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Dive into the research topics where Hélène Labbé is active.

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Featured researches published by Hélène Labbé.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1995

An acetohydroxy acid synthase mutant reveals a single site involved in multiple herbicide resistance

Jiro Hattori; Douglas Brown; George Mourad; Hélène Labbé; Thérèse Ouellet; Glen Sunohara; Robert Rutledge; John King; Brian Miki

Acetohydroxy acid synthase (AHAS) is an essential enzyme for many organisms as it catalyzes the first step in the biosynthesis of the branched-chain amino acids valine, isoleucine, and leucine. The enzyme is under allosteric control by these amino acids. It is also inhibited by several classes of herbicides, such as the sulfonylureas, imidazolinones and triazolopyrimidines, that are believed to bind to a relic quinone-binding site. In this study, a mutant allele of AHAS3 responsible for sulfonylurea resistance in a Brassica napus cell line was isolated. Sequence analyses predicted a single amino acid change (557 Trp→Leu) within a conserved region of AHAS. Expression in transgenic plants conferred strong resistance to the three classes of herbicides, revealing a single site essential for the binding of all the herbicide classes. The mutation did not appear to affect feedback inhibition by the branched-chain amino acids in plants.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1992

Multiple resistance to sulfonylureas and imidazolinones conferred by an acetohydroxyacid synthase gene with separate mutations for selective resistance

Jiro Hattori; Robert G. Rutledge; Hélène Labbé; Douglas Brown; Glen Sunohara; Brian Miki

SummaryThe acetohydroxyacid synthase (AHAS) gene from the Arabidopsis thaliana mutant line GH90 carrying the imidazolinone resistance allele imr1 was cloned. Expression of the AHAS gene under the control of the CaMV 35S promoter in transgenic tobacco resulted in selective imidazolinone resistance, confirming that the single base-pair change found near the 3′ end of the coding region of this gene is responsible for imidazolinone resistance. A chimeric AHAS gene containing both the imr1 mutation and the csr1 mutation, responsible for selective resistance to sulfonylurea herbicides, was constructed. It conferred on transgenic tobacco plants resistance to both sulfonylurea and imidazolinone herbicides. The data illustrate that a multiple-resistance phenotype can be achieved in an AHAS gene through combinations of separate mutations, each of which individually confers resistance to only one class of herbicides.


Plant Molecular Biology | 2010

Control of somatic embryogenesis and embryo development by AP2 transcription factors

Souad El Ouakfaoui; Jaimie Schnell; Ashraf Abdeen; Adam Colville; Hélène Labbé; Shuyou Han; Bernard R. Baum; Serge Laberge; Brian Miki

Members of the AP2 family of transcription factors, such as BABY BOOM (BBM), play important roles in cell proliferation and embryogenesis in Arabidopsis thaliana (AtBBM) and Brassica napus (BnBBM) but how this occurs is not understood. We have isolated three AP2 genes (GmBBM1, GmAIL5, GmPLT2) from somatic embryo cultures of soybean, Glycine max (L.) Merr, and discovered GmBBM1 to be homologous to AtBBM and BnBBM. GmAIL5 and GmPLT2 were homologous to Arabidopsis AINTEGUMENTA-like5 (AIL5) and PLETHORA2 (PLT2), respectively. Constitutive expression of GmBBM1 in Arabidopsis induced somatic embryos on vegetative organs and other pleiotropic effects on post-germinative vegetative organ development. Sequence comparisons of BBM orthologues revealed the presence of ten sequence motifs outside of the AP2 DNA-binding domains. One of the motifs, bbm-1, was specific to the BBM-like genes. Deletion and domain swap analyses revealed that bbm-1 was important for somatic embryogenesis and acted cooperatively with at least one other motif, euANT2, in the regulation of somatic embryogenesis and embryo development in transgenic Arabidopsis. The results provide new insights into the mechanisms by which BBM governs embryogenesis.


Planta | 2000

The seed coat-specific expression of a subtilisin-like gene, SCS1, from soybean

Anthea K. Batchelor; Kim Boutilier; S. Shea Miller; Hélène Labbé; LuAnne Bowman; Ming Hu; Douglas A. Johnson; Mark Gijzen; Brian Miki

Abstract. A seed coat-specific gene, SCS1 (Seed Coat Subtilisin 1), from soybean, Glycine max [L.] Merill, has been identified and studied. The gene belongs to a small family of genes with sequence similarity to the subtilisins, which are serine proteases. Northern blot analysis showed that SCS1 RNA accumulates to maximal levels in seed coats at 12 days post anthesis, preceding the final stages of seed coat differentiation. The SCS1 RNA was not found in other tissues including embryos, seed pods, flowers, stems, roots or leaves. In-situ hybridization studies confirmed the temporal pattern of expression observed by Northern blot analysis and further revealed a restricted pattern of RNA accumulation in thick-walled parenchyma cells of the seed coats. These cells are important in the apoplastic translocation of nutrients en route to the embryo from the vascular tissues. The tissue-specific subtilisin-like gene may be required for regulating the differentiation of the thick-walled parenchyma cells.


