94 results on '"Grégoire Thomas"'
Search Results
52. The novel marker LTBP2 predicts all-cause and pulmonary death in patients with acute dyspnoea
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Grégoire Thomas, Thenral Socrates, Christian Mueller, Griet Vanpoucke, Wouter Laroy, Mihael Potocki, Tobias Breidthardt, Tamina Mosimann, Ronny Ziller, Alexandre Mebazaa, Beatrice Drexler, Koen Kas, and Piet Moerman
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cause of Death ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Intensive care medicine ,Aged ,Cause of death ,Receiver operating characteristic ,business.industry ,Proportional hazards model ,Hazard ratio ,Area under the curve ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,Dyspnea ,Latent TGF-beta Binding Proteins ,Area Under Curve ,Heart failure ,Acute Disease ,Cardiology ,Female ,business ,Biomarkers ,Cohort study - Abstract
The risk stratification in patients presenting with acute dyspnoea remains a challenge. We therefore conducted a prospective, observational cohort study enrolling 292 patients presenting to the emergency department with acute dyspnoea. A proteomic approach for antibody-free targeted protein quantification based on high-end MS was used to measure LTBP2 [latent TGF (transforming growth factor)-binding protein 2] levels. Final diagnosis and death during follow-up were adjudicated blinded to LTBP2 levels. AHF (acute heart failure) was the final diagnosis in 54% of patients. In both AHF (P
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- 2012
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53. Unbiased plasma proteomics for novel diagnostic biomarkers in cardiovascular disease: identification of quiescin Q6 as a candidate biomarker of acutely decompensated heart failure
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Jan Wuyts, Robin Tuytten, Christian Mueller, Huw Davies, Jean-Marie Launay, Piet Moerman, Alexandre Mebazaa, Brice Lortat-Jacob, Jozef Bartunek, Griet Vanpoucke, Wouter Laroy, Koen De Cremer, Corinne Collet, Filip D'hondt, Damien Logeart, Caroline Vanhaute, Jane-Lise Samuel, Marc Vanderheyden, Grégoire Thomas, Elisabeth Verschuere, Natalie Van Landuyt, James L. Januzzi, Koen Kas, Miguel Tavares, Katleen Verleysen, Alain Cohen-Solal, and Lies Vanneste
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Male ,Proteomics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Acute decompensated heart failure ,Aorta, Thoracic ,Disease ,Internal medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Medicine ,Oxidoreductases Acting on Sulfur Group Donors ,Prospective Studies ,Aged ,Heart Failure ,Receiver operating characteristic ,business.industry ,Case-control study ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Brain natriuretic peptide ,Constriction ,Rats ,Biomarker (cell) ,Dyspnea ,ROC Curve ,Case-Control Studies ,Heart failure ,Cardiology ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Biomarkers - Abstract
Aims Biochemical marker testing has improved the evaluation and management of patients with cardiovascular diseases over the past decade. Natriuretic peptides (NPs), used in clinical practice to assess cardiac dysfunction, exhibit many limitations, however. We used an unbiased proteomics approach for the discovery of novel diagnostic plasma biomarkers of heart failure (HF). Methods and results A proteomics pipeline adapted for very low-abundant plasma proteins was applied to clinical samples from patients admitted with acute decompensated HF (ADHF). Quiescin Q6 (QSOX1), a protein involved in the formation of disulfide bridges, emerged as the best performing marker for ADHF (with an area under the receiver operator characteristic curve of 0.86, 95% confidence interval: 0.79–0.92), and novel isoforms of NPs were also identified. Diagnostic performance of QSOX1 for ADHF was confirmed in 267 prospectively collected subjects of whom 76 had ADHF. Combining QSOX1 to B-type NP (BNP) significantly improved diagnostic accuracy for ADHF by particularly improving specificity. Using thoracic aortic constriction in rats, QSOX1 was specifically induced within both left atria and ventricles at the time of HF onset. Conclusion The novel biomarker QSOX1 accurately identifies ADHF, particularly when combined with BNP. Through both clinical and experimental studies we provide lines of evidence for a link between ADHF and cardiovascular production of QSOX1.
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- 2012
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54. Application of a Combined Weak Cation-Exchange/Crown Ether Column: First Demonstrations of a Versatile Tool for Proteome Subselection
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Bart Ruttens, Katelijne Gheysen, Koen Sandra, José C. Martins, Pat Sandra, D. Vlieghe, Koen De Cremer, Robin Tuytten, Grégoire Thomas, Katleen Verleysen, Natalie Van Landuyt, and Koen Kas
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Male ,Proteomics ,Glycosylation ,Proteome ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Lysine ,Pilot Projects ,Peptide ,Ether ,Column (database) ,Analytical Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Crown Ethers ,Side chain ,Humans ,Peptide-N4-(N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminyl) Asparagine Amidase ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Crown ether ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Chromatography ,Glycopeptides ,Reversed-phase chromatography ,Combinatorial chemistry ,chemistry ,Artifacts - Abstract
The present paper introduces the use of a weak cation-exchange/crown ether column in the proteomics field. The 18-crown-6 ether functionality is well-known to selectively complex ammonium and monoalkylammonium ions, which should make this column highly suitable to trap peptides with free alpha-NH(2) or free epsilon-NH(2) groups from lysine side chains. This unique selection mechanism was put to the test in an N-teromics setup which aims for the enrichment of deliberately acetylated protein N-terminal peptides from a serum digest. It was demonstrated that peptides with free alpha-NH(2) groups and peptides with alpha-amino-acetylated groups can be separated from each other using this weak cation-exchange/crown ether column. The peptides of interest, bearing no free primary amines, were found to be significantly enriched in the column's flow through. At the same time a favorable coenrichment of N-glycosylated peptides was observed. To obtain more insight in the contributions of the two distinct column functionalities, i.e., the weak cation exchanger and the crown ether, the experimental data were checked against a theoretical prediction of the outcome.
