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Dive into the research topics where Quentin Thommen is active.

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Featured researches published by Quentin Thommen.


PLOS Computational Biology | 2010

Robustness of circadian clocks to daylight fluctuations: hints from the picoeucaryote Ostreococcus tauri.

Quentin Thommen; Benjamin Pfeuty; Pierre-Emmanuel Morant; Florence Corellou; François-Yves Bouget; Marc Lefranc

The development of systemic approaches in biology has put emphasis on identifying genetic modules whose behavior can be modeled accurately so as to gain insight into their structure and function. However, most gene circuits in a cell are under control of external signals and thus, quantitative agreement between experimental data and a mathematical model is difficult. Circadian biology has been one notable exception: quantitative models of the internal clock that orchestrates biological processes over the 24-hour diurnal cycle have been constructed for a few organisms, from cyanobacteria to plants and mammals. In most cases, a complex architecture with interlocked feedback loops has been evidenced. Here we present the first modeling results for the circadian clock of the green unicellular alga Ostreococcus tauri. Two plant-like clock genes have been shown to play a central role in the Ostreococcus clock. We find that their expression time profiles can be accurately reproduced by a minimal model of a two-gene transcriptional feedback loop. Remarkably, best adjustment of data recorded under light/dark alternation is obtained when assuming that the oscillator is not coupled to the diurnal cycle. This suggests that coupling to light is confined to specific time intervals and has no dynamical effect when the oscillator is entrained by the diurnal cycle. This intringuing property may reflect a strategy to minimize the impact of fluctuations in daylight intensity on the core circadian oscillator, a type of perturbation that has been rarely considered when assessing the robustness of circadian clocks.


Biophysical Journal | 2011

Robust entrainment of circadian oscillators requires specific phase response curves.

Benjamin Pfeuty; Quentin Thommen; Marc Lefranc

The circadian clocks keeping time in many living organisms rely on self-sustained biochemical oscillations entrained by external cues, such as light, to the 24-h cycle induced by Earths rotation. However, environmental cues are unreliable due to the variability of habitats, weather conditions, or cue-sensing mechanisms among individuals. A tempting hypothesis is that circadian clocks have evolved so as to be robust to fluctuations in the signal that entrains them. To support this hypothesis, we analyze the synchronization behavior of weakly and periodically forced oscillators in terms of their phase response curve (PRC), which measures phase changes induced by a perturbation applied at different times of the cycle. We establish a general relationship between the robustness of key entrainment properties, such as stability and oscillator phase, on the one hand, and the shape of the PRC as characterized by a specific curvature or the existence of a dead zone, on the other hand. The criteria obtained are applied to computational models of circadian clocks and account for the disparate robustness properties of various forcing schemes. Finally, the analysis of PRCs measured experimentally in several organisms strongly suggests a case of convergent evolution toward an optimal strategy for maintaining a clock that is accurate and robust to environmental fluctuations.


Chaos | 2010

A robust two-gene oscillator at the core of Ostreococcus tauri circadian clock

Pierre-Emmanuel Morant; Quentin Thommen; Benjamin Pfeuty; Constant Vandermoëre; Florence Corellou; François-Yves Bouget; Marc Lefranc

The microscopic green alga Ostreococcus tauri is rapidly emerging as a promising model organism in the green lineage. In particular, recent results by Corellou et al. [Plant Cell 21, 3436 (2009)] and Thommen et al. [PLOS Comput. Biol. 6, e1000990 (2010)] strongly suggest that its circadian clock is a simplified version of Arabidopsis thaliana clock, and that it is architectured so as to be robust to natural daylight fluctuations. In this work, we analyze the time series data from luminescent reporters for the two central clock genes TOC1 and CCA1 and correlate them with microarray data previously analyzed. Our mathematical analysis strongly supports both the existence of a simple two-gene oscillator at the core of Ostreococcus tauri clock and the fact that its dynamics is not affected by light in normal entrainment conditions, a signature of its robustness.


Physical Review Letters | 2009

Oscillations in the expression of a self-repressed gene induced by a slow transcriptional dynamics

Pierre-Emmanuel Morant; Quentin Thommen; François Lemaire; Constant Vandermoëre; Benjamin Parent; Marc Lefranc

We revisit the dynamics of a gene repressed by its own protein in the case where the transcription rate does not adapt instantaneously to protein concentration but is a dynamical variable. We derive analytical criteria for the appearance of sustained oscillations and find that they require degradation mechanisms much less nonlinear than for infinitely fast regulation. Deterministic predictions are confirmed by stochastic simulations of this minimal genetic oscillator.


