Catalogue Search | MBRL
Search Results Heading
Explore the vast range of titles available.
MBRLSearchResults
-
DisciplineDiscipline
-
Is Peer ReviewedIs Peer Reviewed
-
Item TypeItem Type
-
SubjectSubject
-
YearFrom:-To:
-
More FiltersMore FiltersSourceLanguage
Done
Filters
Reset
49
result(s) for
"Gompel, Nicolas"
Sort by:
A bird's inner stripes
2018
Patterns of stripes on bird plumage are determined from deep under the skin How do the periodic patterns of colored stripes that decorate so many birds and mammals form? These patterns are the object of aesthetic fascination and the focus of endless debate about the mechanisms that generate them or diversify them. Theoreticians show that the most complex of regular patterns can be reproduced in silico using Turing-like reaction-diffusion mechanisms, whereby the concentrations and diffusing properties of an activator and an inhibitor regulate their interactions and thus determine the final periodic pattern ( 1 ). By contrast, experimental data indicate that self-organizing processes relying on interactions between skin cells establish striped patterns ( 2 , 3 ). On page 1216 of this issue, Haupaix et al. ( 4 ) address this question from a different perspective, by examining the contribution of embryonic structures that could act as instructive, spatial landmarks to guide the formation of alternating yellow and black stripes on the back of chicks of quails, pheasants, partridges, and their relatives (galliform birds). They show that an early developmental signal from under the skin dictates the position of stripes and therefore periodic patterns. This provides a new framework within which to understand the rich diversity of verterbrate coat decoration.
Journal Article
Ionotropic Chemosensory Receptors Mediate the Taste and Smell of Polyamines
by
Üçpunar, Habibe K.
,
Gompel, Nicolas
,
Quillery, Elsa
in
Aedes - physiology
,
Aging
,
Animal Feed
2016
The ability to find and consume nutrient-rich diets for successful reproduction and survival is fundamental to animal life. Among the nutrients important for all animals are polyamines, a class of pungent smelling compounds required in numerous cellular and organismic processes. Polyamine deficiency or excess has detrimental effects on health, cognitive function, reproduction, and lifespan. Here, we show that a diet high in polyamine is beneficial and increases reproductive success of flies, and we unravel the sensory mechanisms that attract Drosophila to polyamine-rich food and egg-laying substrates. Using a combination of behavioral genetics and in vivo calcium imaging, we demonstrate that Drosophila uses multisensory detection to find and evaluate polyamines present in overripe and fermenting fruit, their favored feeding and egg-laying substrate. In the olfactory system, two coexpressed ionotropic receptors (IRs), IR76b and IR41a, mediate the long-range attraction to the odor. In the gustatory system, multimodal taste sensation by IR76b receptor and GR66a bitter receptor neurons is used to evaluate quality and valence of the polyamine providing a mechanism for the fly's high attraction to polyamine-rich and sweet decaying fruit. Given their universal and highly conserved biological roles, we propose that the ability to evaluate food for polyamine content may impact health and reproductive success also of other animals including humans.
Journal Article
Emerging principles of regulatory evolution
by
Prud'homme, Benjamin
,
Gompel, Nicolas
,
Carroll, Sean B
in
Animal morphology
,
Animals
,
Biological Evolution
2007
Understanding the genetic and molecular mechanisms governing the evolution of morphology is a major challenge in biology. Because most animals share a conserved repertoire of body-building and -patterning genes, morphological diversity appears to evolve primarily through changes in the deployment of these genes during development. The complex expression patterns of developmentally regulated genes are typically controlled by numerous independent cis-regulatory elements (CREs). It has been proposed that morphological evolution relies predominantly on changes in the architecture of gene regulatory networks and in particular on functional changes within CREs. Here, we discuss recent experimental studies that support this hypothesis and reveal some unanticipated features of how regulatory evolution occurs. From this growing body of evidence, we identify three key operating principles underlying regulatory evolution, that is, how regulatory evolution: (i) uses available genetic components in the form of preexisting and active transcription factors and CREs to generate novelty; (ii) minimizes the penalty to overall fitness by introducing discrete changes in gene expression; and (iii) allows interactions to arise among any transcription factor and downstream CRE. These principles endow regulatory evolution with a vast creative potential that accounts for both relatively modest morphological differences among closely related species and more profound anatomical divergences among groups at higher taxonomical levels.
