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Dive into the research topics where Klaas Vandepoele is active.

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Featured researches published by Klaas Vandepoele.


Trends in Plant Science | 2011

ROS signaling: the new wave?

Ron Mittler; Sandy Vanderauwera; Nobuhiro Suzuki; Gad Miller; Vanesa B. Tognetti; Klaas Vandepoele; Marty Gollery; Vladimir Shulaev; Frank Van Breusegem

Reactive oxygen species (ROS) play a multitude of signaling roles in different organisms from bacteria to mammalian cells. They were initially thought to be toxic byproducts of aerobic metabolism, but have now been acknowledged as central players in the complex signaling network of cells. In this review, we will attempt to address several key questions related to the use of ROS as signaling molecules in cells, including the dynamics and specificity of ROS signaling, networking of ROS with other signaling pathways, ROS signaling within and across different cells, ROS waves and the evolution of the ROS gene network.


Nature | 2008

The Phaeodactylum genome reveals the evolutionary history of diatom genomes.

Chris Bowler; Andrew E. Allen; Jonathan H. Badger; Jane Grimwood; Kamel Jabbari; Alan Kuo; Uma Maheswari; Cindy Martens; Florian Maumus; Robert Otillar; Edda Rayko; Asaf Salamov; Klaas Vandepoele; Bank Beszteri; Ansgar Gruber; Marc Heijde; Michael Katinka; Thomas Mock; Klaus Valentin; Frederic Verret; John A. Berges; Colin Brownlee; Jean-Paul Cadoret; Chang Jae Choi; Sacha Coesel; Alessandra De Martino; J. Chris Detter; Colleen Durkin; Angela Falciatore; Jérome Fournet

Diatoms are photosynthetic secondary endosymbionts found throughout marine and freshwater environments, and are believed to be responsible for around one-fifth of the primary productivity on Earth. The genome sequence of the marine centric diatom Thalassiosira pseudonana was recently reported, revealing a wealth of information about diatom biology. Here we report the complete genome sequence of the pennate diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutum and compare it with that of T. pseudonana to clarify evolutionary origins, functional significance and ubiquity of these features throughout diatoms. In spite of the fact that the pennate and centric lineages have only been diverging for 90 million years, their genome structures are dramatically different and a substantial fraction of genes (∼40%) are not shared by these representatives of the two lineages. Analysis of molecular divergence compared with yeasts and metazoans reveals rapid rates of gene diversification in diatoms. Contributing factors include selective gene family expansions, differential losses and gains of genes and introns, and differential mobilization of transposable elements. Most significantly, we document the presence of hundreds of genes from bacteria. More than 300 of these gene transfers are found in both diatoms, attesting to their ancient origins, and many are likely to provide novel possibilities for metabolite management and for perception of environmental signals. These findings go a long way towards explaining the incredible diversity and success of the diatoms in contemporary oceans.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

The hidden duplication past of Arabidopsis thaliana

Cedric Simillion; Klaas Vandepoele; Marc Van Montagu; Marc Zabeau; Yves Van de Peer

Analysis of the genome sequence of Arabidopsis thaliana shows that this genome, like that of many other eukaryotic organisms, has undergone large-scale gene duplications or even duplications of the entire genome. However, the high frequency of gene loss after duplication events reduces colinearity and therefore the chance of finding duplicated regions that, at the extreme, no longer share homologous genes. In this study we show that heavily degenerated block duplications that can no longer be recognized by directly comparing two segments because of differential gene loss, can still be detected through indirect comparison with other segments. When these so-called hidden duplications in Arabidopsis are taken into account, many homologous genomic regions can be found in five to eight copies. This finding strongly implies that Arabidopsis has undergone three, but probably no more, rounds of genome duplications. Therefore, adding such hidden blocks to the duplication landscape of Arabidopsis sheds light on the number of polyploidy events that this model plant genome has undergone in its evolutionary past.


The Plant Cell | 2002

Genome-Wide Analysis of Core Cell Cycle Genes in Arabidopsis

Klaas Vandepoele; Jeroen Raes; Lieven De Veylder; Pierre Rouzé; Stephane Rombauts; Dirk Inzé

Cyclin-dependent kinases and cyclins regulate with the help of different interacting proteins the progression through the eukaryotic cell cycle. A high-quality, homology-based annotation protocol was applied to determine the core cell cycle genes in the recently completed Arabidopsis genome sequence. In total, 61 genes were identified belonging to seven selected families of cell cycle regulators, for which 30 are new or corrections of the existing annotation. A new class of putative cell cycle regulators was found that probably are competitors of E2F/DP transcription factors, which mediate the G1-to-S progression. In addition, the existing nomenclature for cell cycle genes of Arabidopsis was updated, and the physical positions of all genes were compared with segmentally duplicated blocks in the genome, showing that 22 core cell cycle genes emerged through block duplications. This genome-wide analysis illustrates the complexity of the plant cell cycle machinery and provides a tool for elucidating the function of new family members in the future.


