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Featured researches published by Julie Guy.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Two genomes of highly polyphagous lepidopteran pests (Spodoptera frugiperda, Noctuidae) with different host-plant ranges

Anaïs Gouin; Anthony Bretaudeau; Kiwoong Nam; Sylvie Gimenez; Jean-Marc Aury; Bernard Duvic; Frédérique Hilliou; Nicolas Durand; Nicolas Montagné; Isabelle Darboux; Suyog S. Kuwar; Thomas Chertemps; David Siaussat; Anne Bretschneider; Yves Moné; Seung-Joon Ahn; Sabine Hänniger; Anne-Sophie Gosselin Grenet; David Neunemann; Florian Maumus; Isabelle Luyten; Karine Labadie; Wei Xu; Fotini Koutroumpa; Jean-Michel Escoubas; Angel Llopis; Martine Maïbèche-Coisne; Fanny Salasc; Archana Tomar; Alisha Anderson

Emergence of polyphagous herbivorous insects entails significant adaptation to recognize, detoxify and digest a variety of host-plants. Despite of its biological and practical importance - since insects eat 20% of crops - no exhaustive analysis of gene repertoires required for adaptations in generalist insect herbivores has previously been performed. The noctuid moth Spodoptera frugiperda ranks as one of the world’s worst agricultural pests. This insect is polyphagous while the majority of other lepidopteran herbivores are specialist. It consists of two morphologically indistinguishable strains (“C” and “R”) that have different host plant ranges. To describe the evolutionary mechanisms that both enable the emergence of polyphagous herbivory and lead to the shift in the host preference, we analyzed whole genome sequences from laboratory and natural populations of both strains. We observed huge expansions of genes associated with chemosensation and detoxification compared with specialist Lepidoptera. These expansions are largely due to tandem duplication, a possible adaptation mechanism enabling polyphagy. Individuals from natural C and R populations show significant genomic differentiation. We found signatures of positive selection in genes involved in chemoreception, detoxification and digestion, and copy number variation in the two latter gene families, suggesting an adaptive role for structural variation.


Molecular Ecology | 2015

A population genomics insight into the Mediterranean origins of wine yeast domestication

Pedro L. Almeida; Raquel Barbosa; Yumi Imanishi; Kiminori Shimizu; Benedetta Turchetti; Jean Luc Legras; Marta Serra; Sylvie Dequin; Arnaud Couloux; Julie Guy; Douda Bensasson; Paula Gonçalves; José Paulo Sampaio

The domestication of the wine yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is thought to be contemporary with the development and expansion of viticulture along the Mediterranean basin. Until now, the unavailability of wild lineages prevented the identification of the closest wild relatives of wine yeasts. Here, we enlarge the collection of natural lineages and employ whole‐genome data of oak‐associated wild isolates to study a balanced number of anthropic and natural S. cerevisiae strains. We identified industrial variants and new geographically delimited populations, including a novel Mediterranean oak population. This population is the closest relative of the wine lineage as shown by a weak population structure and further supported by genomewide population analyses. A coalescent model considering partial isolation with asymmetrical migration, mostly from the wild group into the Wine group, and population growth, was found to be best supported by the data. Importantly, divergence time estimates between the two populations agree with historical evidence for winemaking. We show that three horizontally transmitted regions, previously described to contain genes relevant to wine fermentation, are present in the Wine group but not in the Mediterranean oak group. This represents a major discontinuity between the two populations and is likely to denote a domestication fingerprint in wine yeasts. Taken together, these results indicate that Mediterranean oaks harbour the wild genetic stock of domesticated wine yeasts.


Molecular Biology and Evolution | 2015

Evolutionary Advantage Conferred by an Eukaryote-to-Eukaryote Gene Transfer Event in Wine Yeasts

Souhir Marsit; Adriana Mena; Frédéric Bigey; François-Xavier Sauvage; Arnaud Couloux; Julie Guy; Jean-Luc Legras; Eladio Barrio; Sylvie Dequin; Virginie Galeote

Although an increasing number of horizontal gene transfers have been reported in eukaryotes, experimental evidence for their adaptive value is lacking. Here, we report the recent transfer of a 158-kb genomic region between Torulaspora microellipsoides and Saccharomyces cerevisiae wine yeasts or closely related strains. This genomic region has undergone several rearrangements in S. cerevisiae strains, including gene loss and gene conversion between two tandemly duplicated FOT genes encoding oligopeptide transporters. We show that FOT genes confer a strong competitive advantage during grape must fermentation by increasing the number and diversity of oligopeptides that yeast can utilize as a source of nitrogen, thereby improving biomass formation, fermentation efficiency, and cell viability. Thus, the acquisition of FOT genes has favored yeast adaptation to the nitrogen-limited wine fermentation environment. This finding indicates that anthropic environments offer substantial ecological opportunity for evolutionary diversification through gene exchange between distant yeast species.