Journal Article
Odor-regulated oviposition behavior in an ecological specialist
2023
Colonization of a novel ecological niche can require, or be driven by, evolution of an animal’s behaviors promoting their reproductive success. We investigated the evolution and sensory basis of oviposition in
Drosophila sechellia
, a close relative of
Drosophila melanogaster
that exhibits extreme specialism for
Morinda citrifolia
noni fruit.
D. sechellia
produces fewer eggs than other drosophilids and lays these almost exclusively on noni substrates. We show that visual, textural and social cues do not explain this species-specific preference. By contrast, we find that loss of olfactory input in
D. sechellia
, but not
D. melanogaster
, essentially abolishes egg-laying, suggesting that olfaction gates gustatory-driven noni preference. Noni odors are detected by redundant olfactory pathways, but we discover a role for hexanoic acid and the cognate Ionotropic receptor 75b (Ir75b) in odor-evoked oviposition. Through receptor exchange in
D. melanogaster
, we provide evidence for a causal contribution of odor-tuning changes in Ir75b to the evolution of
D. sechellia
’s oviposition behavior.
There is much interest in how animals adapt behaviorally to their ecological niche. Here, the authors demonstrate a role for olfaction in the oviposition preference of the noni fruit specialist
Drosophila sechellia
, and evidence for an important contribution of Ir75b, a receptor for the noni odor hexanoic acid.
Journal Article
The TRP-channel painless mediates substrate stiffness sensing in the legs during Drosophila oviposition
by
Dinges, Gesa F.
,
Pierzchlińska, Anna
,
Gompel, Nicolas
in
Animals
,
Biology and Life Sciences
,
Drosophila melanogaster - genetics
2025
The distinct textural properties of fruits in varying stages of ripening present unique ecological opportunities for several species of fruit flies, resulting, over evolutionary times, in specialized egg-laying behaviors. In this study we identified a TrpA channel-dependent mechanosensory pathway in the legs, through the gene painless, that modulates the discernment of softer patches for oviposition in gravid D. melanogaster females. We report that the stiffness-sensing role of tarsi is mediated through external sensory organs, namely ventral mechanosensory bristles and subsets of campaniform sensilla present primarily at the joints between tarsomeres. Our findings provide new evidence that campaniform sensilla function as indirect stiffness sensors of oviposition substrates, owing to their placement at joints that experience maximal cuticular distortion. We show that Painless is expressed in mechanosensory neurons innervating peripheral organs and is necessary for their functions in mediating oviposition substrate selection in gravid females. Furthermore, we observed that overexpression of painless in both campaniform sensilla and mechanosensory bristles partially rescues preference for the softer substrates in painless mutants, indicating that painless activity in these organs is necessary to mediate the preference. We propose that different interactions with a soft vs. a hard substrate (compression of the cuticle, distribution of contacts) results in differential mechanotransduction in painless -expressing neurons, determining oviposition preferences.
Journal Article
Emergence and Diversification of Fly Pigmentation Through Evolution of a Gene Regulatory Module
by
Gompel, Nicolas
,
Manoel, Diogo
,
Arnoult, Laurent
in
Animals
,
Binding Sites
,
Biological Evolution
2013
The typical pattern of morphological evolution associated with the radiation of a group of related species is the emergence of a novel trait and its subsequent diversification. Yet the genetic mechanisms associated with these two evolutionary steps are poorly characterized. Here, we show that a spot of dark pigment on fly wings emerged from the assembly of a novel gene regulatory module in which a set of pigmentation genes evolved to respond to a common transcriptional regulator determining their spatial distribution. The primitive wing spot pattern subsequently diversified through changes in the expression pattern of this regulator. These results suggest that the genetic changes underlying the emergence and diversification of wing pigmentation patterns are partitioned within genetic networks.
