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Dive into the research topics where Gérard Guérin is active.

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Featured researches published by Gérard Guérin.


Science | 2009

Genome Sequence, Comparative Analysis, and Population Genetics of the Domestic Horse

Claire M. Wade; Elena Giulotto; Snaevar Sigurdsson; Monica Zoli; Sante Gnerre; Freyja Imsland; Teri L. Lear; David L. Adelson; Ernest Bailey; Rebecca R. Bellone; Helmut Blöcker; Ottmar Distl; R.C. Edgar; Manuel Garber; Tosso Leeb; Evan Mauceli; James N. MacLeod; M.C.T. Penedo; Joy M. Raison; Ted Sharpe; J. Vogel; Leif Andersson; Douglas F. Antczak; Tara Biagi; M. M. Binns; B.P. Chowdhary; S.J. Coleman; G. Della Valle; Sarah Fryc; Gérard Guérin

A Horse Is a Horse, of Course The history of horse domestication is closely tied to the history of the human society. Wade et al. (p. 865) report on the sequencing and provide a single nucleotide polymorphism map of the horse (Equus caballus) genome. Horses are a member of the order perissodactyla (odd-toed animals with hooves). The analysis reveals an evolutionarily new centromere on equine chromosome 11 that displays properties of an immature but fully functioning centromere and is devoid of centromeric satellite sequence. The findings clarify the nature of genetic diversity within and across horse breeds and suggest that the horse was domesticated from a relatively large number of females, but few males. The horse genome reveals an evolutionary new centromere and conserved chromosomal sequences relative to other mammals. We report a high-quality draft sequence of the genome of the horse (Equus caballus). The genome is relatively repetitive but has little segmental duplication. Chromosomes appear to have undergone few historical rearrangements: 53% of equine chromosomes show conserved synteny to a single human chromosome. Equine chromosome 11 is shown to have an evolutionary new centromere devoid of centromeric satellite DNA, suggesting that centromeric function may arise before satellite repeat accumulation. Linkage disequilibrium, showing the influences of early domestication of large herds of female horses, is intermediate in length between dog and human, and there is long-range haplotype sharing among breeds.


Mammalian Genome | 1994

A set of 99 cattle microsatellites: characterization, synteny mapping, and polymorphism

D. Vaiman; D. Mercier; Katayoun Moazami-Goudarzi; A. Eggen; R. Ciampolini; A. Lépingle; R. Velmala; J. Kaukinen; Sirkka-Liisa Varvio; P. Martin; Hubert Levéziel; Gérard Guérin

Cattle microsatellite clones (136) were isolated from cosmid (10) and plasmid (126) libraries and sequenced. The dinucleotide repeats were studied in each of these sequences and compared with dinucleotide repeats found in other vertebrate species where information was available. The distribution in cattle was similar to that described for other mammals, such as rat, mouse, pig, or human. A major difference resides in the number of sequences present in the bovine genome, which seemed at best one-third as large as in other species. Oligonucleotide primers (117 pairs) were synthesized, and a PCR product of expected size was obtained for 88 microsatellite sequences (75%). Synteny or chromosome assignment was searched for each locus with PCR amplification on a panel of 36 hamster/bovine somatic cell hybrids. Of our bovine microsatellites, eighty-six could be assigned to synteny groups of chromosomes. In addition, 10 other microsatellites—HEL 5, 6, 9, 11, 12, 13 (Kaukinen and Varvio 1993), HEL 4, 7, 14, 15—as well as the microsatellite found in the κ-casein gene (Fries et al. 1990) were mapped on the hybrids. Microsatellite polymorphism was checked on at leat 30 unrelated animals of different breeds. Almost all the autosomal and X Chr microsatellites displayed polymorphism, with the number of alleles varying between two and 44. We assume that these microsatellites could be very helpful in the construction of a primary public linkage map of the bovine genome, with an aim of finding markers for Economic Trait Loci (ETL) in cattle.