Plant Cell Reports | 2011

Role of HD2 genes in seed germination and early seedling growth in Arabidopsis

Adam Colville; Reem Alhattab; Ming Hu; Hélène Labbé; Tim Xing; Brian Miki

The Arabidopsis HD2 family of histone deacetylases consist of 4 members (HD2A, HD2B, HD2C, HD2D) that play diverse roles in plant development and physiology through chromatin remodelling. Here, we show that the transcripts of HD2 family members selectively accumulate in response to glucose through a HXK1-independent signal transduction pathway during the early stages of seedling growth. Germination was enhanced in hd2a null mutants relative to wild-type seeds. In contrast, hd2c mutants were restrained in germination relative to wild-type seeds. In hd2a/hd2c double mutants, germination was restored to wild-type levels. The data suggests that HD2A and HD2C may have different and opposing functions in germination with the glucose/HD2A pathway acting to restrain germination and the HD2C pathway acting to enhance germination. These pathways may function early in the regulation of seedling germination, independently of the glucose/HXK1/ABA signal transduction pathway, to fine tune the onset of germination.


Transgenic Research | 2012

Comparability of imazapyr-resistant Arabidopsis created by transgenesis and mutagenesis

Jaimie Schnell; Hélène Labbé; Nik Kovinich; Yuzuki Manabe; Brian Miki

The Arabidopsis CSR1 gene codes for the enzyme acetohydroxyacid synthase (AHAS, EC 2.2.1.6), also known as acetolactate synthase, which catalyzes the first step in branched-chain amino acid biosynthesis. It is inhibited by several classes of herbicides, including the imidazolinone herbicides, such as imazapyr; however, a substitution mutation in csr1-2 (Ser-653-Asn) confers selective resistance to the imidazolinones. The transcriptome of csr1-2 seedlings grown in the presence of imazapyr has been shown in a previous study (Manabe in Plant Cell Physiol 48:1340–1358, 2007) to be identical to that of wild-type seedlings indicating that AHAS is the sole target of imazapyr and that the mutation is not associated with pleiotropic effects detectable by transcriptome analysis. In this study, a lethal null mutant, csr1-7, created by a T-DNA insertion into the CSR1 gene was complemented with a randomly-inserted 35S/CSR1-2/NOS transgene in a subsequent genetic transformation event. A comparison of the csr1-2 substitution mutant with the transgenic lines revealed that all were resistant to imazapyr; however, the transgenic lines yielded significantly higher levels of resistance and greater biomass accumulation in the presence of imazapyr. Microarray analysis revealed few differences in their transcriptomes. The most notable was a sevenfold to tenfold elevation in the CSR1-2 transcript level. The data indicate that transgenesis did not create significant unintended pleiotropic effects on gene expression and that the mutant and transgenic lines were highly similar, except for the level of herbicide resistance.


Plant Journal | 2004

Expression and function of HD2‐type histone deacetylases in Arabidopsis development

Changhe Zhou; Hélène Labbé; Sunandini Sridha; Li Wang; Lining Tian; Marysia Latoszek-Green; Zhen Yang; Daniel C. W. Brown; Brian Miki; Keqiang Wu


Plant Molecular Biology | 1999

A tobacco cryptic constitutive promoter, tCUP, revealed by T-DNA tagging.

Elizabeth Foster; Jiro Hattori; Hélène Labbé; Thérèse Ouellet; Pierre R. Fobert; Lisa E. James; V. N. Iyer; Brian Miki


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2004

Evidence that the hexose-to-sucrose ratio does not control the switch to storage product accumulation in oilseeds: analysis of tobacco seed development and effects of overexpressing apoplastic invertase

Kim L. Tomlinson; Sylvia McHugh; Hélène Labbé; John L. Grainger; Lisa E. James; Keith M. Pomeroy; John W. Mullin; S. Shea Miller; David T. Dennis; Brian Miki


Genome | 1994

Construction and expression of a metallothionein–β-glucuronidase gene fusion

Jiro Hattori; Hélène Labbé; Brian Miki

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Brian Miki

Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

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Jiro Hattori

Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

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Thérèse Ouellet

Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

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Elizabeth Foster

Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

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Lining Tian

Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

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Keqiang Wu

National Taiwan University

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