19 results on '"E. Labarthe"'
Search Results
2. Experimental Determination of Liquid-liquid Equilibria Under Pressure in an Amine-water-naoh Ternary System: Application to the Extraction Process
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D.M. Le, A. Dhenain, E. Labarthe, A.J. Bougrine, and H. Delalu
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Chemical engineering ,TP155-156 ,Computer engineering. Computer hardware ,TK7885-7895 - Abstract
Abstract preview not available - see full-text PDF article.
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- 2011
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3. 621. Statistics for an accurate genome wide association study on Varroa resistance trait in a French honeybee
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S.E. Eynard, A. Vignal, Y. Agez, B. Basso, O. Bouchez, T. Bulach, Y. Le Conte, B. Dainat, A. Decourtye, L. Genestout, M. Guichard, F. Guillaume, E. Labarthe, R. Mahla, F. Mondet, M. Neudischko, F. Phocas, Y. Poquet, C. Sann, R.F. Serre, K. Tabet, and B. Servin
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- 2022
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4. A New Strategy for the Preparation of N-Aminopiperidine Using Hydroxylamine-O-Sulfonic Acid: Synthesis, Kinetic Modelling, Phase Equilibria, Extraction and Processes
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A. J. Bougrine, V. Pasquet, Henri Delalu, and E. Labarthe
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Extraction (chemistry) ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Computational chemistry ,Phase (matter) ,Scientific method ,Anhydrous ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Degradation (geology) ,Organic chemistry ,Piperidine ,Stoichiometry ,General Environmental Science ,Phase diagram - Abstract
A new strategy for the synthesis of N-aminopiperidine (NAPP) was developed using hydroxylamine-O-sulfonic acid (HOSA). A systematic study of NAPP formation and degradation reactions was carried out in diluted medium, in order to identify products and to establish a kinetic modelling. Principal parameters have been defined, in particular, that obtaining high yields (>90%) requires non stoichiometric conditions. The extraction and purification processes were also studied. NAPP isolation and piperidine recycling were optimized after the establishment of the various solid-liquid-liquid and liquid-vapour implied phase diagrams. At least, a calorimetric study of solvatation and reaction enthalpies was undertaken in order to estimate reactor heating temperature in the case of anhydrous synthesis. The combination of our kinetic, thermodynamic and calorimetric data allows the establishment of two process schemes: one using pure piperidine, the other, a 66 w% titrating azeotropic solution in piperidine.
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- 2013
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5. Kinetic modelling of synthesis of N-aminopiperidine from hydroxylamine-O-sulfonique acid and piperidine
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A. J. Bougrine, Henri Delalu, V. Pasquet, and E. Labarthe
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General Chemistry ,Catalysis ,Computer Science Applications ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Hydroxylamine ,Reaction rate constant ,chemistry ,Computational chemistry ,Modeling and Simulation ,Reagent ,Yield (chemistry) ,Nucleophilic substitution ,Organic chemistry ,SN2 reaction ,Piperidine - Abstract
A new route to synthesize N-aminopiperidine (NAPP) from hydroxylamine-O-sulfonique acid (HOSA) and piperidine was described. Kinetics of the reaction was investigated to optimize the conditions of the synthesis. Since the reaction is fast, this study was carried out in a diluted medium (10−3 to 10−2 mol/l). To determine the concentration of the reaction product, NAPP was allowed to react with formaldehyde and the product was analysed by UV and HPLC techniques. The formation of NAPP is consistent with the first-order reaction to two reagents, governed by the nucleophilic substitution via SN2 mechanism. Oxidation of NAPP by HOSA was identified as the main secondary reaction which consistently reduced the yield of NAPP. A number of differential equations were elaborated and solution of these equations serves to predict the behavior of the system as a function of the reagent concentrations, pH and temperature. From the corresponding mathematical treatment a unique implicit expression was derived that characterizes the reaction medium. It was found that the [PP]0/[HOSA]0 molar ratio (p), the initial concentrations of [PP]0 and [HOSA]0, the ratio of rate constants k 2/k 1 and temperature are the only parameters that affect the yield of NAPP from HOSA. The results calculated from this model are in good agreement with the experimental data and they can be used to determine the optimal conditions of the reaction.
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- 2012
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6. Extraction optimization of organic compounds by demixing observed in the H2O–NaOH–piperidine ternary diagram
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Henri Delalu, E. Labarthe, and A. J. Bougrine
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Ternary numeral system ,Chromatography ,Chemistry ,Spinodal decomposition ,Thermodynamics ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Miscibility ,Isothermal process ,law.invention ,Critical point (thermodynamics) ,law ,Phase (matter) ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Crystallization ,Phase diagram - Abstract
Three isothermal sections of the isobaric ternary system H2O–NaOH–C5H10NH were determined by Isoplethic Thermal Analysis at 293, 313, and 323 K. Miscibility gaps were completely delimited and each critical point was calculated. This system is then characterized by a prevalent miscibility gap, three crystallization domains and two triphasic invariant domains. The relevant exploitation of this diagram so permits us to deduce the demixing temperature leading to the optimal transfer of the organic compounds in the light phase and also the composition of the organic phase recovered after this second step of extraction. Moreover, the addition of calculated quantities of sodium hydroxide aqueous solution allows to be in optimized conditions for the next distillation operations.
