Philippe Grappin
Institut national de la recherche agronomique
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Featured researches published by Philippe Grappin.
Planta | 2004
Sonia Ali-Rachedi; Denise Bouinot; Marie-Hélène Wagner; Magda Bonnet; Bruno Sotta; Philippe Grappin; Marc Jullien
Mature seeds of the Cape Verde Islands (Cvi) ecotype of Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. show a very marked dormancy. Dormant (D) seeds completely fail to germinate in conditions that are favourable for germination whereas non-dormant (ND) seeds germinate easily. Cvi seed dormancy is alleviated by after-ripening, stratification, and also by nitrate or fluridone treatment. Addition of gibberellins to D seeds does not suppress dormancy efficiently, suggesting that gibberellins are not directly involved in the breaking of dormancy. Dormancy expression of Cvi seeds is strongly dependent on temperature: D seeds do not germinate at warm temperatures (20–27°C) but do so easily at a low temperature (13°C) or when a fluridone treatment is given to D seeds sown at high temperature. To investigate the role of abscisic acid (ABA) in dormancy release and maintenance, we measured the ABA content in both ND and D seeds imbibed using various dormancy-breaking conditions. It was found that dry D seeds contained higher amounts of ABA than dry ND after-ripened seeds. During early imbibition in standard conditions, there was a decrease in ABA content in both seeds, the rate of which was slower in D seeds. Three days after sowing, the ABA content in D seeds increased specifically and then remained at a high level. When imbibed with fluridone, nitrate or stratified, the ABA content of D seeds decreased and reached a level very near to that of ND seeds. In contrast, gibberellic acid (GA3) treatment caused a transient increase in ABA content. When D seeds were sown at low optimal temperature their ABA content also decreased to the level observed in ND seeds. The present study indicates that Cvi D and ND seeds can be easily distinguished by their ability to synthesize ABA following imbibition. Treatments used here to break dormancy reduced the ABA level in imbibed D seeds to the level observed in ND seeds, with the exception of GA3 treatment, which was active in promoting germination only when ABA synthesis was inhibited.
Planta | 2000
Philippe Grappin; Denise Bouinot; Bruno Sotta; Emile Miginiac; Marc Jullien
Abstract. The physiological characteristics of seed dormancy in Nicotiana plumbaginifolia Viv. are described. The level of seed dormancy is defined by the delay in seed germination (i.e the time required prior to germination) under favourable environmental conditions. A wild-type line shows a clear primary dormancy, which is suppressed by afterripening, whereas an abscisic acid (ABA)-deficient mutant shows a non-dormant phenotype. We have investigated the role of ABA and gibberellic acid (GA3) in the control of dormancy maintenance or breakage during imbibition in suitable conditions. It was found that fluridone, a carotenoid biosynthesis inhibitor, is almost as efficient as GA3 in breaking dormancy. Dry dormant seeds contained more ABA than dry afterripened seeds and, during early imbibition, there was an accumulation of ABA in dormant seeds, but not in afterripened seeds. In addition, fluridone and exogenous GA3 inhibited the accumulation of ABA in imbibed dormant seeds. This reveals an important role for ABA synthesis in dormancy maintenance in imbibed seeds.
Plant Physiology | 2006
Kamel Chibani; Sonia Ali-Rachedi; Claudette Job; Dominique Job; Marc Jullien; Philippe Grappin
The mechanisms controlling seed dormancy in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) have been characterized by proteomics using the dormant (D) accession Cvi originating from the Cape Verde Islands. Comparative studies carried out with freshly harvested dormant and after-ripened non-dormant (ND) seeds revealed a specific differential accumulation of 32 proteins. The data suggested that proteins associated with metabolic functions potentially involved in germination can accumulate during after-ripening in the dry state leading to dormancy release. Exogenous application of abscisic acid (ABA) to ND seeds strongly impeded their germination, which physiologically mimicked the behavior of D imbibed seeds. This application resulted in an alteration of the accumulation pattern of 71 proteins. There was a strong down-accumulation of a major part (90%) of these proteins, which were involved mainly in energetic and protein metabolisms. This feature suggested that exogenous ABA triggers proteolytic mechanisms in imbibed seeds. An analysis of de novo protein synthesis by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis in the presence of [35S]-methionine disclosed that exogenous ABA does not impede protein biosynthesis during imbibition. Furthermore, imbibed D seeds proved competent for de novo protein synthesis, demonstrating that impediment of protein translation was not the cause of the observed block of seed germination. However, the two-dimensional protein profiles were markedly different from those obtained with the ND seeds imbibed in ABA. Altogether, the data showed that the mechanisms blocking germination of the ND seeds by ABA application are different from those preventing germination of the D seeds imbibed in basal medium.
The Plant Cell | 2008
Laurent Ogé; Gildas Bourdais; Jérôme Bove; Boris Collet; Béatrice Godin; Fabienne Granier; Jean-Pierre Boutin; Dominique Job; Marc Jullien; Philippe Grappin
The formation of abnormal amino acid residues is a major source of spontaneous age-related protein damage in cells. The protein l-isoaspartyl methyltransferase (PIMT) combats protein misfolding resulting from l-isoaspartyl formation by catalyzing the conversion of abnormal l-isoaspartyl residues to their normal l-aspartyl forms. In this way, the PIMT repair enzyme system contributes to longevity and survival in bacterial and animal kingdoms. Despite the discovery of PIMT activity in plants two decades ago, the role of this enzyme during plant stress adaptation and in seed longevity remains undefined. In this work, we have isolated Arabidopsis thaliana lines exhibiting altered expression of PIMT1, one of the two genes encoding the PIMT enzyme in Arabidopsis. PIMT1 overaccumulation reduced the accumulation of l-isoaspartyl residues in seed proteins and increased both seed longevity and germination vigor. Conversely, reduced PIMT1 accumulation was associated with an increase in the accumulation of l-isoaspartyl residues in the proteome of freshly harvested dry mature seeds, thus leading to heightened sensitivity to aging treatments and loss of seed vigor under stressful germination conditions. These data implicate PIMT1 as a major endogenous factor that limits abnormal l-isoaspartyl accumulation in seed proteins, thereby improving seed traits such as longevity and vigor. The PIMT repair pathway likely works in concert with other anti-aging pathways to actively eliminate deleterious protein products, thus enabling successful seedling establishment and strengthening plant proliferation in natural environments.
Genome Biology | 2001
Jérôme Bove; Marc Jullien; Philippe Grappin
A recent proteomic analysis of germinating Arabidopsis thaliana seeds demonstrates the effectiveness of functional genomics for investigating the complexity of developmental regulatory networks, such as the development of the embryo into a young plant.
Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1996
Philippe Grappin; Colette Audeon; Marie-Christine Chupeau; Marie-Angèle Grandbastien
A new transposable element of tobacco, Slide, was isolated from thetl mutant line, which shows somatic instability, after its transposition into a locus encoding nitrate reductase (NR). The Slide-124 element is 3733 bp long and its coding sequences show similarities with conserved domains of the transposases ofAc, Tam3 andhobo. Excision from the NR locus is detectable in somatic leaf tissues and Slide mobility is triggered by in vitro tissue culture. Slide excision events create footprints similar to those left byAc and Tam3. Tobacco lines derived from thetl mutant line seem characterized by unmethylated copies of a few members of the highly repetitive Slide family. Slide mobility was monitored in transient expression assays. In wild-type tobacco protoplasts, the complete Slide element, as well as a defective copy, is able to excise. The complete Slide element, but not the defective version, is able to excise in protoplasts of the heterologous species lettuce (Lactuca sativa). These results show that Slide carries the functions required for its own mobility, and represents the first autonomousAc-like element characterized inSolanaceae species.
Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1996
Bertrand Dubreucq; Philippe Grappin; Michel Caboche
Seed viability, dormancy and germination efficiency are very important aspects of the life cycle of plants and their potential to survive and spread in the environment. To characterize the genes controlling these processes, we have devised a technique for the selection of mutants impaired in seed germination. Selection for such a trait is complicated by physiological factors that interact with these processes and affect seed germination efficiency. The distinction between low seed germination potential due to physiological factors that interfere with seed maturation or germination and germination deficiency due to genetic factors was based on screening for tagged mutations.Arabidopsis thaliana T-DNA primary transformants obtained by an in planta transformation technique are all heterozygotes. We screened for lack of germination of 1/4 of the seeds in the progeny of independent transformants, and simultaneously for the abnormal segregation (2:1 instead of 3:1) of a kanamycin resistance marker carried by the T-DNA inserted into the genome of these primary transformants in the plants that germinate. This yielded several mutants affected in the germination processes. One of the mutants, designated ABC33, was further characterized. Once the viable embryos from non-germinating seeds were removed from their testa, they grew and displayed a dwarf phenotype which could be complemented by providing gibberellic acid. A genetic and molecular analysis, based on the characterization of the flanking genomic sequences of the T-DNA insert, showed that ABC33 is a new loss-of-function allele at theGA1 locus.
Genetica | 1994
Marie-Angèle Grandbastien; Colette Audeon; Josep M. Casacuberta; Philippe Grappin; Hélène Lucas; Corinne Moreau; Sylvie Pouteau
Retroelements represent by far the largest and most widespread class of mobile genetic elements. Representatives of several classes of retrotransposons have been characterized in a broad range of plant species, but only a few of them have been shown to be active. Among these, the tobaccoTnt1 retrotransposon has been isolated after insertional mutagenesis and is one of the very few to be transcriptionally active.Tntl expression is strongly regulated in a tissue-specific and developmental manner. Moreover,Tntl expression is induced by a range of biotic or abiotic elicitors, which all have in common the ability to induce the plant defense response. Regulatory sequences involved in this elicitor-mediated induction have been located in the LTR U3 region. The link betweenTntl activation and the plant defense response might represent an example of the involvement of transposable elements in genome restructurations needed in response to environmental fluctuations such as pathogen attacks.
Journal of Proteome Research | 2012
Erwann Arc; Kamel Chibani; Philippe Grappin; Marc Jullien; Béatrice Godin; Gwendal Cueff; Benoît Valot; Thierry Balliau; Dominique Job; Loïc Rajjou
Despite having very similar initial pools of stored mRNAs and proteins in the dry state, mature Arabidopsis seeds can either proceed toward radicle protrusion or stay in a dormant state upon imbibition. Dormancy breaking, a prerequisite to germination completion, can be induced by different treatments though the underlying mechanisms remain elusive. Thus, we investigated the consequence of such treatments on the seed proteome. Two unrelated dormancy-releasing treatments were applied to dormant seeds, namely, cold stratification and exogenous nitrates, in combination with differential proteomic tools to highlight the specificities of the imbibed dormant state. The results reveal that both treatments lead to highly similar proteome adjustments. In the imbibed dormant state, enzymes involved in reserve mobilization are less accumulated and it appears that several energetically costly processes associated to seed germination and preparation for subsequent seedling establishment are repressed. Our data suggest that dormancy maintenance is associated to an abscisic-acid-dependent recapitulation of the late maturation program resulting in a higher potential to cope with environmental stresses. The comparison of the present results with previously published -omic data sets reinforces and extends the assumption that post-transcriptional, translational, and post-translational regulations are determinant for seed germination.
Journal of Plant Physiology | 2001
Emilio Cervantes; Juana Gutiérrez de Diego; María Gómez; Javier De Las Rivas; José M. Igual; Encarna Velázquez; Philippe Grappin; Manuel Cercós; Juan Carbonell
Summary A full-length cDNA clone encoding a chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.) cysteine proteinase, homologous to rd21gene of Arabidopsis as well as to cysteine proteinase genes from legumes, was isolated. Expression of the mRNA in growing radicles has been located in a very precisely defined longitudinal zone in the stele, corresponding to the area of differentiation of vascular tissues. This result suggests that the encoded proteinase may be involved in programmed cell death events that precede vascular development.