Genome Biology | 2006

The gain and loss of genes during 600 million years of vertebrate evolution

Tine Blomme; Klaas Vandepoele; Stefanie De Bodt; Cedric Simillion; Steven Maere; Yves Van de Peer

BackgroundGene duplication is assumed to have played a crucial role in the evolution of vertebrate organisms. Apart from a continuous mode of duplication, two or three whole genome duplication events have been proposed during the evolution of vertebrates, one or two at the dawn of vertebrate evolution, and an additional one in the fish lineage, not shared with land vertebrates. Here, we have studied gene gain and loss in seven different vertebrate genomes, spanning an evolutionary period of about 600 million years.ResultsWe show that: first, the majority of duplicated genes in extant vertebrate genomes are ancient and were created at times that coincide with proposed whole genome duplication events; second, there exist significant differences in gene retention for different functional categories of genes between fishes and land vertebrates; third, there seems to be a considerable bias in gene retention of regulatory genes towards the mode of gene duplication (whole genome duplication events compared to smaller-scale events), which is in accordance with the so-called gene balance hypothesis; and fourth, that ancient duplicates that have survived for many hundreds of millions of years can still be lost.ConclusionBased on phylogenetic analyses, we show that both the mode of duplication and the functional class the duplicated genes belong to have been of major importance for the evolution of the vertebrates. In particular, we provide evidence that massive gene duplication (probably as a consequence of entire genome duplications) at the dawn of vertebrate evolution might have been particularly important for the evolution of complex vertebrates.


Science | 2014

Structural and functional partitioning of bread wheat chromosome 3B

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.


The Plant Cell | 2009

PLAZA: A Comparative Genomics Resource to Study Gene and Genome Evolution in Plants

Sebastian Proost; Michiel Van Bel; Lieven Sterck; Kenny Billiau; Thomas Van Parys; Yves Van de Peer; Klaas Vandepoele

The number of sequenced genomes of representatives within the green lineage is rapidly increasing. Consequently, comparative sequence analysis has significantly altered our view on the complexity of genome organization, gene function, and regulatory pathways. To explore all this genome information, a centralized infrastructure is required where all data generated by different sequencing initiatives is integrated and combined with advanced methods for data mining. Here, we describe PLAZA, an online platform for plant comparative genomics (http://bioinformatics.psb.ugent.be/plaza/). This resource integrates structural and functional annotation of published plant genomes together with a large set of interactive tools to study gene function and gene and genome evolution. Precomputed data sets cover homologous gene families, multiple sequence alignments, phylogenetic trees, intraspecies whole-genome dot plots, and genomic colinearity between species. Through the integration of high confidence Gene Ontology annotations and tree-based orthology between related species, thousands of genes lacking any functional description are functionally annotated. Advanced query systems, as well as multiple interactive visualization tools, are available through a user-friendly and intuitive Web interface. In addition, detailed documentation and tutorials introduce the different tools, while the workbench provides an efficient means to analyze user-defined gene sets through PLAZAs interface. In conclusion, PLAZA provides a comprehensible and up-to-date research environment to aid researchers in the exploration of genome information within the green plant lineage.


Trends in Plant Science | 2009

The flowering world: a tale of duplications

Yves Van de Peer; Jeffrey A. Fawcett; Sebastian Proost; Lieven Sterck; Klaas Vandepoele

Flowering plants contain many genes, most of which were created during the past 200 or so million years through small- and large-scale duplications. Paleo-polyploidy events, in particular, have been the subject of much recent research. There is a growing consensus that one or more genome doubling or merging events occurred early during the evolution of the flowering plants, and that many lineages have since undergone additional, independent and more recent duplication events. Here, we review the difficulties in determining the number of genome duplications and discuss how the completion of some additional genome sequences of species occupying key phylogenetic positions has led to a better understanding of the timing of certain duplication events. This is important if we want to demonstrate the significance of genome duplications for the evolution and radiation of (different groups of) flowering plants.


Plant Physiology | 2012

Dissecting plant genomes with the PLAZA comparative genomics platform

Michiel Van Bel; Sebastian Proost; Elisabeth Wischnitzki; Sara Movahedi; Christopher Scheerlinck; Yves Van de Peer; Klaas Vandepoele

With the arrival of low-cost, next-generation sequencing, a multitude of new plant genomes are being publicly released, providing unseen opportunities and challenges for comparative genomics studies. Here, we present PLAZA 2.5, a user-friendly online research environment to explore genomic information from different plants. This new release features updates to previous genome annotations and a substantial number of newly available plant genomes as well as various new interactive tools and visualizations. Currently, PLAZA hosts 25 organisms covering a broad taxonomic range, including 13 eudicots, five monocots, one lycopod, one moss, and five algae. The available data consist of structural and functional gene annotations, homologous gene families, multiple sequence alignments, phylogenetic trees, and colinear regions within and between species. A new Integrative Orthology Viewer, combining information from different orthology prediction methodologies, was developed to efficiently investigate complex orthology relationships. Cross-species expression analysis revealed that the integration of complementary data types extended the scope of complex orthology relationships, especially between more distantly related species. Finally, based on phylogenetic profiling, we propose a set of core gene families within the green plant lineage that will be instrumental to assess the gene space of draft or newly sequenced plant genomes during the assembly or annotation phase.


The Plant Cell | 2003

Evidence That Rice and Other Cereals Are Ancient Aneuploids

Klaas Vandepoele; Cedric Simillion; Yves Van de Peer

Detailed analyses of the genomes of several model organisms revealed that large-scale gene or even entire-genome duplications have played prominent roles in the evolutionary history of many eukaryotes. Recently, strong evidence has been presented that the genomic structure of the dicotyledonous model plant species Arabidopsis is the result of multiple rounds of entire-genome duplications. Here, we analyze the genome of the monocotyledonous model plant species rice, for which a draft of the genomic sequence was published recently. We show that a substantial fraction of all rice genes (∼15%) are found in duplicated segments. Dating of these block duplications, their nonuniform distribution over the different rice chromosomes, and comparison with the duplication history of Arabidopsis suggest that rice is not an ancient polyploid, as suggested previously, but an ancient aneuploid that has experienced the duplication of one—or a large part of one—chromosome in its evolutionary past, ∼70 million years ago. This date predates the divergence of most of the cereals, and relative dating by phylogenetic analysis shows that this duplication event is shared by most if not all of them.

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