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- 2009
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55. A strategy for the prior processing of high-resolution mass spectral data obtained from high-dimensional combined fractional diagonal chromatography
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Grégoire Thomas, Luc Krols, Dirk Valkenborg, Koen Kas, and Tomasz Burzykowski
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Matrix (chemical analysis) ,Time of flight ,Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization ,Chromatography ,Two-dimensional chromatography ,Chemistry ,Mass spectrum ,Analytical chemistry ,Monoisotopic mass ,Reversed-phase chromatography ,Mass spectrometry ,Spectroscopy - Abstract
Combined fractional diagonal chromatography (COFRADIC) is a novel suite of gel-free technologies for the identification of biomarkers in complex peptide mixtures. For this purpose, reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) technology and, in this case, matrix assisted laser desorption /ionization- time of flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometers are extensively used. The particular characteristic of COFRADIC mass spectrometry data is the high number of chromatographic fractions, over which a peptide can be scattered. This can obstruct the quantification of the peptide abundance in the biological sample, which is required for statistical analysis. On the other hand, because of the superior peptide sorting properties of the methodology, the mass spectra become less crowded. Consequently, each peptide appears in a mass spectrum as a series of peaks with peak heights proportional to the probability of occurrence of the isotopic variants of the peptide. In this manuscript, we propose an analysis strategy concerned with the preprocessing of COFRADIC mass spectra prior to a downstream statistical analysis. The preprocessing algorithm produces for each mass spectrum a peptide list by exploiting the characteristic features that should be associated with peaks corresponding to an isotopically resolved cluster of peptide peaks. This reduction step is necessary to facilitate the clustering used in a next step to assemble the validated monoisotopic peptide peaks found over several fractions into a single peptide abundance. To assess the performance of the algorithm, two technical experiments were conducted. The proposed strategy is memory and computationally efficient.
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- 2008
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56. BREEDING NEW COTTON VARIETIES TO FIT THE DIVERSITY OF CROPPING CONDITIONS IN AFRICA: EFFECT OF PLANT ARCHITECTURE, EARLINESS AND EFFECTIVE FLOWERING TIME ON LATE-PLANTED COTTON PRODUCTIVITY
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Grégoire Thomas, Bernard Hau, Eric Gozé, Sylvie Lewicki-Dhainaut, Jacques Lançon, and Emmanuel Sêkloka
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Expérimentation ,Méthodologie ,Vegetative reproduction ,Sélection ,Gossypium hirsutum ,Sowing ,Heritability ,Biology ,Flowering time ,F30 - Génétique et amélioration des plantes ,Crop ,Agronomy ,Productivity (ecology) ,Variété ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Cropping - Abstract
SUMMARYIn most cotton-growing regions of West and Central Africa where rainfed conditions prevail, cropping conditions are highly diversified since the crop is planted over an extended period. We studied production and development patterns in 10 cotton (Gossypium hirsutum) varieties to determine the most efficient strategies that could be transformed into breeding traits. Four trials were carried out between 2002 and 2003 in two cotton-growing areas in Benin to compare the 10 varieties at three stand densities and two planting dates. The parameters monitored were the mean first flower opening date (FF), effective flowering time (EFT), plant height at harvest (HH), height to node ratio (HNR), length of fruiting branch (LFB), number of vegetative branches (NVB) and average boll retention at the first position of the fruiting branches (RP1). We identified two ideotypes that yielded better than the others: (i) Mar 88-214 performed well under late planting–high stand density conditions and was characterized by low vegetative growth and early flowering onset, a short flowering period and low RP1; (ii) H 279-1 performed especially well under early planting–low stand density conditions and was characterized by high vegetative growth, late flowering, long EFT and high RP1. We propose a breeding strategy for both ideotypes based on seven indicators with high heritability (FF, HH, HNR, and LFB) or medium heritability (NVB, EFT, and RP1).
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- 2008
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57. LHC phenomenology and baryogenesis in supersymmetric models with a U(1) R baryon number
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Beauchesne, Hugues, primary, Earl, Kevin, additional, and Grégoire, Thomas, additional
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- 2017
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58. A SIMPLE METHOD FOR ESTIMATING THE END OF EFFECTIVE FLOWERING IN UPLAND COTTON (GOSSYPIUM HIRSUTUM)
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Jacques Lançon, Bernard Hau, Grégoire Thomas, Sylvie Lewicki, Eric Gozé, and Emmanuel Sêkloka
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Identification ,Précocité ,Gossypium hirsutum ,F62 - Physiologie végétale - Croissance et développement ,Biology ,Floraison ,Variété ,Stade de développement végétal ,F63 - Physiologie végétale - Reproduction ,Growth cycle ,fungi ,food and beverages ,Sowing ,Agronomy ,Durée ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Cropping - Abstract
In cotton (Gossypium hirsutum), it is hard to determine the exact date when reproductive growth ceases on the basis of field observations, as compared to more visible factors such as the onset of flowering or boll opening. It is, however, essential to characterize the growth cycle in order to determine what varieties are suitable for planting in different climatic and local cropping conditions. We estimated the end of the effective flowering period on the basis of the opening date of the last flower giving rise to a first-position boll on fruiting branches (LFP1), and propose a simple method for estimating this date. This study, conducted in 2002 and 2003 at Okpara, Benin, involved a comparison of six cotton varieties planted at two different dates (June and July). Plants were monitored to determine the dates when flowers opened at each position on fruiting branches. The LFP1 indicator made a clear distinction between varieties. This highly heritable trait, which was found to be closely correlated with other earliness criteria, could be used to characterize the length of the growth cycle in cotton varieties.
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- 2007
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59. Combination of COFRADIC and high temperature – extended column length conventional liquid chromatography: A very efficient way to tackle complex protein samples, such as serum
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Lies Vanneste, Pat Sandra, Kris Gevaert, Filip D'hondt, Koen Sandra, Koen Kas, Grégoire Thomas, Christine Labeur, Katleen Verleysen, and Joël Vandekerckhove
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Serum ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Chromatography ,Temperature ,Analytical chemistry ,Reproducibility of Results ,Filtration and Separation ,Peptide ,Ion suppression in liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry ,Blood Proteins ,Reversed-phase chromatography ,Mass spectrometry ,High-performance liquid chromatography ,Mass Spectrometry ,Analytical Chemistry ,Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization ,Blood serum ,Two-dimensional chromatography ,chemistry ,Humans ,Trypsin ,Chromatography, Liquid - Abstract
The previously reported COmbined FRActional DIagonal Chromatography (COFRA-DIC) methodology, in which a subset of peptides representative for their parent proteins are sorted, is particularly powerful for whole proteome analysis. This peptide-centric technology is built around diagonal chromatography, where peptide separations are crucial. This paper presents high efficiency peptide separations, in which four 250 x 2.1 mm, 5 microm Zorbax 300SB-C18 columns (total length 1 m) were coupled at operating temperatures of 60'C using a dedicated LC oven and conventional LC equipment. The high efficiency separations were combined with the COFRADIC procedure. This extremely powerful combination resulted, for the analysis of serum, in an increase in the uniquely identified peptide sequences by a factor of 2.6, compared to the COFRADIC procedure on a 25 cm column. This is a reflection of the increased peak capacity obtained on the 1 m column, which was calculated to be a factor 2.7 higher than on the 25 cm column. Besides more efficient sorting, less ion suppression was noticed.
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- 2007
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60. Using a Poisson approximation to predict the isotopic distribution of sulphur-containing peptides in a peptide-centric proteomic approach
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Dirk Valkenborg, Luc Krols, Grégoire Thomas, Pryseley Assam, Tomasz Burzykowski, and Koen Kas
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Proteomics ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Analytical chemistry ,Peptide ,Poisson distribution ,Peptide Fragments ,Analytical Chemistry ,Amino Acids, Sulfur ,symbols.namesake ,Methionine ,Distribution (mathematics) ,Tandem Mass Spectrometry ,Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization ,Mass spectrum ,symbols ,Humans ,Cysteine ,Poisson Distribution ,Monoisotopic mass ,Biological system ,Spectroscopy - Abstract
Breen et al. (Electrophoresis 2000; 21: 2243) proposed a method for finding monoisotopic peptide peaks in mass spectra based on an approximation of the distribution of different isotopic variants of a peptide by a Poisson distribution. They developed the method using all protein sequences from the SWISS-PROT database. We investigate the suitability of this method to predict the isotopic distribution in an environment which enriches for peptides carrying sulphur. More specifically, we focus on mass spectra obtained by a COmbined FRActional DIagonal Chromatography (COFRADIC) approach, developed by Gevaert et al. (Nature Biotechnology 2003; 21: 566), targeting a specific subset of peptides, in this case the N-terminal peptides. One can therefore ask whether the original results of Breen et al. apply to spectra generated by the particular COFRADIC method. We investigate whether the proposed approximation holds for N-terminal peptides. We also evaluate whether ignoring sulphur atoms while developing the approximation, as proposed by Breen et al., does not increase the risk of missing monoisotopic peaks corresponding to sulphur-containing peptides. Finally, we check the sensitivity of the quality of the approximation to optimization criteria used in the development process. The results are not simply restricted to a COFRADIC setting but are also applicable more generally, for any method which enriches for sulphur-containing peptides. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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- 2007
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61. THE ZONE MODULUS OF A LINK
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Rémi Langevin and Grégoire-Thomas Moniot
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Combinatorics ,Algebra and Number Theory ,Corollary ,Hopf link ,Split link ,Mathematical analysis ,Modulus ,Möbius energy ,Disjoint sets ,Invariant (mathematics) ,Upper and lower bounds ,Mathematics - Abstract
In this paper, we construct a conformally invariant functional for two-component links called the zone modulus of the link. Its main property is to give a sufficient condition for a link to be split. The zone modulus is a positive number, and its lower bound is 1. To construct a link with modulus arbitrarily close to 1, it is sufficient to consider two small disjoint spheres each one far from the other and then to construct a link by taking a circle enclosed in each sphere. Such a link is a split link. The situation is different when the link is non-split: we will prove that the modulus of a non-split link is greater than [Formula: see text]. This value of the modulus is realized by a special configuration of linked circles called the Clifford link. As a corollary, we show that if the thickness of a non-split two-component link embedded in S3 is equal to [Formula: see text], then the link is the standard geometric Hopf link.
