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Dive into the research topics where Philippe Potin is active.

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Featured researches published by Philippe Potin.


BMC Plant Biology | 2014

Transcriptomic and metabolomic analysis of copper stress acclimation in Ectocarpus siliculosus highlights signaling and tolerance mechanisms in brown algae

Andrés Ritter; Simon M. Dittami; Sophie Goulitquer; Juan A. Correa; Catherine Boyen; Philippe Potin; Thierry Tonon

BackgroundBrown algae are sessile macro-organisms of great ecological relevance in coastal ecosystems. They evolved independently from land plants and other multicellular lineages, and therefore hold several original ontogenic and metabolic features. Most brown algae grow along the coastal zone where they face frequent environmental changes, including exposure to toxic levels of heavy metals such as copper (Cu).ResultsWe carried out large-scale transcriptomic and metabolomic analyses to decipher the short-term acclimation of the brown algal model E. siliculosus to Cu stress, and compared these data to results known for other abiotic stressors. This comparison demonstrates that Cu induces oxidative stress in E. siliculosus as illustrated by the transcriptomic overlap between Cu and H2O2 treatments. The common response to Cu and H2O2 consisted in the activation of the oxylipin and the repression of inositol signaling pathways, together with the regulation of genes coding for several transcription-associated proteins. Concomitantly, Cu stress specifically activated a set of genes coding for orthologs of ABC transporters, a P1B-type ATPase, ROS detoxification systems such as a vanadium-dependent bromoperoxidase, and induced an increase of free fatty acid contents. Finally we observed, as a common abiotic stress mechanism, the activation of autophagic processes on one hand and the repression of genes involved in nitrogen assimilation on the other hand.ConclusionsComparisons with data from green plants indicate that some processes involved in Cu and oxidative stress response are conserved across these two distant lineages. At the same time the high number of yet uncharacterized brown alga-specific genes induced in response to copper stress underlines the potential to discover new components and molecular interactions unique to these organisms. Of particular interest for future research is the potential cross-talk between reactive oxygen species (ROS)-, myo-inositol-, and oxylipin signaling.


The Plant Cell | 2013

Structure/Function Analysis of a Type III Polyketide Synthase in the Brown Alga Ectocarpus siliculosus Reveals a Biochemical Pathway in Phlorotannin Monomer Biosynthesis

Laurence Meslet-Cladiere; Ludovic Delage; Cédric Leroux; Sophie Goulitquer; Catherine Leblanc; Emeline Creis; Erwan Ar Gall; Valérie Stiger-Pouvreau; Mirjam Czjzek; Philippe Potin

This study advances our understanding of the contribution of type III polyketide synthase (PKS) in phlorotannin biosynthesis of the marine brown algae Ectocarpus. It provides structural insights into the specificity of PKS1 for phloroglucinol formation. The evolution of the type III PKS gene family in Stramenopiles also suggests a lateral gene transfer event from an actinobacterium. Brown algal phlorotannins are structural analogs of condensed tannins in terrestrial plants and, like plant phenols, they have numerous biological functions. Despite their importance in brown algae, phlorotannin biosynthetic pathways have been poorly characterized at the molecular level. We found that a predicted type III polyketide synthase in the genome of the brown alga Ectocarpus siliculosus, PKS1, catalyzes a major step in the biosynthetic pathway of phlorotannins (i.e., the synthesis of phloroglucinol monomers from malonyl-CoA). The crystal structure of PKS1 at 2.85-Å resolution provided a good quality electron density map showing a modified Cys residue, likely connected to a long chain acyl group. An additional pocket not found in other known type III PKSs contains a reaction product that might correspond to a phloroglucinol precursor. In vivo, we also found a positive correlation between the phloroglucinol content and the PKS III gene expression level in cells of a strain of Ectocarpus adapted to freshwater during its reacclimation to seawater. The evolution of the type III PKS gene family in Stramenopiles suggests a lateral gene transfer event from an actinobacterium.


