Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Nathalie Isabel is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Nathalie Isabel.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 1993

RAPDs as an aid to evaluate the genetic integrity of somatic embryogenesis-derived populations of Picea mariana (Mill.) B.S.P.

Nathalie Isabel; L. Tremblay; M. Michaud; F. M. Tremblay; Jean Bousquet

SummaryThe usefulness of random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) in assessing the genetic stability of somatic embryogenesis-derived populations of black spruce [Picea mariana (Mill.) B.S.P.] was evaluated. Three arbitrary 11-mer primers were successfully used to amplify DNA from both in-vivo and in-vitro material. Twenty-five embryogenic cell lines, additional zygotic embryos and megagametophytes from three controlled crosses involving four selected genotypes of black spruce were used for the segregation analysis of RAPD variants. Ten markers were genetically characterized and used to evaluate the genetic stability of somatic embryos derived from three embryogenic cell lines (one cell line per cross, 30 somatic embryos per cell line). No variation was detected within clones. The utilization of RAPD markers both for the assessment of genetic stability of clonal materials and to certify genetic stability throughout the process of somatic embryogenesis is discussed.


BMC Genomics | 2008

Enhancing genetic mapping of complex genomes through the design of highly-multiplexed SNP arrays: application to the large and unsequenced genomes of white spruce and black spruce

Nathalie Pavy; Betty Pelgas; Stéphanie Beauseigle; Sylvie Blais; Isabelle Gosselin; Manuel Lamothe; Nathalie Isabel; Jean Bousquet

BackgroundTo explore the potential value of high-throughput genotyping assays in the analysis of large and complex genomes, we designed two highly multiplexed Illumina bead arrays using the GoldenGate SNP assay for gene mapping in white spruce (Picea glauca [Moench] Voss) and black spruce (Picea mariana [Mill.] B.S.P.).ResultsEach array included 768 SNPs, identified by resequencing genomic DNA from parents of each mapping population. For white spruce and black spruce, respectively, 69.2% and 77.1% of genotyped SNPs had valid GoldenGate assay scores and segregated in the mapping populations. For each of these successful SNPs, on average, valid genotyping scores were obtained for over 99% of progeny. SNP data were integrated to pre-existing ALFP, ESTP, and SSR markers to construct two individual linkage maps and a composite map for white spruce and black spruce genomes. The white spruce composite map contained 821 markers including 348 gene loci. Also, 835 markers including 328 gene loci were positioned on the black spruce composite map. In total, 215 anchor markers (mostly gene markers) were shared between the two species. Considering lineage divergence at least 10 Myr ago between the two spruces, interspecific comparison of homoeologous linkage groups revealed remarkable synteny and marker colinearity.ConclusionThe design of customized highly multiplexed Illumina SNP arrays appears as an efficient procedure to enhance the mapping of expressed genes and make linkage maps more informative and powerful in such species with poorly known genomes. This genotyping approach will open new avenues for co-localizing candidate genes and QTLs, partial genome sequencing, and comparative mapping across conifers.


Molecular Ecology | 1999

Direct evidence for biased gene diversity estimates from dominant random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) fingerprints

Nathalie Isabel; Jean Beaulieu; Philippe Thériault; Jean Bousquet

The relevance of using dominant random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) fingerprints for estimating population differentiation was investigated when typically small population sample sizes were used. Haploid sexual tissues were first used to determine genotypes at RAPD loci for 75 eastern white pines (Pinus strobus L.) representing five populations. Dominant RAPD fingerprints were then inferred from genotypic data for each individual at each locus, and gene diversity estimates from both sources of data were compared. Genotypic information at RAPD loci indicated little or no differentiation among populations, similar to allozyme loci. However, estimates of population differentiation derived from dominant RAPD fingerprints according to various common methods of analysis were generally inflated, especially when all fragments were considered. Simulations showed that an increase in loci sampling and population sample sizes did not significantly alleviate the biases observed.