Mammalian Genome | 2001

Mutations in the agouti (ASIP), the extension (MC1R), and the brown (TYRP1) loci and their association to coat color phenotypes in horses (Equus caballus)

Stefan Rieder; Sead Taourit; Denis Mariat; Bertrand Langlois; Gérard Guérin

Abstract. Coat color genetics, when successfully adapted and applied to different mammalian species, provides a good demonstration of the powerful concept of comparative genetics. Using cross-species techniques, we have cloned, sequenced, and characterized equine melanocortin-1-receptor (MC1R) and agouti-signaling-protein (ASIP), and completed a partial sequence of tyrosinase-related protein 1 (TYRP1).The coding sequences and parts of the flanking regions of those genes were systematically analyzed in 40 horses and mutations typed in a total of 120 horses. Our panel represented 22 different horse breeds, including 11 different coat colors of Equus caballus. The comparison of a 1721-bp genomic fragment of MC1R among the 11 coat color phenotypes revealed no sequence difference apart from the known chestnut allele (C901T). In particular, no dominant black (ED) mutation was found.In a 4994-bp genomic fragment covering the three putative exons, two introns and parts of the 5′- and 3′-UTRs of ASIP, two intronic base substitutions (SNP-A845G and C2374A), a point mutation in the 3′-UTRs (A4734G), and an 11-bp deletion in exon 2 (ADEx2) were detected. The deletion was found to be homozygous and completely associated with horse recessive black coat color (Aa/Aa) in 24 black horses out of 9 different breeds from our panel. The frameshift initiated by ADEx2 is believed to alter the regular coding sequence, acting as a loss-of-function ASIP mutation. In TYRP1 a base substitution was detected in exon 2 (C189T), causing a threonine to methionine change of yet unknown function, and an SNP (A1188G) was found in intron 2.


PLOS Genetics | 2012

A high density SNP array for the domestic horse and extant Perissodactyla: Utility for association mapping, genetic diversity, and phylogeny studies

Molly E. McCue; Danika L. Bannasch; Jessica L. Petersen; Jessica Gurr; E. Bailey; M. M. Binns; Ottmar Distl; Gérard Guérin; Telhisa Hasegawa; Emmeline W. Hill; Tosso Leeb; Gabriella Lindgren; M. Cecilia T. Penedo; Knut H. Røed; Oliver A. Ryder; June Swinburne; Teruaki Tozaki; Stephanie J. Valberg; Mark Vaudin; Kerstin Lindblad-Toh; Claire M. Wade; James R. Mickelson

An equine SNP genotyping array was developed and evaluated on a panel of samples representing 14 domestic horse breeds and 18 evolutionarily related species. More than 54,000 polymorphic SNPs provided an average inter-SNP spacing of ∼43 kb. The mean minor allele frequency across domestic horse breeds was 0.23, and the number of polymorphic SNPs within breeds ranged from 43,287 to 52,085. Genome-wide linkage disequilibrium (LD) in most breeds declined rapidly over the first 50–100 kb and reached background levels within 1–2 Mb. The extent of LD and the level of inbreeding were highest in the Thoroughbred and lowest in the Mongolian and Quarter Horse. Multidimensional scaling (MDS) analyses demonstrated the tight grouping of individuals within most breeds, close proximity of related breeds, and less tight grouping in admixed breeds. The close relationship between the Przewalskis Horse and the domestic horse was demonstrated by pair-wise genetic distance and MDS. Genotyping of other Perissodactyla (zebras, asses, tapirs, and rhinoceros) was variably successful, with call rates and the number of polymorphic loci varying across taxa. Parsimony analysis placed the modern horse as sister taxa to Equus przewalski. The utility of the SNP array in genome-wide association was confirmed by mapping the known recessive chestnut coat color locus (MC1R) and defining a conserved haplotype of ∼750 kb across all breeds. These results demonstrate the high quality of this SNP genotyping resource, its usefulness in diverse genome analyses of the horse, and potential use in related species.


PLOS Genetics | 2013

Genome-Wide Analysis Reveals Selection for Important Traits in Domestic Horse Breeds

Jessica L. Petersen; James R. Mickelson; Aaron Rendahl; Stephanie J. Valberg; L. Andersson; Jeanette Axelsson; E. Bailey; Danika L. Bannasch; M. M. Binns; Alexandre Secorun Borges; P. A. J. Brama; Artur da Câmara Machado; Stefano Capomaccio; Katia Cappelli; E. Gus Cothran; Ottmar Distl; Laura Y. Fox-Clipsham; Kathryn T. Graves; Gérard Guérin; Bianca Haase; Telhisa Hasegawa; Karin Hemmann; Emmeline W. Hill; Tosso Leeb; Gabriella Lindgren; Hannes Lohi; M. S. Lopes; Beatrice A. McGivney; Sofia Mikko; Nick Orr