Phytochemistry Reviews | 2004

Monitoring defensive responses in macroalgae – limitations and perspectives

S. L. La. Barre; Florian Weinberger; Nelly Kervarec; Philippe Potin

As part of an ongoing research program aiming at monitoring molecular changes in the tissues and metabolite trafficking in the hydrosphere of algae subjected to chemical stresses, we are discussing the various analytical techniques that have been employed to characterize, and sometimes to quantity these metabolites. High-field multinuclear and solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopies are powerful tools for metabolite characterization from extracts and in vivo, but quantification and kinetic aspects show some limitations. Modern MS (mass spectrometry) is extremely useful for fingerprinting samples against databases and when dealing with very low concentrations of metabolites, the limitations being set by the type of chromatographic separation and mode of detection coupled with the mass spectrometer. Regarding chemical communication, optimization in terms of resolution and efficiency of hydrosphere chemical analysis can theoretically be achieved in a system which integrates (i) a multiparametric incubation chamber, (ii) a gasphase or a liquid-phase separation system and (iii) mass spectrometer(s) equipped with one or two detectors responding to the analytical and quantitative needs. This text reviews some of the techniques that have been employed in various types of plant metabolic studies, which may serve as a basis towards an integrative analytical strategy directly applicable to the metabolomics of selected marine macrophytes.


Carbohydrate Polymers | 2017

A review about brown algal cell walls and fucose-containing sulfated polysaccharides: Cell wall context, biomedical properties and key research challenges

Estelle Deniaud-Bouët; Kévin Hardouin; Philippe Potin; Bernard Kloareg; Cécile Hervé

Studies on brown algal cell walls have entered a new phase with the concomitant discovery of novel polysaccharides present in cell walls and the establishment of a comprehensive generic model for cell wall architecture. Brown algal cell walls are composites of structurally complex polysaccharides. In this review we discuss the most recent progress in the structural composition of brown algal cell walls, emphasizing the significance of extraction and screening techniques, and the biological activities of the corresponding polysaccharides, with a specific focus on the fucose-containing sulfated polysaccharides. They include valuable marine molecules that exert a broad range of pharmacological properties such as antioxidant and anti-inflammatory activities, functions in the regulation of immune responses and of haemostasis, anti-infectious and anticancer actions. We identify the key remaining challenges in this research field.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Constitutive or Inducible Protective Mechanisms against UV-B Radiation in the Brown Alga Fucus vesiculosus? A Study of Gene Expression and Phlorotannin Content Responses.

Emeline Creis; Ludovic Delage; Sophie Charton; Sophie Goulitquer; Catherine Leblanc; Philippe Potin; Erwan Ar Gall

A role as UV sunscreens has been suggested for phlorotannins, the phenolic compounds that accumulate in brown algae in response to a number of external stimuli and take part in cell wall structure. After exposure of the intertidal brown alga Fucus vesiculosus to artificial UV-B radiation, we examined its physiological responses by following the transcript level of the pksIII gene encoding a phloroglucinol synthase, likely to be involved in the first step of phlorotannins biosynthesis. We also monitored the expression of three targeted genes, encoding a heat shock protein (hsp70), which is involved in global stress responses, an aryl sulfotransferase (ast), which could be involved in the sulfation of phlorotannins, and a vanadium bromoperoxidase (vbpo), which can potentially participate in the scavenging of Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) and in the cross-linking and condensation of phlorotannins. We investigated whether transcriptional regulation of these genes is correlated with an induction of phlorotannin accumulation by establishing metabolite profiling of purified fractions of low molecular weight phlorotannins. Our findings demonstrated that a high dose of UV-B radiation induced a significant overexpression of hsp70 after 12 and 24 hours following the exposure to the UV-B treatment, compared to control treatment. The physiological performance of algae quantified by the photosynthetic efficiency (Fv/Fm) was slightly reduced. However UV-B treatment did not induce the accumulation of soluble phlorotannins in F. vesiculosus during the kinetics of four weeks, a result that may be related to the lack of induction of the pksIII gene expression. Taken together these results suggest a constitutive accumulation of phlorotannins occurring during the development of F.vesiculosus, rather than inducible processes. Gene expression studies and phlorotannin profiling provide here complementary approaches to global quantifications currently used in studies of phenolic compounds in brown algae.


New Phytologist | 2014

Kelps feature systemic defense responses: insights into the evolution of innate immunity in multicellular eukaryotes

François Thomas; Audrey Cosse; Sophie Le Panse; Bernard Kloareg; Philippe Potin; Catherine Leblanc

Brown algae are one of the few eukaryotic lineages that have evolved complex multicellularity, together with Opisthokonts (animals, fungi) and Plantae (land plants, green and red algae). In these three lineages, biotic stresses induce similar local defense reactions. Animals and land plants also feature a systemic immune response, protecting the whole organism after an attack on one of its parts. However, the occurrence of systemic defenses has never been investigated in brown algae. We elicited selected parts of the kelp Laminaria digitata and monitored distant, nonchallenged areas of the same individual for subsequent defense reactions. A systemic reaction was detected following elicitation on a distant area, including an oxidative response, an increase in haloperoxidase activities and a stronger resistance against herbivory. Based on experiments with pharmacological inhibitors, the liberation of free fatty acids is proposed to play a key role in systemic signaling, reminiscent of what is known in land plants. This study is the first report, outside the phyla of Opisthokonts and Plantae, of an intraorganism communication leading to defense reactions. These findings indicate that systemic immunity emerged independently at least three times, as a consequence of convergent evolution in multicellular eukaryotic lineages.


Advances in Botanical Research | 2012

The Ectocarpus Genome and Brown Algal Genomics: The Ectocarpus Genome Consortium

J. Mark Cock; Lieven Sterck; Sophia Ahmed; Andrew E. Allen; Grigoris D. Amoutzias; Véronique Anthouard; François Artiguenave; Alok Arun; Jean-Marc Aury; Jonathan H. Badger; Bank Beszteri; Kenny Billiau; Eric Bonnet; John H. Bothwell; Chris Bowler; Catherine Boyen; Colin Brownlee; Carl J. Carrano; Bénédicte Charrier; Ga Youn Cho; Susana M. Coelho; Jonas Collén; Gildas Le Corguillé; Erwan Corre; Laurence Dartevelle; Corinne Da Silva; Ludovic Delage; Nicolas Delaroque; Simon M. Dittami; Sylvie Doulbeau

Brown algae are important organisms both because of their key ecological roles in coastal ecosystems and because of the remarkable biological features that they have acquired during their unusual evolutionary history. The recent sequencing of the complete genome of the filamentous brown alga Ectocarpus has provided unprecedented access to the molecular processes that underlie brown algal biology. Analysis of the genome sequence, which exhibits several unusual structural features, identified genes that are predicted to play key roles in several aspects of brown algal metabolism, in the construction of the multicellular bodyplan and in resistance to biotic and abiotic stresses. Information from the genome sequence is currently being used in combination with other genomic, genetic and biochemical tools to further investigate these and other aspects of brown algal biology at the molecular level. Here, we review some of the major discoveries that emerged from the analysis of the Ectocarpus genome sequence, with a particular focus on the unusual genome structure, inferences about brown algal evolution and novel aspects of brown algal metabolism.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Herbivore-induced chemical and molecular responses of the kelps Laminaria digitata and Lessonia spicata

Andrés Ritter; Léa Cabioch; Loraine Brillet-Guéguen; Erwan Corre; Audrey Cosse; Laurence Dartevelle; Harold Duruflé; Carina Fasshauer; Sophie Goulitquer; François Thomas; Juan A. Correa; Philippe Potin; Sylvain Faugeron; Catherine Leblanc

Kelps are founding species of temperate marine ecosystems, living in intertidal coastal areas where they are often challenged by generalist and specialist herbivores. As most sessile organisms, kelps develop defensive strategies to restrain grazing damage and preserve their own fitness during interactions with herbivores. To decipher some inducible defense and signaling mechanisms, we carried out metabolome and transcriptome analyses in two emblematic kelp species, Lessonia spicata from South Pacific coasts and Laminaria digitata from North Atlantic, when challenged with their main specialist herbivores. Mass spectrometry based metabolomics revealed large metabolic changes induced in these two brown algae following challenges with their own specialist herbivores. Targeted metabolic profiling of L. spicata further showed that free fatty acid (FFA) and amino acid (AA) metabolisms were particularly regulated under grazing. An early stress response was illustrated by the accumulation of Sulphur containing amino acids in the first twelve hours of herbivory pressure. At latter time periods (after 24 hours), we observed FFA liberation and eicosanoid oxylipins synthesis likely representing metabolites related to stress. Global transcriptomic analysis identified sets of candidate genes specifically induced by grazing in both kelps. qPCR analysis of the top candidate genes during a 48-hours time course validated the results. Most of these genes were particularly activated by herbivore challenge after 24 hours, suggesting that transcriptional reprogramming could be operated at this time period. We demonstrated the potential utility of these genes as molecular markers for herbivory by measuring their inductions in grazed individuals of field harvested L. digitata and L. spicata. By unravelling the regulation of some metabolites and genes following grazing pressure in two kelps representative of the two hemispheres, this work contributes to provide a set of herbivore-induced chemical and molecular responses in kelp species, showing similar inducible responses upon specialist herbivores in their respective ecosystems.