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- 2005
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62. The human platelet proteome mapped by peptide-centric proteomics: A functional protein profile
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Kris Gevaert, Jozef Van Damme, Bart Ghesquière, An Staes, Evy Timmerman, Grégoire Thomas, Joël Vandekerckhove, Petra Van Damme, and Lennart Martens
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Blood Platelets ,Proteomics ,Proteome ,Peptide ,Biology ,Tandem mass spectrometry ,Peptide Mapping ,Biochemistry ,Mass Spectrometry ,Transcriptome ,Animals ,Humans ,Protein Isoforms ,RNA, Messenger ,Databases, Protein ,Molecular Biology ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Chromatography ,Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis ,Computational Biology ,Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization ,Membrane protein ,chemistry ,Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization ,Peptides - Abstract
Several studies have been published in which holistic approaches were used to characterise the proteome and transcriptome of human platelets. The key intent being that a deeper understanding of the normal and aberrant physiological functions of platelets can only be achieved if most biomolecular building blocks are mapped. Here we present the application of recently developed novel technologies that overcome some of the shortcomings of gel-based proteomics. Central in our approach is the so-called combined fractional diagonal chromatography (COFRADIC)-technology in which sets of representative peptides are sorted in a diagonal RP chromatographic system through a specific modification of their side chain. In this study we combined three different COFRADIC sorting techniques to analyse the proteome of human platelets. Methionyl, cysteinyl and amino terminal peptides were isolated and analysed by MS/MS. Merging the peptide identifications obtained after database searching resulted in a core set of 641 platelet proteins, which comprises the largest set identified today. In comparison to previously published platelet proteomes, we identified 404 novel platelet proteins containing a high number of hydrophobic membrane proteins and hypothetical proteins. Furthermore we discuss the observed characteristics and potential benefits of each of the different COFRADIC technologies for proteome analysis and highlight important issues that need to be considered when searching sequence databases using data obtained in peptide-centric, non-gel proteomics studies.
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- 2005
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63. Reversible labeling of cysteine-containing peptides allows their specific chromatographic isolation for non-gel proteome studies
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Lennart Martens, Bart Ghesquière, Kris Gevaert, An Staes, Grégoire Thomas, Joël Vandekerckhove, and Jozef Van Damme
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Blood Platelets ,Proteome ,Dithionitrobenzoic Acid ,Peptide ,Mass spectrometry ,Biochemistry ,Mass Spectrometry ,Sequence Analysis, Protein ,Protein methods ,Liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry ,medicine ,Humans ,Trypsin ,Cysteine ,Molecular Biology ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Chromatography ,Chemistry ,Blood Proteins ,Bottom-up proteomics ,Peptides ,medicine.drug - Abstract
We report upon a novel procedure to specifically isolate cysteine-containing peptides from a complex peptide mixture. Cysteines are converted to hydrophobic residues by mixed disulfide formation with Ellman's reagent. Proteins are subsequently digested with trypsin and the generated peptide mixture is a first time fractionated by reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography. Cysteinyl-peptides are isolated out of each primary fraction by a reduction step followed by a secondary peptide separation on the same column, performed under identical conditions as for the primary separation. The reducing agent removes the covalently attached group from the cysteine side chain, making cysteine-peptides more hydrophilic and, thereby, such peptides can be specifically collected during the secondary separation and are finally used to identify their precursor proteins using automated liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry. We show that this procedure efficiently isolates cysteine-peptides, making the sample mixture less complex for further analysis. This method was applied for the analysis of the proteomes of human platelets and enriched human plasma. In both proteomes, a significant number of low abundance proteins were identified next to extremely abundant ones. A dynamic range for protein identification spanning 4-5 orders of magnitude is demonstrated.
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- 2004
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64. Exploring proteomes and analyzing protein processing by mass spectrometric identification of sorted N-terminal peptides
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Grégoire Thomas, An Staes, Jozef Van Damme, Marc Goethals, Joël Vandekerckhove, Lennart Martens, and Kris Gevaert
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,Biomedical Engineering ,Bioengineering ,Peptide ,Terminal amine isotopic labeling of substrates ,Mass spectrometry ,Trypsin ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,N-terminus ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Peptide mass fingerprinting ,Proteome ,medicine ,Molecular Medicine ,Bottom-up proteomics ,Biotechnology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Current non-gel techniques for analyzing proteomes rely heavily on mass spectrometric analysis of enzymatically digested protein mixtures. Prior to analysis, a highly complex peptide mixture is either separated on a multidimensional chromatographic system or it is first reduced in complexity by isolating sets of representative peptides. Recently, we developed a peptide isolation procedure based on diagonal electrophoresis and diagonal chromatography. We call it combined fractional diagonal chromatography (COFRADIC). In previous experiments, we used COFRADIC to identify more than 800 Escherichia coli proteins by tandem mass spectrometric (MS/MS) analysis of isolated methionine-containing peptides. Here, we describe a diagonal method to isolate N-terminal peptides. This reduces the complexity of the peptide sample, because each protein has one N terminus and is thus represented by only one peptide. In this new procedure, free amino groups in proteins are first blocked by acetylation and then digested with trypsin. After reverse-phase (RP) chromatographic fractionation of the generated peptide mixture, internal peptides are blocked using 2,4,6-trinitrobenzenesulfonic acid (TNBS); they display a strong hydrophobic shift and therefore segregate from the unaltered N-terminal peptides during a second identical separation step. N-terminal peptides can thereby be specifically collected for further liquid chromatography (LC)-MS/MS analysis. Omitting the acetylation step results in the isolation of non-lysine-containing N-terminal peptides from in vivo blocked proteins.
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- 2003
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65. Chromatographic Isolation of Methionine-containing Peptides for Gel-free Proteome Analysis
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Jozef Van Damme, An Staes, Marc Goethals, Bart Hoorelbeke, Lennart Martens, Hans Demol, Joël Vandekerckhove, Kris Gevaert, Magda Puype, and Grégoire Thomas
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,Methionine ,Chromatography ,Quantitative proteomics ,lac operon ,Peptide ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Biochemistry ,Analytical Chemistry ,Amino acid ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Proteome ,medicine ,Low copy number ,Molecular Biology ,Escherichia coli - Abstract
A novel gel-free proteomic technology was used to identify more than 800 proteins from 50 million Escherichia coli K12 cells in a single analysis. A peptide mixture is first obtained from a total unfractionated cell lysate, and only the methionine-containing peptides are isolated and identified by mass spectrometry and database searching. The sorting procedure is based on the concept of diagonal chromatography but adapted for highly complex mixtures. Statistical analysis predicts that we have identified more than 40% of the expressed proteome, including soluble and membrane-bound proteins. Next to highly abundant proteins, we also detected low copy number components such as the E. coli lactose operon repressor, illustrating the high dynamic range. The method is about 100 times more sensitive than two-dimensional gel-based methods and is fully automated. The strongest point, however, is the flexibility in the peptide sorting chemistry, which may target the technique toward quantitative proteomics of virtually every class of peptides containing modifiable amino acids, such as phosphopeptides, amino-terminal peptides, etc., adding a new dimension to future proteome research.
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- 2002
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66. Existence de surfaces de Willmore qui ne sont pas minimales
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Grégoire-Thomas Moniot
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Physics ,General Medicine ,Humanities - Abstract
En utilisant un theoreme de Langer et Singer, Pinkall a construit dans [Pi] une infinite de tores plonges dans S 3 qui sont des points critiques de la fonctionnelle de Willmore, mais qui ne proviennent pas de surfaces minimales. Nous donnons ici une demonstration plus geometrique de ce resultat sans utiliser le theoreme de Langer et Singer. Les tores obtenus par Pinkall sont des images reciproques par l'application de Hopf de courbes de S 2 . Lorsqu'un tel tore est extremal, des relations entre la courbure de son image et la courbure des cercles d'une famille particuliere enveloppant cette image apparaissent. Nous verrons que les contraintes apportees par ces relations sont suffisantes pour determiner la courbure de ces images.
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- 2002
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67. The spontaneous ℤ 2 $$ {\mathbb{Z}}_2 $$ breaking Twin Higgs
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Beauchesne, Hugues, primary, Earl, Kevin, additional, and Grégoire, Thomas, additional
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- 2016
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68. P88. Pre-eclampsia risk stratification for low risk 1st pregnancies: First results of a new LC-MS based multiplex metabolite assay
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Robin Tuytten, Philip N. Baker, Grégoire Thomas, Louise C. Kenny, Caroline Nolan, and Liz Bond
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Pregnancy ,Univariate analysis ,Eclampsia ,Obstetrics ,business.industry ,Metabolite ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Prenatal care ,Bioinformatics ,medicine.disease ,Logistic regression ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Biomarker (medicine) ,Multiplex ,business - Abstract
Introduction Screening for pre-eclampsia is a focus of prenatal care and is largely based on the use of clinical risk factors. However, current screening protocols are unfit to determine pre-eclampsia risk in 1st time pregnant women; biomarkers have the potential to address this unmet need. As single biomarkers have insufficient predictive accuracy, unbiased biomarker discoveries have been performed to identify panels of markers which when combined, have the potential pre-eclampsia prediction. Metabolite based solutions using mass spectrometry have gained significant interest as they have the potential to readily translate to clinical practice. Objectives To translate the discovery that blood-borne metabolite biomarkers stratify pregnant women early in pregnancy (∼15 weeks) to their risk of pre-eclampsia [1] into a commercial LC–MS based clinical assay. To pursue fit-for-purpose testing of the first version of the developed LC–MS pipeline followed by independent verification through a case:control study. Methods The analysis pipeline incorporated (1) a single step metabolite extraction, (2) multiplex LC-QqQ-MS assays for 40+ metabolites and (3) a dedicated data processing protocol. Case:control study testing utilised 15 weeks’ plasma samples of from 50 pregnant women who subsequently developed pre-eclampsia and 500 random control pregnancies. All participants are part of the SCOPE study [2] and were recruited in Cork, Ireland. Results For the 40+ metabolite assays: 62% had a %CV £ 15% and 82% had a %CV £ 25%. Univariate analyses using the ROC statistic showed that 7 of the metabolites tested had significant predictive power (lower limit 95% CI ROC-AUC [3] 0.5). Multivariate logistic regression analysis revealed particular combinations of metabolites which identified groups of women either at increased risk or at decreased risk for pre-eclampsia. Conclusion These findings underpin the potential of metabolite-centric multimarker panels to encapsulate a complex syndrome such as pre-eclampsia considerably in advance of any clinical manifestation. Further development steps will include performing additional case:control studies and subsequent clinical validation of this metabolite based test in the large scale European, multicentre phase IIa clinical study IMproved Pregnancy Outcomes by Early Detection (IMPROvED) which is currently recruiting 1st time pregnant women in 5 European countries [3] . Acknowledgment The authors gratefully acknowledge funding from the EU-HEALTH Project IMPROvED (305169) of the Seventh Framework Programme (FP7).
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- 2015
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69. Integrated proteomics pipeline yields novel biomarkers for predicting preeclampsia
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Robin Tuytten, Jenny Myers, Griet Vanpoucke, Wouter Laroy, Koen Kas, Louise C. Kenny, Robyn A. North, Philip N. Baker, Grégoire Thomas, Nigel Simpson, and Claire T. Roberts
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Oncology ,Placental growth factor ,Adult ,Male ,Proteomics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Population ,Blood Pressure ,Gestational Age ,Biology ,Pregnancy Proteins ,Bioinformatics ,Mass Spectrometry ,Preeclampsia ,Pre-Eclampsia ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Pregnancy ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,education ,Growth Substances ,Placenta Growth Factor ,education.field_of_study ,Incidence ,Australia ,Infant, Newborn ,Pregnancy Outcome ,Reproducibility of Results ,Ultrasonography, Doppler ,medicine.disease ,Prognosis ,Uterine Artery ,Blood pressure ,Gestation ,Biomarker (medicine) ,Female ,Biomarkers ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Preeclampsia, a hypertensive pregnancy complication, is largely unpredictable in healthy nulliparous pregnant women. Accurate preeclampsia prediction in this population would transform antenatal care. To identify novel protein markers relevant to the prediction of preeclampsia, a 3-step mass spectrometric work flow was applied. On selection of candidate biomarkers, mostly from an unbiased discovery experiment (19 women), targeted quantitation was used to verify and validate candidate biomarkers in 2 independent cohorts from the SCOPE (SCreening fOr Pregnancy Endpoints) study. Candidate proteins were measured in plasma specimens collected at 19 to 21 weeks’ gestation from 100 women who later developed preeclampsia and 200 women without preeclampsia recruited from Australia and New Zealand. Protein levels (n=25), age, and blood pressure were then analyzed using logistic regression to identify multimarker models (maximum 6 markers) that met predefined criteria: sensitivity ≥50% at 20% positive predictive value. These 44 algorithms were then tested in an independent European cohort (n=300) yielding 8 validated models. These 8 models detected 50% to 56% of preeclampsia cases in the training and validation sets; the detection rate for preterm preeclampsia cases was 80%. Validated models combine insulin-like growth factor acid labile subunit and soluble endoglin, supplemented with maximally 4 markers of placental growth factor, serine peptidase inhibitor Kunitz type 1, melanoma cell adhesion molecule, selenoprotein P, and blood pressure. Predictive performances were maintained when exchanging mass spectrometry measurements with ELISA measurements for insulin-like growth factor acid labile subunit. In conclusion, we demonstrated that biomarker combinations centered on insulin-like growth factor acid labile subunit have the potential to predict preeclampsia in healthy nulliparous women.
- Published
- 2013
70. LHC constraints on Mini-Split anomaly and gauge mediation and prospects for LHC 14 and a future 100 TeV pp collider
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Beauchesne, Hugues, primary, Earl, Kevin, additional, and Grégoire, Thomas, additional
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- 2015
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71. Effective flowering time variations in upland cotton (Gossypium hirsutum) at different planting dates and stand densities in Benin
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Sylvie Lewicki, Jacques Lançon, Emmanuel Sêkloka, Grégoire Thomas, Eric Gozé, and Bernard Hau
- Subjects
Gossypium hirsutum ,F62 - Physiologie végétale - Croissance et développement ,Biology ,Densité de semis ,Flowering time ,F01 - Culture des plantes ,Floraison ,Variété ,Crop management ,date de semis ,Growth cycle ,F63 - Physiologie végétale - Reproduction ,Expérimentation ,Sowing ,Agronomy ,Choix des espèces ,Durée ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Cropping - Abstract
Effective flowering time in Gossypium hirsutum cotton plants was studied with the aim of enhancing decision making on the best varieties to plant according to the planting date under rainfed cropping conditions. Trials were conducted at two sites in a cotton-growing area of Benin in 2002 and 2003. A split-split plot design with three replicates was used to compare 10 cotton varieties, with different growth cycle lengths and morphology, at three stand densities (42 000, 125 000, 167 000 plants ha−1) and two planting dates (standard planting in June and late planting). The flowering period was characterized by the mean first flower opening date (FF), which is an indicator of flowering earliness, and by the opening date of the last flower giving rise to a first-position boll on fruiting branches (LFP1). Effective flowering time (EFT) was calculated as the difference between LFP1 and FF. EFTs differed markedly in the 10 cotton varieties tested and this parameter could not be predicted on the basis of flowering earliness. Late planting and high planting rates delayed first-flower opening, accelerated last-boll development and reduced the effective flowering time. This latter factor should be taken into account in cotton breeding programmes so that varieties adapted to local rainfall constraints can be recommended to growers while also enhancing crop management sequences.
- Published
- 2007
72. Little Higgs models
- Author
-
Grégoire, Thomas, Logan, Heather E, and McElrath, Bob
- Subjects
Particle Physics - Published
- 2006
73. LHC phenomenology and baryogenesis in supersymmetric models with a U(1) baryon number.
- Author
-
Beauchesne, Hugues, Earl, Kevin, and Grégoire, Thomas
- Subjects
LARGE Hadron Collider ,PHENOMENOLOGICAL theory (Physics) ,SUPERSYMMETRY ,BARYON number ,CONSTRAINTS (Physics) - Abstract
We study the phenomenology of a supersymmetric extension of the Standard Model with an R-symmetry under which R-charges correspond to the baryon number. This identification allows for the presence in the superpotential of the R-parity violating term λ U D D without breaking baryon number, which loosens several bounds on this operator while changing considerably the phenomenology. However, the R-symmetry cannot remain exact as it is at least broken by anomaly mediation. Under these conditions, we investigate the constraints coming from baryon number violating processes and flavour physics and find that, in general, they are lessened. Additionally, we examine recent ATLAS and CMS experimental searches and use these to place limits on the parameter space of the model. This is done for both stop production, which now features both pair and resonant production, and pair production of the first two generations of squarks. Finally, we study the implications this model has on baryogenesis. We find that successful baryogenesis can potentially be achieved, but only at the cost of breaking the R-symmetry by a significant amount. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
74. Electroweak precision measurements in supersymmetric models with a U(1) R lepton number
- Author
-
Beauchesne, Hugues, primary and Grégoire, Thomas, additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
75. Social Work with Addictions James G. Barber
- Author
-
Gregoire, Thomas K.
- Published
- 1996
76. Alcoholism Treatment: A Social Work Perspective Katherine van Wormer
- Author
-
Gregoire, Thomas K.
- Published
- 1996
77. “L = R” - U(1) R lepton number at the LHC
- Author
-
Frugiuele, Claudia, primary, Grégoire, Thomas, additional, Kumar, Piyush, additional, and Pontón, Eduardo, additional
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
78. “L = R” — U(1) R as the origin of leptonic ‘RPV’
- Author
-
Frugiuele, Claudia, primary, Grégoire, Thomas, additional, Kumar, Piyush, additional, and Pontón, Eduardo, additional
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
79. Exploring the heavy quark sector of the Bestest Little Higgs model at the LHC
- Author
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Godfrey, Stephen, primary, Grégoire, Thomas, additional, Kalyniak, Pat, additional, Martin, Travis A. W., additional, and Moats, Kenneth, additional
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
80. Four top quarks in extensions of the standard model
- Author
-
Grégoire, Thomas, primary, Katz, Emanuel, additional, and Sanz, Veronica, additional
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
81. Dilaton constraints and LHC prospects
- Author
-
Coleppa, Baradhwaj, primary, Grégoire, Thomas, additional, and Logan, Heather E., additional
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
82. Making the sneutrino a Higgs particle with aU(1)Rlepton number
- Author
-
Frugiuele, Claudia, primary and Grégoire, Thomas, additional
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
83. OS043. Identification and validation of novel markers for the predictionof pre-eclampsia
- Author
-
Robyn A. North, Robin Tuytten, Nigel Simpson, Jenny Myers, Philip N. Baker, Gus Dekker, Lucilla Poston, Grégoire Thomas, Louise C. Kenny, and L. McCowan
- Subjects
Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Multivariate statistics ,education.field_of_study ,Multivariate analysis ,business.industry ,Selected reaction monitoring ,Population ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Overfitting ,Bioinformatics ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Biomarker (medicine) ,Multiplex ,Biomarker discovery ,business ,education - Abstract
Introduction Currently no test accurately predicts pre-eclampsia (PE) in a healthy nulliparous population. Unbiased protein biomarker discovery has the potential to identify novel markers but multimarker panels are required to achieve clinically relevant prediction of PE. To this purpose, single biomarker performances were obtained and multimarker panels developed in a significant subcohort of the international Screening fOr Pregnancy Endpoints study (SCOPE) study [1]. Objectives To identify and validate novel protein markers for PE prediction using chromatographic and mass spectrometric techniques which enable the identification and quantification of plasma proteins present in plasma at sub ng/ml concentration (Pronota, Belgium). Methods Pre-disease plasma samples (22–26 weeks) from women who subsequently developed PE and those with uncomplicated pregnancies [2] were used to generate 30 plasma proteome profiles using the MASStermind™ pipeline. A set of novel protein candidates were validated using an antibody-free mass spectrometry method using multiple reaction monitoring (MASSterclass™) in a subcohort of the SCOPE study (NZ & Aus) [1]. Relative abundance of 40+ proteins was determined in 20week plasma samples from 100 women who developed PE and 200 women who did not develop PE (included women with other pregnancy complications). Multivariate analyses were performed to identify algorithms with predictive performance using combinations confined to a maximum of 6 parameters (protein markers and clinical parameters) to avoid overfitting. Validation of the prediction panels was performed in an independent subcohort of SCOPE (Europe) comprising 50 PE and 150 no PE. Results From this large scale biomarker discovery effort a number of key results were obtained: a novel protein, i.e., Insulin-like growth factor binding protein, acid labile subunit (IGFALS), was identified. AUC for this marker for the prediction of all PE was 0.71 (CI 0.68–0.75) which was greater than both PlGF and s-Eng (respective AUCs: 0.64 and 0.61). IGFALS was also found to have predictive value for term (AUC 0.70) as well as preterm disease (AUC 0.75). Using multivariate analysis, marker panels were identified that achieved clinically relevant prediction (exemplary panel prediction of all PE cases AUC=0.79; prediction of preterm PE AUC=0.92). These multivariate models were successfully validated in the European SCOPE subcohort. In addition, predictive algorithms based on mass spectrometric read outs were largely invariant to interchanging the IGFALS mass spectrometry quantitation data with IGFALS ELISA data. Conclusion This study demonstrates the capability of high level LC-MS technologies to discover candidate biomarkers and execute large scale multiplex validation to develop a predictive screening test for preeclampsia.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
84. A composite gluino at the LHC
- Author
-
Grégoire, Thomas, primary and Katz, Emanuel, additional
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
85. Clifford links are the only minimizers of the zone modulus among non-split links
- Author
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Moniot, Grégoire-Thomas, primary
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
86. Brane-to-brane mediation of supersymmetry breaking in presence of D-type breaking
- Author
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Grégoire, Thomas, primary
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
87. Null energy condition and superluminal propagation
- Author
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Dubovsky, Sergei, primary, Grégoire, Thomas, additional, Nicolis, Alberto, additional, and Rattazzi, Riccardo, additional
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
88. THE ZONE MODULUS OF A LINK
- Author
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LANGEVIN, RÉMI, primary and MONIOT, GRÉGOIRE-THOMAS, additional
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
89. Existence de surfaces de Willmore qui ne sont pas minimales
- Author
-
Moniot, Grégoire-Thomas, primary
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
90. IL-29 Is proteomics heading towards medicine?
- Author
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Grégoire Thomas, Kris Gevaert, Jozef Van Damme, Bart Ghesquière, An Staes, Marc Goethals, Lennart Martens, Hans Demol, Joël Vandekerckhove, and Magda Puype
- Subjects
Heading (navigation) ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Cell Biology ,Plant Science ,Computational biology ,Biology ,Proteomics ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Developmental Biology - Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
91. Vector dilepton production at hadron colliders in the 3-3-1 model
- Author
-
Grégoire, Thomas, primary
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
92. A SIMPLE METHOD FOR ESTIMATING THE END OF EFFECTIVE FLOWERING IN UPLAND COTTON (GOSSYPIUM HIRSUTUM).
- Author
-
EMMANUEL SEKLOKA, JACQUES LANÇON, BERNARD HAU, ERIC GOZÉ, SYLVIE LEWICKI, and GRÉGOIRE THOMAS
- Subjects
COTTON ,PLANT growth ,FLOWERING time ,CULTIVARS ,PLANTS - Abstract
In cotton (Gossypium hirsutum), it is hard to determine the exact date when reproductive growth ceases on the basis of field observations, as compared to more visible factors such as the onset of flowering or boll opening. It is, however, essential to characterize the growth cycle in order to determine what varieties are suitable for planting in different climatic and local cropping conditions. We estimated the end of the effective flowering period on the basis of the opening date of the last flower giving rise to a first-position boll on fruiting branches (LFP1), and propose a simple method for estimating this date. This study, conducted in 2002 and 2003 at Okpara, Benin, involved a comparison of six cotton varieties planted at two different dates (June and July). Plants were monitored to determine the dates when flowers opened at each position on fruiting branches. The LFP1 indicator made a clear distinction between varieties. This highly heritable trait, which was found to be closely correlated with other earliness criteria, could be used to characterize the length of the growth cycle in cotton varieties. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
93. EFFECTIVE FLOWERING TIME VARIATIONS IN UPLAND COTTON (GOSSYPIUM HIRSUTUM) AT DIFFERENT PLANTING DATES AND STAND DENSITIES IN BENIN.
- Author
-
EMMANUEL SEKLOKA, BERNARD HAU, ERIC GOZÉ, SYLVIE LEWICKI, GRÉGOIRE THOMAS, and JACQUES LANÇON
- Subjects
COTTON ,FLOWERING time ,CULTIVARS ,PLANT growth ,PLANT development - Abstract
Effective flowering time in Gossypium hirsutum cotton plants was studied with the aim of enhancing decision making on the best varieties to plant according to the planting date under rainfed cropping conditions. Trials were conducted at two sites in a cotton-growing area of Benin in 2002 and 2003. A split-split plot design with three replicates was used to compare 10 cotton varieties, with different growth cycle lengths and morphology, at three stand densities (42 000, 125 000, 167 000 plants ha−1) and two planting dates (standard planting in June and late planting). The flowering period was characterized by the mean first flower opening date (FF), which is an indicator of flowering earliness, and by the opening date of the last flower giving rise to a first-position boll on fruiting branches (LFP1). Effective flowering time (EFT) was calculated as the difference between LFP1 and FF. EFTs differed markedly in the 10 cotton varieties tested and this parameter could not be predicted on the basis of flowering earliness. Late planting and high planting rates delayed first-flower opening, accelerated last-boll development and reduced the effective flowering time. This latter factor should be taken into account in cotton breeding programmes so that varieties adapted to local rainfall constraints can be recommended to growers while also enhancing crop management sequences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
94. Making the sneutrino a Higgs particle with a U(1)R lepton number.
- Author
-
Frugiuele, Claudia and Grégoire, Thomas
- Subjects
- *
HIGGS bosons , *LEPTONS (Nuclear physics) , *SUPERSYMMETRY , *STANDARD model (Nuclear physics) , *QUARKS , *ELECTROWEAK interactions , *NEUTRINO mass - Abstract
We present a supersymmetric extension of the Sstandard model that possesses a continuous 17(1 )R symmetry, which is identified with one of three lepton numbers, and where a sneutrino vev gives mass to the down-type quark and leptons. This idea allows for a smaller particle content than the minimal /-symmetric supersymmetry extension of the standard model. We explore bounds on this model coming from electroweak precision measurements, neutrino masses, and gravitino decay. Bounds from electro-weak precision measurements lead to a two-sided bound on tan&bgr;, while gravitino decay forces a low reheating temperature. Finally, the generation of neutrino masses from R-symmetry violation put an upper bound on the SUSY-breaking scale. Despite all of this, we find that the allowed parameter space is still large and would lead to a distinctive phenomenology at the LHC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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