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- 2010
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7. Study of the polythermal diagram water–sodium sulphate–piperidine
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A. J. Bougrine, E. Labarthe, and H. Delalu
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Ternary numeral system ,Spinodal decomposition ,Chemistry ,Thermodynamics ,Atmospheric temperature range ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Isothermal process ,law.invention ,Critical point (thermodynamics) ,law ,Isobaric process ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Crystallization ,Thermal analysis - Abstract
Two isothermal sections of the isobaric ternary system H2O–Na2SO4–C5H10NH were determined by isoplethic thermal analysis at 293 and 323 K. The compositions of the aqueous and organic invariant liquids, respectively L1 and L2, as well as that of the critical point, were characterized for each isotherm. The temperature of the invariant reaction was obtained by controlled flow thermal analysis and the temperature of the demixing ending, by interpolation of the monovariant lines. All these informations allowed us to establish the isobaric polythermal diagram of the H2O–Na2SO4–C5H10NH system, for the temperature range 293–323 K, as well as a qualitative representation of the monovariant curves. This system is then characterized by a wide miscibility gap, three crystallization domains, and four-three-phase invariant domains. The relevant exploitation of this diagram so permits us to deduce the demixing temperature leading to the optimal transfer of the organic compounds in the light phase and also the composition of the organic phase recovered after this first step of extraction.
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- 2009
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8. Equilibrium study between condensed phases by isoplethic thermal analysis when a miscibility gap is observed
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Jean-Jacques Counioux, J. Berthet, A. J. Bougrine, Henri Delalu, E. Labarthe, Hydrazines et Procédés (HP), Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), and Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Institut de Chimie du CNRS (INC)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-SNPE
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Spinodal decomposition ,water ,Thermodynamics ,Ternary plot ,02 engineering and technology ,[CHIM.INOR]Chemical Sciences/Inorganic chemistry ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Miscibility ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,020401 chemical engineering ,Critical point (thermodynamics) ,Sodium sulfate ,0204 chemical engineering ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Thermal analysis ,sodium sulfate ,Ternary numeral system ,Chemistry ,critical point ,isoplethic thermal analysis ,Condensed Matter Physics ,piperidine ,ternary diagram ,0104 chemical sciences ,misicibility gap - Abstract
International audience; Isoplethic thermal analysis was used to determine the solid-liquid-liquid equilibria in the ternary system water-sodium sulfate-piperidine. The changes in state observed on the thermogram recorded during the displacement in a quasi-binary section permit the identification of the different phases and the delimitation of the corresponding equilibrium domains. Two isotherms were established at 25°C and 40°C because these temperatures frame the peritectic decomposition of the sodium sulfate decahydrate. Miscibility gaps were completely delimited and each critical point was calculated. This study permitted to determine the optimal conditions for separating the organic phase by liquid-liquid extraction.
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- 2009
9. Sequence-Based Multi Ancestry Association Study Reveals the Polygenic Architecture of Varroa destructor Resistance in the Honeybee Apis mellifera.
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Eynard SE, Mondet F, Basso B, Bouchez O, Le Conte Y, Dainat B, Decourtye A, Genestout L, Guichard M, Guillaume F, Labarthe E, Locke B, Mahla R, de Miranda J, Neuditschko M, Phocas F, Canale-Tabet K, Vignal A, and Servin B
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- Animals, Bees genetics, Bees parasitology, Disease Resistance genetics, Genetic Variation, Europe, Varroidae genetics, Varroidae pathogenicity, Genome-Wide Association Study, Multifactorial Inheritance genetics, Phenotype
- Abstract
Honeybees, Apis mellifera, have experienced the full impacts of globalisation, including the recent invasion by the parasitic mite Varroa destructor, now one of the main causes of colony losses worldwide. The strong selection pressure it exerts has led some colonies to develop defence strategies conferring some degree of resistance to the parasite. Assuming these traits are partly heritable, selective breeding of naturally resistant bees could be a sustainable strategy for fighting infestations. To characterise the genetic determinism of varroa resistance, we conducted the largest genome wide association study performed to date on whole genome sequencing of more than 1500 colonies on multiple phenotypes linked to varroa resistance of honeybees. To take into account some genetic diversity of honeybees, colonies belonging to different ancestries representing the main honeybee subspecies in Western Europe were included and analysed both as separate populations and combined in a meta-analysis. The results show that varroa resistance is substantially heritable and polygenic: while 60 significant associations were identified, none explain a substantial part of the trait genetic variance. Overall our study highlights that genomic selection for varroa resistance is promising but that it will not be based on managing a few strong effect mutations and rather use approaches that leverage the genome wide diversity of honeybee populations. From a broader perspective, these results point the way towards understanding the genetic adaptation of eusocial insects to parasite load., (© 2024 The Author(s). Molecular Ecology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2025
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10. Building a reliable 16S mini-barcode library of wild bees from Occitania, south-west of France.
