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result(s) for
"Poulet, Axel"
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Bioinformatics Analysis of Phylogeny and Transcription of TAA/YUC Auxin Biosynthetic Genes
by
Kriechbaumer, Verena
,
Poulet, Axel
in
Arabidopsis - enzymology
,
Arabidopsis - genetics
,
Arabidopsis - metabolism
2017
Auxin is a main plant growth hormone crucial in a multitude of developmental processes in plants. Auxin biosynthesis via the tryptophan aminotransferase of arabidopsis (TAA)/YUCCA (YUC) route involving tryptophan aminotransferases and YUC flavin-dependent monooxygenases that produce the auxin indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) from tryptophan is currently the most researched auxin biosynthetic pathway. Previous data showed that, in maize and arabidopsis, TAA/YUC-dependent auxin biosynthesis can be detected in endoplasmic reticulum (ER) microsomal fractions, and a subset of auxin biosynthetic proteins are localized to the ER, mainly due to transmembrane domains (TMD). The phylogeny presented here for TAA/TAR (tryptophan aminotransferase related) and YUC proteins analyses phylogenetic groups as well as transmembrane domains for ER-membrane localisation. In addition, RNAseq datasets are analysed for transcript abundance of YUC and TAA/TAR proteins in Arabidopsis thaliana. We show that ER membrane localisation for TAA/YUC proteins involved in auxin biosynthesis is already present early on in the evolution of mosses and club mosses. ER membrane anchored YUC proteins can mainly be found in roots, while cytosolic proteins are more abundant in the shoot. The distribution between the different phylogenetic classes in root and shoot may well originate from gene duplications, and the phylogenetic groups detected also overlap with the biological function.
Journal Article
Evolution and Diversity of the Microviridae Viral Family through a Collection of 81 New Complete Genomes Assembled from Virome Reads
by
Krupovic, Mart
,
Debroas, Didier
,
Poulet, Axel
in
Bacteroidetes
,
Base Sequence
,
Biodiversity and Ecology
2012
Recent studies suggest that members of the Microviridae (a family of ssDNA bacteriophages) might play an important role in a broad spectrum of environments, as they were found in great number among the viral fraction from seawater and human gut samples. 24 completely sequenced Microviridae have been described so far, divided into three distinct groups named Microvirus, Gokushovirinae and Alpavirinae, this last group being only composed of prophages. In this study, we present the analysis of 81 new complete Microviridae genomes, assembled from viral metagenomes originating from various ecosystems. The phylogenetic analysis of the core genes highlights the existence of four groups, confirming the three sub-families described so far and exhibiting a new group, named Pichovirinae. The genomic organizations of these viruses are strikingly coherent with their phylogeny, the Pichovirinae being the only group of this family with a different organization of the three core genes. Analysis of the structure of the major capsid protein reveals the presence of mushroom-like insertions conserved within all the groups except for the microviruses. In addition, a peptidase gene was found in 10 Microviridae and its analysis indicates a horizontal gene transfer that occurred several times between these viruses and their bacterial hosts. This is the first report of such gene transfer in Microviridae. Finally, searches against viral metagenomes revealed the presence of highly similar sequences in a variety of biomes indicating that Microviridae probably have both an important role in these ecosystems and an ancient origin.
Journal Article
TONSOKU prevents the formation of large tandem duplications and restrains ATR–WEE1 checkpoint activation
2026
Copy number variation (CNV) plays a fundamental role in modulating plant agronomic traits and tumorigenesis in animals. While frequently linked to replication stress, the mechanisms giving rise to CNVs are not fully elucidated. Here we characterize the mutational consequences associated with losing the conserved TONSOKU (TSK/TONSL) pathway (CAF-1-H3.1-TSK), which is required to resolve impaired DNA replication forks. Using
Arabidopsis thaliana
, we demonstrate that
tsk
mutants rapidly accumulate large, heritable tandem duplications within their genomes that are consistent with DNA Polymerase θ (Pol θ) activity. These duplications are associated with late replicating heterochromatin enriched in sources of replication stress. We also show that stochastic developmental phenotypes in
tsk
plants are the result of the DNA Damage Response (DDR), with phenotype suppression occurring when ATR–WEE1 checkpoint signaling is removed. We thus describe a previously uncharacterized source of large tandem duplications that are relevant to understanding genome stability in diverse eukaryotes, and in disease contexts.
Large tandem duplications arise in Arabidopsis genomes in the absence of the DNA repair protein TONSOKU. This is linked to the activity of Pol θ and sites of late-replicating heterochromatin. This genome instability causes developmental defects dependent on the ATR-WEE1 axis of the DNA damage response.
Journal Article
Medicago Mting1 Mting2 double knockout mutants are extremely dwarfed and never flower implicating essential MtING functions in growth and flowering
by
Peng, Yongyan
,
Zhang, Lulu
,
Poulet, Axel
in
Agricultural production
,
agricultural productivity
,
Agriculture
2025
Background
Optimal flowering time is critical to agricultural productivity. Despite this, flowering regulation in the Fabaceae (legume) family is not fully understood. For example, FLC and CO control Arabidopsis flowering, but do not regulate flowering in the temperate legume
Medicago
. Little is known about the genetic roles of the two plant
ING
genes. They encode proteins with conserved ING and PHD finger domains predicted to function as epigenetic readers. Previously, using CRISPR-Cas9 knock outs, we reported that
Medicago MtING2
promotes flowering and growth. However, surprisingly,
Mting2
PHD finger mutants flowered similarly to wild type. Additionally,
MtING1
did not regulate flowering because
Mting1
mutants flowered like wild type.
Methods
To further dissect the combined genetic function of
MtING1
and
MtING2
and their PHD fingers, we cross-pollinated
Mting1
and
Mting2
single mutants to create two double mutants: The
Mting1-7 Mting2-2
double knockout mutant and the
Mting1-1 Mting2-11
double PHD finger mutant. Mutant phenotypes were assessed in floral-inductive conditions. We used fluorescence confocal microscopy and in vitro protein biophysical analysis to investigate the subcellular localization and oligomerization of the proteins. We carried out gene expression analysis by RNA-seq and RT-qPCR to determine how the two genes affect transcript accumulation to influence growth and flowering.
Results
The
Mting
double knockout mutants displayed a striking, non-flowering, highly dwarfed phenotype indicating overlapping and complementary functions. Conversely
Mting
double PHD finger mutants showed only mild dwarfing and weak delays to flowering, indicating that the PHD fingers did not have a major impact on MtING function. MtING proteins localised to the nucleus, consistent with their predicted roles as histone readers, but did not interact in solution. Large changes to gene expression were seen in the
Mting2-2
single mutant and the double knockout mutant, with key flowering genes downregulated and predicted floral repressors elevated. Furthermore, the MtINGs promoted the expression of Medicago homologs of target genes of the Arabidopsis NuA4 HAT complex.
Conclusions
Our findings demonstrate the key combined function the
MtING
genes play in regulation of global gene expression, flowering time and wider development and implicate an important role in epigenetic regulation via HAT complexes.
Journal Article
H3.1K27M-induced misregulation of the TONSOKU-H3.1 pathway causes genomic instability
2025
The oncomutation lysine 27-to-methionine in histone H3 (H3K27M) is frequently identified in tumors of patients with diffuse midline glioma-H3K27 altered (DMG-H3K27a). H3K27M inhibits the deposition of the histone mark H3K27me3, which affects the maintenance of transcriptional programs and cell identity. Cells expressing H3K27M are also characterized by defects in genome integrity, but the mechanisms linking expression of the oncohistone to DNA damage remain mostly unknown. In this study, we demonstrate that expression of H3.1K27M in the model plant
Arabidopsis thaliana
interferes with post-replicative chromatin maturation mediated by the H3.1K27 methyltransferases ATXR5 and ATXR6. As a result, H3.1 variants on nascent chromatin remain unmethylated at K27 (H3.1K27me0), leading to ectopic activity of TONSOKU (TSK/TONSL), which induces DNA damage and genomic alterations. Elimination of TSK activity suppresses the genome stability defects associated with H3.1K27M expression, while inactivation of specific DNA repair pathways prevents survival of H3.1K27M-expressing plants. Overall, our results suggest that H3.1K27M disrupts the chromatin-based mechanisms regulating TSK activity, which causes genomic instability and may contribute to the etiology of DMG-H3K27a.
Cancer mutations in histone H3 cause genome instability, but the mechanisms remain to be elucidated. Here, the authors show in a plant model that the oncohistone H3.1K27M disrupts the TSK/TONSL-H3.1 DNA repair pathway.
Journal Article
NODeJ: an ImageJ plugin for 3D segmentation of nuclear objects
by
van Wolfswinkel, Josien C.
,
Jacob, Yannick
,
Péry, Emilie
in
3D DNA FISH analysis
,
3D image analysis
,
Add-in/on software
2022
Background
The three-dimensional nuclear arrangement of chromatin impacts many cellular processes operating at the DNA level in animal and plant systems. Chromatin organization is a dynamic process that can be affected by biotic and abiotic stresses. Three-dimensional imaging technology allows to follow these dynamic changes, but only a few semi-automated processing methods currently exist for quantitative analysis of the 3D chromatin organization.
Results
We present an automated method, Nuclear Object DetectionJ (NODeJ), developed as an imageJ plugin. This program segments and analyzes high intensity domains in nuclei from 3D images. NODeJ performs a Laplacian convolution on the mask of a nucleus to enhance the contrast of intra-nuclear objects and allow their detection. We reanalyzed public datasets and determined that NODeJ is able to accurately identify heterochromatin domains from a diverse set of
Arabidopsis thaliana
nuclei stained with DAPI or Hoechst. NODeJ is also able to detect signals in nuclei from DNA FISH experiments, allowing for the analysis of specific targets of interest.
Conclusion and availability
NODeJ allows for efficient automated analysis of subnuclear structures by avoiding the semi-automated steps, resulting in reduced processing time and analytical bias. NODeJ is written in Java and provided as an ImageJ plugin with a command line option to perform more high-throughput analyses. NODeJ can be downloaded from
https://gitlab.com/axpoulet/image2danalysis/-/releases
with source code, documentation and further information avaliable at
https://gitlab.com/axpoulet/image2danalysis
. The images used in this study are publicly available at
https://www.brookes.ac.uk/indepth/images/
and
https://doi.org/10.15454/1HSOIE
.
Journal Article
A novel family of plant nuclear envelope-associated proteins
by
Pawar, Vidya
,
Graumann, Katja
,
Tatout, Christophe
in
Arabidopsis - genetics
,
Arabidopsis - metabolism
,
Arabidopsis Proteins - genetics
2016
This paper describes the characterisation of a new family of higher plant nuclear envelope-associated proteins (NEAPs) that interact with other proteins of the nuclear envelope. In the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana, the family consists of three genes expressed ubiquitously (AtNEAP1–3) and a pseudogene (AtNEAP4). NEAPs consist of extensive coiled-coil domains, followed by a nuclear localisation signal and a C-terminal predicted transmembrane domain. Domain deletion mutants confirm the presence of a functional nuclear localisation signal and transmembrane domain. AtNEAP proteins localise to the nuclear periphery as part of stable protein complexes, are able to form homo- and heteromers, and interact with the SUN domain proteins AtSUN1 and AtSUN2, involved in the linker of nucleoskeleton and cytoskeleton (LINC) complex. An A. thaliana cDNA library screen identified a putative transcription factor called AtbZIP18 as a novel interactor of AtNEAP1, which suggest a connection between NEAP and chromatin. An Atneap1 Atneap3 double-knockout mutant showed reduced root growth, and altered nuclear morphology and chromatin structure. Thus AtNEAPs are suggested as inner nuclear membrane-anchored coiled-coil proteins with roles in maintaining nuclear morphology and chromatin structure.
