Mary T. Kelly
University of Montpellier
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Publication
Featured researches published by Mary T. Kelly.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Markus Rienth; Laurent Torregrosa; Mary T. Kelly; Nathalie Luchaire; Anne Pellegrino; Jérôme Grimplet; Charles Romieu
Diurnal changes in gene expression occur in all living organisms and have been studied on model plants such as Arabidopsis thaliana. To our knowledge the impact of the nycthemeral cycle on the genetic program of fleshly fruit development has been hitherto overlooked. In order to circumvent environmental changes throughout fruit development, young and ripening berries were sampled simultaneously on continuously flowering microvines acclimated to controlled circadian light and temperature changes. Gene expression profiles along fruit development were monitored during both day and night with whole genome microarrays (Nimblegen® vitis 12x), yielding a total number of 9273 developmentally modulated probesets. All day-detected transcripts were modulated at night, whereas 1843 genes were night-specific. Very similar developmental patterns of gene expression were observed using independent hierarchical clustering of day and night data, whereas functional categories of allocated transcripts varied according to time of day. Many transcripts within pathways, known to be up-regulated during ripening, in particular those linked to secondary metabolism exhibited a clearer developmental regulation at night than during the day. Functional enrichment analysis also indicated that diurnally modulated genes considerably varied during fruit development, with a shift from cellular organization and photosynthesis in green berries to secondary metabolism and stress-related genes in ripening berries. These results reveal critical changes in gene expression during night development that differ from daytime development, which have not been observed in other transcriptomic studies on fruit development thus far.
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2014
Markus Rienth; Charles Romieu; Rebecca Gregan; Caroline Walsh; Laurent Torregrosa; Mary T. Kelly
A rapid and sensitive method is presented for the determination of proline in grape berries. Following acidification with formic acid, proline is derivatized by heating at 100 °C for 15 min with 3% ninhydrin in dimethyl sulfoxide, and the absorbance, which is stable for at least 60 min, is read at 520 nm. The method was statistically validated in the concentration range from 2.5 to 15 mg/L, giving a repeatability and intermediate precision of generally <3%; linearity was determined using the lack of fit test. Results obtained with this method concurred (r = 0.99) with those obtained for the same samples on an amino acid analyzer. In terms of sample preparation, a simple dilution (5-20-fold) is required, and sugars, primary amino acids, and anthocyanins were demonstrated not to interfere, as the latter are bleached by ninhydrin under the experimental conditions. The method was applied to the study of proline accumulation in the fruits of microvines grown in phytotrons, and it was established that proline accumulation and concentrations closely resemble those of field-grown macrovines.
Food Chemistry | 2018
Carolina Canoura; Mary T. Kelly; Hernán Ojeda
This study reports the effect of different doses of nitrogen applied to soil and/or leaves of Syrah and Chardonnay grapevines in the Languedoc-Roussillon (France) over two years. In 2011, nitrogen treatment involved both foliar urea sprayings and soil application at two different levels, with two controls - irrigated without nitrogen and no irrigation nor nitrogen. In 2012, the same grapevines received either soil or foliar nitrogen using the same controls. Results showed that foliar application increased the amino acid content to a greater extent than soil application, but that a combination of both was the most effective. For the first time, significantly elevated proline levels in response to drought were demonstrated for the grapevine. Increased contents of aromatic compounds and glycosylated precursors closely mirrored the applied nitrogen dose. Wines produced from N-fertilized Syrah grapes in 2011 showed a statistically significant effect of irrigation and fertilization on positive sensorial perception.
Journal of Chromatography A | 2010
Mary T. Kelly; Alain Blaise; Michel Larroque
BMC Plant Biology | 2014
Markus Rienth; Laurent Torregrosa; Nathalie Luchaire; Ratthaphon Chatbanyong; David Lecourieux; Mary T. Kelly; Charles Romieu
Food Chemistry | 2007
Thierry Bauza; Mary T. Kelly; Alain Blaise
Journal of Chromatography A | 2006
Mary T. Kelly; Alain Blaise
OENO One | 2009
Rana Jreij; Mary T. Kelly; Alain Deloire; Emmanuel Brenon; Alain Blaise
OENO One | 2004
María Teresa Ribeiro de Lima; Mary T. Kelly; Marie-Thérèse Cabanis; Geneviève Cassanas; Lurdes Matos; Jorge Pinheiro; Alain Blaise
18. International Symposium GiESCO 2013 | 2013
Markus Rienth; Nathalie Luchaire; Ratthaphon Chatbanyong; Agnès Ageorges; Mary T. Kelly; Jean Marc Brillouet; Bertrand Muller; Anne Pellegrino; Laurent Torregrosa; Charles Romieu