Valentin Guignon
Bioversity International
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Publication
Featured researches published by Valentin Guignon.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2008
Alexis Dereeper; Valentin Guignon; Guillaume Blanc; Stéphane Audic; S. Buffet; François Chevenet; Jean-François Dufayard; Stéphane Guindon; Vincent Lefort; Magali Lescot; Jean-Michel Claverie
Phylogenetic analyses are central to many research areas in biology and typically involve the identification of homologous sequences, their multiple alignment, the phylogenetic reconstruction and the graphical representation of the inferred tree. The Phylogeny.fr platform transparently chains programs to automatically perform these tasks. It is primarily designed for biologists with no experience in phylogeny, but can also meet the needs of specialists; the first ones will find up-to-date tools chained in a phylogeny pipeline to analyze their data in a simple and robust way, while the specialists will be able to easily build and run sophisticated analyses. Phylogeny.fr offers three main modes. The ‘One Click’ mode targets non-specialists and provides a ready-to-use pipeline chaining programs with recognized accuracy and speed: MUSCLE for multiple alignment, PhyML for tree building, and TreeDyn for tree rendering. All parameters are set up to suit most studies, and users only have to provide their input sequences to obtain a ready-to-print tree. The ‘Advanced’ mode uses the same pipeline but allows the parameters of each program to be customized by users. The ‘A la Carte’ mode offers more flexibility and sophistication, as users can build their own pipeline by selecting and setting up the required steps from a large choice of tools to suit their specific needs. Prior to phylogenetic analysis, users can also collect neighbors of a query sequence by running BLAST on general or specialized databases. A guide tree then helps to select neighbor sequences to be used as input for the phylogeny pipeline. Phylogeny.fr is available at: http://www.phylogeny.fr/
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.
Nature Genetics | 2011
Xavier Argout; Jérôme Salse; Jean-Marc Aury; Mark J. Guiltinan; Gaëtan Droc; Jérôme Gouzy; Mathilde Allègre; Cristian Chaparro; Thierry Legavre; Siela N. Maximova; Michael Abrouk; Florent Murat; Olivier Fouet; Julie Poulain; Manuel Ruiz; Yolande Roguet; Maguy Rodier-Goud; Jose Fernandes Barbosa-Neto; François Sabot; Dave Kudrna; Jetty S. S. Ammiraju; Stephan C. Schuster; John E. Carlson; Erika Sallet; Thomas Schiex; Anne Dievart; Melissa Kramer; Laura Gelley; Zi Shi; Aurélie Bérard
We sequenced and assembled the draft genome of Theobroma cacao, an economically important tropical-fruit tree crop that is the source of chocolate. This assembly corresponds to 76% of the estimated genome size and contains almost all previously described genes, with 82% of these genes anchored on the 10 T. cacao chromosomes. Analysis of this sequence information highlighted specific expansion of some gene families during evolution, for example, flavonoid-related genes. It also provides a major source of candidate genes for T. cacao improvement. Based on the inferred paleohistory of the T. cacao genome, we propose an evolutionary scenario whereby the ten T. cacao chromosomes were shaped from an ancestor through eleven chromosome fusions.
