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Dive into the research topics where Morgane Ardisson is active.

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Featured researches published by Morgane Ardisson.


BMC Plant Biology | 2014

A small XY chromosomal region explains sex determination in wild dioecious V. vinifera and the reversal to hermaphroditism in domesticated grapevines

Sandrine Picq; Sylvain Santoni; Thierry Lacombe; Muriel Latreille; Audrey Weber; Morgane Ardisson; Sarah Ivorra; David Maghradze; Rosa Arroyo-García; Philippe Chatelet; Patrice This; Jean-Frédéric Terral; Roberto Bacilieri

BackgroundIn Vitis vinifera L., domestication induced a dramatic change in flower morphology: the wild sylvestris subspecies is dioecious while hermaphroditism is largely predominant in the domesticated subsp. V. v. vinifera. The characterisation of polymorphisms in genes underlying the sex-determining chromosomal region may help clarify the history of domestication in grapevine and the evolution of sex chromosomes in plants. In the genus Vitis, sex determination is putatively controlled by one major locus with three alleles, male M, hermaphrodite H and female F, with an allelic dominance M > H > F. Previous genetic studies located the sex locus on chromosome 2. We used DNA polymorphisms of geographically diverse V. vinifera genotypes to confirm the position of this locus, to characterise the genetic diversity and traces of selection in candidate genes, and to explore the origin of hermaphroditism.ResultsIn V. v. sylvestris, a sex-determining region of 154.8 kb, also present in other Vitis species, spans less than 1% of chromosome 2. It displays haplotype diversity, linkage disequilibrium and differentiation that typically correspond to a small XY sex-determining region with XY males and XX females. In male alleles, traces of purifying selection were found for a trehalose phosphatase, an exostosin and a WRKY transcription factor, with strikingly low polymorphism levels between distant geographic regions. Both diversity and network analysis revealed that H alleles are more closely related to M than to F alleles.ConclusionsHermaphrodite alleles appear to derive from male alleles of wild grapevines, with successive recombination events allowing import of diversity from the X into the Y chromosomal region and slowing down the expansion of the region into a full heteromorphic chromosome. Our data are consistent with multiple domestication events and show traces of introgression from other Asian Vitis species into the cultivated grapevine gene pool.


Molecular Ecology Resources | 2017

A large set of 26 new reference transcriptomes dedicated to comparative population genomics in crops and wild relatives

Gautier Sarah; Félix Homa; Stéphanie Pointet; Sandy Contreras; François Sabot; Benoit Nabholz; Sylvain Santoni; Laure Sauné; Morgane Ardisson; Nathalie Chantret; Christopher Sauvage; James Tregear; Cyril Jourda; David Pot; Yves Vigouroux; Hâna Chaïr; Nora Scarcelli; Claire Billot; Nabila Yahiaoui; Roberto Bacilieri; Bouchaib Khadari; Michel Boccara; Adeline Barnaud; Jean-Pierre Péros; Jean-Pierre Labouisse; Jean Louis Pham; Jacques David; Sylvain Glémin; Manuel Ruiz

We produced a unique large data set of reference transcriptomes to obtain new knowledge about the evolution of plant genomes and crop domestication. For this purpose, we validated a RNA‐Seq data assembly protocol to perform comparative population genomics. For the validation, we assessed and compared the quality of de novo Illumina short‐read assemblies using data from two crops for which an annotated reference genome was available, namely grapevine and sorghum. We used the same protocol for the release of 26 new transcriptomes of crop plants and wild relatives, including still understudied crops such as yam, pearl millet and fonio. The species list has a wide taxonomic representation with the inclusion of 15 monocots and 11 eudicots. All contigs were annotated using BLAST, prot4EST and Blast2GO. A strong originality of the data set is that each crop is associated with close relative species, which will permit whole‐genome comparative evolutionary studies between crops and their wild‐related species. This large resource will thus serve research communities working on both crops and model organisms. All the data are available at http://arcad-bioinformatics.southgreen.fr/.