FEBS Journal | 2012

Robust and flexible response of the Ostreococcus tauri circadian clock to light/dark cycles of varying photoperiod

Quentin Thommen; Benjamin Pfeuty; Florence Corellou; François-Yves Bouget; Marc Lefranc

The green microscopic alga Ostreococcus tauri has recently emerged as a promising model for understanding how circadian clocks, which drive the daily biological rhythms of many organisms, synchronize to the day/night cycle in changing weather and seasons. Here, we analyze translational reporter time series data for the central clock genes CCA1 and TOC1 for a wide range of daylight durations (photoperiods). The variation of temporal expression profiles with day duration is complex, with the two protein peaks tracking different times of the day. Nevertheless, all profiles are accurately reproduced by a simple two‐gene transcriptional loop model whose parameters depend on light only through the photoperiod value. We show that this non‐intuitive behavior allows the circadian clock to combine flexibility and robustness with respect to daylight fluctuations.


BioEssays | 2012

Circadian clocks in changing weather and seasons: lessons from the picoalga Ostreococcus tauri.

Benjamin Pfeuty; Quentin Thommen; Florence Corellou; El Batoul Djouani-Tahri; François-Yves Bouget; Marc Lefranc

Daylight is the primary cue used by circadian clocks to entrain to the day/night cycle so as to synchronize physiological processes with periodic environmental changes induced by Earth rotation.


Physical Review A | 2002

Theoretical analysis of quantum dynamics in one-dimensional lattices: Wannier-Stark description

Quentin Thommen; Jean Claude Garreau; Véronique Zehnlé

This paper presents a formalism describing the dynamics of a quantum particle in a one-dimensional, tilted, time-dependent lattice. The description uses the Wannier-Stark states, which are localized in each site of the lattice, and provides a simple framework leading to fully analytical developments. Particular attention is devoted to the case of a time-dependent potential, which results in a rich variety of quantum coherent dynamics.


Frontiers in Genetics | 2015

Probing entrainment of Ostreococcus tauri circadian clock by green and blue light through a mathematical modeling approach

Quentin Thommen; Benjamin Pfeuty; Philippe Schatt; Amandine Bijoux; François-Yves Bouget; Marc Lefranc

Most organisms anticipate daily environmental variations and orchestrate cellular functions thanks to a circadian clock which entrains robustly to the day/night cycle, despite fluctuations in light intensity due to weather or seasonal variations. Marine organisms are also subjected to fluctuations in light spectral composition as their depth varies, due to differential absorption of different wavelengths by sea water. Studying how light input pathways contribute to circadian clock robustness is therefore important. Ostreococcus tauri, a unicellular picoplanktonic marine green alga with low genomic complexity and simple cellular organization, has become a promising model organism for systems biology. Functional and modeling approaches have shown that a core circadian oscillator based on orthologs of Arabidopsis TOC1 and CCA1 clock genes accounts for most experimental data acquired under a wide range of conditions. Some evidence points at putative light input pathway(s) consisting of a two-component signaling system (TCS) controlled by the only two histidine kinases (HK) of O. tauri. LOV-HK is a blue light photoreceptor under circadian control, that is required for circadian clock function. An involvement of Rhodopsin-HK (Rhod-HK) is also conceivable since rhodopsin photoreceptors mediate blue to green light input in animal circadian clocks. Here, we probe the role of LOV-HK and Rhod-HK in mediating light input to the TOC1-CCA1 oscillator using a mathematical model incorporating the TCS hypothesis. This model agrees with clock gene expression time series representative of multiple environmental conditions in blue or green light, characterizing entrainment by light/dark cycles, free-running in constant light, and resetting. Experimental and theoretical results indicate that both blue and green light can reset O. tauri circadian clock. Moreover, our mathematical analysis suggests that Rhod-HK is a blue-green light receptor and drives the clock together with LOV-HK.


Physical Review E | 2014

Minimal model of transcriptional elongation processes with pauses.

Jingkui Wang; Benjamin Pfeuty; Quentin Thommen; M. Carmen Romano; Marc Lefranc

Fundamental biological processes such as transcription and translation, where a genetic sequence is sequentially read by a macromolecule, have been well described by a classical model of nonequilibrium statistical physics, the totally asymmetric exclusion principle (TASEP). This model describes particles hopping between sites of a one-dimensional lattice, with the particle current determining the transcription or translation rate. An open problem is how to analyze a TASEP where particles can pause randomly, as has been observed during transcription. In this work, we report that surprisingly, a simple mean-field model predicts well the particle current for all values of the average pause duration, using a simple description of blocking behind paused particles.


Journal of Optics B-quantum and Semiclassical Optics | 2004

Atomic motion in tilted optical lattices: an analytical approach

Quentin Thommen; Jean Claude Garreau; Véronique Zehnlé

This paper presents general results concerning the quantum dynamics in a tilted, time-modulated, one-dimensional, optical lattice. A dynamic equation describing the atomic motion is analytically solved, and the solution used to characterize the corresponding dynamics through the spatial mean position and dispersion of the wavepacket. The analysis of such quantities gives a quite complete picture of the quantum dynamics, and provides evidence for the central role of the quantum coherence.

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Jean Claude Garreau

Lille University of Science and Technology

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Benjamin Pfeuty

Lille University of Science and Technology

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Jingkui Wang

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Philippe Schatt

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Amandine Bijoux

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Florence Corellou

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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