Journal Article
Near-chromosome level genome assembly of the fruit pest Drosophila suzukii using long-read sequencing
by
Gautier, Mathieu
,
Cagnon, Mathilde
,
Ludwig Maximilian University [Munich] = Ludwig Maximilians Universität München (LMU)
in
631/158/2178
,
631/158/2464
,
631/208/720
2020
Over the past decade, the spotted wing Drosophila, Drosophila suzukii, has invaded Europe and America and has become a major agricultural pest in these areas, thereby prompting intense research activities to better understand its biology. Two draft genome assemblies already exist for this species but contain pervasive assembly errors and are highly fragmented, which limits their values. Our purpose here was to improve the assembly of the D. suzukii genome and to annotate it in a way that facilitates comparisons with D. melanogaster. For this, we generated PacBio long-read sequencing data and assembled a novel, high-quality D. suzukii genome assembly. It is one of the largest Drosophila genomes, notably because of the expansion of its repeatome. We found that despite 16 rounds of full-sib crossings the D. suzukii strain that we sequenced has maintained high levels of polymorphism in some regions of its genome. As a consequence, the quality of the assembly of these regions was reduced. We explored possible origins of this high residual diversity, including the presence of structural variants and a possible heterogeneous admixture pattern of North American and Asian ancestry. Overall, our assembly and annotation constitute a high-quality genomic resource that can be used for both high-throughput sequencing approaches, as well as manipulative genetic technologies to study D. suzukii.
Journal Article
A strawberry accession with elevated methyl anthranilate fruit concentration is naturally resistant to the pest fly Drosophila suzukii
by
Ulrich, Detlef
,
Ainsworth, Julia
,
Parniske, Martin
in
Agricultural production
,
Berries
,
Biological control
2020
During the past decade, Drosophila suzukii has established itself as a global invasive fruit pest, enabled by its ability to lay eggs into fresh, ripening fruit. In a previous study, we investigated the impact of different strawberry accessions on the development of D. suzukii eggs, in the search of natural resistance. We identified several accessions that significantly reduced adult fly emergence from infested fruit. In the present study, we aimed at understanding the chemical basis of this effect. We first noted that one of the more resistant accessions showed an unusual enrichment of methyl anthranilate within its fruit, prompting us to investigate this fruit compound as a possible cause limiting fly development. We found that methyl anthranilate alone triggers embryo lethality in a concentration-dependent manner, unlike another comparable organic fruit compound. We also showed that a chemical fraction of the resistant strawberry accession that contains methyl anthranilate carries some activity toward the egg hatching rate. Surprisingly, in spite of the lethal effect of this compound to their eggs, adult females are not only attracted to methyl anthranilate at certain concentrations, but they also display a concentration-dependent preference to lay on substrates enriched in methyl anthranilate. This study demonstrates that methyl anthranilate is a potent agonist molecule against D. suzukii egg development. Its elevated concentration in a specific strawberry accession proven to reduce the fly development may explain, at least in part the fruit resistance. It further illustrates how a single, natural compound, non-toxic to humans could be exploited for biological control of a pest species.
Journal Article
Chance caught on the wing: cis-regulatory evolution and the origin of pigment patterns in Drosophila
2005
The gain, loss or modification of morphological traits is generally associated with changes in gene regulation during development. However, the molecular bases underlying these evolutionary changes have remained elusive. Here we identify one of the molecular mechanisms that contributes to the evolutionary gain of a male-specific wing pigmentation spot in Drosophila biarmipes, a species closely related to Drosophila melanogaster. We show that the evolution of this spot involved modifications of an ancestral cis-regulatory element of the yellow pigmentation gene. This element has gained multiple binding sites for transcription factors that are deeply conserved components of the regulatory landscape controlling wing development, including the selector protein Engrailed. The evolutionary stability of components of regulatory landscapes, which can be co-opted by chance mutations in cis-regulatory elements, might explain the repeated evolution of similar morphological patterns, such as wing pigmentation patterns in flies.
Journal Article
Inhibition of oxidative stress in cholinergic projection neurons fully rescues aging-associated olfactory circuit degeneration in Drosophila
by
Blais, Catherine-Marie
,
Loschek, Laura F
,
Friedrich, Anja B
in
ageing
,
Aging
,
Alzheimer's disease
2018
Loss of the sense of smell is among the first signs of natural aging and neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s. Cellular and molecular mechanisms promoting this smell loss are not understood. Here, we show that Drosophila melanogaster also loses olfaction before vision with age. Within the olfactory circuit, cholinergic projection neurons show a reduced odor response accompanied by a defect in axonal integrity and reduction in synaptic marker proteins. Using behavioral functional screening, we pinpoint that expression of the mitochondrial reactive oxygen scavenger SOD2 in cholinergic projection neurons is necessary and sufficient to prevent smell degeneration in aging flies. Together, our data suggest that oxidative stress induced axonal degeneration in a single class of neurons drives the functional decline of an entire neural network and the behavior it controls. Given the important role of the cholinergic system in neurodegeneration, the fly olfactory system could be a useful model for the identification of drug targets.
Journal Article