BMC Bioinformatics | 2013

Disentangling homeologous contigs in allo-tetraploid assembly: application to durum wheat

Vincent Ranwez; Yan Holtz; Gautier Sarah; Morgane Ardisson; Sylvain Santoni; Sylvain Glémin; Muriel Tavaud-Pirra; Jacques David

BackgroundUsing Next Generation Sequencing, SNP discovery is relatively easy on diploid species and still hampered in polyploid species by the confusion due to homeology. We develop HomeoSplitter; a fast and effective solution to split original contigs obtained by RNAseq into two homeologous sequences. It uses the differential expression of the two homeologous genes in the RNA. We verify that the new sequences are closer to the diploid progenitors of the allopolyploid species than the original contig. By remapping original reads on these new sequences, we also verify that the number of valuable detected SNPs has significantly increased.Thirty accessions of the tetraploid durum wheat (Triticum turgidum, A and B genomes) were sequenced in pooled cDNA libraries. Reads were assembled in a de novo durum assembly. Transcriptomes of the diploid species, Aegilops speltoides (close B genome) and Triticum urartu ( A genome) were used as reference to benchmark the method.ResultsHomeoSplitter is a fast and effective solution to disentangle homeologous sequences based on a maximum likelihood optimization. On a benchmark set of 2,505 clusters containing homologous sequences of urartu, speltoides and durum, HomeoSplitter was efficient to build sequences closer to the diploid references and increased the number of valuable SNPs from 188 out of 1,360 SNPs detected when mapping the reads on the de novo durum assembly to 762 out of 1,620 SNPs when mapping on HomeoSplitter contigs.ConclusionsThe HomeoSplitter program is freely available at http://bioweb.supagro.inra.fr/homeoSplitter/. This work provides a practical solution to the complex problem of disentangling homeologous transcripts in allo-tetraploids, which further allows an improved SNP detection.


BMC Evolutionary Biology | 2014

Towards a comprehensive characterization of durum wheat landraces in Moroccan traditional agrosystems: analysing genetic diversity in the light of geography, farmers’ taxonomy and tetraploid wheat domestication history

Ali Sahri; Lamyae Chentoufi; Mustapha Arbaoui; Morgane Ardisson; Loubna Belqadi; Ahmed Birouk; Pierre Roumet; Marie-Hélène Muller

BackgroundCrop diversity managed by smallholder farmers in traditional agrosystems is the outcome of historical and current processes interacting at various spatial scales, and influenced by factors such as farming practices and environmental pressures. Only recently have studies started to consider the complexity of these processes instead of simply describing diversity for breeding purposes. A first step in that aim is to add multiple references to the collection of genetic data, including the farmers’ varietal taxonomy and practices and the historical background of the crop.ResultsOn the basis of interview data collected in a previous study, we sampled 166 populations of durum wheat varieties in two traditional Moroccan agrosystems, in the Pre-Rif and Atlas Mountains regions. Using a common garden experiment, we detected a high phenotypic variability on traits indicative of taxonomical position and breeding status, namely spike shape and plant height. Populations often combined modern (short) with traditional-like (tall) statures, and classical durum squared spike shape (5 flowers/spikelet) with flat spike shape (3 flowers/ spikelet) representative of primitive domesticated tetraploid wheat (ssp. dicoccum). By contrast, the genetic diversity assessed using 14 microsatellite markers was relatively limited. When compared to the genetic diversity found in a large collection of tetraploid wheat, it corresponded to free-threshing tetraploid wheat. Within Morocco, the two studied regions differed for both genetic diversity and variety names. Within regions, neither geography nor variety names nor even breeding status constituted strong barriers to gene exchange despite a few significant patterns.ConclusionsThis first assessment of morphological and genetic diversity allowed pointing out some important factors that may have influenced the structure and evolutionary dynamics of durum wheat in Morocco: the significance of variety names, the occurrence of mixtures within populations, the relative strength of seed exchange between farmers and local adaptation, as well as the fate of modern varieties once they have been introduced. Further, multidisciplinary studies at different spatial scales are needed to better understand these complex agrosystems of invaluable importance for food security.


PLOS Genetics | 2017

Evolutionary forces affecting synonymous variations in plant genomes

Yves Clement; Gautier Sarah; Yan Holtz; Félix Homa; Stéphanie Pointet; Sandy Contreras; Benoit Nabholz; François Sabot; Laure Sauné; Morgane Ardisson; Roberto Bacilieri; Guillaume Besnard; Angélique Berger; Céline Cardi; Fabien De Bellis; Olivier Fouet; Cyril Jourda; Bouchaib Khadari; Claire Lanaud; Thierry Leroy; David Pot; Christopher Sauvage; Nora Scarcelli; James Tregear; Yves Vigouroux; Nabila Yahiaoui; Manuel Ruiz; Sylvain Santoni; Jean-Pierre Labouisse; Jean Louis Pham