BMC Genomics | 2011

QTL mapping in white spruce: gene maps and genomic regions underlying adaptive traits across pedigrees, years and environments

Betty Pelgas; Jean Bousquet; Patrick G. Meirmans; Kermit Ritland; Nathalie Isabel

BackgroundThe genomic architecture of bud phenology and height growth remains poorly known in most forest trees. In non model species, QTL studies have shown limited application because most often QTL data could not be validated from one experiment to another. The aim of our study was to overcome this limitation by basing QTL detection on the construction of genetic maps highly-enriched in gene markers, and by assessing QTLs across pedigrees, years, and environments.ResultsFour saturated individual linkage maps representing two unrelated mapping populations of 260 and 500 clonally replicated progeny were assembled from 471 to 570 markers, including from 283 to 451 gene SNPs obtained using a multiplexed genotyping assay. Thence, a composite linkage map was assembled with 836 gene markers.For individual linkage maps, a total of 33 distinct quantitative trait loci (QTLs) were observed for bud flush, 52 for bud set, and 52 for height growth. For the composite map, the corresponding numbers of QTL clusters were 11, 13, and 10. About 20% of QTLs were replicated between the two mapping populations and nearly 50% revealed spatial and/or temporal stability. Three to four occurrences of overlapping QTLs between characters were noted, indicating regions with potential pleiotropic effects. Moreover, some of the genes involved in the QTLs were also underlined by recent genome scans or expression profile studies.Overall, the proportion of phenotypic variance explained by each QTL ranged from 3.0 to 16.4% for bud flush, from 2.7 to 22.2% for bud set, and from 2.5 to 10.5% for height growth. Up to 70% of the total character variance could be accounted for by QTLs for bud flush or bud set, and up to 59% for height growth.ConclusionsThis study provides a basic understanding of the genomic architecture related to bud flush, bud set, and height growth in a conifer species, and a useful indicator to compare with Angiosperms. It will serve as a basic reference to functional and association genetic studies of adaptation and growth in Picea taxa. The putative QTNs identified will be tested for associations in natural populations, with potential applications in molecular breeding and gene conservation programs. QTLs mapping consistently across years and environments could also be the most important targets for breeding, because they represent genomic regions that may be least affected by G × E interactions.


Plant Journal | 2015

Improved white spruce (Picea glauca) genome assemblies and annotation of large gene families of conifer terpenoid and phenolic defense metabolism

René L. Warren; Christopher I. Keeling; Macaire Man Saint Yuen; Anthony Raymond; Greg Taylor; Benjamin P. Vandervalk; Hamid Mohamadi; Daniel Paulino; Readman Chiu; Shaun D. Jackman; Gordon Robertson; Chen Yang; Brian Boyle; Margarete Hoffmann; Detlef Weigel; David R. Nelson; Carol Ritland; Nathalie Isabel; Barry Jaquish; Alvin Yanchuk; Jean Bousquet; Steven J.M. Jones; John MacKay; Inanc Birol; Joerg Bohlmann

White spruce (Picea glauca), a gymnosperm tree, has been established as one of the models for conifer genomics. We describe the draft genome assemblies of two white spruce genotypes, PG29 and WS77111, innovative tools for the assembly of very large genomes, and the conifer genomics resources developed in this process. The two white spruce genotypes originate from distant geographic regions of western (PG29) and eastern (WS77111) North America, and represent elite trees in two Canadian tree-breeding programs. We present an update (V3 and V4) for a previously reported PG29 V2 draft genome assembly and introduce a second white spruce genome assembly for genotype WS77111. Assemblies of the PG29 and WS77111 genomes confirm the reconstructed white spruce genome size in the 20 Gbp range, and show broad synteny. Using the PG29 V3 assembly and additional white spruce genomics and transcriptomics resources, we performed MAKER-P annotation and meticulous expert annotation of very large gene families of conifer defense metabolism, the terpene synthases and cytochrome P450s. We also comprehensively annotated the white spruce mevalonate, methylerythritol phosphate and phenylpropanoid pathways. These analyses highlighted the large extent of gene and pseudogene duplications in a conifer genome, in particular for genes of secondary (i.e. specialized) metabolism, and the potential for gain and loss of function for defense and adaptation.


Plant Cell Tissue and Organ Culture | 2000

Effect of sugars, amino acids, and culture technique on maturation of somatic embryos of Pinus strobus on medium with two gellan gum concentrations

E. Garin; Michèle Bernier-Cardou; Nathalie Isabel; Krystyna Klimaszewska; Ariane Plourde

Maturation of five embryogenic lines of Pinus strobus L. was tested on media with various sugars and sources of organic nitrogen, and solidified with two gellan gum concentrations (0.6 and 1.0%). Mature somatic embryo production was more abundant at 1.0% gellan gum than at 0.6%. Complex combinations of amino acids had little effect on mature embryo production of most tested embryogenic lines. Increasing glutamine concentration of the maturation medium from 1.7 to 7.3 g l−1 was beneficial to one embryogenic line. Increasing sucrose concentration or substituting part of the sucrose with mannitol or sorbitol had variable effects on somatic embryo maturation depending on the embryogenic line. A medium with 88 mM sucrose plus 175 mM sorbitol solidified with 1.0% gellan gum produced high numbers of somatic embryos in four out of five embryogenic lines tested.


BMC Biology | 2012

A spruce gene map infers ancient plant genome reshuffling and subsequent slow evolution in the gymnosperm lineage leading to extant conifers

Nathalie Pavy; Betty Pelgas; Jérôme Laroche; Philippe Rigault; Nathalie Isabel; Jean Bousquet

BackgroundSeed plants are composed of angiosperms and gymnosperms, which diverged from each other around 300 million years ago. While much light has been shed on the mechanisms and rate of genome evolution in flowering plants, such knowledge remains conspicuously meagre for the gymnosperms. Conifers are key representatives of gymnosperms and the sheer size of their genomes represents a significant challenge for characterization, sequencing and assembling.ResultsTo gain insight into the macro-organisation and long-term evolution of the conifer genome, we developed a genetic map involving 1,801 spruce genes. We designed a statistical approach based on kernel density estimation to analyse gene density and identified seven gene-rich isochors. Groups of co-localizing genes were also found that were transcriptionally co-regulated, indicative of functional clusters. Phylogenetic analyses of 157 gene families for which at least two duplicates were mapped on the spruce genome indicated that ancient gene duplicates shared by angiosperms and gymnosperms outnumbered conifer-specific duplicates by a ratio of eight to one. Ancient duplicates were much more translocated within and among spruce chromosomes than conifer-specific duplicates, which were mostly organised in tandem arrays. Both high synteny and collinearity were also observed between the genomes of spruce and pine, two conifers that diverged more than 100 million years ago.ConclusionsTaken together, these results indicate that much genomic evolution has occurred in the seed plant lineage before the split between gymnosperms and angiosperms, and that the pace of evolution of the genome macro-structure has been much slower in the gymnosperm lineage leading to extent conifers than that seen for the same period of time in flowering plants. This trend is largely congruent with the contrasted rates of diversification and morphological evolution observed between these two groups of seed plants.


Molecular Ecology Resources | 2013

Development of high-density SNP genotyping arrays for white spruce (Picea glauca) and transferability to subtropical and nordic congeners.

Nathalie Pavy; Philippe Rigault; Sylvie Blais; Astrid Deschênes; Brian Boyle; Betty Pelgas; Marie Deslauriers; Sébastien Clément; Patricia Lavigne; Manuel Lamothe; Janice E. K. Cooke; Juan P. Jaramillo-Correa; Jean Beaulieu; Nathalie Isabel; John MacKay; Jean Bousquet

High‐density SNP genotyping arrays can be designed for any species given sufficient sequence information of high quality. Two high‐density SNP arrays relying on the Infinium iSelect technology (Illumina) were designed for use in the conifer white spruce (Picea glauca). One array contained 7338 segregating SNPs representative of 2814 genes of various molecular functional classes for main uses in genetic association and population genetics studies. The other one contained 9559 segregating SNPs representative of 9543 genes for main uses in population genetics, linkage mapping of the genome and genomic prediction. The SNPs assayed were discovered from various sources of gene resequencing data. SNPs predicted from high‐quality sequences derived from genomic DNA reached a genotyping success rate of 64.7%. Nonsingleton in silico SNPs (i.e. a sequence polymorphism present in at least two reads) predicted from expressed sequenced tags obtained with the Roche 454 technology and Illumina GAII analyser resulted in a similar genotyping success rate of 71.6% when the deepest alignment was used and the most favourable SNP probe per gene was selected. A variable proportion of these SNPs was shared by other nordic and subtropical spruce species from North America and Europe. The number of shared SNPs was inversely proportional to phylogenetic divergence and standing genetic variation in the recipient species, but positively related to allele frequency in P. glauca natural populations. These validated SNP resources should open up new avenues for population genetics and comparative genetic mapping at a genomic scale in spruce species.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2003

Cross-species amplification of mitochondrial DNA sequence-tagged-site markers in conifers: the nature of polymorphism and variation within and among species in Picea

Juan P. Jaramillo-Correa; Jean Bousquet; Jean Beaulieu; Nathalie Isabel; Martin Perron; Marie Bouillé

Abstract Primers previously developed to amplify specific non-coding regions of the mitochondrial genome in Angiosperms, and new primers for additional non-coding mtDNA regions, were tested for their ability to direct DNA amplification in 12 conifer taxa and to detect sequence-tagged-site (STS) polymorphisms within and among eight species in Picea. Out of 12 primer pairs, nine were successful at amplifying mtDNA in most of the taxa surveyed. In conifers, indels and substitutions were observed for several loci, allowing them to distinguish between families, genera and, in some cases, between species within genera. In Picea, interspecific polymorphism was detected for four loci, while intraspecific variation was observed for three of the mtDNA regions studied. One of these (SSU rRNA V1 region) exhibited indel polymorphisms, and the two others (nad1 intron b/c and nad5 intron1) revealed restriction differences after digestion with Sau3AI (PCR-RFLP). A fourth locus, the nad4L-orf25 intergenic region, showed a multibanding pattern for most of the spruce species, suggesting a possible gene duplication. Maternal inheritance, expected for mtDNA in conifers, was observed for all polymorphic markers except the intergenic region nad4L-orf25. Pooling of the variation observed with the remaining three markers resulted in two to six different mtDNA haplotypes within the different species of Picea. Evidence for intra-genomic recombination was observed in at least two taxa. Thus, these mitotypes are likely to be more informative than single-locus haplotypes. They should be particularly useful for the study of biogeography and the dynamics of hybrid zones.


Heredity | 2012

The heterogeneous levels of linkage disequilibrium in white spruce genes and comparative analysis with other conifers

Nathalie Pavy; Marie-Claire Namroud; Gagnon F; Nathalie Isabel; Jean Bousquet

In plants, knowledge about linkage disequilibrium (LD) is relevant for the design of efficient single-nucleotide polymorphism arrays in relation to their use in population and association genomics studies. Previous studies of conifer genes have shown LD to decay rapidly within gene limits, but exceptions have been reported. To evaluate the extent of heterogeneity of LD among conifer genes and its potential causes, we examined LD in 105 genes of white spruce (Picea glauca) by sequencing a panel of 48 haploid megagametophytes from natural populations and further compared it with LD in other conifer species. The average pairwise r2 value was 0.19 (s.d.=0.19), and LD dropped quickly with a half-decay being reached at a distance of 65 nucleotides between sites. However, LD was significantly heterogeneous among genes. A first group of 29 genes had stronger LD (mean r2=0.28), and a second group of 38 genes had weaker LD (mean r2=0.12). While a strong relationship was found with the recombination rate, there was no obvious relationship between LD and functional classification. The level of nucleotide diversity, which was highly heterogeneous across genes, was also not significantly correlated with LD. A search for selection signatures highlighted significant deviations from the standard neutral model, which could be mostly attributed to recent demographic changes. Little evidence was seen for hitchhiking and clear relationships with LD. When compared among conifer species, on average, levels of LD were similar in genes from white spruce, Norway spruce and Scots pine, whereas loblolly pine and Douglas fir genes exhibited a significantly higher LD.

Collaboration


Dive into the Nathalie Isabel's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Manuel Lamothe

Natural Resources Canada

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Francine Tremblay

Université du Québec en Abitibi-Témiscamingue

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge