Christophe Lemaire - Academia.edu (original) (raw)
Papers by Christophe Lemaire
Résumé en anglais An important branch of evolutionary biology strives to understand how divergent... more Résumé en anglais An important branch of evolutionary biology strives to understand how divergent selection for an ecologically important trait can foster the emergence of new species specialized on different niches. Such ecological speciation is usually difficult to achieve because recombination between different subsets of a population that are adapting to different environments counteracts selection for locally adapted gene combinations. Traits pleiotropically controlling adaptation to different environments and reproductive isolation are therefore the most favourable for ecological speciation, and are thus called “magic traits”. We used genetic markers and crossinoculations to show that pathogenicity-related loci are responsible for both host adaptation and reproductive isolation in emerging populations of Venturia inaequalis, the fungus causing apple scab disease. Because the fungus mates within its host and because the pathogenicity-related loci prevent infection of the non-ho...
Massive gene flow between crops and their wild relatives may threaten the genetic integrity of wi... more Massive gene flow between crops and their wild relatives may threaten the genetic integrity of wild species. Such threats are now well documented, but little is known about indirect consequences involving the spillover of crop pathogens to wild plants or introgression between crop and wild pathogens. To address these questions, we used population genetics approaches, demographic inference and pathogenicity tests on host-pathogen pairs composed of wild or domesticated apple trees of Central Asia and their fungal pathogen, Venturia inaequalis, itself showing differentiated agricultural-type and wild-type populations. We confirmed the occurrence of gene flow from cultivated to wild apple trees in Asian forests, threatening the Asian wild apple genetic integrity. SNP markers and demographic modeling revealed the occurrence of a secondary contact followed by hybridization between agricultural-type and wild-type fungal pathogen populations, and the dispersal of the agricultural-type patho...
Journal of Clinical Virology, 2015
Background. The NS5A protein of the hepatitis C virus has been shown to be involved in the develo... more Background. The NS5A protein of the hepatitis C virus has been shown to be involved in the development of hepatocellular carcinoma. Objectives. In a French multicenter study, we investigated the clinical and epidemiological features of a new HCV genotype 1b strain bearing a wide insertion into the V3 domain. Study Design. We studied NS5A gene sequences in 821 French patients infected with genotype 1b HCV. Results. We identified an uncharacterized V3 insertion without ORF disruption in 3.05% of the HCV sequences. The insertion comprised 31 amino-acids for the majority of patients; 3 patients had 27 amino-acids insertions and 1 had a 12 amino-acids insertion. Sequence identity between the 31 amino-acids insertions and the V3 domain ranged from 48 to 96% with E-values above 4e-5 , thus illustrating sequence homology and a partial gene duplication event that to our knowledge has never been reported in HCV. Moreover we showed the A c c e p t e d M a n u s c r i p t 4 presence of the duplication at the time of infection and its persistence at least during 12 years in the entire quasispecies. No association was found with extrahepatic diseases. Conversely, patients with cirrhosis were two times more likely to have HCV with this genetic characteristic (p=0.04). Moreover, its prevalence increased with liver disease severity (from 3.0% in patients without cirrhosis to 9.4% in patients with both cirrhosis and HCC, p for trend=0.045). Conclusions. We identified a duplicated V3 domain in the HCV-1b NS5A protein for the first time. The duplication may be associated with unfavorable evolution of liver disease including a possible involvement in liver carcinogenesis.
PLOS ONE, 2015
Understanding evolutionary dynamics of pathogens during domestication of their hosts and rise of ... more Understanding evolutionary dynamics of pathogens during domestication of their hosts and rise of agro-ecosystems is essential for durable disease management. Here, we investigated changes in life-history traits of the fungal pathogen Venturia inaequalis during domestication of the apple. Life traits linked to fungal dispersal were compared between 60 strains that were sampled in domestic and wild habitats in Kazakhstan, the center of origin of both host and pathogen. Our two main findings are that transition from wild to agro-ecosystems was associated with an increase of both spore size and sporulation capacity; and that distribution of quantitative traits of the domestic population mostly overlapped with those of the wild population. Our results suggest that apple domestication had a considerable impact on fungal characters linked to its dispersal through selection from standing phenotypic diversity. We showed that pestification of V. inaequalis in orchards led to an enhanced allocation in colonization ability from standing variation in the wild area. This study emphasizes the potential threat that pathogenic fungal populations living in wild environments represent for durability of resistance in agro-ecosystems.
Evolutionary Applications, 2015
Unraveling the genomic processes at play during variety diversification is of fundamental interes... more Unraveling the genomic processes at play during variety diversification is of fundamental interest for understanding evolution, but also of applied interest in crop science. It can indeed provide knowledge on the genetic bases of traits for crop improvement and germplasm diversity management. Apple is one of the most important fruit crops in temperate regions, having both great economic and cultural values. Sweet dessert apples are used for direct consumption, while bitter cider apples are used to produce cider. Several important traits are known to differentiate the two variety types, in particular fruit size, biennial versus annual fruit bearing, and bitterness, caused by a higher content in polyphenols. Here, we used an Illumina 8k SNP chip on two core collections, of 48 dessert and 48 cider apples, respectively, for identifying genomic regions responsible for the differences between cider and dessert apples. The genome-wide level of genetic differentiation between cider and dessert apples was low, although 17 candidate regions showed signatures of divergent selection, displaying either outlier F ST values or significant association with phenotypic traits (bitter versus sweet fruits). These candidate regions encompassed 420 genes involved in a variety of functions and metabolic pathways, including several colocalizations with QTLs for polyphenol compounds.
Molecular Ecology Notes, 2002
We used exon-primed, intron-crossing polymerase chain reaction (EPIC-PCR) amplification to assay ... more We used exon-primed, intron-crossing polymerase chain reaction (EPIC-PCR) amplification to assay variation in nuclear loci in some teleost fishes (Carangidae, Centropomidae, Chaetodontidae, Clupeidae, Holocentridae, Moronidae, Mullidae, Pomacentridae, Scombridae, Siganidae). We designed primers in the conserved regions flanking splice sites of consecutive exons of different genes, allowing the amplification of 17 putative introns. Among the satisfactory amplified systems, 14 showed length polymorphism with 2-14 alleles.
Journal of Heredity, 1999
We report on the genetic differentiation among populations of the common (or European) sea bass (... more We report on the genetic differentiation among populations of the common (or European) sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax) from the North Sea, Britanny, Portugal, Morocco, the Alboran Sea, and the western Mediterranean. Based on allele-frequency variation at six microsatellite loci, a distance tree inferred from Reynold's coancestry coefficient showed that sea bass populations clustered into two distinct groups of populations, an Atlantic group which includes the Alboran Sea east of Gibraltar Strait, and a western Mediterranean group. While no clear geographical pattern emerged within each of these two entities, the sharp transition led us to postulate that the divide may correspond to the Almeria-Oran oceanographic front. This divide was evidenced by a small but highly significant F ST value (0.018, P Ͻ .001), corresponding at equilibrium to an average effective number of migrants Nm on the order of 14 individuals per generation. We emphasize the idea that the passive retention of larvae on either side of the oceanographic front is not a sufficient explanation for the persistence of this divide.
Molecular Ecology, 2011
Expanding global trade and the domestication of ecosystems have greatly accelerated the rate of e... more Expanding global trade and the domestication of ecosystems have greatly accelerated the rate of emerging infectious fungal diseases, and host-shift speciation appears to be a major route for disease emergence. There is therefore an increased interest in identifying the factors that drive the evolution of reproductive isolation between populations adapting to different hosts. Here, we used genetic markers and cross-inoculations to assess the level of gene flow and investigate barriers responsible for reproductive isolation between two sympatric populations of Venturia inaequalis, the fungal pathogen causing apple scab disease, one of the fungal populations causing a recent emerging disease on resistant varieties. Our results showed the maintenance over several years of strong and stable differentiation between the two populations in the same orchards, suggesting ongoing ecological divergence following a host shift. We identified strong selection against immigrants (i.e. host specificity) from different host varieties as the strongest and likely most efficient barrier to gene flow between local and emerging populations. Cross-variety disease transmission events were indeed rare in the field and cross-inoculation tests confirmed high host specificity. Because the fungus mates within its host after successful infection and because pathogenicity-related loci prevent infection of nonhost trees, adaptation to specific hosts may alone maintain both genetic differentiation between and adaptive allelic combinations within sympatric populations parasitizing different apple varieties, thus acting as a 'magic trait'. Additional intrinsic and extrinsic postzygotic barriers might complete reproductive isolation and explain why the rare migrants and F1 hybrids detected do not lead to pervasive gene flow across years.
Journal of Evolutionary Biology, 2005
To investigate the origin and maintenance of the genetic discontinuity between Atlantic and Medit... more To investigate the origin and maintenance of the genetic discontinuity between Atlantic and Mediterranean populations of the common sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax) we analysed the genetic variation at a fragment of mitochondrial cytochrome b sequence for 18 population samples. The result were also compared with new or previously published microsatellite data. Seven mitochondrial haplotypes and an average nucleotidic divergence of 0.02 between Atlantic and Mediterranean populations that matches a Pleistocene allopatric isolation were found. The frequency variation at the cytochrome b locus was many times greater between Atlantic and Mediterranean populations (= 0.67) than at microsatellite loci (= 0.02). The examination of the different evolutionary forces at play suggests that a sex-biased hybrid breakdown is a likely explanation for part of the observed discrepancy between mitochondrial and nuclear loci. In addition, an analysis is made of the correlation between microsatellite loci points towards the possible existence of a hybrid zone in samples from the Alboran Sea.
Heredity, 2010
Species that overlap over a large part of their range and habitat requirements are challenging fo... more Species that overlap over a large part of their range and habitat requirements are challenging for the study of speciation and hybridization. In this respect, the study of broadscale introgressive hybridization has raised recent interest. Here we studied hybridization between two closely related amphibians Lissotriton helveticus and Lissotriton vulgaris that reproduce over a wide sympatric zone. We used mitochondrial and microsatellite markers on 1272 individuals in 37 sites over Europe to detect hybrids at the individual-level and to analyse Hardy-Weinberg and linkage disequilibria at the population-level. Morphological traits showed a strong bimodal distribution. Consistently, hybrid frequency was low (1.7%). We found asymmetric introgression with five times more hybrids in L. vulgaris than in L. helveticus, a pattern probably explained by an unequal effective population size in a study part wherein L. helveticus numerically predominates. Strikingly, significant levels of introgression were detected in 73% of sites shared by both species. Our study showed that introgression is widespread but remains confined to the sites where the two species reproduce at the same time. This pattern may explain why these species remain genetically distinct over a broad sympatric zone.
Heredity, 2007
Contrasting results are usually reported in the literature regarding the factors influencing obse... more Contrasting results are usually reported in the literature regarding the factors influencing observed structuring of genetic variability. The goals of this study were, for five coral reef fishes in French Polynesia, (1) to infer the theoretical variance of single locus F ST estimates expected under neutrality in order to exclude outlier loci before inferring gene flow and (2) to test thereafter whether species laying pelagic eggs effectively disperse more than species laying benthic eggs in this system. For this purpose, a total of 952 individuals from five species belonging to two families (Chaetodontidae and Pomacentridae) were screened among populations sampled within a 60-600 km spatial range for intron length polymorphism at 11 loci in order to illuminate contrasting results previously published on allozymes and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) control region polymorphisms. Statistically speaking, among the five species, four loci (three allozymes and one intron) were identified as outliers and discarded before interpretation of genetic differentiation in terms of effective dispersal. Biologically speaking, our results suggest that the observed genetic structure is not significantly related to the reproductive strategy of coral reef fish in the island system we analysed and that observed random genetic differentiation accommodates Wright's island model in all five species surveyed. Overall, our study emphasizes how cautious one has to be when trying to interpret present-day genetic structure in terms of gene flow while using a limited number of loci and/or different sets of loci.
Evolutionary Applications, 2012
Understanding how pathogens emerge is essential to bring disease-causing agents under durable hum... more Understanding how pathogens emerge is essential to bring disease-causing agents under durable human control. Here, we used cross-pathogenicity tests to investigate the changes in life-history traits of the fungal pathogen Venturia inaequalis associated with host-tracking during the domestication of apple and subsequent host-range expansion on the wild European crabapple (Malus sylvestris). Pathogenicity of 40 isolates collected in wild and domesticated ecosystems was assessed on the domesticated apple, its Central Asian main progenitor (M. sieversii) and M. sylvestris. Isolates from wild habitats in the centre of origin of the crop were not pathogenic on the domesticated apple and less aggressive than other isolates on their host of origin. Isolates from the agroecosystem in Central Asia infected a higher proportion of plants with higher aggressiveness, on both the domesticated host and its progenitor. Isolates from the European crabapple were still able to cause disease on other species but were less aggressive and less frequently virulent on these hosts than their endemic populations. Our results suggest that the domestication of apple was associated with the acquisition of virulence in the pathogen following hosttracking. The spread of the disease in the agro-ecosystem would also have been accompanied by an increase in overall pathogenicity.
Ecological Modelling, 2009
Modelling gene flow across natural landscapes is a current challenge of population genetics. Mode... more Modelling gene flow across natural landscapes is a current challenge of population genetics. Models are essential to make clear predictions about conditions that cause genetic differentiation or maintain connectivity between populations. River networks are a special case of landscape matrix. They represent stretches of habitat connected according to a branching pattern where dispersal is usually limited to upstream or downstream movements. Because of their peculiar topology, and the increasing concern about conservation issues in hydrosystems, there has been a recent revival of interest in modelling dispersal in river networks. Network complexity has been shown to influence global population differentiation. However, geometric characteristics are likely to interact with the way individuals move across space. Studies have focused on in-stream movements. None of the work published so far took into consideration the ability of many species to disperse overland between branches of the same network though. We predicted that the relative contribution of these two dispersal modalities (in-stream and overland) would affect the overall genetic structure. We simulated dispersal in synthetic river networks using an individual-based model. We tested the effect of dispersal modalities, i.e. the ratio of overland / in-stream dispersal, and two geometric parameters, bifurcation angle between branches and network complexity. Data revealed that if geometrical parameters affected population differentiation, dispersal parameters had the strongest effect. Interestingly, we observed a quadratic relationship between p the proportion of overland dispersers and population differentiation. We interpret this U-shape pattern as a balance between isolation by distance caused by in-stream movements at low values of p and intense migrant exchanges within the same branching unit at high values of p. Our study is the first attempt to model out-of-network movements. It clearly shows that both geometric and dispersal parameters interact. Both should be taken into consideration in order to refine predictions about dispersal and gene flow in river network.
Conservation Genetics, 2009
... Low levels of successful cross-species amplification are common in '&#x2... more ... Low levels of successful cross-species amplification are common in ''old'' species like amphibians (Primmer and Merila 2002) and has been observed before in Old World newts (Garner et al. 2003). The low frequency of microsatellites in amphibian's genome (Zane et al. ...
Comptes Rendus Biologies, 2009
This article appeared in a journal published by Elsevier. The attached copy is furnished to the a... more This article appeared in a journal published by Elsevier. The attached copy is furnished to the author for internal non-commercial research and education use, including for instruction at the authors institution and sharing with colleagues. Other uses, including reproduction and distribution, or selling or licensing copies, or posting to personal, institutional or third party websites are prohibited. In most cases authors are permitted to post their version of the article (e.g. in Word or Tex form) to their personal website or institutional repository. Authors requiring further information regarding Elsevier's archiving and manuscript policies are encouraged to visit:
BMC Evolutionary Biology, 2013
Background: Adaptation, which induces differentiation between populations in relation to environm... more Background: Adaptation, which induces differentiation between populations in relation to environmental conditions, can initiate divergence. The balance between gene flow and selection determines the maintenance of such a structure in sympatry. Studying these two antagonistic forces in plant pathogens is made possible because of the high ability of pathogens to disperse and of the strong selective pressures exerted by their hosts. In this article, we analysed the genetic structure of the population of the apple scab fungus, Venturia inaequalis, in a heterogeneous environment composed of various Malus species. Inferences were drawn from microsatellite and AFLP data obtained from 114 strains sampled in a single orchard on nine different Malus species to determine the forces that shape the genetic structure of the pathogen. Results: Using clustering methods, we first identified two specialist subpopulations: (i) a virulent subpopulation sampled on Malus trees carrying the Rvi6 resistance gene; and (ii) a subpopulation infecting only Malus trees that did not carry this resistance gene. A genome scan of loci on these two subpopulations did not detect any locus under selection. Additionally, we did not detect any other particular substructure linked to different hosts. However, an isolation-by-distance (IBD) pattern at the orchard scale revealed free gene flow within each subpopulation. Conclusions: Our work shows a rare example of a very strong effect of a resistance gene on pathogen populations. Despite the high diversity of Malus hosts, the presence of Rvi6 seems sufficient to explain the observed genetic structure. Moreover, detection of an IBD pattern at the orchard scale revealed a very low average dispersal distance that is particularly significant for epidemiologists and landscape managers for the design of scab control strategies
Aquatic Living Resources, 2005
-Une analyse phylogéographique de quinze échantillons de Dicentrarchus labrax dont cinq sont orig... more -Une analyse phylogéographique de quinze échantillons de Dicentrarchus labrax dont cinq sont originaires de Méditerranée occidentale, sept de Méditerranée orientale et trois échantillons d'élevage en provenance de trois piscicultures françaises a été effectuée à partir du polymorphisme de six locus microsatellites. Parmi les échantillons orientaux, trois ne se regroupent pas en fonction de leur origine géographique, mais plutôt avec le groupe occidental. Ces échantillons présentent également une diversité allélique légèrement réduite, indiquant qu'ils proviennent d'un nombre limité de géniteurs d'origine occidentale. Parmi les stocks d'élevage, un seul montre une réduction significative de la variabilité génétique, ce qui indique que ces cheptels sont ouverts et font largement appel à des géniteurs sauvages. L'utilisation d'alevins d'origine occidentale pour ensemencer les premières fermes d'élevage du bassin oriental remonte au plus tard au début des années 80. Ceci soulève la question des mécanismes biologiques expliquant le maintien de poissons d'origine occidentale dans un contexte oriental pendant au moins deux ou trois générations.
Molecular Ecology, 2014
Population genetics theory has laid the foundations for genomics analyses including the recent bu... more Population genetics theory has laid the foundations for genomics analyses including the recent burst in genome scans for selection and statistical inference of past demographic events in many prokaryote, animal and plant species. Identifying SNPs under natural selection and underpinning species adaptation relies on disentangling the respective contribution of random processes (mutation, drift, migration) from that of selection on nucleotide variability. Most theory and statistical tests have been developed using the Kingman's coalescent theory based on the Wright-Fisher population model. However, these theoretical models rely on biological and life-history assumptions which may be violated in many prokaryote, fungal, animal or plant species. Recent theoretical developments of the so called multiple merger coalescent models are reviewed here (Λ-coalescent, beta-coalescent, Bolthausen-Snitzman, Ξ-coalescent). We explicit how these new models take into account various pervasive ecological and biological characteristics, life history traits or life cycles which were not accounted in previous theories such as 1) the skew in offspring production typical of marine species, 2) fast adapting microparasites (virus, bacteria and fungi) exhibiting large variation in population sizes during epidemics, 3) the peculiar life cycles of fungi and bacteria alternating sexual and asexual cycles, and 4) the high rates of extinction-recolonization in spatially structured populations. We finally discuss the relevance of multiple merger models for the detection of SNPs under selection in these species, for population genomics of very large sample size and advocate to potentially examine the conclusion of previous population genetics studies. .
In France, marine fish and shellfish farming is based mainly on the breeding of wild species, who... more In France, marine fish and shellfish farming is based mainly on the breeding of wild species, whose natural populations are traditionally exploited. Research programs are conducted by IFREMER, in co-operation with INRA and Universities. French research programs for the genetical improvement of marine fish and shellfish concern primarily seabass (Dicentrarchus labrax) and oysters (Ostrea edulis and Crassostrea gigas). The following programs are developed: • The knowledge of wild and farmed populations. The most recent prodjects involve the highly variable microsatellite markers. Seven markers are presently available for seabass and the work is now initiated on turbot (Scophthalmus maximus). In molluscs, microsatellite markers have been developed for the European fJat oyster (O.edulis). • The control of sex-ratios. Research programs in physiology and developmental genetics are initiated in order to control sex-ratios in seabass. These programs include the production of gynogenetic progenies and the study of the sex-ratios of progenies issued from the crossing of hormonally feminised or masculinised breeders with normal ones. • The production of polyploids. Triploid seabass have been produced using high pressure and thermal shocks. The results after 6 months show a lower survival and growth compared with diploid controls. Triploid oysters, produced using chemical treatments (cytochalasin B or 6-DMAP), show better performances compared to doploids. • The establishment of breeding programs for traits of commercial interest.
Résumé en anglais An important branch of evolutionary biology strives to understand how divergent... more Résumé en anglais An important branch of evolutionary biology strives to understand how divergent selection for an ecologically important trait can foster the emergence of new species specialized on different niches. Such ecological speciation is usually difficult to achieve because recombination between different subsets of a population that are adapting to different environments counteracts selection for locally adapted gene combinations. Traits pleiotropically controlling adaptation to different environments and reproductive isolation are therefore the most favourable for ecological speciation, and are thus called “magic traits”. We used genetic markers and crossinoculations to show that pathogenicity-related loci are responsible for both host adaptation and reproductive isolation in emerging populations of Venturia inaequalis, the fungus causing apple scab disease. Because the fungus mates within its host and because the pathogenicity-related loci prevent infection of the non-ho...
Massive gene flow between crops and their wild relatives may threaten the genetic integrity of wi... more Massive gene flow between crops and their wild relatives may threaten the genetic integrity of wild species. Such threats are now well documented, but little is known about indirect consequences involving the spillover of crop pathogens to wild plants or introgression between crop and wild pathogens. To address these questions, we used population genetics approaches, demographic inference and pathogenicity tests on host-pathogen pairs composed of wild or domesticated apple trees of Central Asia and their fungal pathogen, Venturia inaequalis, itself showing differentiated agricultural-type and wild-type populations. We confirmed the occurrence of gene flow from cultivated to wild apple trees in Asian forests, threatening the Asian wild apple genetic integrity. SNP markers and demographic modeling revealed the occurrence of a secondary contact followed by hybridization between agricultural-type and wild-type fungal pathogen populations, and the dispersal of the agricultural-type patho...
Journal of Clinical Virology, 2015
Background. The NS5A protein of the hepatitis C virus has been shown to be involved in the develo... more Background. The NS5A protein of the hepatitis C virus has been shown to be involved in the development of hepatocellular carcinoma. Objectives. In a French multicenter study, we investigated the clinical and epidemiological features of a new HCV genotype 1b strain bearing a wide insertion into the V3 domain. Study Design. We studied NS5A gene sequences in 821 French patients infected with genotype 1b HCV. Results. We identified an uncharacterized V3 insertion without ORF disruption in 3.05% of the HCV sequences. The insertion comprised 31 amino-acids for the majority of patients; 3 patients had 27 amino-acids insertions and 1 had a 12 amino-acids insertion. Sequence identity between the 31 amino-acids insertions and the V3 domain ranged from 48 to 96% with E-values above 4e-5 , thus illustrating sequence homology and a partial gene duplication event that to our knowledge has never been reported in HCV. Moreover we showed the A c c e p t e d M a n u s c r i p t 4 presence of the duplication at the time of infection and its persistence at least during 12 years in the entire quasispecies. No association was found with extrahepatic diseases. Conversely, patients with cirrhosis were two times more likely to have HCV with this genetic characteristic (p=0.04). Moreover, its prevalence increased with liver disease severity (from 3.0% in patients without cirrhosis to 9.4% in patients with both cirrhosis and HCC, p for trend=0.045). Conclusions. We identified a duplicated V3 domain in the HCV-1b NS5A protein for the first time. The duplication may be associated with unfavorable evolution of liver disease including a possible involvement in liver carcinogenesis.
PLOS ONE, 2015
Understanding evolutionary dynamics of pathogens during domestication of their hosts and rise of ... more Understanding evolutionary dynamics of pathogens during domestication of their hosts and rise of agro-ecosystems is essential for durable disease management. Here, we investigated changes in life-history traits of the fungal pathogen Venturia inaequalis during domestication of the apple. Life traits linked to fungal dispersal were compared between 60 strains that were sampled in domestic and wild habitats in Kazakhstan, the center of origin of both host and pathogen. Our two main findings are that transition from wild to agro-ecosystems was associated with an increase of both spore size and sporulation capacity; and that distribution of quantitative traits of the domestic population mostly overlapped with those of the wild population. Our results suggest that apple domestication had a considerable impact on fungal characters linked to its dispersal through selection from standing phenotypic diversity. We showed that pestification of V. inaequalis in orchards led to an enhanced allocation in colonization ability from standing variation in the wild area. This study emphasizes the potential threat that pathogenic fungal populations living in wild environments represent for durability of resistance in agro-ecosystems.
Evolutionary Applications, 2015
Unraveling the genomic processes at play during variety diversification is of fundamental interes... more Unraveling the genomic processes at play during variety diversification is of fundamental interest for understanding evolution, but also of applied interest in crop science. It can indeed provide knowledge on the genetic bases of traits for crop improvement and germplasm diversity management. Apple is one of the most important fruit crops in temperate regions, having both great economic and cultural values. Sweet dessert apples are used for direct consumption, while bitter cider apples are used to produce cider. Several important traits are known to differentiate the two variety types, in particular fruit size, biennial versus annual fruit bearing, and bitterness, caused by a higher content in polyphenols. Here, we used an Illumina 8k SNP chip on two core collections, of 48 dessert and 48 cider apples, respectively, for identifying genomic regions responsible for the differences between cider and dessert apples. The genome-wide level of genetic differentiation between cider and dessert apples was low, although 17 candidate regions showed signatures of divergent selection, displaying either outlier F ST values or significant association with phenotypic traits (bitter versus sweet fruits). These candidate regions encompassed 420 genes involved in a variety of functions and metabolic pathways, including several colocalizations with QTLs for polyphenol compounds.
Molecular Ecology Notes, 2002
We used exon-primed, intron-crossing polymerase chain reaction (EPIC-PCR) amplification to assay ... more We used exon-primed, intron-crossing polymerase chain reaction (EPIC-PCR) amplification to assay variation in nuclear loci in some teleost fishes (Carangidae, Centropomidae, Chaetodontidae, Clupeidae, Holocentridae, Moronidae, Mullidae, Pomacentridae, Scombridae, Siganidae). We designed primers in the conserved regions flanking splice sites of consecutive exons of different genes, allowing the amplification of 17 putative introns. Among the satisfactory amplified systems, 14 showed length polymorphism with 2-14 alleles.
Journal of Heredity, 1999
We report on the genetic differentiation among populations of the common (or European) sea bass (... more We report on the genetic differentiation among populations of the common (or European) sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax) from the North Sea, Britanny, Portugal, Morocco, the Alboran Sea, and the western Mediterranean. Based on allele-frequency variation at six microsatellite loci, a distance tree inferred from Reynold's coancestry coefficient showed that sea bass populations clustered into two distinct groups of populations, an Atlantic group which includes the Alboran Sea east of Gibraltar Strait, and a western Mediterranean group. While no clear geographical pattern emerged within each of these two entities, the sharp transition led us to postulate that the divide may correspond to the Almeria-Oran oceanographic front. This divide was evidenced by a small but highly significant F ST value (0.018, P Ͻ .001), corresponding at equilibrium to an average effective number of migrants Nm on the order of 14 individuals per generation. We emphasize the idea that the passive retention of larvae on either side of the oceanographic front is not a sufficient explanation for the persistence of this divide.
Molecular Ecology, 2011
Expanding global trade and the domestication of ecosystems have greatly accelerated the rate of e... more Expanding global trade and the domestication of ecosystems have greatly accelerated the rate of emerging infectious fungal diseases, and host-shift speciation appears to be a major route for disease emergence. There is therefore an increased interest in identifying the factors that drive the evolution of reproductive isolation between populations adapting to different hosts. Here, we used genetic markers and cross-inoculations to assess the level of gene flow and investigate barriers responsible for reproductive isolation between two sympatric populations of Venturia inaequalis, the fungal pathogen causing apple scab disease, one of the fungal populations causing a recent emerging disease on resistant varieties. Our results showed the maintenance over several years of strong and stable differentiation between the two populations in the same orchards, suggesting ongoing ecological divergence following a host shift. We identified strong selection against immigrants (i.e. host specificity) from different host varieties as the strongest and likely most efficient barrier to gene flow between local and emerging populations. Cross-variety disease transmission events were indeed rare in the field and cross-inoculation tests confirmed high host specificity. Because the fungus mates within its host after successful infection and because pathogenicity-related loci prevent infection of nonhost trees, adaptation to specific hosts may alone maintain both genetic differentiation between and adaptive allelic combinations within sympatric populations parasitizing different apple varieties, thus acting as a 'magic trait'. Additional intrinsic and extrinsic postzygotic barriers might complete reproductive isolation and explain why the rare migrants and F1 hybrids detected do not lead to pervasive gene flow across years.
Journal of Evolutionary Biology, 2005
To investigate the origin and maintenance of the genetic discontinuity between Atlantic and Medit... more To investigate the origin and maintenance of the genetic discontinuity between Atlantic and Mediterranean populations of the common sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax) we analysed the genetic variation at a fragment of mitochondrial cytochrome b sequence for 18 population samples. The result were also compared with new or previously published microsatellite data. Seven mitochondrial haplotypes and an average nucleotidic divergence of 0.02 between Atlantic and Mediterranean populations that matches a Pleistocene allopatric isolation were found. The frequency variation at the cytochrome b locus was many times greater between Atlantic and Mediterranean populations (= 0.67) than at microsatellite loci (= 0.02). The examination of the different evolutionary forces at play suggests that a sex-biased hybrid breakdown is a likely explanation for part of the observed discrepancy between mitochondrial and nuclear loci. In addition, an analysis is made of the correlation between microsatellite loci points towards the possible existence of a hybrid zone in samples from the Alboran Sea.
Heredity, 2010
Species that overlap over a large part of their range and habitat requirements are challenging fo... more Species that overlap over a large part of their range and habitat requirements are challenging for the study of speciation and hybridization. In this respect, the study of broadscale introgressive hybridization has raised recent interest. Here we studied hybridization between two closely related amphibians Lissotriton helveticus and Lissotriton vulgaris that reproduce over a wide sympatric zone. We used mitochondrial and microsatellite markers on 1272 individuals in 37 sites over Europe to detect hybrids at the individual-level and to analyse Hardy-Weinberg and linkage disequilibria at the population-level. Morphological traits showed a strong bimodal distribution. Consistently, hybrid frequency was low (1.7%). We found asymmetric introgression with five times more hybrids in L. vulgaris than in L. helveticus, a pattern probably explained by an unequal effective population size in a study part wherein L. helveticus numerically predominates. Strikingly, significant levels of introgression were detected in 73% of sites shared by both species. Our study showed that introgression is widespread but remains confined to the sites where the two species reproduce at the same time. This pattern may explain why these species remain genetically distinct over a broad sympatric zone.
Heredity, 2007
Contrasting results are usually reported in the literature regarding the factors influencing obse... more Contrasting results are usually reported in the literature regarding the factors influencing observed structuring of genetic variability. The goals of this study were, for five coral reef fishes in French Polynesia, (1) to infer the theoretical variance of single locus F ST estimates expected under neutrality in order to exclude outlier loci before inferring gene flow and (2) to test thereafter whether species laying pelagic eggs effectively disperse more than species laying benthic eggs in this system. For this purpose, a total of 952 individuals from five species belonging to two families (Chaetodontidae and Pomacentridae) were screened among populations sampled within a 60-600 km spatial range for intron length polymorphism at 11 loci in order to illuminate contrasting results previously published on allozymes and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) control region polymorphisms. Statistically speaking, among the five species, four loci (three allozymes and one intron) were identified as outliers and discarded before interpretation of genetic differentiation in terms of effective dispersal. Biologically speaking, our results suggest that the observed genetic structure is not significantly related to the reproductive strategy of coral reef fish in the island system we analysed and that observed random genetic differentiation accommodates Wright's island model in all five species surveyed. Overall, our study emphasizes how cautious one has to be when trying to interpret present-day genetic structure in terms of gene flow while using a limited number of loci and/or different sets of loci.
Evolutionary Applications, 2012
Understanding how pathogens emerge is essential to bring disease-causing agents under durable hum... more Understanding how pathogens emerge is essential to bring disease-causing agents under durable human control. Here, we used cross-pathogenicity tests to investigate the changes in life-history traits of the fungal pathogen Venturia inaequalis associated with host-tracking during the domestication of apple and subsequent host-range expansion on the wild European crabapple (Malus sylvestris). Pathogenicity of 40 isolates collected in wild and domesticated ecosystems was assessed on the domesticated apple, its Central Asian main progenitor (M. sieversii) and M. sylvestris. Isolates from wild habitats in the centre of origin of the crop were not pathogenic on the domesticated apple and less aggressive than other isolates on their host of origin. Isolates from the agroecosystem in Central Asia infected a higher proportion of plants with higher aggressiveness, on both the domesticated host and its progenitor. Isolates from the European crabapple were still able to cause disease on other species but were less aggressive and less frequently virulent on these hosts than their endemic populations. Our results suggest that the domestication of apple was associated with the acquisition of virulence in the pathogen following hosttracking. The spread of the disease in the agro-ecosystem would also have been accompanied by an increase in overall pathogenicity.
Ecological Modelling, 2009
Modelling gene flow across natural landscapes is a current challenge of population genetics. Mode... more Modelling gene flow across natural landscapes is a current challenge of population genetics. Models are essential to make clear predictions about conditions that cause genetic differentiation or maintain connectivity between populations. River networks are a special case of landscape matrix. They represent stretches of habitat connected according to a branching pattern where dispersal is usually limited to upstream or downstream movements. Because of their peculiar topology, and the increasing concern about conservation issues in hydrosystems, there has been a recent revival of interest in modelling dispersal in river networks. Network complexity has been shown to influence global population differentiation. However, geometric characteristics are likely to interact with the way individuals move across space. Studies have focused on in-stream movements. None of the work published so far took into consideration the ability of many species to disperse overland between branches of the same network though. We predicted that the relative contribution of these two dispersal modalities (in-stream and overland) would affect the overall genetic structure. We simulated dispersal in synthetic river networks using an individual-based model. We tested the effect of dispersal modalities, i.e. the ratio of overland / in-stream dispersal, and two geometric parameters, bifurcation angle between branches and network complexity. Data revealed that if geometrical parameters affected population differentiation, dispersal parameters had the strongest effect. Interestingly, we observed a quadratic relationship between p the proportion of overland dispersers and population differentiation. We interpret this U-shape pattern as a balance between isolation by distance caused by in-stream movements at low values of p and intense migrant exchanges within the same branching unit at high values of p. Our study is the first attempt to model out-of-network movements. It clearly shows that both geometric and dispersal parameters interact. Both should be taken into consideration in order to refine predictions about dispersal and gene flow in river network.
Conservation Genetics, 2009
... Low levels of successful cross-species amplification are common in '&#x2... more ... Low levels of successful cross-species amplification are common in ''old'' species like amphibians (Primmer and Merila 2002) and has been observed before in Old World newts (Garner et al. 2003). The low frequency of microsatellites in amphibian's genome (Zane et al. ...
Comptes Rendus Biologies, 2009
This article appeared in a journal published by Elsevier. The attached copy is furnished to the a... more This article appeared in a journal published by Elsevier. The attached copy is furnished to the author for internal non-commercial research and education use, including for instruction at the authors institution and sharing with colleagues. Other uses, including reproduction and distribution, or selling or licensing copies, or posting to personal, institutional or third party websites are prohibited. In most cases authors are permitted to post their version of the article (e.g. in Word or Tex form) to their personal website or institutional repository. Authors requiring further information regarding Elsevier's archiving and manuscript policies are encouraged to visit:
BMC Evolutionary Biology, 2013
Background: Adaptation, which induces differentiation between populations in relation to environm... more Background: Adaptation, which induces differentiation between populations in relation to environmental conditions, can initiate divergence. The balance between gene flow and selection determines the maintenance of such a structure in sympatry. Studying these two antagonistic forces in plant pathogens is made possible because of the high ability of pathogens to disperse and of the strong selective pressures exerted by their hosts. In this article, we analysed the genetic structure of the population of the apple scab fungus, Venturia inaequalis, in a heterogeneous environment composed of various Malus species. Inferences were drawn from microsatellite and AFLP data obtained from 114 strains sampled in a single orchard on nine different Malus species to determine the forces that shape the genetic structure of the pathogen. Results: Using clustering methods, we first identified two specialist subpopulations: (i) a virulent subpopulation sampled on Malus trees carrying the Rvi6 resistance gene; and (ii) a subpopulation infecting only Malus trees that did not carry this resistance gene. A genome scan of loci on these two subpopulations did not detect any locus under selection. Additionally, we did not detect any other particular substructure linked to different hosts. However, an isolation-by-distance (IBD) pattern at the orchard scale revealed free gene flow within each subpopulation. Conclusions: Our work shows a rare example of a very strong effect of a resistance gene on pathogen populations. Despite the high diversity of Malus hosts, the presence of Rvi6 seems sufficient to explain the observed genetic structure. Moreover, detection of an IBD pattern at the orchard scale revealed a very low average dispersal distance that is particularly significant for epidemiologists and landscape managers for the design of scab control strategies
Aquatic Living Resources, 2005
-Une analyse phylogéographique de quinze échantillons de Dicentrarchus labrax dont cinq sont orig... more -Une analyse phylogéographique de quinze échantillons de Dicentrarchus labrax dont cinq sont originaires de Méditerranée occidentale, sept de Méditerranée orientale et trois échantillons d'élevage en provenance de trois piscicultures françaises a été effectuée à partir du polymorphisme de six locus microsatellites. Parmi les échantillons orientaux, trois ne se regroupent pas en fonction de leur origine géographique, mais plutôt avec le groupe occidental. Ces échantillons présentent également une diversité allélique légèrement réduite, indiquant qu'ils proviennent d'un nombre limité de géniteurs d'origine occidentale. Parmi les stocks d'élevage, un seul montre une réduction significative de la variabilité génétique, ce qui indique que ces cheptels sont ouverts et font largement appel à des géniteurs sauvages. L'utilisation d'alevins d'origine occidentale pour ensemencer les premières fermes d'élevage du bassin oriental remonte au plus tard au début des années 80. Ceci soulève la question des mécanismes biologiques expliquant le maintien de poissons d'origine occidentale dans un contexte oriental pendant au moins deux ou trois générations.
Molecular Ecology, 2014
Population genetics theory has laid the foundations for genomics analyses including the recent bu... more Population genetics theory has laid the foundations for genomics analyses including the recent burst in genome scans for selection and statistical inference of past demographic events in many prokaryote, animal and plant species. Identifying SNPs under natural selection and underpinning species adaptation relies on disentangling the respective contribution of random processes (mutation, drift, migration) from that of selection on nucleotide variability. Most theory and statistical tests have been developed using the Kingman's coalescent theory based on the Wright-Fisher population model. However, these theoretical models rely on biological and life-history assumptions which may be violated in many prokaryote, fungal, animal or plant species. Recent theoretical developments of the so called multiple merger coalescent models are reviewed here (Λ-coalescent, beta-coalescent, Bolthausen-Snitzman, Ξ-coalescent). We explicit how these new models take into account various pervasive ecological and biological characteristics, life history traits or life cycles which were not accounted in previous theories such as 1) the skew in offspring production typical of marine species, 2) fast adapting microparasites (virus, bacteria and fungi) exhibiting large variation in population sizes during epidemics, 3) the peculiar life cycles of fungi and bacteria alternating sexual and asexual cycles, and 4) the high rates of extinction-recolonization in spatially structured populations. We finally discuss the relevance of multiple merger models for the detection of SNPs under selection in these species, for population genomics of very large sample size and advocate to potentially examine the conclusion of previous population genetics studies. .
In France, marine fish and shellfish farming is based mainly on the breeding of wild species, who... more In France, marine fish and shellfish farming is based mainly on the breeding of wild species, whose natural populations are traditionally exploited. Research programs are conducted by IFREMER, in co-operation with INRA and Universities. French research programs for the genetical improvement of marine fish and shellfish concern primarily seabass (Dicentrarchus labrax) and oysters (Ostrea edulis and Crassostrea gigas). The following programs are developed: • The knowledge of wild and farmed populations. The most recent prodjects involve the highly variable microsatellite markers. Seven markers are presently available for seabass and the work is now initiated on turbot (Scophthalmus maximus). In molluscs, microsatellite markers have been developed for the European fJat oyster (O.edulis). • The control of sex-ratios. Research programs in physiology and developmental genetics are initiated in order to control sex-ratios in seabass. These programs include the production of gynogenetic progenies and the study of the sex-ratios of progenies issued from the crossing of hormonally feminised or masculinised breeders with normal ones. • The production of polyploids. Triploid seabass have been produced using high pressure and thermal shocks. The results after 6 months show a lower survival and growth compared with diploid controls. Triploid oysters, produced using chemical treatments (cytochalasin B or 6-DMAP), show better performances compared to doploids. • The establishment of breeding programs for traits of commercial interest.