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Featured researches published by Guillaume Queval.


Plant Cell and Environment | 2012

Glutathione in plants: an integrated overview.

Graham Noctor; Amna Mhamdi; Sejir Chaouch; Yi Han; Jenny Neukermans; Belén Márquez-García; Guillaume Queval; Christine H. Foyer

Plants cannot survive without glutathione (γ-glutamylcysteinylglycine) or γ-glutamylcysteine-containing homologues. The reasons why this small molecule is indispensable are not fully understood, but it can be inferred that glutathione has functions in plant development that cannot be performed by other thiols or antioxidants. The known functions of glutathione include roles in biosynthetic pathways, detoxification, antioxidant biochemistry and redox homeostasis. Glutathione can interact in multiple ways with proteins through thiol-disulphide exchange and related processes. Its strategic position between oxidants such as reactive oxygen species and cellular reductants makes the glutathione system perfectly configured for signalling functions. Recent years have witnessed considerable progress in understanding glutathione synthesis, degradation and transport, particularly in relation to cellular redox homeostasis and related signalling under optimal and stress conditions. Here we outline the key recent advances and discuss how alterations in glutathione status, such as those observed during stress, may participate in signal transduction cascades. The discussion highlights some of the issues surrounding the regulation of glutathione contents, the control of glutathione redox potential, and how the functions of glutathione and other thiols are integrated to fine-tune photorespiratory and respiratory metabolism and to modulate phytohormone signalling pathways through appropriate modification of sensitive protein cysteine residues.


Annual Review of Plant Biology | 2009

Photorespiratory Metabolism: Genes, Mutants, Energetics, and Redox Signaling

Christine H. Foyer; Arnold J. Bloom; Guillaume Queval; Graham Noctor

Photorespiration is a high-flux pathway that operates alongside carbon assimilation in C(3) plants. Because most higher plant species photosynthesize using only the C(3) pathway, photorespiration has a major impact on cellular metabolism, particularly under high light, high temperatures, and CO(2) or water deficits. Although the functions of photorespiration remain controversial, it is widely accepted that this pathway influences a wide range of processes from bioenergetics, photosystem II function, and carbon metabolism to nitrogen assimilation and respiration. Crucially, the photorespiratory pathway is a major source of H(2)O(2) in photosynthetic cells. Through H(2)O(2) production and pyridine nucleotide interactions, photorespiration makes a key contribution to cellular redox homeostasis. In so doing, it influences multiple signaling pathways, particularly those that govern plant hormonal responses controlling growth, environmental and defense responses, and programmed cell death. The potential influence of photorespiration on cell physiology and fate is thus complex and wide ranging. The genes, pathways, and signaling functions of photorespiration are considered here in the context of whole plant biology, with reference to future challenges and human interventions to diminish photorespiratory flux.


Plant Physiology | 2013

The Impact of Global Change Factors on Redox Signaling Underpinning Stress Tolerance

Sergi Munné-Bosch; Guillaume Queval; Christine H. Foyer

Reduction/oxidation (redox) metabolism and associated signaling are key components of cross tolerance to biotic and abiotic stresses in plants. Climate change factors such as predicted increases in temperature and the availability of atmospheric carbon dioxide ([CO2][1]) and ozone ([O3][2]) will


Plant Cell and Environment | 2015

Low glutathione regulates gene expression and the redox potentials of the nucleus and cytosol in Arabidopsis thaliana

Daniel Schnaubelt; Guillaume Queval; Yingping Dong; Pedro Díaz-Vivancos; Matome E. Makgopa; Gareth J. Howell; Ambra de Simone; Juan Bai; Matthew A. Hannah; Christine H. Foyer

