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Dive into the research topics where Morgane Boutin is active.

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Featured researches published by Morgane Boutin.


Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2009

Effect of Wheat Roots Infected with the Pathogenic Fungus Gaeumannomyces graminis var. tritici on Gene Expression of the Biocontrol Bacterium Pseudomonas fluorescens Pf29Arp

Matthieu Barret; Pascale Frey-Klett; Anne-Yvonne Guillerm-Erckelboudt; Morgane Boutin; Gregory Guernec; Alain Sarniguet

Traits contributing to the competence of biocontrol bacteria to colonize plant roots are often induced in the rhizosphere in response to plant components. These interactions have been studied using the two partners in gnotobiotic systems. However, in nature, beneficial or pathogenic fungi often colonize roots. Influence of these plant-fungus interactions on bacterial behavior remains to be investigated. Here, we have examined the influence of colonization of wheat roots by the take-all fungus Gaeumannomyces graminis var. tritici on gene expression of the biocontrol bacterium Pseudomonas fluorescens Pf29Arp. Bacteria were inoculated onto healthy, early G. graminis var. tritici-colonized and necrotic roots and transcriptomes were compared by shotgun DNA microarray. Pf29Arp decreased disease severity when inoculated before the onset of necrosis. Necrotic roots exerted a broader effect on gene expression compared with early G. graminis var. tritici-colonized and healthy roots. A gene encoding a putative type VI secretion system effector was only induced in necrotic conditions. A common pool of Pf29Arp genes differentially expressed on G. graminis var. tritici-colonized roots was related to carbon metabolism and oxidative stress, with a highest fold-change with necrosis. Overall, the data showed that the association of the pathogenic fungus with the roots strongly altered Pf29Arp adaptation with differences between early and late G. graminis var. tritici infection steps.


European Journal of Plant Pathology | 2003

Direct and specific assessment of colonisation of wheat rhizoplane by Pseudomonas fluorescens Pf29A

Alain Chapon; Morgane Boutin; Delphine Rimé; Laurie Delalande; Anne-Yvonne Guillerm; Alain Sarniguet

The efficacy of fluorescent pseudomonads as suppressors of soil-borne diseases is linked to their ability to colonise plant roots. Monitoring the dynamics of biocontrol agents in the rhizosphere should improve the irreliability. We designed a pair of Sequenced Characterised Amplified Region (SCAR) primers specific to Pseudomonas fluorescens Pf29A, based on a specific 700 bp RAPD product selected in a previous work. Primer specificity was tested with DNA samples extracted from rhizospheric soil and rhizoplane of wheat plants grown in two different non-sterile soils. We assessed the total population of Pf29A by PCR and the culturable population by counting a tetracycline-resistant Pf29A transformant producing Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP), on selective medium 5 days after inoculation of non-sterile soil. SCAR primers were specific for Pf29A in both soils. We evaluated the limit of detection to 14.2 fg of target DNA, equivalent to 242 Pf29A cells per cm of wheat root. Culturable populations of Pf29A transformant accounted for 13% and 4% of the total populations 5 days after treatment with 103 and 107 CFU of transformed Pf29A per gram of soil. The SCAR derived sequence is a good candidate to develop a strain specific and sensitive PCR-quantification of Pf29A available for population dynamic studies in fields. We confirm that only a small proportion of the total Pf29A rhizosphere population is culturable.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Re-Sequencing Data for Refining Candidate Genes and Polymorphisms in QTL Regions Affecting Adiposity in Chicken

Pierre-François Roux; Morgane Boutin; Colette Désert; Anis Djari; Diane Esquerre; Christophe Klopp; Sandrine Lagarrigue; Olivier Demeure

In this study, we propose an approach aiming at fine-mapping adiposity QTL in chicken, integrating whole genome re-sequencing data. First, two QTL regions for adiposity were identified by performing a classical linkage analysis on 1362 offspring in 11 sire families obtained by crossing two meat-type chicken lines divergently selected for abdominal fat weight. Those regions, located on chromosome 7 and 19, contained a total of 77 and 84 genes, respectively. Then, SNPs and indels in these regions were identified by re-sequencing sires. Considering issues related to polymorphism annotations for regulatory regions, we focused on the 120 and 104 polymorphisms having an impact on protein sequence, and located in coding regions of 35 and 42 genes situated in the two QTL regions. Subsequently, a filter was applied on SNPs considering their potential impact on the protein function based on conservation criteria. For the two regions, we identified 42 and 34 functional polymorphisms carried by 18 and 24 genes, and likely to deeply impact protein, including 3 coding indels and 4 nonsense SNPs. Finally, using gene functional annotation, a short list of 17 and 4 polymorphisms in 6 and 4 functional genes has been defined. Even if we cannot exclude that the causal polymorphisms may be located in regulatory regions, this strategy gives a complete overview of the candidate polymorphisms in coding regions and prioritize them on conservation- and functional-based arguments.


