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Dive into the research topics where Laurent Cauquil is active.

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Featured researches published by Laurent Cauquil.


Molecular Ecology Resources | 2009

StatFingerprints: a friendly graphical interface program for processing and analysis of microbial fingerprint profiles

R. J. Michelland; Sébastien Déjean; Sylvie Combes; L. Fortun-Lamothe; Laurent Cauquil

Molecular fingerprint methods are widely used to compare microbial communities in various habitats. The free program StatFingerprints can import, process, and display fingerprint profiles and perform numerous statistical analyses on them, and also estimate diversity indexes. StatFingerprints works with the free program R, providing an environment for statistical computing and graphics. No programming knowledge is required to use StatFingerprints, thanks to its friendly graphical user interface. StatFingerprints is useful for analysing the effect of a controlled factor on the microbial community and for establishing the relationships between the microbial community and the parameters of its environment. Multivariate analyses include ordination, clustering methods and hypothesis‐driven tests like 50–50 multivariate analysis of variance, analysis of similarity or similarity percentage procedure and the program offers the possibility of plotting ordinations as a three‐dimensional display.


Journal of Applied Microbiology | 2014

Establishment of ruminal bacterial community in dairy calves from birth to weaning is sequential

Mickael Rey; Francis Enjalbert; Sylvie Combes; Laurent Cauquil; Olivier Bouchez; Valérie Monteils

Establishment of ruminal bacterial community in dairy calves.


FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2008

Potential core species and satellite species in the bacterial community within the rabbit caecum

Valérie Monteils; Laurent Cauquil; Sylvie Combes; Jean-Jacques Godon; T. Gidenne

A bacteria library was constructed from the caecum of a rabbit maintained under standard conditions. The complete gene 16S rRNA gene was sequenced. The 228 clones obtained were distributed in 70 operational taxonomic units (OTUs). The large majority of the OTUs were composed of one or two clones and seven OTUs contained half of the sequences. Fourteen sequences had high similarity to the sequence already registered in databases (threshold of 97%). Only one of these sequences has been identified as Variovorax sp. (99% identity). Units were distributed mainly (94%) in the Firmicutes phylum. Three sequences were related to Bacteroidetes. Nine clusters were defined in the phylogenic tree. A great diversity of caecal bacteria of the rabbit was shown. Half of the sequences generated in this library were distributed in the phylogenetic tree near the sequences characterized previously in rabbit caecum (potential core species), and the other half of the sequences were well separated (satellite species).


Anaerobe | 2010

Molecular analysis of the bacterial community in digestive tract of rabbit.

Rory Julien Michelland; Sylvie Combes; Valérie Monteils; Laurent Cauquil; T. Gidenne; L. Fortun-Lamothe

This work aimed to study the stability over time of the bacterial community in caecum and faeces of the rabbit (diversity index and structure) without experimental disturbance and to evaluate its relationships with environmental parameters. Soft and hard faeces of 14 rabbits were sampled for 5 weeks while caecal content was sampled on the 3rd week (by surgery) and the 5th week (at slaughter). Bacterial communities were assessed by studying CE-SSCP profiles of 16S rRNA genes fragments. Redox potential, pH, NH3-N concentration and volatile fatty acid concentrations were measured in the caecum. Data showed that bacterial communities of soft and hard faeces barely differed from that of the caecum (ANOSIM-R<0.25; p<0.05). Without disturbance, the bacterial communities of faeces were stable over time (ANOSIM-R<0.25; p<0.001). However, the bacterial communities of caecum and faeces were affected by the surgery (ANOSIM-R=0.22-0.33; p<0.001). The caecal content was an acidic (pH=6.03+/-0.33) and an anaerobic environment (redox potential=-160+/-43 mV). Only the redox potential was correlated with the diversity index of the bacterial community of the caecum (R(2)=0.35; p<0.05) and no environmental parameters were correlated to its structure.


FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2011

Postnatal development of the rabbit caecal microbiota composition and activity

Sylvie Combes; Rory Julien Michelland; Valérie Monteils; Laurent Cauquil; Vincent Soulié; Ngoc Uyen Tran; T. Gidenne; L. Fortun-Lamothe

This study describes the development of the rabbit caecum microbiota and its metabolic activities from the neonatal (day 2) until the subadult period (day 70). The caecal microbiota was analysed using 16S rRNA gene approaches coupled with capillary electrophoresis single-stranded conformation polymorphism (CE-SSCP) and qPCR. At day 2, rabbits harboured population levels up to 8.4, 7.2 and 7.4 log(10) copy number g(-1) full caecum of the total bacteria, Bacteroides-Prevotella and Firmicutes groups, respectively. These populations reached their maximum levels from day 14 for Firmicutes groups (10.8 log(10) copy number g(-1) caecal content) and day 21 (11.4 and 10.7 log(10) copy number g(-1) caecal content of the total bacteria and the Bacteroides-Prevotella group, respectively). The archaeal population could be detected only from day 7 onwards (5.5 log(10) copy number g(-1) full caecum) and reached its maximum level at day 35 (7.4 log(10) copy number g(-1) caecal content). Similarity analysis, diversity calculation and quantitative evaluation of the stability of bacterial community CE-SSCP profiles provided some evidence that the caecal microbiota develops progressively from a simple and unstable community after birth into a complex and climax community in subadult rabbits. Meanwhile, the microbial activity evolved with the progressive decrease of the propionate/butyrate ratio towards a rabbit-specific value <1.


Journal of Applied Microbiology | 2009

Spatial and temporal variations of the bacterial community in the bovine digestive tract.

Rory Julien Michelland; Valérie Monteils; Asma Zened; Sylvie Combes; Laurent Cauquil; T. Gidenne; Jérôme Hamelin; L. Fortun-Lamothe

Aims:  Improved knowledge of the bacterial community of the digestive tract is required to enhance the efficiency of digestion in herbivores. This work aimed to study spatial and temporal variations of the bacterial communities in the bovine digestive tract and their correlation with gut environmental parameters.


Journal of Dairy Science | 2011

Starch and oil in the donor cow diet and starch in substrate differently affect the in vitro ruminal biohydrogenation of linoleic and linolenic acids

Asma Zened; Annabelle Troegeler-Meynadier; Marie-Claude Nicot; Sylvie Combes; Laurent Cauquil; Yves Farizon; Francis Enjalbert

Trans isomers of fatty acids exhibit different health properties. Among them, trans-10,cis-12 conjugated linoleic acid has negative effects on milk fat production and can affect human health. A shift from the trans-11 to the trans-10 pathway of biohydrogenation (BH) can occur in the rumen of dairy cows receiving high-concentrate diets, especially when the diet is supplemented with highly unsaturated fat sources. The differences of BH patterns between linoleic acid (LeA) and linolenic acid (LnA) in such ruminal conditions remain unknown; thus, the aim of this work was to investigate in vitro the effects of starch and sunflower oil in the diet of the donor cows and starch level in the incubates on the BH patterns and efficiencies of LeA and LnA. The design was a 4 × 4 Latin square design with 4 cows, 4 periods, and 4 diets with combinations of 21 or 34% starch and 0 or 5% sunflower oil. The rumen content of each cow during each period was incubated with 4 substrates, combining 2 starch levels and either LeA or LnA addition. Capillary electrophoresis single-strand conformation polymorphism of incubates showed that dietary starch decreased the diversity of the bacterial community and the high-starch plus oil diet modified its structure. High-starch diets poorly affected isomerization and first reduction of LeA and LnA, but decreased the efficiencies of trans-11,cis-15-C18:2 and trans C18:1 reduction. Dietary sunflower oil increased the efficiency of LeA isomerization but decreased the efficiency of trans C18:1 reduction. An interaction between dietary starch and dietary oil resulted in the highest trans-10 isomers production in incubates when the donor cow received the high-starch plus oil diet. The partition between trans-10 and trans-11 isomers was also affected by an interaction between starch level and the fatty acid added to the incubates, showing that the trans-10 shift only occurred with LeA, whereas LnA was mainly hydrogenated via the more usual trans-11 pathway, whatever the starch level in the substrate, although the bacterial communities were not different between LeA and LnA incubates. In LeA incubates, trans-10 isomer production was significantly related to the structure of the bacterial community.


