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Dive into the research topics where Geneviève J. Parent is active.

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Featured researches published by Geneviève J. Parent.


Plant Journal | 2015

Expression of the β‐glucosidase gene Pgβglu‐1 underpins natural resistance of white spruce against spruce budworm

Melissa H. Mageroy; Geneviève J. Parent; Gaby Germanos; Nathalie Delvas; Halim Maaroufi; Éric Bauce; Joerg Bohlmann; John MacKay

Periodic outbreaks of spruce budworm (SBW) affect large areas of ecologically and economically important conifer forests in North America, causing tree mortality and reduced forest productivity. Host resistance against SBW has been linked to growth phenology and the chemical composition of foliage, but the underlying molecular mechanisms and population variation are largely unknown. Using a genomics approach, we discovered a β-glucosidase gene, Pgβglu-1, whose expression levels and function underpin natural resistance to SBW in mature white spruce (Picea glauca) trees. In phenotypically resistant trees, Pgβglu-1 transcripts were up to 1000 times more abundant than in non-resistant trees and were highly enriched in foliage. The encoded PgβGLU-1 enzyme catalysed the cleavage of acetophenone sugar conjugates to release the aglycons piceol and pungenol. These aglycons were previously shown to be active against SBW. Levels of Pgβglu-1 transcripts and biologically active acetophenone aglycons were substantially different between resistant and non-resistant trees over time, were positively correlated with each other and were highly variable in a natural white spruce population. These results suggest that expression of Pgβglu-1 and accumulation of acetophenone aglycons is a constitutive defence mechanism in white spruce. The progeny of resistant trees had higher Pgβglu-1 gene expression than non-resistant progeny, indicating that the trait is heritable. With reported increases in the intensity of SBW outbreaks, influenced by climate, variation of Pgβglu-1 transcript expression, PgβGLU-1 enzyme activity and acetophenone accumulation may serve as resistance markers to better predict impacts of SBW in both managed and wild spruce populations.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Insect herbivory (Choristoneura fumiferana, Tortricidea) underlies tree population structure (Picea glauca, Pinaceae).

Geneviève J. Parent; Gaby Germanos; Mebarek Lamara; Éric Bauce; John MacKay

Variation in insect herbivory can lead to population structure in plant hosts as indicated by defence traits. In annual herbaceous, defence traits may vary between geographic areas but evidence of such patterns is lacking for long-lived species. This may result from the variety of selection pressures from herbivores, long distance gene flow, genome properties, and lack of research. We investigated the antagonistic interaction between white spruce (Picea glauca) and spruce budworm (SBW, Choristoneura fumiferana) the most devastating forest insect of eastern North America in common garden experiments. White spruces that are able to resist SBW attack were reported to accumulate the acetophenones piceol and pungenol constitutively in their foliage. We show that levels of these acetophenones and transcripts of the gene responsible for their release is highly heritable and that their accumulation is synchronized with the most devastating stage of SBW. Piceol and pungenol concentrations negatively correlate with rate of development in female SBW and follow a non-random geographic variation pattern that is partially explained by historical damage from SBW and temperature. Our results show that accumulation of acetophenones is an efficient resistance mechanism against SBW in white spruce and that insects can affect population structure of a long-lived plant.


Archive | 2011

LCA Potentials and Limits Within a Sustainable Agri-food Statutory Framework

Geneviève J. Parent; Sophie Lavallée

The Life Cycle Analysis (LCA) of products and services is a tool created to assess the environmental impact of a product, process, services or system by taking into account every step in its life cycle. Mainly used for the analysis of environmental impacts of products and industrial services, a growing number of studies incorporating LCA are focusing on the agri-food production sector. At a time when the agri-food statutory framework must take into account the environmental impacts of the activities that it encompasses, it seems worthwhile to question whether or not LCA may contribute to a sustainable agri-food statutory framework, especially by promoting agriculture more friendly to the environment and those who work in this area.


Plant Cell and Environment | 2018

Evolution of the biosynthesis of two hydroxyacetophenones in plants: Evolution of hydroxyacetophenone biosynthesis

Geneviève J. Parent; Melissa H. Mageroy; Joerg Bohlmann; John MacKay

Acetophenones are phenolic metabolites of plant species. A metabolic route for the biosynthesis and release of 2 defence-related hydroxyacetophenones in white spruce (Picea glauca) was recently proposed to involve 3 phases: (a) biosynthesis of the acetophenone aglycons catalysed by a currently unknown set of enzymes, (b) formation and accumulation of the corresponding glycosides catalysed by a glucosyltransferase, and (c) release of the aglycons catalysed by a glucosylhydrolase (PgβGLU-1). We tested if this biosynthetic model is conserved across Pinaceae and land plant species. We assayed and surveyed the literature and sequence databases for possible patterns of the presence of the acetophenone aglycons piceol and pungenol and their glucosides, as well as sequences and expression of Pgβglu-1 orthologues. In the Pinaceae, the 3 phases of the biosynthetic model are present and differences in expression of Pgβglu-1 gene orthologues explain some of the interspecific variation in hydroxyacetophenones. The phylogenetic signal in the metabolite phenotypes was low across species of 6 plant divisions. Putative orthologues of PgβGLU-1 do not form a monophyletic group in species producing hydroxyacetophenones. The biosynthetic model for acetophenones appears to be conserved across Pinaceae, whereas convergent evolution has led to the production of acetophenone glucosides across land plants.