PLOS Pathogens | 2013

Identification of Novel Target Genes for Safer and More Specific Control of Root-Knot Nematodes from a Pan-Genome Mining

Etienne Danchin; Marie-Jeanne Arguel; Amandine Campan-Fournier; Laetitia Perfus-Barbeoch; Marc Magliano; Marie-Noëlle Rosso; Martine Da Rocha; Corinne Da Silva; Nicolas Nottet; Karine Labadie; Julie Guy; François Artiguenave; Pierre Abad

Root-knot nematodes are globally the most aggressive and damaging plant-parasitic nematodes. Chemical nematicides have so far constituted the most efficient control measures against these agricultural pests. Because of their toxicity for the environment and danger for human health, these nematicides have now been banned from use. Consequently, new and more specific control means, safe for the environment and human health, are urgently needed to avoid worldwide proliferation of these devastating plant-parasites. Mining the genomes of root-knot nematodes through an evolutionary and comparative genomics approach, we identified and analyzed 15,952 nematode genes conserved in genomes of plant-damaging species but absent from non target genomes of chordates, plants, annelids, insect pollinators and mollusks. Functional annotation of the corresponding proteins revealed a relative abundance of putative transcription factors in this parasite-specific set compared to whole proteomes of root-knot nematodes. This may point to important and specific regulators of genes involved in parasitism. Because these nematodes are known to secrete effector proteins in planta, essential for parasitism, we searched and identified 993 such effector-like proteins absent from non-target species. Aiming at identifying novel targets for the development of future control methods, we biologically tested the effect of inactivation of the corresponding genes through RNA interference. A total of 15 novel effector-like proteins and one putative transcription factor compatible with the design of siRNAs were present as non-redundant genes and had transcriptional support in the model root-knot nematode Meloidogyne incognita. Infestation assays with siRNA-treated M. incognita on tomato plants showed significant and reproducible reduction of the infestation for 12 of the 16 tested genes compared to control nematodes. These 12 novel genes, showing efficient reduction of parasitism when silenced, constitute promising targets for the development of more specific and safer control means.


PLOS Genetics | 2017

Hybridization and polyploidy enable genomic plasticity without sex in the most devastating plant-parasitic nematodes

Romain Blanc-Mathieu; Laetitia Perfus-Barbeoch; Jean-Marc Aury; Martine Da Rocha; Jérôme Gouzy; Erika Sallet; Cristina Martin-Jimenez; Marc Bailly-Bechet; Philippe Castagnone-Sereno; Jean-François Flot; Djampa Kozlowski; Julie Cazareth; Arnaud Couloux; Corinne Da Silva; Julie Guy; Yu-Jin Kim-Jo; Corinne Rancurel; Thomas Schiex; Pierre Abad; Patrick Wincker; Etienne Danchin

Root-knot nematodes (genus Meloidogyne) exhibit a diversity of reproductive modes ranging from obligatory sexual to fully asexual reproduction. Intriguingly, the most widespread and devastating species to global agriculture are those that reproduce asexually, without meiosis. To disentangle this surprising parasitic success despite the absence of sex and genetic exchanges, we have sequenced and assembled the genomes of three obligatory ameiotic and asexual Meloidogyne. We have compared them to those of relatives able to perform meiosis and sexual reproduction. We show that the genomes of ameiotic asexual Meloidogyne are large, polyploid and made of duplicated regions with a high within-species average nucleotide divergence of ~8%. Phylogenomic analysis of the genes present in these duplicated regions suggests that they originated from multiple hybridization events and are thus homoeologs. We found that up to 22% of homoeologous gene pairs were under positive selection and these genes covered a wide spectrum of predicted functional categories. To biologically assess functional divergence, we compared expression patterns of homoeologous gene pairs across developmental life stages using an RNAseq approach in the most economically important asexually-reproducing nematode. We showed that >60% of homoeologous gene pairs display diverged expression patterns. These results suggest a substantial functional impact of the genome structure. Contrasting with high within-species nuclear genome divergence, mitochondrial genome divergence between the three ameiotic asexuals was very low, signifying that these putative hybrids share a recent common maternal ancestor. Transposable elements (TE) cover a ~1.7 times higher proportion of the genomes of the ameiotic asexual Meloidogyne compared to the sexual relative and might also participate in their plasticity. The intriguing parasitic success of asexually-reproducing Meloidogyne species could be partly explained by their TE-rich composite genomes, resulting from allopolyploidization events, and promoting plasticity and functional divergence between gene copies in the absence of sex and meiosis.


Science Advances | 2015

Recurrent DNA virus domestication leading to different parasite virulence strategies

Apolline Pichon; Annie Bézier; Serge Urbach; Jean-Marc Aury; Véronique Jouan; Marc Ravallec; Julie Guy; François Cousserans; Julien Thézé; Jérémy Gauthier; Edith Demettre; Sandra Schmieder; François Wurmser; Vonick Sibut; Marylène Poirié; Dominique Colinet; Corinne Da Silva; Arnaud Couloux; Valérie Barbe; Jean-Michel Drezen; Anne-Nathalie Volkoff

Virus domestication is a recurrent and beneficial process in the evolution of parasitic wasps. Relics of ancient infections are abundant in eukaryote genomes, but little is known about how they evolve when they confer a functional benefit on their host. We show here, for the first time, that the virus-like particles shown to protect Venturia canescens eggs against host immunity are derived from a nudivirus genome incorporated by the parasitic wasp into its own genetic material. Nudivirus hijacking was also at the origin of protective particles from braconid wasps. However, we show here that the viral genes produce “liposomes” that wrap and deliver V. canescens virulence proteins, whereas the particles are used as gene transfer agents in braconid wasps. Our findings indicate that virus domestication has occurred repeatedly during parasitic wasp evolution but with different evolutionary trajectories after endogenization, resulting in different virulence molecule delivery strategies.


BMC Bioinformatics | 2014

TE-Tracker: systematic identification of transposition events through whole-genome resequencing

Arthur Gilly; Mathilde Etcheverry; Mohammed-Amin Madoui; Julie Guy; Leandro Quadrana; Adriana Alberti; Antoine Martin; Tony Heitkam; Stefan Engelen; Karine Labadie; Jeremie Le Pen; Patrick Wincker; Vincent Colot; Jean-Marc Aury

BackgroundTransposable elements (TEs) are DNA sequences that are able to move from their location in the genome by cutting or copying themselves to another locus. As such, they are increasingly recognized as impacting all aspects of genome function. With the dramatic reduction in cost of DNA sequencing, it is now possible to resequence whole genomes in order to systematically characterize novel TE mobilization in a particular individual. However, this task is made difficult by the inherently repetitive nature of TE sequences, which in some eukaryotes compose over half of the genome sequence. Currently, only a few software tools dedicated to the detection of TE mobilization using next-generation-sequencing are described in the literature. They often target specific TEs for which annotation is available, and are only able to identify families of closely related TEs, rather than individual elements.ResultsWe present TE-Tracker, a general and accurate computational method for the de-novo detection of germ line TE mobilization from re-sequenced genomes, as well as the identification of both their source and destination sequences. We compare our method with the two classes of existing software: specialized TE-detection tools and generic structural variant (SV) detection tools. We show that TE-Tracker, while working independently of any prior annotation, bridges the gap between these two approaches in terms of detection power. Indeed, its positive predictive value (PPV) is comparable to that of dedicated TE software while its sensitivity is typical of a generic SV detection tool. TE-Tracker demonstrates the benefit of adopting an annotation-independent, de novo approach for the detection of TE mobilization events. We use TE-Tracker to provide a comprehensive view of transposition events induced by loss of DNA methylation in Arabidopsis. TE-Tracker is freely available at http://www.genoscope.cns.fr/TE-Tracker.ConclusionsWe show that TE-Tracker accurately detects both the source and destination of novel transposition events in re-sequenced genomes. Moreover, TE-Tracker is able to detect all potential donor sequences for a given insertion, and can identify the correct one among them. Furthermore, TE-Tracker produces significantly fewer false positives than common SV detection programs, thus greatly facilitating the detection and analysis of TE mobilization events.


Scientific Data | 2017

Viral to metazoan marine plankton nucleotide sequences from the Tara Oceans expedition

Adriana Alberti; Julie Poulain; Stefan Engelen; Karine Labadie; Sarah Romac; Isabel Ferrera; Guillaume Albini; Jean-Marc Aury; Caroline Belser; Alexis Bertrand; Corinne Cruaud; Corinne Da Silva; Carole Dossat; Frédérick Gavory; Shahinaz Gas; Julie Guy; Maud Haquelle; E'krame Jacoby; Olivier Jaillon; Arnaud Lemainque; Eric Pelletier; Gaelle Samson; Mark Wessner; Genoscope Technical Team; Pascal Bazire; Odette Beluche; Laurie Bertrand; Marielle Besnard-Gonnet; Isabelle Bordelais; Magali Boutard

A unique collection of oceanic samples was gathered by the Tara Oceans expeditions (2009–2013), targeting plankton organisms ranging from viruses to metazoans, and providing rich environmental context measurements. Thanks to recent advances in the field of genomics, extensive sequencing has been performed for a deep genomic analysis of this huge collection of samples. A strategy based on different approaches, such as metabarcoding, metagenomics, single-cell genomics and metatranscriptomics, has been chosen for analysis of size-fractionated plankton communities. Here, we provide detailed procedures applied for genomic data generation, from nucleic acids extraction to sequence production, and we describe registries of genomics datasets available at the European Nucleotide Archive (ENA, www.ebi.ac.uk/ena). The association of these metadata to the experimental procedures applied for their generation will help the scientific community to access these data and facilitate their analysis. This paper complements other efforts to provide a full description of experiments and open science resources generated from the Tara Oceans project, further extending their value for the study of the world’s planktonic ecosystems.


