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Dive into the research topics where Georges Periquet is active.

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Featured researches published by Georges Periquet.


Science | 2009

Polydnaviruses of braconid wasps derive from an ancestral nudivirus

Annie Bézier; Marc Annaheim; Juline Herbinière; Christoph Wetterwald; Gabor Gyapay; Sylvie Bernard-Samain; Patrick Wincker; Isabel Roditi; Manfred Heller; Maya Belghazi; Rita Pfister-Wilhem; Georges Periquet; Catherine Dupuy; Elisabeth Huguet; Anne-Nathalie Volkoff; Beatrice Lanzrein; Jean-Michel Drezen

Many species of parasitoid wasps inject polydnavirus particles in order to manipulate host defenses and development. Because the DNA packaged in these particles encodes almost no viral structural proteins, their relation to viruses has been debated. Characterization of complementary DNAs derived from braconid wasp ovaries identified genes encoding subunits of a viral RNA polymerase and structural components of polydnavirus particles related most closely to those of nudiviruses—a sister group of baculoviruses. The conservation of this viral machinery in different braconid wasp lineages sharing polydnaviruses suggests that parasitoid wasps incorporated a nudivirus-related genome into their own genetic material. We found that the nudiviral genes themselves are no longer packaged but are actively transcribed and produce particles used to deliver genes essential for successful parasitism in lepidopteran hosts.


FEBS Letters | 1995

Human and other mammalian genomes contain transposons of the mariner family

Corinne Augé-Gouillou; Yves Bigot; Nicolas Pollet; Marie-Hélène Hamelin; Michèle Meunier‐Rotival; Georges Periquet

Internal fragments of the putative transposase gene of mariner‐like elements (MLEs) were amplified from human, mouse, rat, chinese hamster, sheep and bovine genomic DNAs by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). The sequences identified in human, ovine and bovine genomes correspond to ancient degenerate transposons. Screening mammalian sequence libraries identified a truncated element in the human ABL gene and the sequence of its 5′‐ITR was determined. This ITR sequences were used in PCR experiments with DNA from six mammalian species and detected full‐sized and deleted MLEs. The presence of MLE in mammalian genomes demonstrates that they are ubiquitous mobile elements found from fungi to man. This observation strongly raises the possibility that MLE could constitute tools for the modification of eucaryotic genomes.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Paleozoic origin of insect large dsDNA viruses.

Julien Thézé; Annie Bézier; Georges Periquet; Jean-Michel Drezen; Elisabeth A. Herniou

To understand how extant viruses interact with their hosts, we need a historical framework of their evolutionary association. Akin to retrovirus or hepadnavirus viral fossils present in eukaryotic genomes, bracoviruses are integrated in braconid wasp genomes and are transmitted by Mendelian inheritance. However, unlike viral genomic fossils, they have retained functional machineries homologous to those of large dsDNA viruses pathogenic to arthropods. Using a phylogenomic approach, we resolved the relationships between bracoviruses and their closest free relatives: baculoviruses and nudiviruses. The phylogeny showed that bracoviruses are nested within the nudivirus clade. Bracoviruses establish a bridge between the virus and animal worlds. Their inclusion in a virus phylogeny allowed us to relate free viruses to fossils. The ages of the wasps were used to calibrate the virus phylogeny. Bayesian analyses revealed that insect dsDNA viruses first evolved at ∼310 Mya in the Paleozoic Era during the Carboniferous Period with the first insects. Furthermore the virus diversification time frame during the Mesozoic Era appears linked to the diversification of insect orders; baculoviruses that infect larvae evolved at the same period as holometabolous insects. These results imply ancient coevolution by resource tracking between several insect dsDNA virus families and their hosts, dating back to 310 Mya.


Genetics Selection Evolution | 1990

The distribution of the P-M system in Drosophila melanogaster strains from the People's Republic of China

D Anxolabéhère; K Hu; D. Nouaud; Georges Periquet

An extensive survey of the D melanogaster populations collected during the period 1982-1987 in the People’s Republic of China was carried out with respect to the P M system of hybrid dysgenesis. Geographical differentiation was found between the continental area where only the M’ type occurs, and the coastal areas, where the populations were characterized as weak P or Q types. All populations studied carried P sequences and had a high frequency of the KP element (a particular P element deletionderivative). The geographical differentiation of eastern Asian populations appears to be a mirror image of that of western Eurasian populations with the highest frequencies of P elements existing in the coastal areas. The causes of this geographical differentiation are discussed.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B | 2013

When parasitic wasps hijacked viruses: genomic and functional evolution of polydnaviruses

Elisabeth A. Herniou; Elisabeth Huguet; Julien Thézé; Annie Bézier; Georges Periquet; Jean-Michel Drezen

The Polydnaviridae (PDV), including the Bracovirus (BV) and Ichnovirus genera, originated from the integration of unrelated viruses in the genomes of two parasitoid wasp lineages, in a remarkable example of convergent evolution. Functionally active PDVs represent the most compelling evolutionary success among endogenous viral elements (EVEs). BV evolved from the domestication by braconid wasps of a nudivirus 100 Ma. The nudivirus genome has become an EVE involved in BV particle production but is not encapsidated. Instead, BV genomes have co-opted virulence genes, used by the wasps to control the immunity and development of their hosts. Gene transfers and duplications have shaped BV genomes, now encoding hundreds of genes. Phylogenomic studies suggest that BVs contribute largely to wasp diversification and adaptation to their hosts. A genome evolution model explains how multidirectional wasp adaptation to different host species could have fostered PDV genome extension. Integrative studies linking ecological data on the wasp to genomic analyses should provide new insights into the adaptive role of particular BV genes. Forthcoming genomic advances should also indicate if the associations between endoparasitoid wasps and symbiotic viruses evolved because of their particularly intimate interactions with their hosts, or if similar domesticated EVEs could be uncovered in other parasites.


Genetica | 2011

Transfer of a chromosomal Maverick to endogenous bracovirus in a parasitoid wasp

Dupuy C; Georges Periquet; Serbielle C; Bézier A; Louis F; Drezen Jm

Bracoviruses are used by parasitoid wasps to allow development of their progeny within the body of lepidopteran hosts. In parasitoid wasps, the bracovirus exists as a provirus, integrated in a wasp chromosome. Viral replication occurs in wasp ovaries and leads to formation of particles containing dsDNA circles (segments) that are injected into the host body during wasp oviposition. We identified a large DNA transposon Maverick in a parasitoid wasp bracovirus. Closely related elements are present in parasitoid wasp genomes indicating that the element in CcBV corresponds to the insertion of an endogenous wasp Maverick in CcBV provirus. The presence of the Maverick in a bracovirus genome suggests the possibility of transposon transfers from parasitoids to lepidoptera via bracoviruses.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences | 2000

Drosophila resistance genes to parasitoids: chromosomal location and linkage analysis

Marylène Poirié; F. Frey; M. Hita; Elisabeth Huguet; F. Lemeunier; Georges Periquet; Y. Carton

Insect hosts can survive infection by parasitoids using the encapsulation phenomenon. In Drosophila melanogaster the abilities to encapsulate the wasp species Leptopilina boulardi and Asobara tabida each involve one major gene. Both resistance genes have been precisely localized on the second chromosome, 35 centimorgans apart. This result clearly demonstrates the involvement of at least two separate genetic systems in Drosophila resistance to parasitoid wasps. The resistance genes to L. boulardi and A. tabida are not clustered as opposed to many plant resistance genes to pathogens cloned to date.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B | 2013

Functional endogenous viral elements in the genome of the parasitoid wasp Cotesia congregata: insights into the evolutionary dynamics of bracoviruses