Science | 2014
Lorenzo Carretero-Paulet; Alexis Dereeper; Gaëtan Droc; Romain Guyot; Marco Pietrella; Chunfang Zheng; Adriana Alberti; François Anthony; Giuseppe Aprea; Jean-Marc Aury; Pascal Bento; Maria Bernard; Stéphanie Bocs; Claudine Campa; Alberto Cenci; Marie Christine Combes; Dominique Crouzillat; Corinne Da Silva; Loretta Daddiego; Fabien De Bellis; Stéphane Dussert; Olivier Garsmeur; Thomas Gayraud; Valentin Guignon; Katharina Jahn; Véronique Jamilloux; Thierry Joët; Karine Labadie; Tianying Lan; Julie Leclercq
Coffee, tea, and chocolate converge Caffeine has evolved multiple times among plant species, but no one knows whether these events involved similar genes. Denoeud et al. sequenced the Coffea canephora (coffee) genome and identified a conserved gene order (see the Perspective by Zamir). Although this species underwent fewer genome duplications than related species, the relevant caffeine genes experienced tandem duplications that expanded their numbers within this species. Scientists have seen similar but independent expansions in distantly related species of tea and cacao, suggesting that caffeine might have played an adaptive role in coffee evolution. Science, this issue p. 1181; see also p. 1124 The genetic origins of coffee’s constituents reveal intriguing links to cacao and tea. Coffee is a valuable beverage crop due to its characteristic flavor, aroma, and the stimulating effects of caffeine. We generated a high-quality draft genome of the species Coffea canephora, which displays a conserved chromosomal gene order among asterid angiosperms. Although it shows no sign of the whole-genome triplication identified in Solanaceae species such as tomato, the genome includes several species-specific gene family expansions, among them N-methyltransferases (NMTs) involved in caffeine production, defense-related genes, and alkaloid and flavonoid enzymes involved in secondary compound synthesis. Comparative analyses of caffeine NMTs demonstrate that these genes expanded through sequential tandem duplications independently of genes from cacao and tea, suggesting that caffeine in eudicots is of polyphyletic origin.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2011
Mathieu Rouard; Valentin Guignon; Christelle Aluome; Marie-Angélique Laporte; Gaëtan Droc; Christian Walde; Christian M. Zmasek; Christophe Périn; Matthieu Conte
GreenPhylDB is a database designed for comparative and functional genomics based on complete genomes. Version 2 now contains sixteen full genomes of members of the plantae kingdom, ranging from algae to angiosperms, automatically clustered into gene families. Gene families are manually annotated and then analyzed phylogenetically in order to elucidate orthologous and paralogous relationships. The database offers various lists of gene families including plant, phylum and species specific gene families. For each gene cluster or gene family, easy access to gene composition, protein domains, publications, external links and orthologous gene predictions is provided. Web interfaces have been further developed to improve the navigation through information related to gene families. New analysis tools are also available, such as a gene family ontology browser that facilitates exploration. GreenPhylDB is a component of the South Green Bioinformatics Platform (http://southgreen.cirad.fr/) and is accessible at http://greenphyl.cirad.fr. It enables comparative genomics in a broad taxonomy context to enhance the understanding of evolutionary processes and thus tends to speed up gene discovery.
Database | 2013
Gaëtan Droc; Delphine Larivière; Valentin Guignon; Nabila Yahiaoui; Dominique This; Olivier Garsmeur; Alexis Dereeper; Chantal Hamelin; Xavier Argout; Jean-François Dufayard; Juliette Lengellé; Franc-Christophe Baurens; Alberto Cenci; Bertrand Pitollat; Angélique D’Hont; Manuel Ruiz; Mathieu Rouard; Stéphanie Bocs
Banana is one of the world’s favorite fruits and one of the most important crops for developing countries. The banana reference genome sequence (Musa acuminata) was recently released. Given the taxonomic position of Musa, the completed genomic sequence has particular comparative value to provide fresh insights about the evolution of the monocotyledons. The study of the banana genome has been enhanced by a number of tools and resources that allows harnessing its sequence. First, we set up essential tools such as a Community Annotation System, phylogenomics resources and metabolic pathways. Then, to support post-genomic efforts, we improved banana existing systems (e.g. web front end, query builder), we integrated available Musa data into generic systems (e.g. markers and genetic maps, synteny blocks), we have made interoperable with the banana hub, other existing systems containing Musa data (e.g. transcriptomics, rice reference genome, workflow manager) and finally, we generated new results from sequence analyses (e.g. SNP and polymorphism analysis). Several uses cases illustrate how the Banana Genome Hub can be used to study gene families. Overall, with this collaborative effort, we discuss the importance of the interoperability toward data integration between existing information systems. Database URL: http://banana-genome.cirad.fr/
Plant Molecular Biology | 2014
Albero Cenci; Valentin Guignon; Nicolas Roux; Mathieu Rouard
Identifying the molecular mechanisms underlying tolerance to abiotic stresses is important in crop breeding. A comprehensive understanding of the gene families associated with drought tolerance is therefore highly relevant. NAC transcription factors form a large plant-specific gene family involved in the regulation of tissue development and responses to biotic and abiotic stresses. The main goal of this study was to set up a framework of orthologous groups determined by an expert sequence comparison of NAC genes from both monocots and dicots. In order to clarify the orthologous relationships among NAC genes of different species, we performed an in-depth comparative study of four divergent taxa, in dicots and monocots, whose genomes have already been completely sequenced: Arabidopsis thaliana, Vitis vinifera, Musa acuminata and Oryza sativa. Due to independent evolution, NAC copy number is highly variable in these plant genomes. Based on an expert NAC sequence comparison, we propose forty orthologous groups of NAC sequences that were probably derived from an ancestor gene present in the most recent common ancestor of dicots and monocots. These orthologous groups provide a curated resource for large-scale protein sequence annotation of NAC transcription factors. The established orthology relationships also provide a useful reference for NAC function studies in newly sequenced genomes such as M. acuminata and other plant species.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2015
Alexis Dereeper; Stéphanie Bocs; Mathieu Rouard; Valentin Guignon; Sébastien Ravel; Christine Tranchant-Dubreuil; Valérie Poncet; Olivier Garsmeur; Philippe Lashermes; Gaëtan Droc
The whole genome sequence of Coffea canephora, the perennial diploid species known as Robusta, has been recently released. In the context of the C. canephora genome sequencing project and to support post-genomics efforts, we developed the Coffee Genome Hub (http://coffee-genome.org/), an integrative genome information system that allows centralized access to genomics and genetics data and analysis tools to facilitate translational and applied research in coffee. We provide the complete genome sequence of C. canephora along with gene structure, gene product information, metabolism, gene families, transcriptomics, syntenic blocks, genetic markers and genetic maps. The hub relies on generic software (e.g. GMOD tools) for easy querying, visualizing and downloading research data. It includes a Genome Browser enhanced by a Community Annotation System, enabling the improvement of automatic gene annotation through an annotation editor. In addition, the hub aims at developing interoperability among other existing South Green tools managing coffee data (phylogenomics resources, SNPs) and/or supporting data analyses with the Galaxy workflow manager.
string processing and information retrieval | 2005
Valentin Guignon; Cedric Chauve; Sylvie Hamel
We introduce the notion of conservative edit distance and mapping between two RNA stem-loops. We show that unlike the general edit distance between RNA secondary structures, the conservative edit distance can be computed in polynomial time and space, and we describe an algorithm for this problem. We show how this algorithm can be used in the more general problem of complete RNA secondary structures comparison.
Database | 2017
M. Ruas; Valentin Guignon; G. Sempere; Julie Sardos; Y. Hueber; H. Duvergey; A. Andrieu; R. Chase; C. Jenny; T. Hazekamp; B. Irish; K. Jelali; J. Adeka; T. Ayala-Silva; C.P. Chao; J. Daniells; B. Dowiya; B. Effa effa; L. Gueco; L. Herradura; L. Ibobondji; E. Kempenaers; J. Kilangi; S. Muhangi; P. Ngo Xuan; J. Paofa; C. Pavis; D. Thiemele; C. Tossou; J. Sandoval
Abstract Unraveling the genetic diversity held in genebanks on a large scale is underway, due to advances in Next-generation sequence (NGS) based technologies that produce high-density genetic markers for a large number of samples at low cost. Genebank users should be in a position to identify and select germplasm from the global genepool based on a combination of passport, genotypic and phenotypic data. To facilitate this, a new generation of information systems is being designed to efficiently handle data and link it with other external resources such as genome or breeding databases. The Musa Germplasm Information System (MGIS), the database for global ex situ-held banana genetic resources, has been developed to address those needs in a user-friendly way. In developing MGIS, we selected a generic database schema (Chado), the robust content management system Drupal for the user interface, and Tripal, a set of Drupal modules which links the Chado schema to Drupal. MGIS allows germplasm collection examination, accession browsing, advanced search functions, and germplasm orders. Additionally, we developed unique graphical interfaces to compare accessions and to explore them based on their taxonomic information. Accession-based data has been enriched with publications, genotyping studies and associated genotyping datasets reporting on germplasm use. Finally, an interoperability layer has been implemented to facilitate the link with complementary databases like the Banana Genome Hub and the MusaBase breeding database. Database URL: https://www.crop-diversity.org/mgis/
Collaboration
Dive into the Valentin Guignon's collaboration.
Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement
View shared research outputsCentre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement
View shared research outputsCentre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement
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