Intense selective pressures applied over short evolutionary time have resulted in homogeneity within, but substantial variation among, horse breeds. Utilizing this population structure, 744 individuals from 33 breeds, and a 54,000 SNP genotyping array, breed-specific targets of selection were identified using an FST-based statistic calculated in 500-kb windows across the genome. A 5.5-Mb region of ECA18, in which the myostatin (MSTN) gene was centered, contained the highest signature of selection in both the Paint and Quarter Horse. Gene sequencing and histological analysis of gluteal muscle biopsies showed a promoter variant and intronic SNP of MSTN were each significantly associated with higher Type 2B and lower Type 1 muscle fiber proportions in the Quarter Horse, demonstrating a functional consequence of selection at this locus. Signatures of selection on ECA23 in all gaited breeds in the sample led to the identification of a shared, 186-kb haplotype including two doublesex related mab transcription factor genes (DMRT2 and 3). The recent identification of a DMRT3 mutation within this haplotype, which appears necessary for the ability to perform alternative gaits, provides further evidence for selection at this locus. Finally, putative loci for the determination of size were identified in the draft breeds and the Miniature horse on ECA11, as well as when signatures of selection surrounding candidate genes at other loci were examined. This work provides further evidence of the importance of MSTN in racing breeds, provides strong evidence for selection upon gait and size, and illustrates the potential for population-based techniques to find genomic regions driving important phenotypes in the modern horse.


Mammalian Genome | 2002

Cytogenetic localization of 136 genes in the horse: comparative mapping with the human genome

Dragan Milenkovic; Anne Oustry-Vaiman; Teri L. Lear; Alain Billault; Denis Mariat; François Piumi; Laurent Schibler; Edmond Cribiu; Gérard Guérin

The aim of this study was to increase the number of type I markers on the horse cytogenetic map and to improve comparison with maps of other species, thus facilitating positional candidate cloning studies. BAC clones from two different sources were FISH mapped: homologous horse BAC clones selected from our newly extended BAC library using consensus primer sequences and heterologous goat BAC clones. We report the localization of 136 genes on the horse cytogenetic map, almost doubling the number of cytogenetically mapped genes with 48 localizations from horse BAC clones and 88 from goat BAC clones. For the first time, genes were mapped to ECA13p, ECA29, and probably ECA30. A total of 284 genes are now FISH mapped on the horse chromosomes. Comparison with the human map defines 113 conserved segments that include new homologous segments not identified by Zoo-FISH on ECA7 and ECA13p.


Mammalian Genome | 2002

Construction of a 5000 rad whole-genome radiation hybrid panel in the horse and generation of a comprehensive and comparative map for ECA11

Bhanu P. Chowdhary; Terje Raudsepp; Dee Honeycutt; Elaine Owens; François Piumi; Gérard Guérin; Tara C. Matise; Srinivas R. Kata; James E. Womack; Loren C. Skow

Abstract. A 5000rad whole-genome radiation hybrid (RH) panel was created for the horse. The usefulness of the panel for generating physically ordered maps of individual equine chromosomes was tested by typing 24 markers on horse Chromosome 11 (ECA11). The overall retention of markers on this chromosome was 43.6%. Almost complete retention of two of the typed markers—CA062 and AHT44—clearly indicated the location of thymidine kinase gene on the short arm of ECA11. Seven of the typed markers were FISH mapped to align the RH and cytogenetic maps. With the RH-MAPPER approach, a physically ordered map comprising four linkage groups and incorporating all the markers was obtained. The study provides the first comprehensive map for a horse chromosome that integrates all available mapping data and adds new information that spans the entire length of the equine chromosome. The map clearly underlines the resolving power and utility of the panel and emphasizes the need to have uniformly distributed cytogenetic markers for appropriate alignment of RH map with the chromosome. A comparative status of the ECA11 map in relation to the corresponding human/mouse chromosome is presented.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Genetic Diversity in the Modern Horse Illustrated from Genome-Wide SNP Data