PeerJ | 2017

In vivo function of Pgβglu-1 in the release of acetophenones in white spruce

Melissa H. Mageroy; Denis Lachance; Sharon Jancsik; Geneviève J. Parent; Armand Séguin; John MacKay; Joerg Bohlmann

Eastern spruce budworm (Choristoneura fumiferiana Clemens) (ESBW) is a major forest pest which feeds on young shoots of white spruce (Picea glauca) and can cause landscape level economic and ecological losses. Release of acetophenone metabolites, piceol and pungenol, from their corresponding glycosides, picein and pungenin, can confer natural resistance of spruce to ESBW. A beta-glucosidase gene, Pgβglu-1, was recently discovered and the encoded enzyme was characterized in vitro to function in the release of the defensive acetophenone aglycons. Here we describe overexpression of Pgβglu-1 in a white spruce genotype whose metabolome contains the glucosylated acetophenones, but no detectable amounts of the aglycons. Transgenic overexpression of Pgβglu-1 resulted in release of the acetophenone aglycons in planta. This work provides in vivo evidence for the function of Pgβglu-1.


Heredity | 2018

Genetic control and evolutionary potential of a constitutive resistance mechanism against the spruce budworm ( Choristoneura fumiferana ) in white spruce ( Picea glauca )

Claudia Méndez-Espinoza; Geneviève J. Parent; Patrick Lenz; André Rainville; Laurence Tremblay; Greg Adams; Andrew McCartney; Éric Bauce; John MacKay

Insect herbivory may drive evolution by selecting for trees with heritable resistance against defoliation. The spruce budworm (Choristoneura fumiferana, SBW) is a highly damaging forest insect pest that can affect population structure of white spruce (Picea glauca) in North America. Resistance against SBW was recently described in white spruce and was linked to three constitutive resistance biomarkers: the phenolic compounds piceol and pungenol, and expression of a beta-glucosidase encoding gene (Pgβglu-1). We investigated the phenotypic variability and heritability of these resistance biomarkers and of picein, the precursor of piceol, in the foliage of 874 trees belonging to 33 full-sib families and 71 clonal lines under evaluation in seven field locations in Eastern Canada. We aimed to (i) determine their genetic control, (ii) estimate the genetic and phenotypic correlations among defense biomarkers, and (iii) determine whether their constitutive levels are associated with detrimental trade-offs on growth. Quantitative genetics analyses indicated that all four traits are moderately to highly heritable. The full-sib and clonal analyses showed that additive and non-additive genetic effects play major and minor roles, respectively. Positive genetic and phenotypic correlations between resistance biomarkers and primary growth indicated that there is no trade-off between total height and height increment and resistance traits, contradicting the GDBH (Growth Differentiation Balance Hypothesis). Our findings about the predominant additive genetic basis of the resistance biomarkers show that adaptive evolution of white spruce natural populations to resist to SBW is possible and that potentially important gains could also be expected from artificial selection.


BMC Plant Biology | 2018

Association genetics of acetophenone defence against spruce budworm in mature white spruce

Mebarek Lamara; Geneviève J. Parent; Jean Beaulieu; Jean Bousquet; John MacKay

BackgroundOutbreaks of spruce budworm (SBW, Choristoneura fumiferana Clem.) cause major recurrent damage in boreal conifers such as white spruce (Picea glauca [Moench] Voss) and large losses of forest biomass in North America. Although defensive phenolic compounds have recently been linked to chemical resistance against SBW, their genetic basis remains poorly understood in forest trees, especially in conifers. Here, we used diverse association genetics approaches to discover genes and their variants that may control the accumulation of acetophenones, and dissect the genetic architecture of these defence compounds against SBW in white spruce mature trees.ResultsOut of 4747 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) from 2312 genes genotyped in a population of 211 unrelated individuals, genetic association analyses identified 35 SNPs in 33 different genes that were significantly associated with the defence traits by using single-locus, multi-locus and multi-trait approaches. The multi-locus approach was particularly effective at detecting SNP–trait associations that explained a large fraction of the phenotypic variance (from 20 to 43%). Significant genes were regulatory including the NAC transcription factor, or they were involved in carbohydrate metabolism, falling into the binding, catalytic or transporter activity functional classes. Most of them were highly expressed in foliage. Weak positive phenotypic correlations were observed between defence and growth traits, indicating little or no evidence of defence-growth trade-offs.ConclusionsThis study provides new insights on the genetic architecture of tree defence traits, contributing to our understanding of the physiology of resistance mechanisms to biotic factors and providing a basis for the genetic improvement of the constitutive defence of white spruce against SBW.


Limnology and Oceanography | 2012

Natural hybridization between Calanus finmarchicus and C. glacialis (Copepoda) in the Arctic and Northwest Atlantic

Geneviève J. Parent; Stéphane Plourde; Julie Turgeon


Journal of Plankton Research | 2011

Overlapping size ranges of Calanus spp. off the Canadian Arctic and Atlantic Coasts: impact on species' abundances

Geneviève J. Parent; Stéphane Plourde; Julie Turgeon


Advances in Botanical Research | 2015

Forest Tree Genomics: Review of Progress

Geneviève J. Parent; Elie Raherison; Juliana Stival Sena; John MacKay

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Joerg Bohlmann

University of British Columbia

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Melissa H. Mageroy

University of British Columbia

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Stéphane Plourde

Fisheries and Oceans Canada

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André Rainville

Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources

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Armand Séguin

Natural Resources Canada

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