Genes | 2017

The Transcriptomes of Xiphinema index and Longidorus elongatus Suggest Independent Acquisition of Some Plant Parasitism Genes by Horizontal Gene Transfer in Early-Branching Nematodes

Etienne Danchin; Laetitia Perfus-Barbeoch; Corinne Rancurel; Peter Thorpe; Martine Da Rocha; Simon Bajew; R. Neilson; Elena Sokolova; Corinne Da Silva; Julie Guy; Karine Labadie; Daniel Esmenjaud; Johannes Helder; John T. Jones; Sebastian Eves-van den Akker

Nematodes have evolved the ability to parasitize plants on at least four independent occasions, with plant parasites present in Clades 1, 2, 10 and 12 of the phylum. In the case of Clades 10 and 12, horizontal gene transfer of plant cell wall degrading enzymes from bacteria and fungi has been implicated in the evolution of plant parasitism. We have used ribonucleic acid sequencing (RNAseq) to generate reference transcriptomes for two economically important nematode species, Xiphinema index and Longidorus elongatus, representative of two genera within the early-branching Clade 2 of the phylum Nematoda. We used a transcriptome-wide analysis to identify putative horizontal gene transfer events. This represents the first in-depth transcriptome analysis from any plant-parasitic nematode of this clade. For each species, we assembled ~30 million Illumina reads into a reference transcriptome. We identified 62 and 104 transcripts, from X. index and L. elongatus, respectively, that were putatively acquired via horizontal gene transfer. By cross-referencing horizontal gene transfer prediction with a phylum-wide analysis of Pfam domains, we identified Clade 2-specific events. Of these, a GH12 cellulase from X. index was analysed phylogenetically and biochemically, revealing a likely bacterial origin and canonical enzymatic function. Horizontal gene transfer was previously shown to be a phenomenon that has contributed to the evolution of plant parasitism among nematodes. Our findings underline the importance and the extensiveness of this phenomenon in the evolution of plant-parasitic life styles in this speciose and widespread animal phylum.


Molecular Biology and Evolution | 2018

Adaptation of S. cerevisiae to Fermented Food Environments Reveals Remarkable Genome Plasticity and the Footprints of Domestication

Jean Luc Legras; Virginie Galeote; Frederic Bigey; Carole Camarasa; Souhir Marsit; Thibault Nidelet; Isabelle Sanchez; Arnaud Couloux; Julie Guy; Ricardo Franco-Duarte; Marina Marcet-Houben; Toni Gabaldón; Dorit Elisabeth Schuller; José Paulo Sampaio; Sylvie Dequin

Abstract The budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae can be found in the wild and is also frequently associated with human activities. Despite recent insights into the phylogeny of this species, much is still unknown about how evolutionary processes related to anthropogenic niches have shaped the genomes and phenotypes of S. cerevisiae. To address this question, we performed population-level sequencing of 82 S. cerevisiae strains from wine, flor, rum, dairy products, bakeries, and the natural environment (oak trees). These genomic data enabled us to delineate specific genetic groups corresponding to the different ecological niches and revealed high genome content variation across the groups. Most of these strains, compared with the reference genome, possessed additional genetic elements acquired by introgression or horizontal transfer, several of which were population-specific. In addition, several genomic regions in each population showed evidence of nonneutral evolution, as shown by high differentiation, or of selective sweeps including genes with key functions in these environments (e.g., amino acid transport for wine yeast). Linking genetics to lifestyle differences and metabolite traits has enabled us to elucidate the genetic basis of several niche-specific population traits, such as growth on galactose for cheese strains. These data indicate that yeast has been subjected to various divergent selective pressures depending on its niche, requiring the development of customized genomes for better survival in these environments. These striking genome dynamics associated with local adaptation and domestication reveal the remarkable plasticity of the S. cerevisiae genome, revealing this species to be an amazing complex of specialized populations.

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Arnaud Couloux

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Patrick Wincker

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Sylvie Dequin

University of Montpellier

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Etienne Danchin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Martine Da Rocha

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Corinne Rancurel

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Laetitia Perfus-Barbeoch

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Pierre Abad

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jean Luc Legras

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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