio were similar in WT80 and CMSII80 leaves, net photosynthesis was higher in CMSII80. Carboxylation efficiency was lowest in WT80 leaves both, on the basis of the same internal and chloroplastic CO2 molar ratio. Photosynthetic and fluorescence parameters indicate that WT80 leaves were only affected in the presence of oxygen. Photorespiration, as estimated by electron flux to oxygen, increased slightly in CMSII80 and WT80 leaves in accordance with increased glycerate contents but maximum photorespiration at low chloroplastic CO2 was markedly lowest in WT80 leaves. This suggests that carbon assimilation of WT80 leaves is impaired by limited photorespiratory activity. The results are discussed with respect to a possible pre-acclimation of complex I deficient leaves in CMSII to drive photosynthesis and photorespiration at low CO2 partial pressure.


Plant Science | 2014

Assessment of photosystem II thermoluminescence as a tool to investigate the effects of dehydration and rehydration on the cyclic/chlororespiratory electron pathways in wheat and barley leaves.

Kathrin Bürling; Jean-Marc Ducruet; Gabriel Cornic; Mauricio Hunsche; Zoran G. Cerovic

Thermoluminescence emission from wheat leaves was recorded under various controlled drought stress conditions: (i) fast dehydration (few hours) of excised leaves in the dark (ii) slow dehydration (several days) obtained by withholding watering of plants under a day/night cycle (iii) overnight rehydration of the slowly dehydrated plants at a stage of severe dessication. In fast dehydrated leaves, the AG band intensity was unchanged but its position was shifted to lower temperatures, indicating an activation of cyclic and chlororespiratory pathways in darkness, without any increase of their overall electron transfer capacity. By contrast, after a slow dehydration the AG intensity was strongly increased whereas its position was almost unchanged, indicating respectively that the capacity of cyclic pathways was enhanced but that they remained inactivated in darkness. Under more severe dehydration, the AG band almost disappeared. Rewatering caused its rapid bounce significantly above the control level. No significant differences in AG emission could be found between the two drought-sensitive and drought-tolerant wheat cultivars. The afterglow thermoluminescence emission in leaves provides an additional tool to follow the increased capacity and activation of cyclic electron flow around PSI in leaves during mild, severe dehydration and after rehydration.


Archive | 2012

Electron Transport in Leaves: A Physiological Perspective

Gabriel Cornic; Neil R. Baker

Light absorbed by photosystems I and II is used to drive linear electron transport, and associated proton transport, in the thylakoid membranes of leaves. In healthy leaves operating under non-stressful conditions and in which photorespiration is inhibited, photosynthetic electron transport is used primarily to reduce NADP+ to NADPH, which is then used to drive the assimilation of CO2 into carbohydrates with ca. 88% of electrons being consumed in this process. However, such a high quantum efficiency of CO2 assimilation is frequently not observed in leaves. We examine the intrinsic physiological, metabolic and environmental factors that can modify photosynthetic electron transport in leaves. Electron transport is also required for the reduction and activation of key enzymes involved in photosynthetic metabolism and driving other metabolic processes, such as nitrogen and sulfur metabolism. Oxygen can act as an electron acceptor, being reduced by electrons from photosystem I via a Mehler reaction or by electrons from photosystem II via the plastid terminal oxidase. Although such photoreductions of oxygen do not appear to have a significant role in healthy, non-stressed leaves, there is evidence to support the contention that these processes can be important for photoprotection of photosystem II in leaves under light stress. Cyclic electron transport can occur around photosystem I; however, this process would also appear to only be of physiological importance when the ability of the leaf to assimilate CO2 is severely restricted. It is concluded that leaves exhibit a high degree of plasticity in their ability to modify the pathways of photosynthetic electron transport in order to deal with fluctuations in metabolic demands and environmental stresses.

Collaboration


Dive into the Gabriel Cornic's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Guillaume Tcherkez

Australian National University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jean-Marc Ducruet

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Peter Streb

University of Paris-Sud

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Graham D. Farquhar

Australian National University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Owen K. Atkin

Australian National University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge