Patrick Wincker
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Patrick Wincker.
Nature | 2007
Olivier Jaillon; Jean-Marc Aury; Benjamin Noel; Alberto Policriti; Christian Clepet; Alberto Casagrande; Nathalie Choisne; Sébastien Aubourg; Nicola Vitulo; Claire Jubin; Alessandro Vezzi; Fabrice Legeai; Philippe Hugueney; Corinne Dasilva; David S. Horner; Erica Mica; Delphine Jublot; Julie Poulain; Clémence Bruyère; Alain Billault; Béatrice Segurens; Michel Gouyvenoux; Edgardo Ugarte; Federica Cattonaro; Véronique Anthouard; Virginie Vico; Cristian Del Fabbro; Michael Alaux; Gabriele Di Gaspero; Vincent Dumas
The analysis of the first plant genomes provided unexpected evidence for genome duplication events in species that had previously been considered as true diploids on the basis of their genetics. These polyploidization events may have had important consequences in plant evolution, in particular for species radiation and adaptation and for the modulation of functional capacities. Here we report a high-quality draft of the genome sequence of grapevine (Vitis vinifera) obtained from a highly homozygous genotype. The draft sequence of the grapevine genome is the fourth one produced so far for flowering plants, the second for a woody species and the first for a fruit crop (cultivated for both fruit and beverage). Grapevine was selected because of its important place in the cultural heritage of humanity beginning during the Neolithic period. Several large expansions of gene families with roles in aromatic features are observed. The grapevine genome has not undergone recent genome duplication, thus enabling the discovery of ancestral traits and features of the genetic organization of flowering plants. This analysis reveals the contribution of three ancestral genomes to the grapevine haploid content. This ancestral arrangement is common to many dicotyledonous plants but is absent from the genome of rice, which is a monocotyledon. Furthermore, we explain the chronology of previously described whole-genome duplication events in the evolution of flowering plants.
Nature | 2004
Olivier Jaillon; Jean-Marc Aury; Frédéric Brunet; Jean-Louis Petit; Nicole Stange-Thomann; Evan Mauceli; Laurence Bouneau; Cécile Fischer; Catherine Ozouf-Costaz; Alain Bernot; Sophie Nicaud; David B. Jaffe; Sheila Fisher; Georges Lutfalla; Carole Dossat; Béatrice Segurens; Corinne Dasilva; Marcel Salanoubat; Michael Levy; Nathalie Boudet; Sergi Castellano; Véronique Anthouard; Claire Jubin; Vanina Castelli; Michael Katinka; Benoit Vacherie; Christian Biémont; Zineb Skalli; Laurence Cattolico; Julie Poulain
Tetraodon nigroviridis is a freshwater puffer fish with the smallest known vertebrate genome. Here, we report a draft genome sequence with long-range linkage and substantial anchoring to the 21 Tetraodon chromosomes. Genome analysis provides a greatly improved fish gene catalogue, including identifying key genes previously thought to be absent in fish. Comparison with other vertebrates and a urochordate indicates that fish proteins have diverged markedly faster than their mammalian homologues. Comparison with the human genome suggests ∼900 previously unannotated human genes. Analysis of the Tetraodon and human genomes shows that whole-genome duplication occurred in the teleost fish lineage, subsequent to its divergence from mammals. The analysis also makes it possible to infer the basic structure of the ancestral bony vertebrate genome, which was composed of 12 chromosomes, and to reconstruct much of the evolutionary history of ancient and recent chromosome rearrangements leading to the modern human karyotype.
Nature | 2001
Michael Katinka; Simone Duprat; Emmanuel Cornillot; Guy Méténier; Fabienne Thomarat; Gérard Prensier; Valérie Barbe; Eric Peyretaillade; Patrick Wincker; Frédéric Delbac; Hicham El Alaoui; Pierre Peyret; William Saurin; Manolo Gouy; Jean Weissenbach; Christian P. Vivarès
Microsporidia are obligate intracellular parasites infesting many animal groups. Lacking mitochondria and peroxysomes, these unicellular eukaryotes were first considered a deeply branching protist lineage that diverged before the endosymbiotic event that led to mitochondria. The discovery of a gene for a mitochondrial-type chaperone combined with molecular phylogenetic data later implied that microsporidia are atypical fungi that lost mitochondria during evolution. Here we report the DNA sequences of the 11 chromosomes of the ∼2.9-megabase (Mb) genome of Encephalitozoon cuniculi (1,997 potential protein-coding genes). Genome compaction is reflected by reduced intergenic spacers and by the shortness of most putative proteins relative to their eukaryote orthologues. The strong host dependence is illustrated by the lack of genes for some biosynthetic pathways and for the tricarboxylic acid cycle. Phylogenetic analysis lends substantial credit to the fungal affiliation of microsporidia. Because the E. cuniculi genome contains genes related to some mitochondrial functions (for example, Fe–S cluster assembly), we hypothesize that microsporidia have retained a mitochondrion-derived organelle.
Nature | 2006
Marc Strous; Eric Pelletier; Sophie Mangenot; Thomas Rattei; Angelika Lehner; Michael W. Taylor; Matthias Horn; Holger Daims; Delphine Bartol-Mavel; Patrick Wincker; Valérie Barbe; Nuria Fonknechten; David Vallenet; Béatrice Segurens; Chantal Schenowitz-Truong; Claudine Médigue; Astrid Collingro; Berend Snel; Bas E. Dutilh; Huub J. M. Op den Camp; Chris van der Drift; Irina Cirpus; Katinka van de Pas-Schoonen; Harry R. Harhangi; Laura van Niftrik; Markus Schmid; Jan T. Keltjens; Jack van de Vossenberg; Boran Kartal; Harald Meier
Anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox) has become a main focus in oceanography and wastewater treatment. It is also the nitrogen cycles major remaining biochemical enigma. Among its features, the occurrence of hydrazine as a free intermediate of catabolism, the biosynthesis of ladderane lipids and the role of cytoplasm differentiation are unique in biology. Here we use environmental genomics—the reconstruction of genomic data directly from the environment—to assemble the genome of the uncultured anammox bacterium Kuenenia stuttgartiensis from a complex bioreactor community. The genome data illuminate the evolutionary history of the Planctomycetes and allow us to expose the genetic blueprint of the organisms special properties. Most significantly, we identified candidate genes responsible for ladderane biosynthesis and biological hydrazine metabolism, and discovered unexpected metabolic versatility.
Nature Biotechnology | 2008
Pierre Abad; Jérôme Gouzy; Jean-Marc Aury; Philippe Castagnone-Sereno; Etienne Danchin; Emeline Deleury; Laetitia Perfus-Barbeoch; Véronique Anthouard; François Artiguenave; Vivian C Blok; Marie-Cécile Caillaud; Pedro M. Coutinho; Corinne Dasilva; Francesca De Luca; Florence Deau; Magali Esquibet; Timothé Flutre; Jared V. Goldstone; Noureddine Hamamouch; Tarek Hewezi; Olivier Jaillon; Claire Jubin; Paola Leonetti; Marc Magliano; Tom Maier; Gabriel V. Markov; Paul McVeigh; Julie Poulain; Marc Robinson-Rechavi; Erika Sallet
Plant-parasitic nematodes are major agricultural pests worldwide and novel approaches to control them are sorely needed. We report the draft genome sequence of the root-knot nematode Meloidogyne incognita, a biotrophic parasite of many crops, including tomato, cotton and coffee. Most of the assembled sequence of this asexually reproducing nematode, totaling 86 Mb, exists in pairs of homologous but divergent segments. This suggests that ancient allelic regions in M. incognita are evolving toward effective haploidy, permitting new mechanisms of adaptation. The number and diversity of plant cell wall–degrading enzymes in M. incognita is unprecedented in any animal for which a genome sequence is available, and may derive from multiple horizontal gene transfers from bacterial sources. Our results provide insights into the adaptations required by metazoans to successfully parasitize immunocompetent plants, and open the way for discovering new antiparasitic strategies.
Science | 2014
Boulos Chalhoub; Shengyi Liu; Isobel A. P. Parkin; Haibao Tang; Xiyin Wang; Julien Chiquet; Harry Belcram; Chaobo Tong; Birgit Samans; Margot Corréa; Corinne Da Silva; Jérémy Just; Cyril Falentin; Chu Shin Koh; Isabelle Le Clainche; Maria Bernard; Pascal Bento; Benjamin Noel; Karine Labadie; Adriana Alberti; Mathieu Charles; Dominique Arnaud; Hui Guo; Christian Daviaud; Salman Alamery; Kamel Jabbari; Meixia Zhao; Patrick P. Edger; Houda Chelaifa; David Tack
The genomic origins of rape oilseed Many domesticated plants arose through the meeting of multiple genomes through hybridization and genome doubling, known as polyploidy. Chalhoub et al. sequenced the polyploid genome of Brassica napus, which originated from a recent combination of two distinct genomes approximately 7500 years ago and gave rise to the crops of rape oilseed (canola), kale, and rutabaga. B. napus has undergone multiple events affecting differently sized genetic regions where a gene from one progenitor species has been converted to the copy from a second progenitor species. Some of these gene conversion events appear to have been selected by humans as part of the process of domestication and crop improvement. Science, this issue p. 950 The polyploid genome of oilseed rape exhibits evolution through homologous gene conversion. Oilseed rape (Brassica napus L.) was formed ~7500 years ago by hybridization between B. rapa and B. oleracea, followed by chromosome doubling, a process known as allopolyploidy. Together with more ancient polyploidizations, this conferred an aggregate 72× genome multiplication since the origin of angiosperms and high gene content. We examined the B. napus genome and the consequences of its recent duplication. The constituent An and Cn subgenomes are engaged in subtle structural, functional, and epigenetic cross-talk, with abundant homeologous exchanges. Incipient gene loss and expression divergence have begun. Selection in B. napus oilseed types has accelerated the loss of glucosinolate genes, while preserving expansion of oil biosynthesis genes. These processes provide insights into allopolyploid evolution and its relationship with crop domestication and improvement.
Nature | 2006
Jean-Marc Aury; Olivier Jaillon; Laurent Duret; Benjamin Noel; Claire Jubin; Betina M. Porcel; Béatrice Segurens; Vincent Daubin; Véronique Anthouard; Nathalie Aiach; Olivier Arnaiz; Alain Billaut; Janine Beisson; Isabelle Blanc; Khaled Bouhouche; Francisco Câmara; Sandra Duharcourt; Roderic Guigó; Delphine Gogendeau; Michael Katinka; Anne-Marie Keller; Roland Kissmehl; Catherine Klotz; Anne Le Mouël; Gersende Lepère; Sophie Malinsky; Mariusz Nowacki; Jacek K. Nowak; Helmut Plattner; Julie Poulain
The duplication of entire genomes has long been recognized as having great potential for evolutionary novelties, but the mechanisms underlying their resolution through gene loss are poorly understood. Here we show that in the unicellular eukaryote Paramecium tetraurelia, a ciliate, most of the nearly 40,000 genes arose through at least three successive whole-genome duplications. Phylogenetic analysis indicates that the most recent duplication coincides with an explosion of speciation events that gave rise to the P. aurelia complex of 15 sibling species. We observed that gene loss occurs over a long timescale, not as an initial massive event. Genes from the same metabolic pathway or protein complex have common patterns of gene loss, and highly expressed genes are over-retained after all duplications. The conclusion of this analysis is that many genes are maintained after whole-genome duplication not because of functional innovation but because of gene dosage constraints.
Nature | 2012
Angélique D’Hont; Jean-Marc Aury; Franc-Christophe Baurens; Françoise Carreel; Olivier Garsmeur; Benjamin Noel; Stéphanie Bocs; Gaëtan Droc; Mathieu Rouard; Corinne Da Silva; Kamel Jabbari; Céline Cardi; Julie Poulain; Marlène Souquet; Karine Labadie; Cyril Jourda; Juliette Lengellé; Marguerite Rodier-Goud; Adriana Alberti; Maria Bernard; Margot Corréa; Saravanaraj Ayyampalayam; Michael R. McKain; Jim Leebens-Mack; Diane Burgess; Michael Freeling; Didier Mbéguié-A-Mbéguié; Matthieu Chabannes; Thomas Wicker; Olivier Panaud
Bananas (Musa spp.), including dessert and cooking types, are giant perennial monocotyledonous herbs of the order Zingiberales, a sister group to the well-studied Poales, which include cereals. Bananas are vital for food security in many tropical and subtropical countries and the most popular fruit in industrialized countries. The Musa domestication process started some 7,000 years ago in Southeast Asia. It involved hybridizations between diverse species and subspecies, fostered by human migrations, and selection of diploid and triploid seedless, parthenocarpic hybrids thereafter widely dispersed by vegetative propagation. Half of the current production relies on somaclones derived from a single triploid genotype (Cavendish). Pests and diseases have gradually become adapted, representing an imminent danger for global banana production. Here we describe the draft sequence of the 523-megabase genome of a Musa acuminata doubled-haploid genotype, providing a crucial stepping-stone for genetic improvement of banana. We detected three rounds of whole-genome duplications in the Musa lineage, independently of those previously described in the Poales lineage and the one we detected in the Arecales lineage. This first monocotyledon high-continuity whole-genome sequence reported outside Poales represents an essential bridge for comparative genome analysis in plants. As such, it clarifies commelinid-monocotyledon phylogenetic relationships, reveals Poaceae-specific features and has led to the discovery of conserved non-coding sequences predating monocotyledon–eudicotyledon divergence.
PLOS Genetics | 2011
Joelle Amselem; Christina A. Cuomo; Jan A. L. van Kan; Muriel Viaud; Ernesto P. Benito; Arnaud Couloux; Pedro M. Coutinho; Ronald P. de Vries; Paul S. Dyer; Sabine Fillinger; Elisabeth Fournier; Lilian Gout; Matthias Hahn; Linda T. Kohn; Nicolas Lapalu; Kim M. Plummer; Jean-Marc Pradier; Emmanuel Quévillon; Amir Sharon; Adeline Simon; Arjen ten Have; Bettina Tudzynski; Paul Tudzynski; Patrick Wincker; Marion Andrew; Véronique Anthouard; Ross E. Beever; Rolland Beffa; Isabelle Benoit; Ourdia Bouzid
Sclerotinia sclerotiorum and Botrytis cinerea are closely related necrotrophic plant pathogenic fungi notable for their wide host ranges and environmental persistence. These attributes have made these species models for understanding the complexity of necrotrophic, broad host-range pathogenicity. Despite their similarities, the two species differ in mating behaviour and the ability to produce asexual spores. We have sequenced the genomes of one strain of S. sclerotiorum and two strains of B. cinerea. The comparative analysis of these genomes relative to one another and to other sequenced fungal genomes is provided here. Their 38–39 Mb genomes include 11,860–14,270 predicted genes, which share 83% amino acid identity on average between the two species. We have mapped the S. sclerotiorum assembly to 16 chromosomes and found large-scale co-linearity with the B. cinerea genomes. Seven percent of the S. sclerotiorum genome comprises transposable elements compared to <1% of B. cinerea. The arsenal of genes associated with necrotrophic processes is similar between the species, including genes involved in plant cell wall degradation and oxalic acid production. Analysis of secondary metabolism gene clusters revealed an expansion in number and diversity of B. cinerea–specific secondary metabolites relative to S. sclerotiorum. The potential diversity in secondary metabolism might be involved in adaptation to specific ecological niches. Comparative genome analysis revealed the basis of differing sexual mating compatibility systems between S. sclerotiorum and B. cinerea. The organization of the mating-type loci differs, and their structures provide evidence for the evolution of heterothallism from homothallism. These data shed light on the evolutionary and mechanistic bases of the genetically complex traits of necrotrophic pathogenicity and sexual mating. This resource should facilitate the functional studies designed to better understand what makes these fungi such successful and persistent pathogens of agronomic crops.
Nature Genetics | 1999
Jamilé Hazan; Nuria Fonknechten; Delphine Mavel; Caroline Paternotte; Delphine Samson; François Artiguenave; Claire-Sophie Davoine; Corinne Cruaud; Alexandra Durr; Patrick Wincker; Laurence Cattolico; Valérie Barbe; Jean-Marc Burgunder; Jean-François Prud'homme; Alexis Brice; Bertrand Fontaine; Roland Heilig; Jean Weissenbach
Autosomal dominant hereditary spastic paraplegia (AD-HSP) is a genetically heterogeneous neurodegenerative disorder characterized by progressive spasticity of the lower limbs. Among the four loci causing AD-HSP identified so far, the SPG4 locus at chromosome 2p21–p22 has been shown to account for 40–50% of all AD-HSP families. Using a positional cloning strategy based on obtaining sequence of the entire SPG4 interval, we identified a candidate gene encoding a new member of the AAA protein family, which we named spastin. Sequence analysis of this gene in seven SPG4-linked pedigrees revealed several DNA modifications, including missense, nonsense and splice-site mutations. Both SPG4 and its mouse orthologue were shown to be expressed early and ubiquitously in fetal and adult tissues. The sequence homologies and putative subcellular localization of spastin suggest that this ATPase is involved in the assembly or function of nuclear protein complexes.