Jacques Le Gouis
Institut national de la recherche agronomique
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Featured researches published by Jacques Le Gouis.
Science | 2014
Frédéric Choulet; Adriana Alberti; Sébastien Theil; Natasha Glover; Valérie Barbe; Josquin Daron; Lise Pingault; Pierre Sourdille; Arnaud Couloux; Etienne Paux; Philippe Leroy; Sophie Mangenot; Nicolas Guilhot; Jacques Le Gouis; François Balfourier; Michael Alaux; Véronique Jamilloux; Julie Poulain; Céline Durand; Arnaud Bellec; Christine Gaspin; Jan Safar; Jaroslav Dolezel; Jane Rogers; Klaas Vandepoele; Jean-Marc Aury; Klaus F. X. Mayer; Hélène Bergès; Hadi Quesneville; Patrick Wincker
We produced a reference sequence of the 1-gigabase chromosome 3B of hexaploid bread wheat. By sequencing 8452 bacterial artificial chromosomes in pools, we assembled a sequence of 774 megabases carrying 5326 protein-coding genes, 1938 pseudogenes, and 85% of transposable elements. The distribution of structural and functional features along the chromosome revealed partitioning correlated with meiotic recombination. Comparative analyses indicated high wheat-specific inter- and intrachromosomal gene duplication activities that are potential sources of variability for adaption. In addition to providing a better understanding of the organization, function, and evolution of a large and polyploid genome, the availability of a high-quality sequence anchored to genetic maps will accelerate the identification of genes underlying important agronomic traits.
European Journal of Agronomy | 2000
Jacques Le Gouis; Denis Beghin; Emmanuel Heumez; P. Pluchard
Abstract Due to economic and ecological factors, European agricultural practices are likely to go towards extensive systems with lower inputs of nitrogen (N) fertilisers. The objective of this study was to assess varietal differences for N use at two nitrogen levels. A set of 20 winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) genotypes was studied over 2 years in northern France on a deep loam soil without (N0) and with 170 kg ha−1 N fertiliser (N+) as ammonium nitrate. Results were consistent on both years as the genotype×year or genotype×year×N level interactions were not significant. The genotype×N level interaction was highly significant except for total N utilisation efficiency (total above-ground dry weight/total above-ground N) and grain N concentration. The genotype×N level interaction for grain yield was mainly due to three contrasting genotypes: Cappelle, a cultivar from the 1940s, had the same yield at N0 and N+; Arche had a high yield at both N levels; and Recital had a high yield with added N and a very low one without N. The number of kernels/ear explained most of the variations of grain yield at N0 (48%) and N+ (80%), and of the interaction (67%). N uptake efficiency (total above-ground N/soil N supply) accounted for 64% of the variation in N use efficiency (grain yield/soil N supply), while at N0 and at N+ it accounted for only 30%. N utilisation efficiency (grain yield/total above-ground N) was then more important at N+ than at N0. Grain N explained most of total plant N variation at both N levels. The interaction for N use efficiency was best explained by the interaction of N uptake (63%). The applications of these results to a breeding programme to create varieties adapted to low-input management systems are discussed.
Journal of Experimental Botany | 2011
Matthieu Bogard; Matthieu Jourdan; Vincent Allard; Pierre Martre; Marie Reine Perretant; Catherine Ravel; Emmanuel Heumez; Simon Orford; J. W. Snape; Simon Griffiths; Oorbessy Gaju; John Foulkes; Jacques Le Gouis
The genetic variability of the duration of leaf senescence during grain filling has been shown to affect both carbon and nitrogen acquisition. In particular, maintaining green leaves during grain filling possibly leads to increased grain yield, but its associated effect on grain protein concentration has not been studied. The aim of this study was to dissect the genetic factors contributing to correlations observed at the phenotypic level between leaf senescence during grain filling, grain protein concentration, and grain yield in winter wheat. With this aim in view, an analysis of quantitative trait locus (QTL) co-locations for these traits was carried out on a doubled haploid mapping population grown in a large multienvironment trial network. Pleiotropic QTLs affecting leaf senescence and grain yield and/or grain protein concentration were identified on chromosomes 2D, 2A, and 7D. These were associated with QTLs for anthesis date, showing that the phenotypic correlations with leaf senescence were mainly explained by flowering time in this wheat population. Study of the allelic effects of these pleiotropic QTLs showed that delaying leaf senescence was associated with increased grain yield or grain protein concentration depending on the environments considered. It is proposed that this differential effect of delaying leaf senescence on grain yield and grain protein concentration might be related to the nitrogen availability during the post-anthesis period. It is concluded that the benefit of using leaf senescence as a selection criterion to improve grain protein concentration in wheat cultivars may be limited and would largely depend on the targeted environments, particularly on their nitrogen availability during the post-anthesis period.
Journal of Experimental Botany | 2010
Matthieu Bogard; Vincent Allard; Maryse Brancourt-Hulmel; Emmanuel Heumez; Jean-Marie Machet; Marie-Hélène Jeuffroy; Philippe Gate; Pierre Martre; Jacques Le Gouis
In plants, carbon and nitrogen (N) economies are intimately linked at the physiological and biochemical level. The strong genetic negative correlation between grain yield and grain protein concentration observed in various cereals is an illustration of this inter-relationship. Studies have shown that deviation from this negative relationship (grain protein deviation or GPD) has a genetic basis, but its physiological basis is still poorly understood. This study analysed data on 27 genotypes grown in multienvironment field trials, representing a wide range of agricultural practices and climatic conditions. The objective was to identify physiological processes related to the genetic variability in GPD. Under most environments, GPD was significantly related to post-anthesis N uptake independently of anthesis date and total N at anthesis. The underlying physiological trait might be related to genotypic differences in either access to soil N, regulation of N uptake by plant N status, or ability to maintain root activity during the grain-filling period. GPD is an interesting potential target in breeding as it appears to be relatively robust across different environments and would be valuable in increasing total N uptake by maturity.
Plant Journal | 2011
Umar Masood Quraishi; Michael Abrouk; Florent Murat; Caroline Pont; Séverine Foucrier; Gregory Desmaizieres; Carole Confolent; Nathalie Rivière; Gilles Charmet; Etienne Paux; Alain Murigneux; Laurent Guerreiro; Stéphane Lafarge; Jacques Le Gouis; Catherine Feuillet; Jérôme Salse
Monitoring nitrogen use efficiency (NUE) in plants is becoming essential to maintain yield while reducing fertilizer usage. Optimized NUE application in major crops is essential for long-term sustainability of agriculture production. Here, we report the precise identification of 11 major chromosomal regions controlling NUE in wheat that co-localise with key developmental genes such as Ppd (photoperiod sensitivity), Vrn (vernalization requirement), Rht (reduced height) and can be considered as robust markers from a molecular breeding perspective. Physical mapping, sequencing, annotation and candidate gene validation of an NUE metaQTL on wheat chromosome 3B allowed us to propose that a glutamate synthase (GoGAT) gene that is conserved structurally and functionally at orthologous positions in rice, sorghum and maize genomes may contribute to NUE in wheat and other cereals. We propose an evolutionary model for the NUE locus in cereals from a common ancestral region, involving species specific shuffling events such as gene deletion, inversion, transposition and the invasion of repetitive elements.
Journal of Experimental Botany | 2015
Jonathan A. Atkinson; Luzie U. Wingen; Marcus Griffiths; Michael P. Pound; Oorbessy Gaju; M. John Foulkes; Jacques Le Gouis; Simon Griffiths; Malcolm J. Bennett; Julie King; Darren M. Wells
Highlight A phenotyping pipeline was used to quantify seedling root architectural traits in a wheat double haploid mapping population. QTL analyses revealed a potential major effect gene regulating seedling root vigour/growth.
Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2011
M. Rousset; Isabelle Bonnin; Carine Remoué; Matthieu Falque; Bénédicte Rhoné; Jean-Baptiste Veyrieras; Delphine Madur; Alain Murigneux; François Balfourier; Jacques Le Gouis; Sylvain Santoni; I. Goldringer
Earliness is very important for the adaptation of wheat to environmental conditions and the achievement of high grain yield. A detailed knowledge of key genetic components of the life cycle would enable an easier control by the breeders. The objective of the study was to investigate the effect of candidate genes on flowering time. Using a collection of hexaploid wheat composed of 235 lines from diverse geographical origins, we conducted an association study for six candidate genes for flowering time and its components (vernalization sensitivity and earliness per se). The effect on the variation of earliness components of polymorphisms within the copies of each gene was tested in ANOVA models accounting for the underlying genetic structure. The collection was structured in five groups that minimized the residual covariance. Vernalization requirement and lateness tend to increase according to the mean latitude of each group. Heading date for an autumnal sowing was mainly determined by the earliness per se. Except for the Constans (CO) gene orthologous of the barley HvCO3, all gene polymorphisms had a significant impact on earliness components. The three traits used to quantify vernalization requirement were primarily associated with polymorphisms at Vrn-1 and then at Vrn-3 and Luminidependens (LD) genes. We found a good correspondence between spring/winter types and genotypes at the three homeologous copies of Vrn-1. Earliness per se was mainly explained by polymorphisms at Vrn-3 and to a lesser extent at Vrn-1, Hd-1 and Gigantea (GI) genes. Vernalization requirement and earliness as a function of geographical origin, as well as the possible role of the breeding practices in the geographical distribution of the alleles and the hypothetical adaptive value of the candidate genes, are discussed.
Journal of Experimental Botany | 2014
Matthieu Bogard; Catherine Ravel; Etienne Paux; Jacques Bordes; François Balfourier; Scott C. Chapman; Jacques Le Gouis; Vincent Allard
Highlight text QTL-based parameters of an ecophysiological model, calibrated on an association genetics panel of 210 genotypes, allowed prediction of heading dates of 80 independent genotypes in six independent experiments with a median prediction error of 5.6 days.
Molecular Breeding | 2014
Jacques Bordes; Ellen Goudemand; Laure Duchalais; Laetitia Chevarin; François Xavier Oury; Emmanuel Heumez; Annie Lapierre; Marie Reine Perretant; Bernard Rolland; Denis Beghin; Valérie Laurent; Jacques Le Gouis; Eric Storlie; Olivier Robert; Gilles Charmet
The exponential development of molecular markers enables a more effective study of the genetic architecture of traits of economic importance, like test weight in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.), for which a high value is desired by most end-users. The association mapping (AM) method now allows more precise exploration of the entire genome. AM requires populations with substantial genetic variability of the traits of interest. The breeding lines at the end of a selection cycle, characterized for numerous traits, represent a potentially useful population for AM studies. Using three elite line populations, selected by several breeders and genotyped with about 2,500 Diversity Arrays Technology markers, several associations were identified between these markers and test weight, grain yield and heading date. To minimize spurious associations, we compared the general linear model and mixed linear model (MLM), which adjust for population structure and kinship differently. The MLM model with the kinship matrix was the most efficient. Finally, elite lines from several breeding programs had sufficient genetic variability to allow for the mapping of several chromosomal regions involved in the variation of three important traits.
Euphytica | 1996
Jacques Le Gouis; P. Pluchard
The new European Common Agricultural Policy and environmental considerations are certainly to change agricultural practices toward low input cultivation systems. Nitrogen is one of the main inputs of winter wheat in northern France and it contributes highly to phreatic water pollution. A research programme has then been set up in order to study whether it is possible to breed for winter wheat cultivars using more efficiently N fertilisers. Less nitrogen would be applied, decreasing pollution risks and operational costs. It has been shown that a large variation exists for N related traits and for the resistance against N deficiency. On the one hand the cv Arche is very resistant to N deficiency, its yield on low N conditions (with no N fertiliser) is on average 89% of its yield on high N conditions (with a high N application). On the other hand, cv Recital is very susceptible to N deficiency as this same percentage is only 61%. A study on 10 hybrids showed that heterosis for grain yield was higher at low N level than at high N level. This was due to a higher number of grains per m2.