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Dive into the research topics where Irène Hummel is active.

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Featured researches published by Irène Hummel.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Developmental and Environmental Regulation of Aquaporin Gene Expression across Populus Species: Divergence or Redundancy?

David Cohen; Marie-Béatrice Bogeat-Triboulot; Silvère Vialet-Chabrand; Rémy Merret; Pierre Emmanuel Courty; Sébastien Moretti; François Bizet; Agnès Guilliot; Irène Hummel

Aquaporins (AQPs) are membrane channels belonging to the major intrinsic proteins family and are known for their ability to facilitate water movement. While in Populus trichocarpa, AQP proteins form a large family encompassing fifty-five genes, most of the experimental work focused on a few genes or subfamilies. The current work was undertaken to develop a comprehensive picture of the whole AQP gene family in Populus species by delineating gene expression domain and distinguishing responsiveness to developmental and environmental cues. Since duplication events amplified the poplar AQP family, we addressed the question of expression redundancy between gene duplicates. On these purposes, we carried a meta-analysis of all publicly available Affymetrix experiments. Our in-silico strategy controlled for previously identified biases in cross-species transcriptomics, a necessary step for any comparative transcriptomics based on multispecies design chips. Three poplar AQPs were not supported by any expression data, even in a large collection of situations (abiotic and biotic constraints, temporal oscillations and mutants). The expression of 11 AQPs was never or poorly regulated whatever the wideness of their expression domain and their expression level. Our work highlighted that PtTIP1;4 was the most responsive gene of the AQP family. A high functional divergence between gene duplicates was detected across species and in response to tested cues, except for the root-expressed PtTIP2;3/PtTIP2;4 pair exhibiting 80% convergent responses. Our meta-analysis assessed key features of aquaporin expression which had remained hidden in single experiments, such as expression wideness, response specificity and genotype and environment interactions. By consolidating expression profiles using independent experimental series, we showed that the large expansion of AQP family in poplar was accompanied with a strong divergence of gene expression, even if some cases of functional redundancy could be suspected.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2015

Length and activity of the root apical meristem revealed in vivo by infrared imaging

François Bizet; Irène Hummel; Marie-Béatrice Bogeat-Triboulot

Summary A fast and in vivo approach to assess the dynamics of root apical meristem length.


Physiologia Plantarum | 2015

Phenotypic plasticity toward water regime: response of leaf growth and underlying candidate genes in Populus

François Bizet; Marie-Béatrice Bogeat-Triboulot; Pierre Montpied; Angélique Christophe; Nathalie Ningre; David Cohen; Irène Hummel

Phenotypic plasticity is considered as an important mechanism for plants to cope with environmental challenges. Leaf growth is one of the first macroscopic processes to be impacted by modification of soil water availability. In this study, we intended to analyze and compare plasticity at different scales. We examined the differential effect of water regime (optimal, moderate water deprivation and recovery) on growth and on the expression of candidate genes in leaves of different growth stages. Candidates were selected to assess components of growth response: abscisic acid signaling, water transport, cell wall modification and stomatal development signaling network. At the tree scale, the four studied poplar hybrids responded similarly to water regime. Meanwhile, leaf growth response was under genotype × environment interaction. Patterns of candidate gene expression enriched our knowledge about their functionality in poplars. For most candidates, transcript levels were strongly structured according to leaf growth performance while response to water regime was clearly dependent on genotype. The use of an index of plasticity revealed that the magnitude of the response was higher for gene expression than for macroscopic traits. In addition, the ranking of poplar genotypes for macroscopic traits well paralleled the one for gene expression.


Nature plants | 2018

Oak genome reveals facets of long lifespan

Christophe Plomion; Jean-Marc Aury; Joelle Amselem; Thibault Leroy; Florent Murat; Sébastien Duplessis; Sébastien Faye; Nicolas Francillonne; Karine Labadie; Grégoire Le Provost; Isabelle Lesur; Jérôme Bartholomé; Patricia Faivre-Rampant; Annegret Kohler; Jean-Charles Leplé; Nathalie Chantret; Jun Chen; Anne Dievart; Tina Alaeitabar; Valérie Barbe; Caroline Belser; Hélène Bergès; Catherine Bodénès; Marie-Béatrice Bogeat-Triboulot; Marie-Lara Bouffaud; Benjamin Brachi; Emilie Chancerel; David Cohen; Arnaud Couloux; Corinne Da Silva

Oaks are an important part of our natural and cultural heritage. Not only are they ubiquitous in our most common landscapes1 but they have also supplied human societies with invaluable services, including food and shelter, since prehistoric times2. With 450 species spread throughout Asia, Europe and America3, oaks constitute a critical global renewable resource. The longevity of oaks (several hundred years) probably underlies their emblematic cultural and historical importance. Such long-lived sessile organisms must persist in the face of a wide range of abiotic and biotic threats over their lifespans. We investigated the genomic features associated with such a long lifespan by sequencing, assembling and annotating the oak genome. We then used the growing number of whole-genome sequences for plants (including tree and herbaceous species) to investigate the parallel evolution of genomic characteristics potentially underpinning tree longevity. A further consequence of the long lifespan of trees is their accumulation of somatic mutations during mitotic divisions of stem cells present in the shoot apical meristems. Empirical4 and modelling5 approaches have shown that intra-organismal genetic heterogeneity can be selected for6 and provides direct fitness benefits in the arms race with short-lived pests and pathogens through a patchwork of intra-organismal phenotypes7. However, there is no clear proof that large-statured trees consist of a genetic mosaic of clonally distinct cell lineages within and between branches. Through this case study of oak, we demonstrate the accumulation and transmission of somatic mutations and the expansion of disease-resistance gene families in trees.Oaks can live hundreds of years. Comparative genomics using a high-quality genome sequence provides new insights that may explain tree longevity. Samples from branches and corresponding acorns also help quantify heritable somatic mutations.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2016

3D deformation field in growing plant roots reveals both mechanical and biological responses to axial mechanical forces

François Bizet; A. Glyn Bengough; Irène Hummel; Marie-Béatrice Bogeat-Triboulot; Lionel X. Dupuy

Highlight Maximal axial pressures exerted by freely growing roots are restricted by root buckling but are increased when root lateral bracing is provided.


Tree Physiology | 2018

Genes and gene clusters related to genotype and drought-induced variation in saccharification potential, lignin content and wood anatomical traits in Populus nigra

Henning Wildhagen; Shanty Paul; Mike Allwright; Hazel K. Smith; Marta Malinowska; Sabine K. Schnabel; M. João Paulo; Federica Cattonaro; Vera Vendramin; Simone Scalabrin; Dennis Janz; Cyril Douthe; Oliver Brendel; Cyril Bure; David Cohen; Irène Hummel; Didier Le Thiec; Fred A. van Eeuwijk; Joost J. B. Keurentjes; Jaume Flexas; Michele Morgante; Paul Robson; Marie-Béatrice Bogeat-Triboulot; Gail Taylor; Andrea Polle

Abstract Wood is a renewable resource that can be employed for the production of second generation biofuels by enzymatic saccharification and subsequent fermentation. Knowledge on how the saccharification potential is affected by genotype-related variation of wood traits and drought is scarce. Here, we used three Populus nigra L. genotypes from habitats differing in water availability to (i) investigate the relationships between wood anatomy, lignin content and saccharification and (ii) identify genes and co-expressed gene clusters related to genotype and drought-induced variation in wood traits and saccharification potential. The three poplar genotypes differed in wood anatomy, lignin content and saccharification potential. Drought resulted in reduced cambial activity, decreased vessel and fiber lumina, and increased the saccharification potential. The saccharification potential was unrelated to lignin content as well as to most wood anatomical traits. RNA sequencing of the developing xylem revealed that 1.5% of the analyzed genes were differentially expressed in response to drought, while 67% differed among the genotypes. Weighted gene correlation network analysis identified modules of co-expressed genes correlated with saccharification potential. These modules were enriched in gene ontology terms related to cell wall polysaccharide biosynthesis and modification and vesicle transport, but not to lignin biosynthesis. Among the most strongly saccharification-correlated genes, those with regulatory functions, especially kinases, were prominent. We further identified transcription factors whose transcript abundances differed among genotypes, and which were co-regulated with genes for biosynthesis and modifications of hemicelluloses and pectin. Overall, our study suggests that the regulation of pectin and hemicellulose metabolism is a promising target for improving wood quality of second generation bioenergy crops. The causal relationship of the identified genes and pathways with saccharification potential needs to be validated in further experiments.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2018

Changes in the epigenome and transcriptome of the poplar shoot apical meristem in response to water availability affect preferentially hormone pathways

Clément Lafon-Placette; Anne-Laure Le Gac; Didier Chauveau; Vincent Segura; Alain Delaunay; Marie-Claude Lesage-Descauses; Irène Hummel; David Cohen; Béline Jesson; Didier Le Thiec; Marie-Béatrice Bogeat-Triboulot; Franck Brignolas; Stéphane Maury

The adaptive capacity of long-lived organisms such as trees to the predicted climate changes, including severe and successive drought episodes, will depend on the presence of genetic diversity and phenotypic plasticity. Here, the involvement of epigenetic mechanisms in phenotypic plasticity toward soil water availability was examined in Populus×euramericana. This work aimed at characterizing (i) the transcriptome plasticity, (ii) the genome-wide plasticity of DNA methylation, and (iii) the function of genes affected by a drought-rewatering cycle in the shoot apical meristem. Using microarray chips, differentially expressed genes (DEGs) and differentially methylated regions (DMRs) were identified for each water regime. The rewatering condition was associated with the highest variations of both gene expression and DNA methylation. Changes in methylation were observed particularly in the body of expressed genes and to a lesser extent in transposable elements. Together, DEGs and DMRs were significantly enriched in genes related to phytohormone metabolism or signaling pathways. Altogether, shoot apical meristem responses to changes in water availability involved coordinated variations in DNA methylation, as well as in gene expression, with a specific targeting of genes involved in hormone pathways, a factor that may enable phenotypic plasticity.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2018

Quantitative dissection of variations in root growth rate: a matter of cell proliferation or of cell expansion?

Chvan Youssef; François Bizet; R Bastien; David Legland; Marie-Béatrice Bogeat-Triboulot; Irène Hummel

Distinct cellular processes trigger root growth regulation: cell elongation rate drives rapid growth response to environment while cell division rate determines the growth capacity of individual roots.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2016

The build-up of osmotic stress responses within the growing root apex using kinematics and RNA-sequencing

Mathilde Royer; David Cohen; Nathalie Aubry; Vera Vendramin; Simone Scalabrin; Federica Cattonaro; Marie-Béatrice Bogeat-Triboulot; Irène Hummel


BIO-PROTOCOL | 2017

Non-invasive Protocol for Kinematic Monitoring of Root Growth under Infrared Light

François Bizet; Lionel X. Dupuy; A. G. Bengough; Alexis Peaucelle; Irène Hummel; Marie-Béatrice Bogeat-Triboulot

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Marie-Béatrice Bogeat-Triboulot

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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David Cohen

University of Lorraine

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Cyril Bure

University of Lorraine

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Cyril Douthe

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Andrea Polle

University of Göttingen

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Dennis Janz

University of Göttingen

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