Food Chemistry | 2018

Isoprostanoids quantitative profiling of marine red and brown macroalgae

Claire Vigor; Guillaume Réversat; Camille Oger; Jean-Marie Galano; Joseph Vercauteren; Thierry Durand; Thierry Tonon; Catherine Leblanc; Philippe Potin

With the increasing demand for direct human and animal consumption seaweed farming is rapidly expanding worldwide. Macroalgae have colonized aquatic environments in which they are submitted to frequent changes in biotic and abiotic factors that can trigger oxidative stress (OS). Considering that isoprostanoid derivatives may constitute the most relevant OS biomarkers, we were interested to establish their profile in two red and four brown macroalgae. Seven phytoprostanes, three phytofuranes, and four isoprostanes were quantified through a new micro-LC-MS/MS method. The isoprostanoid contents vary greatly among all the samples, the ent-16(RS)-9-epi-ST-Δ14-10-PhytoF and the sum of 5-F2t-IsoP and 5-epi-5F2t-IsoP being the major compounds for most of the macroalgae studied. We further quantified these isoprostanoids in macroalgae submitted to heavy metal (copper) exposure. In most of the cases, their concentrations increased after 24u202fh of copper stress corroborating the original hypothesis. One exception is the decrease of ent-9-L1-PhytoP content in L. digitata.


Potin, Philippe, Creis, Emeline, Delage, Ludovic, Meslet-Cladiere, Laurence, Vallet, Laurent, Gall, Erwan A., Kruse, Inken, Weinberger, Florian, Goulitquer, Sophie, Charton, Sophie and Leblanc, Catherine (2015) Expression of a PKSIII Gene and soluble phlorotannin synthesis in response to abiotic and biotic stresses in the brown alga Fucus Vesiculosus: constitutive versus inductive protection [Talk] In: 6. European Phycological Congress (EPC6), 23.-28.08.2015, London, UK. | 2015

Expression of a PKSIII Gene and soluble phlorotannin synthesis in response to abiotic and biotic stresses in the brown alga Fucus Vesiculosus: constitutive versus inductive protection

Philippe Potin; Emeline Creis; Ludovic Delage; Laurence Meslet-Cladiere; Laurent Vallet; Erwan Ar Gall; Inken Kruse; Florian Weinberger; Sophie Goulitquer; Sophie Charton; Catherine Leblanc

Station Biologique de Roscoff, Sorbonne Universités, Université Pierre et Marie Curie, CNRS, Roscoff 29688, France; Institut de Systématique, Evolution, Biodiversité, UMR 7205CNRS-EPHE-MNHN-UPMC, Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, Paris 75231, France; Station Biologique de Roscoff, CNRS, Sorbonne Universités, Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Roscoff 29688, France and Station Biologique de Roscoff, CNRS, Sorbonne Universités, Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Roscoff 29688, FranceEarly life-stage of the bladderwrack Fucus vesiculosus is highly influenced by the climate change factors temperature, CO2 and eutrophication. Intraspecific genetic diversity of Baltic Fucus vesiculosus populations is low, compared to e.g. Atlantic populations, which may limit their potential for adaptation. To nassess the role of intraspecific genetic diversity on the tolerance towards environmental change we manipulated their diversity: Plots with full-sibling Keynote and Oral Papers 106 Downloaded by [University of Kiel] at 02:13 22 September 2015 groups of Fucus germlings each originating from one parental pair represents the low diversity level, whereas plots with sibling groups from multiple parental pairs represent the high diversity level. Climate change was simulated according to the year 2100 in the near-natural scenario Kiel Benthocosms by maintaining the environmental fluctuations of the Baltic Sea and adding 5°C warming, 600 μatm pCO2 and doubling the nutrient concentrations. Germlings nresponded to warming with higher mortality and enhanced growth rates. High pCO2 concentrations nincreased growth due to a fertilisation effect. Nonphotochemical quenching was lower under warmed than ambient temperatures. A positive co-tolerance among sibling groups towards warming and acidification indicates the possible attenuation in presence of the multiple factors. Considerable differences among sibling group performance indicate a higher adaptive potential for genetically diverse populations. The high diversity levels also showed higher survival, indicating possible facilitation processes among genotypes. nMicrosatellite genotyping is in progress for revealing whether and how selection processes took place in high diversity levels. We conclude that impacts on early life-stage bladderwrack depend on the combination of stressors and season and that genetic variation nis crucial for local adaptation to climate change stress

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Bernard Kloareg

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jean-Claude Yvin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Laurence Meslet-Cladiere

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Ludovic Delage

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Tristan Barbeyron

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Ludovic Delage

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Erwan Ar Gall

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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