Base composition is highly variable among and within plant genomes, especially at third codon positions, ranging from GC-poor and homogeneous species to GC-rich and highly heterogeneous ones (particularly Monocots). Consequently, synonymous codon usage is biased in most species, even when base composition is relatively homogeneous. The causes of these variations are still under debate, with three main forces being possibly involved: mutational bias, selection and GC-biased gene conversion (gBGC). So far, both selection and gBGC have been detected in some species but how their relative strength varies among and within species remains unclear. Population genetics approaches allow to jointly estimating the intensity of selection, gBGC and mutational bias. We extended a recently developed method and applied it to a large population genomic dataset based on transcriptome sequencing of 11 angiosperm species spread across the phylogeny. We found that at synonymous positions, base composition is far from mutation-drift equilibrium in most genomes and that gBGC is a widespread and stronger process than selection. gBGC could strongly contribute to base composition variation among plant species, implying that it should be taken into account in plant genome analyses, especially for GC-rich ones.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Genotyping by Sequencing Using Specific Allelic Capture to Build a High-Density Genetic Map of Durum Wheat

Yan Holtz; Morgane Ardisson; Vincent Ranwez; Alban Besnard; Philippe Leroy; Gérard Poux; Pierre Roumet; Véronique Viader; Sylvain Santoni; Jacques David

Targeted sequence capture is a promising technology which helps reduce costs for sequencing and genotyping numerous genomic regions in large sets of individuals. Bait sequences are designed to capture specific alleles previously discovered in parents or reference populations. We studied a set of 135 RILs originating from a cross between an emmer cultivar (Dic2) and a recent durum elite cultivar (Silur). Six thousand sequence baits were designed to target Dic2 vs. Silur polymorphisms discovered in a previous RNAseq study. These baits were exposed to genomic DNA of the RIL population. Eighty percent of the targeted SNPs were recovered, 65% of which were of high quality and coverage. The final high density genetic map consisted of more than 3,000 markers, whose genetic and physical mapping were consistent with those obtained with large arrays.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2017

Epistatic determinism of durum wheat resistance to the wheat spindle streak mosaic virus

Yan Holtz; Michel Bonnefoy; Véronique Viader; Morgane Ardisson; Nicolas O. Rode; Gérard Poux; Pierre Roumet; Véronique Marie-Jeanne; Vincent Ranwez; Sylvain Santoni; David Gouache; Jacques David

Key messageThe resistance of durum wheat to the Wheat spindle streak mosaic virus (WSSMV) is controlled by two main QTLs on chromosomes 7A and 7B, with a huge epistatic effect.AbstractWheat spindle streak mosaic virus (WSSMV) is a major disease of durum wheat in Europe and North America. Breeding WSSMV-resistant cultivars is currently the only way to control the virus since no treatment is available. This paper reports studies of the inheritance of WSSMV resistance using two related durum wheat populations obtained by crossing two elite cultivars with a WSSMV-resistant emmer cultivar. In 2012 and 2015, 354 recombinant inbred lines (RIL) were phenotyped using visual notations, ELISA and qPCR and genotyped using locus targeted capture and sequencing. This allowed us to build a consensus genetic map of 8568 markers and identify three chromosomal regions involved in WSSMV resistance. Two major regions (located on chromosomes 7A and 7B) jointly explain, on the basis of epistatic interactions, up to 43% of the phenotypic variation. Flanking sequences of our genetic markers are provided to facilitate future marker-assisted selection of WSSMV-resistant cultivars.


Molecular Plant Pathology | 2016

Dual RNA-seq reveals Meloidogyne graminicola transcriptome and candidate effectors during the interaction with rice plants.

Anne-Sophie Petitot; Alexis Dereeper; Mawusse Agbessi; Corinne Da Silva; Julie Guy; Morgane Ardisson; Diana Fernandez


Euphytica | 2012

Elite durum wheat genetic map and recombination rate variation in a multiparental connected design

Laurence Vaissayre; Morgane Ardisson; Christiane Borries; Sylvain Santoni; Jacques David; Pierre Roumet


Molecular Breeding | 2014

Genotyping by sequencing transcriptomes in an evolutionary pre-breeding durum wheat population

Jacques David; Yan Holtz; Vincent Ranwez; Sylvain Santoni; Gautier Sarah; Morgane Ardisson; Gérard Poux; Fréderic Choulet; Clémence Genthon; Pierre Roumet; Muriel Tavaud-Pirra

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Sylvain Santoni

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Gautier Sarah

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Yan Holtz

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Pierre Roumet

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Roberto Bacilieri

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Benoit Nabholz

University of Montpellier

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Christopher Sauvage

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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