Reduced glutathione (GSH) is considered to exert a strong influence on cellular redox homeostasis and to regulate gene expression, but these processes remain poorly characterized. Severe GSH depletion specifically inhibited root meristem development, while low root GSH levels decreased lateral root densities. The redox potential of the nucleus and cytosol of Arabidopsis thaliana roots determined using roGFP probes was between -300 and -320 mV. Growth in the presence of the GSH-synthesis inhibitor buthionine sulfoximine (BSO) increased the nuclear and cytosolic redox potentials to approximately -260 mV. GSH-responsive genes including transcription factors (SPATULA, MYB15, MYB75), proteins involved in cell division, redox regulation (glutaredoxinS17, thioredoxins, ACHT5 and TH8) and auxin signalling (HECATE), were identified in the GSH-deficient root meristemless 1-1 (rml1-1) mutant, and in other GSH-synthesis mutants (rax1-1, cad2-1, pad2-1) as well as in the wild type following the addition of BSO. Inhibition of auxin transport had no effect on organ GSH levels, but exogenous auxin decreased the root GSH pool. We conclude that GSH depletion significantly increases the redox potentials of the nucleus and cytosol, and causes arrest of the cell cycle in roots but not shoots, with accompanying transcript changes linked to altered hormone responses, but not oxidative stress.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2014

The effects of redox controls mediated by glutathione peroxidases on root architecture in Arabidopsis thaliana

Gisele Passaia; Guillaume Queval; Juan Bai; Marcia Margis-Pinheiro; Christine H. Foyer

Summary We demonstrate that the GPX proteins are important in the control of root architecture and that loss of any of the GPX isoforms exerts an influence on lateral root density.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B | 2012

Redox regulation of photosynthetic gene expression

Guillaume Queval; Christine H. Foyer

Redox chemistry and redox regulation are central to the operation of photosynthesis and respiration. However, the roles of different oxidants and antioxidants in the regulation of photosynthetic or respiratory gene expression remain poorly understood. Leaf transcriptome profiles of a range of Arabidopsis thaliana genotypes that are deficient in either hydrogen peroxide processing enzymes or in low molecular weight antioxidant were therefore compared to determine how different antioxidant systems that process hydrogen peroxide influence transcripts encoding proteins targeted to the chloroplasts or mitochondria. Less than 10 per cent overlap was observed in the transcriptome patterns of leaves that are deficient in either photorespiratory (catalase (cat)2) or chloroplastic (thylakoid ascorbate peroxidase (tapx)) hydrogen peroxide processing. Transcripts encoding photosystem II (PSII) repair cycle components were lower in glutathione-deficient leaves, as were the thylakoid NAD(P)H (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (phosphate)) dehydrogenases (NDH) mRNAs. Some thylakoid NDH mRNAs were also less abundant in tAPX-deficient and ascorbate-deficient leaves. Transcripts encoding the external and internal respiratory NDHs were increased by low glutathione and low ascorbate. Regulation of transcripts encoding specific components of the photosynthetic and respiratory electron transport chains by hydrogen peroxide, ascorbate and glutathione may serve to balance non-cyclic and cyclic electron flow pathways in relation to oxidant production and reductant availability.


Plant Physiology | 2013

Regulating the redox gatekeeper: Vacuolar sequestration puts glutathione disulfide in its place

Graham Noctor; Amna Mhamdi; Guillaume Queval; Christine H. Foyer

The case is made for the potential importance of compartmentalization in redox signaling with new data on the transporters that may be involved.


Plant Physiology | 2017

Photoperiod Affects the Phenotype of Mitochondrial Complex I Mutants

Pierre Pétriacq; Linda de Bont; Lucie Genestout; Jingfang Hao; Constance Laureau; Igor Florez-Sarasa; Touhami Rzigui; Guillaume Queval; Françoise Gilard; Caroline Mauve; Florence Guérard; Marlène Lamothe-Sibold; Jessica Marion; Chantal Fresneau; Spencer C. Brown; Antoine Danon; Anja Krieger-Liszkay; Richard Berthomé; Miquel Ribas-Carbo; Guillaume Tcherkez; Gabriel Cornic; Bernard Pineau; Bertrand Gakière; Rosine De Paepe