G3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics | 2015

Combined QTL and Selective Sweep Mappings with Coding SNP Annotation and cis-eQTL Analysis Revealed PARK2 and JAG2 as New Candidate Genes for Adiposity Regulation

Pierre-François Roux; Simon Boitard; Yuna Blum; Brian W. Parks; Alexandra Montagner; Etienne Mouisel; Anis Djari; Diane Esquerre; Colette Désert; Morgane Boutin; Sophie Leroux; Frédéric Lecerf; Elisabeth Le Bihan-Duval; Christophe Klopp; Bertrand Servin; Frédérique Pitel; Michel Jean Duclos; Hervé Guillou; Aldons J. Lusis; Olivier Demeure; Sandrine Lagarrigue

Very few causal genes have been identified by quantitative trait loci (QTL) mapping because of the large size of QTL, and most of them were identified thanks to functional links already known with the targeted phenotype. Here, we propose to combine selection signature detection, coding SNP annotation, and cis-expression QTL analyses to identify potential causal genes underlying QTL identified in divergent line designs. As a model, we chose experimental chicken lines divergently selected for only one trait, the abdominal fat weight, in which several QTL were previously mapped. Using new haplotype-based statistics exploiting the very high SNP density generated through whole-genome resequencing, we found 129 significant selective sweeps. Most of the QTL colocalized with at least one sweep, which markedly narrowed candidate region size. Some of those sweeps contained only one gene, therefore making them strong positional causal candidates with no presupposed function. We then focused on two of these QTL/sweeps. The absence of nonsynonymous SNPs in their coding regions strongly suggests the existence of causal mutations acting in cis on their expression, confirmed by cis-eQTL identification using either allele-specific expression or genetic mapping analyses. Additional expression analyses of those two genes in the chicken and mice contrasted for adiposity reinforces their link with this phenotype. This study shows for the first time the interest of combining selective sweeps mapping, coding SNP annotation and cis-eQTL analyses for identifying causative genes for a complex trait, in the context of divergent lines selected for this specific trait. Moreover, it highlights two genes, JAG2 and PARK2, as new potential negative and positive key regulators of adiposity in chicken and mice.


Fungal Genetics and Biology | 2013

Strain-specific variation in a soilborne phytopathogenic fungus for the expression of genes involved in pH signal transduction pathway, pathogenesis and saprophytic survival in response to environmental pH changes

Stéphanie Daval; Lionel Lebreton; Cécile Gracianne; Anne-Yvonne Guillerm-Erckelboudt; Morgane Boutin; Muriel Marchi; Kévin Gazengel; Alain Sarniguet

The soilborne fungus Gaeumannomyces graminis var. tritici (Ggt) causes take-all, a wheat root disease. In an original strain-specific way, a previous study indicates that inside the Ggt species, some strains grow preferentially at acidic pH and other strains at neutral/alkaline pH. The most important mechanism for a fungal response to the environmental pH is the Pal pathway which integrates the products of the six pal genes and the transcription factor PacC. To evaluate whether the Ggt strain-specific growth in function of the ambient pH is mediated via the Pal pathway, a transcriptional study of the genes encoding this pathway was carried out. This study provided the first evidence that the pH signalling pathway similar to those described in other fungi operated in Ggt. The pacC gene was induced at neutral pH whatever the strain. In an original way, the expression of Ggt genes coding for the different Pal proteins depended on the strain and on the ambient pH. In the strain growing better at acidic pH, few pal genes were pH-regulated, and some were overexpressed at neutral pH when regulated. In the strain growing better at neutral pH, underexpression of most of the pal genes at neutral pH occurred. The strains displayed higher gene expression in the ambient pH that unfavoured their growth as if it was a compensation system. All pH taken together, a globally weaker Pal transcript level occurred in the strains that were less sensitive to acidic pH, and on the contrary, the strain growing better on neutral pH showed higher Pal mRNA levels. The expression of genes involved in pathogenesis and saprophytic growth was also regulated by the ambient pH and the strain: each gene displayed a specific pH-regulation that was similar between strains. But all pH taken together, the global transcript levels of four out of six genes were higher in the strain growing better on neutral pH. Altogether, for the first time, the results show that inside a species, conditions affecting environmental pH modulate the expression of genes in an original strain-specific way.


G3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics | 2016

The Extent of mRNA Editing Is Limited in Chicken Liver and Adipose, but Impacted by Tissular Context, Genotype, Age, and Feeding as Exemplified with a Conserved Edited Site in COG3.

Pierre-François Roux; Laure Frésard; Morgane Boutin; Sophie Leroux; Christophe Klopp; Anis Djari; Diane Esquerre; Pascal Martin; Tatiana Zerjal; David Gourichon; Frédérique Pitel; Sandrine Lagarrigue

RNA editing is a posttranscriptional process leading to differences between genomic DNA and transcript sequences, potentially enhancing transcriptome diversity. With recent advances in high-throughput sequencing, many efforts have been made to describe mRNA editing at the transcriptome scale, especially in mammals, yielding contradictory conclusions regarding the extent of this phenomenon. We show, by detailed description of the 25 studies focusing so far on mRNA editing at the whole-transcriptome scale, that systematic sequencing artifacts are considered in most studies whereas biological replication is often neglected and multi-alignment not properly evaluated, which ultimately impairs the legitimacy of results. We recently developed a rigorous strategy to identify mRNA editing using mRNA and genomic DNA sequencing, taking into account sequencing and mapping artifacts, and biological replicates. We applied this method to screen for mRNA editing in liver and white adipose tissue from eight chickens and confirm the small extent of mRNA recoding in this species. Among the 25 unique edited sites identified, three events were previously described in mammals, attesting that this phenomenon is conserved throughout evolution. Deeper investigations on five sites revealed the impact of tissular context, genotype, age, feeding conditions, and sex on mRNA editing levels. More specifically, this analysis highlighted that the editing level at the site located on COG3 was strongly regulated by four of these factors. By comprehensively characterizing the mRNA editing landscape in chickens, our results highlight how this phenomenon is limited and suggest regulation of editing levels by various genetic and environmental factors.


Environmental Microbiology Reports | 2013

Genomic analysis of the biocontrol strain Pseudomonas fluorescens Pf29Arp with evidence of T3SS and T6SS gene expression on plant roots

Muriel Marchi; Morgane Boutin; Kévin Gazengel; Claude Rispe; Jean-Pierre Gauthier; Anne-Yvonne Guillerm-Erckelboudt; Lionel Lebreton; Matthieu Barret; Stéphanie Daval; Alain Sarniguet


Genetics Selection Evolution | 2017

Long noncoding RNA repertoire in chicken liver and adipose tissue

Kévin Muret; Christophe Klopp; Valentin Wucher; Diane Esquerré; Fabrice Legeai; Frédéric Lecerf; Colette Désert; Morgane Boutin; Frédéric Jehl; Hervé Acloque; Elisabetta Giuffra; Sarah Djebali; Sylvain Foissac; Thomas Derrien; Sandrine Lagarrigue


Actes des 11èmes Journées de la Recherche Avicole et Palmipèdes à Foie Gras, Tours, France, les 25 et 26 mars 2015 | 2015

Contribution of the liver, adipose and muscle transcriptomes to the adaptative mechanisms of broilers in response to a variation of dietary energy source.

Colette Désert; E. Baéza; M. Aite; Morgane Boutin; A. le Cam; M. Houee-Bigot; Yuna Blum; Pierre-François Roux; Florence Gondret; Christelle Hennequet-Antier; C. Berri; Michel Lessire; Sonia Métayer-Coustard; Anne Collin; E. le Bihan-Duval; M. J. Duclos; Sandrine Lagarrigue


11. Journées de la Recherche Avicole et Palmipèdes à Foie Gras | 2015

La combinaison de cartographie de signatures de sélection, de re-séquençage de génomes et d'analyses d'expression révèle PARK2 et JAG2 comme nouveaux genes candidats régulant l'adiposité

Pierre-François Roux; Simon Boitard; Anne Blum; Brian M. Parks; Alexandra Montagner; Etienne Mouisel; Anis Djari; Diane Esquerre; Colette Désert; Morgane Boutin; Sophie Leroux; Frédéric Lecerf; Elisabeth Duval; Christophe Klopp; Bertrand Servin; Frédérique Pitel; M. J. Duclos; Hervé Guillou; Aldons J. Lusis; Olivier Demeure; Sandrine Lagarrigue

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Dive into the Morgane Boutin's collaboration.

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Christophe Klopp

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Colette Désert

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Pierre-François Roux

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Alain Sarniguet

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Anis Djari

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Diane Esquerre

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Sandrine Lagarrigue

École nationale supérieure agronomique de Rennes

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Anne-Yvonne Guillerm-Erckelboudt

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Frédéric Lecerf

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Frédérique Pitel

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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