Journal Article
Gene-edited Mtsoc1 triple mutant Medicago plants do not flower
2024
Optimized flowering time is an important trait that ensures successful plant adaptation and crop productivity. SOC1-like genes encode MADS transcription factors, which are known to play important roles in flowering control in many plants. This includes the best-characterized eudicot model Arabidopsis thaliana (Arabidopsis), where SOC1 promotes flowering and functions as a floral integrator gene integrating signals from different flowering-time regulatory pathways. Medicago truncatula (Medicago) is a temperate reference legume with strong genomic and genetic resources used to study flowering pathways in legumes. Interestingly, despite responding to similar floral-inductive cues of extended cold (vernalization) followed by warm long days (VLD), such as in winter annual Arabidopsis, Medicago lacks FLC and CO which are key regulators of flowering in Arabidopsis. Unlike Arabidopsis with one SOC1 gene, multiple gene duplication events have given rise to three MtSOC1 paralogs within the Medicago genus in legumes: one Fabaceae group A SOC1 gene, MtSOC1a , and two tandemly repeated Fabaceae group B SOC1 genes, MtSOC1b and MtSOC1c . Previously, we showed that MtSOC1a has unique functions in floral promotion in Medicago. The Mtsoc1a Tnt1 retroelement insertion single mutant showed moderately delayed flowering in long- and short-day photoperiods, with and without prior vernalization, compared to the wild-type. In contrast, Mtsoc1b Tnt1 single mutants did not have altered flowering time or flower development, indicating that it was redundant in an otherwise wild-type background. Here, we describe the generation of Mtsoc1a Mtsoc1b Mtsoc1c triple mutant lines using CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing. We studied two independent triple mutant lines that segregated plants that did not flower and were bushy under floral inductive VLD. Genotyping indicated that these non-flowering plants were homozygous for the predicted strong mutant alleles of the three MtSOC1 genes. Gene expression analyses using RNA-seq and RT-qPCR indicated that these plants remained vegetative. Overall, the non-flowering triple mutants were dramatically different from the single Mtsoc1a mutant and the Arabidopsis soc1 mutant; implicating multiple MtSOC1 genes in critical overlapping roles in the transition to flowering in Medicago.
Journal Article
Replication-coupled histone H3.1 deposition determines nucleosome composition and heterochromatin dynamics during Arabidopsis seedling development
by
Le Goff, Samuel
,
Probst, Aline
,
Génétique, Reproduction et Développement (GReD) ; Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université Clermont Auvergne (UCA)
in
Arabidopsis
,
Arabidopsis - genetics
,
Arabidopsis - growth & development
2019
Developmental phase transitions are often characterized by changes in the chromatin landscape and heterochromatin reorganization. In Arabidopsis, clustering of repetitive heterochromatic loci into so-called chromocenters is an important determinant of chromosome organization in nuclear space. Here, we investigated the molecular mechanisms involved in chromocenter formation during the switch from a heterotrophic to a photosynthetically competent state during early seedling development. We characterized the spatial organization and chromatin features at centromeric and pericentromeric repeats and identified mutant contexts with impaired chromocenter formation. We find that clustering of repetitive DNA loci into chromocenters takes place in a precise temporal window and results in reinforced transcriptional repression. Although repetitive sequences are enriched in H3K9me2 and linker histone H1 before repeat clustering, chromocenter formation involves increasing enrichment in H3.1 as well as H2A.W histone variants, hallmarks of heterochromatin. These processes are severely affected in mutants impaired in replication-coupled histone assembly mediated by CHROMATIN ASSEMBLY FACTOR 1 (CAF-1). We further reveal that histone deposition by CAF-1 is required for efficient H3K9me2 enrichment at repetitive sequences during chromocenter formation. Taken together, we show that chromocenter assembly during post-germination development requires dynamic changes in nucleosome composition and histone post-translational modifications orchestrated by the replication-coupled H3.1 deposition machinery.
Journal Article
Deficiency of the Heterogeneous Nuclear Ribonucleoprotein U locus leads to delayed hindbrain neurogenesis
2023
Genetic variants affecting Heterogeneous Nuclear Ribonucleoprotein U (HNRNPU) have been identified in several neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs). HNRNPU is widely expressed in the human brain and shows the highest postnatal expression in the cerebellum. Recent studies have investigated the role of HNRNPU in cerebral cortical development, but the effects of HNRNPU deficiency on cerebellar development remain unknown. Here, we describe the molecular and cellular outcomes of HNRNPU locus deficiency during in vitro neural differentiation of patient-derived and isogenic neuroepithelial stem cells with a hindbrain profile. We demonstrate that HNRNPU deficiency leads to chromatin remodeling of A/B compartments, and transcriptional rewiring, partly by impacting exon inclusion during mRNA processing. Genomic regions affected by the chromatin restructuring and host genes of exon usage differences show a strong enrichment for genes implicated in epilepsies, intellectual disability, and autism. Lastly, we show that at the cellular level HNRNPU downregulation leads to an increased fraction of neural progenitors in the maturing neuronal population. We conclude that the HNRNPU locus is involved in delayed commitment of neural progenitors to differentiate in cell types with hindbrain profile.
Journal Article