Respiratory complex I mutants do not properly acclimate to long-day conditions in Arabidopsis, demonstrating the importance of mitochondria for the photoperiod response. Plant mutants for genes encoding subunits of mitochondrial complex I (CI; NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase), the first enzyme of the respiratory chain, display various phenotypes depending on growth conditions. Here, we examined the impact of photoperiod, a major environmental factor controlling plant development, on two Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) CI mutants: a new insertion mutant interrupted in both ndufs8.1 and ndufs8.2 genes encoding the NDUFS8 subunit and the previously characterized ndufs4 CI mutant. In the long day (LD) condition, both ndufs8.1 and ndufs8.2 single mutants were indistinguishable from Columbia-0 at phenotypic and biochemical levels, whereas the ndufs8.1 ndufs8.2 double mutant was devoid of detectable holo-CI assembly/activity, showed higher alternative oxidase content/activity, and displayed a growth retardation phenotype similar to that of the ndufs4 mutant. Although growth was more affected in ndufs4 than in ndufs8.1 ndufs8.2 under the short day (SD) condition, both mutants displayed a similar impairment of growth acceleration after transfer to LD compared with the wild type. Untargeted and targeted metabolomics showed that overall metabolism was less responsive to the SD-to-LD transition in mutants than in the wild type. The typical LD acclimation of carbon and nitrogen assimilation as well as redox-related parameters was not observed in ndufs8.1 ndufs8. Similarly, NAD(H) content, which was higher in the SD condition in both mutants than in Columbia-0, did not adjust under LD. We propose that altered redox homeostasis and NAD(H) content/redox state control the phenotype of CI mutants and photoperiod acclimation in Arabidopsis.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2014

Transport of glutathione into the nucleus

Guillaume Queval; Christine H. Foyer

The tripeptide thiol glutathione (GSH) is present in the nucleus of plant and animal cells. However, the functions of GSH in the nucleus remain poorly characterised. GSH appears to become sequestered in the nucleus at the early stages of the cell cycle. As part of our search for proteins that may be involved in GSH transport into the nucleus, we studied the functions of the nucleoporin called Alacrima Achalasia aDrenal Insufficiency Neurologic disorder (ALADIN). ALADIN is encoded by the Achalasia-Addisonianism-Alacrimia (AAAS) gene in mammalian cells. Defects in ALADIN promote adrenal disorders and lead to the triple A syndrome in humans. The ALADIN protein localizes to the nuclear envelope in Arabidopsis thaliana and interacts with other components of the nuclear pore complex (NPC). We characterised the functions of the ALADIN protein in an Arabidopsis thaliana T-DNA insertion knockout mutant, which shows slow growth compared to the wild type.


F1000Research | 2013

The role of Arabidopsis thaliana ALADIN-related protein in the regulation of plant growth

Guillaume Queval; Christine H. Foyer

INTRODUCTION. Plant growth and yield are intimately linked to cell proliferation in meristems. When plants experience stress, cell proliferation arrests and growth is severely impaired. The tripeptide antioxidant glutathione (GSH) has been shown to be crucial for root apical meristem maintenance. GSH depletion in Arabidopsis thaliana stops the cell cycle at G1 in roots but not in shoots (Vernoux et al., 2000). Recent studies shown that both in animal and plant cells, GSH is recruited into the nucleus during specific phases of the cell cycle and that GSH is predominantly localized with chromatin at G1 and during mitosis (Markovic et al., 2007; Diaz-Vivancos et al., 2010). However, little is known about the transport mechanisms that are responsible for GSH accumulation in the nucleus. The ALADIN protein is a component of the nuclear pore complex (NPC). Human cells that are deficient in ALADIN show an arrest of the cell cycle at G1 (Prasad et al., 2012). We have therefore characterised the growth phenotype of an Arabidopsis mutant that is deficient in an ALADIN-related protein in the absence and presence of the GSH-synthesis inhibitor buthionine sulphoximine (BSO).

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Pedro Díaz-Vivancos

Spanish National Research Council

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