Annie Bézier; Faustine Louis; Séverine Jancek; Georges Periquet; Julien Thézé; Gabor Gyapay; Karine Musset; Jérome Lesobre; Patricia Lenoble; Catherine Dupuy; Dawn E. Gundersen-Rindal; Elisabeth A. Herniou; Jean-Michel Drezen

Bracoviruses represent the most complex endogenous viral elements (EVEs) described to date. Nudiviral genes have been hosted within parasitoid wasp genomes since approximately 100 Ma. They play a crucial role in the wasp life cycle as they produce bracovirus particles, which are injected into parasitized lepidopteran hosts during wasp oviposition. Bracovirus particles encapsidate multiple dsDNA circles encoding virulence genes. Their expression in parasitized caterpillars is essential for wasp parasitism success. Here, we report on the genomic organization of the proviral segments (i.e. master sequences used to produce the encapsidated dsDNA circles) present in the Cotesia congregata parasitoid wasp genome. The provirus is composed of a macrolocus, comprising two-thirds of the proviral segments and of seven dispersed loci, each containing one to three segments. Comparative genomic analyses with closely related species gave insights into the evolutionary dynamics of bracovirus genomes. Conserved synteny in the different wasp genomes showed the orthology of the proviral macrolocus across different species. The nudiviral gene odv-e66-like1 is conserved within the macrolocus, suggesting an ancient co-localization of the nudiviral genome and bracovirus proviral segments. By contrast, the evolution of proviral segments within the macrolocus has involved a series of lineage-specific duplications.


Genetica | 1994

The evolutionary genetics of thehobo transposable element in theDrosophila melanogaster complex

Georges Periquet; Françoise Lemeunier; Yves Bigot; M. H. Hamelin; Claude Bazin; V. Ladevèze; J. Eeken; M. I. Galindo; L. Pascual; Ian A. Boussy

Hobo elements are a family of transposable elements found inDrosophila melanogaster and its three sibling species:D. simulans, D. mauritiana andD. sechellia. Studies inD. melanogaster have shown thathobo may be mobilized, and that the genetic effects of such mobilizations included the general features of hybrid dysgenesis: mutations, chromosomal rearrangements and gonadal dysgenis in F1 individuals. At the evolutionary level somehobo-hybridizing sequences have also been found in the other members of themelanogaster subgroup and in many members of the relatedmontium subgroup. Surveys of older collected strains ofD. melanogaster suggest that completehobo elements were absent prior to 50 years ago and that they have recently been introduced into this species by horizontal transfer. In this paper we review our findings and those of others, in order to precisely describe the geographical distribution and the evolutionary history ofhobo in theD. melanogaster complex. Studies of the DNA sequences reveal a different level of divergence between the groupD. melanogaster, D. simulans andD. mauritiana and the fourth speciesD. sechellia. The hypothesis of multiple transfers in the recent past into theD. melanogaster complex from a common outside source is discussed.


Gene | 1996

COMPUTER ANALYSES REVEAL A HOBO-LIKE ELEMENT IN THE NEMATODE CAENORHABDITIS ELEGANS, WHICH PRESENTS A CONSERVED TRANSPOSASE DOMAIN COMMON WITH THE TC1 -MARINER TRANSPOSON FAMILY

Yves Bigot; Corinne Augé-Gouillou; Georges Periquet

The present report describes the use of computer analyses to reveal a hobo-like element in the genome of Caenorhabditis elegans. This hobo-like sequence is 3039 bp long, contains two inverted terminal repeats of 25-27 bp and probably does not encoded a functional transposase. Sequence comparisons suggest that each transposase of hobo elements probably has a D(D/S)E motif. Thus the transposases of the hAT superfamily of transposons appear to be close to the other transposases and intregrases.

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Yves Bigot

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jean-Michel Drezen

François Rabelais University

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Françoise Lemeunier

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Marie-Hélène Hamelin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Annie Bézier

François Rabelais University

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Elisabeth Huguet

François Rabelais University

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Catherine Dupuy

François Rabelais University

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Elisabeth A. Herniou

François Rabelais University

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