Jessica L. Petersen; James R. Mickelson; E. Gus Cothran; L. Andersson; Jeanette Axelsson; E. Bailey; Danika L. Bannasch; M. M. Binns; Alexandre Secorun Borges; P. A. J. Brama; Artur da Câmara Machado; Ottmar Distl; Michela Felicetti; Laura Y. Fox-Clipsham; Kathryn T. Graves; Gérard Guérin; Bianca Haase; Telhisa Hasegawa; Karin Hemmann; Emmeline W. Hill; Tosso Leeb; Gabriella Lindgren; Hannes Lohi; M. S. Lopes; Beatrice A. McGivney; Sofia Mikko; Nick Orr; M. Cecilia T. Penedo; Richard J. Piercy; Marja Raekallio

Horses were domesticated from the Eurasian steppes 5,000–6,000 years ago. Since then, the use of horses for transportation, warfare, and agriculture, as well as selection for desired traits and fitness, has resulted in diverse populations distributed across the world, many of which have become or are in the process of becoming formally organized into closed, breeding populations (breeds). This report describes the use of a genome-wide set of autosomal SNPs and 814 horses from 36 breeds to provide the first detailed description of equine breed diversity. FST calculations, parsimony, and distance analysis demonstrated relationships among the breeds that largely reflect geographic origins and known breed histories. Low levels of population divergence were observed between breeds that are relatively early on in the process of breed development, and between those with high levels of within-breed diversity, whether due to large population size, ongoing outcrossing, or large within-breed phenotypic diversity. Populations with low within-breed diversity included those which have experienced population bottlenecks, have been under intense selective pressure, or are closed populations with long breed histories. These results provide new insights into the relationships among and the diversity within breeds of horses. In addition these results will facilitate future genome-wide association studies and investigations into genomic targets of selection.


Mammalian Genome | 1998

Construction of a horse BAC library and cytogenetical assignment of 20 type I and type II markers

Sophie Godard; Laurent Schibler; A. Oustry; Edmond Cribiu; Gérard Guérin

Abstract. A horse BAC library was constructed with about 40, 000 clones and mean insert size of 110 kb representing a 1.5 genome equivalent coverage and a probability of finding a single sequence of 0.75. It was characterized by PCR screening of about 130 sequences of horse microsatellites and exonic gene sequences retrieved from databases. BACs containing 8 microsatellites and 12 genes were subsequently localized by fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) on chromosomes. Two linkage groups were newly assigned to chromosomes: LG2 to ECA3 and LG5 to ECA24, and five linkage groups were also oriented—LG3, LG4, LG5, LG8, and LG12—leaving only three groups unassigned. This work showed how this library makes an integrated map a realistic objective for the near future and how it can make comparative mapping more efficient in a search for candidate genes of interest.


Mammalian Genome | 1998

Comparative analysis of 82 expressed sequence tags from a cattle ovary cDNA library

Runlin Z. Ma; M.J.T. van Eijk; Jonathan E. Beever; Gérard Guérin; Harris A. Lewin

Abstract. In total, 82 ESTs were generated from 51 unique clones randomly selected from a cattle ovary cDNA library. Among these clones, 22 (42.1%) had 5′ and/or 3′ ends that matched with known human or other mammalian coding sequences, 18 (35.3%) matched human or other ESTs, and 11 (21.6%) represented novel transcripts with no significant match to any sequence in the databases. The relatively high frequency of ESTs with no matches in GenBank or dbEST indicates that bovine ovary may be a source of novel candidate genes for loci affecting cattle reproduction traits. Primers were designed for 11 ESTs that had human orthologs in GenBank. These ESTs were mapped to 10 bovine autosomes by PCR screening of a somatic cell hybrid panel. Among these 11 ESTs, 4 corresponded to genes previously mapped in humans and had chromosome assignments on the bovine map that were consistent with available comparative mapping data. Although the human orthologs of the remaining 7 mapped bovine ESTs have not been mapped, the human map location could be predicted on the basis of existing comparative mapping data. Because of the general utility of our approach for comparative genome analysis, we have termed it comparative mapping by annotation and sequence similarity (COMPASS). With the cost of large-scale EST sequencing becoming more affordable, and the rapid expansion of DNA databases, it is likely that COMPASS will be a preferred strategy for high throughput comparative mapping.

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Xavier Mata

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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M. M. Binns

Royal Veterinary College

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E. P. Cribiu

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Mathieu Diribarne

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Anne Vaiman

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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François Piumi

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Laurent Schibler

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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