Animal | 2010

Influence of cage or pen housing on carcass traits and meat quality of rabbit

Sylvie Combes; G. Postollec; Laurent Cauquil; T. Gidenne

Carcass traits and meat quality of rabbits reared in conventional cages (0.385 m2), small pens (0.662 m2) or large pens (4.052 m2) at a similar stock density of 15 rabbits/m2 were compared (n = 30 per group). Pens contained an elevated platform. Slaughter weight (SW; P < 0.01) and cold carcass weight (P < 0.05) decreased in the order of Cage < Small pen < Large pen groups. SW and cold carcass weight were 7% lower in rabbits housed in large pens than in cages. Dressing out and meat-to-bone ratio were not influenced by the housing system. Percentage of fat deposits was highest in caged rabbits (+0.15 point for scapular fat and +0.26 point for perirenal fat compared to rabbits reared in large pens P < 0.05). Rabbits housed in large pens had a bigger proportion of hind part (+1 point), and meat colour was shifted towards greater a* values (P < 0.01) compared to caged rabbits. Water holding capacity and shear test parameters in longissimus lumborum muscle, lipid content and shear test parameters of abductor cruralis cranialis, biceps femoris and semitendinosus muscles were not affected by the housing system. Tibia and femur bone moment of inertia increased in the order of Cage < Small pen < Large pen groups (P < 0.05), whereas elastic modulus, which is a measure of intrinsic stiffness, was highest in caged rabbits. This study showed that large pen housing altered carcass traits independently and increased meat redness and fracture resistance of tibia and femur.


Bioinformatics | 2018

FROGS: Find, Rapidly, OTUs with Galaxy Solution

Frédéric Escudié; Lucas Auer; Maria Bernard; Mahendra Mariadassou; Laurent Cauquil; Katia Vidal; Sarah Maman; Guillermina Hernandez-Raquet; Sylvie Combes; Géraldine Pascal

Motivation Metagenomics leads to major advances in microbial ecology and biologists need user friendly tools to analyze their data on their own. Results This Galaxy‐supported pipeline, called FROGS, is designed to analyze large sets of amplicon sequences and produce abundance tables of Operational Taxonomic Units (OTUs) and their taxonomic affiliation. The clustering uses Swarm. The chimera removal uses VSEARCH, combined with original cross‐sample validation. The taxonomic affiliation returns an innovative multi‐affiliation output to highlight databases conflicts and uncertainties. Statistical results and numerous graphical illustrations are produced along the way to monitor the pipeline. FROGS was tested for the detection and quantification of OTUs on real and in silico datasets and proved to be rapid, robust and highly sensitive. It compares favorably with the widespread mothur, UPARSE and QIIME. Availability and implementation Source code and instructions for installation: https://github.com/geraldinepascal/FROGS.git. A companion website: http://frogs.toulouse.inra.fr. Supplementary information Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


Animal | 2011

Rapid adaptation of the bacterial community in the growing rabbit caecum after a change in dietary fibre supply.

R.J. Michelland; Sylvie Combes; Valérie Monteils; Laurent Cauquil; T. Gidenne; Laurence Fortun-Lamothe

This work aimed to study the response of the growing rabbit caecal ecosystem (bacterial community and caecal environmental parameters) after a switch from a control to a low-fibre diet (LFD). A group of 160 rabbits were fed ad libitum a control diet (ADF: 20.4%) from weaning (36 days). At 49 days of age (day 0), 75 rabbits were switched to a LFD group (ADF: 10.7%), whereas 85 others (control group) remained on the control diet, for 39 days. Caecal contents were regularly sampled throughout the trial (60 rabbits per group). The bacterial community structure was characterized using CE-SSCP (capillary electrophoresis single strand conformation polymorphism) and total bacteria were quantified using real-time PCR. Redox potential (Eh), pH, NH(3)-N, volatile fatty acid (VFA) were measured in the caecum to characterize environmental parameters. The reduction of fibre in the diet modified the CE-SSCP profiles (P < 0.001) but not the diversity index (5.6 ± 0.8, ns). The number of 16S rRNA gene copies of total bacteria decreased (P < 0.01) in LFD rabbits compared with controls. In LFD rabbits, the caecal environment was less acid (+0.2 units; P < 0.01), more reductive (-11 mV; P < 0.05) and drier (+3.4 g 100 per g; P < 0.001), with an increase in NH3-N (+77%; P < 0.001) and a decrease in total VFA concentration (-17%; P < 0.001). We found significant correlations between the bacterial community, the quantity of bacteria and the caecal traits of the caecal ecosystem. Indeed, in both groups, the caecal traits barely constrained the total inertia of the CE-SSCP profile set (less than 14%), whereas total bacteria were positively related to total VFA, acetic acid and butyric acid levels, and Eh, and negatively related to pH. All the microbial and environmental modifications had occurred by day 2 and remained stable thereafter. These results suggest that the bacterial community in the growing rabbit caecum is able to adapt quickly after a change to in the dietary fibre supply to reach a new steady-state equilibrium.

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T. Gidenne

University of Toulouse

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Annabelle Troegeler-Meynadier

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Asma Zened

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Olivier Bouchez

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Géraldine Pascal

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Mickael Rey

University of Toulouse

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