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Marquisseau A, Canale-Tabet K, Labarthe E, Pascal G, Klopp C, Pornon A, Escaravage N, Rudelle R, Vignal A, Ouin A, Ollivier M, and Pichon M
- Abstract
Background: DNA barcoding and metabarcoding are now powerful tools for studying biodiversity and especially the accurate identification of large sample collections belonging to diverse taxonomic groups. Their success depends largely on the taxonomic resolution of the DNA sequences used as barcodes and on the reliability of the reference databases. For wild bees, the barcode sequences coverage is consistently growing in volume, but some incorrect species annotations need to be cared for. The COI (Cytochrome Oxydase subunit 1) gene, the most used in barcoding/metabarcoding of arthropods, suffers from primer bias and difficulties for covering all wild bee species using the classical Folmer primers., New Information: We present here a curated database for a 250 bp mini-barcode region of the 16S rRNA gene, suitable for low-cost metabarcoding wild bees in applications, such as eDNA analysis or for sequencing ancient or degraded DNA. Sequenced specimens were captured in Occitania (south-west of France) and morphologically identified by entomologists, with a total of 530 individuals belonging to 171 species and 19 genera. A customised workflow including distance-tree inferences and a second round of entomologist observations, when necessary, was used for the validation of 348 mini-barcodes covering 148 species. Amongst them, 93 species did not have any 16S reference barcode available before our contribution. This high-quality reference library data are freely available to the scientific community, with the aim of facilitating future large-scale characterisation of wild bee communities in a context of pollinators' decline., (Anaïs Marquisseau, Kamila Canale-Tabet, Emmanuelle Labarthe, Géraldine Pascal, Christophe Klopp, André Pornon, Nathalie Escaravage, Rémi Rudelle, Alain Vignal, Annie Ouin, Mélodie Ollivier, Magalie Pichon.)
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- 2025
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11. Natural clines and human management impact the genetic structure of Algerian honey bee populations.
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Salvatore G, Chibani Bahi Amar A, Canale-Tabet K, Fridi R, Tabet Aoul N, Saci S, Labarthe E, Palombo V, D'Andrea M, Vignal A, and Faux P
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- Humans, Bees genetics, Animals, Whole Genome Sequencing veterinary, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Genetic Structures, Breeding, Genetic Drift
- Abstract
Background: The Algerian honey bee population is composed of two described subspecies A. m. intermissa and A. m. sahariensis, of which little is known regarding population genomics, both in terms of genetic differentiation and of possible contamination by exogenous stock. Moreover, the phenotypic differences between the two subspecies are expected to translate into genetic differences and possible adaptation to heat and drought in A. m. sahariensis. To shed light on the structure of this population and to integrate these two subspecies in the growing dataset of available haploid drone sequences, we performed whole-genome sequencing of 151 haploid drones., Results: Integrated analysis of our drone sequences with a similar dataset of European reference populations did not detect any significant admixture in the Algerian honey bees. Interestingly, most of the genetic variation was not found between the A. m. intermissa and A. m. sahariensis subspecies; instead, two main genetic clusters were found along an East-West axis. We found that the correlation between genetic and geographic distances was higher in the Western cluster and that close-family relationships were mostly detected in the Eastern cluster, sometimes at long distances. In addition, we selected a panel of 96 ancestry-informative markers to decide whether a sampled bee is Algerian or not, and tested this panel in simulated cases of admixture., Conclusions: The differences between the two main genetic clusters suggest differential breeding management between eastern and western Algeria, with greater exchange of genetic material over long distances in the east. The lack of detected admixture events suggests that, unlike what is seen in many places worldwide, imports of queens from foreign countries do not seem to have occurred on a large scale in Algeria, a finding that is relevant for conservation purposes. In addition, the proposed panel of 96 markers was found effective to distinguish Algerian from European honey bees. Therefore, we conclude that applying this approach to other taxa is promising, in particular when genetic differentiation is difficult to capture., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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12. Complex population structure and haplotype patterns in the Western European honey bee from sequencing a large panel of haploid drones.
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Wragg D, Eynard SE, Basso B, Canale-Tabet K, Labarthe E, Bouchez O, Bienefeld K, Bieńkowska M, Costa C, Gregorc A, Kryger P, Parejo M, Pinto MA, Bidanel JP, Servin B, Le Conte Y, and Vignal A
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- Animals, Bees genetics, Genotype, Haploidy, Haplotypes, Inbreeding, Unmanned Aerial Devices
- Abstract
Honey bee subspecies originate from specific geographical areas in Africa, Europe and the Middle East, and beekeepers interested in specific phenotypes have imported genetic material to regions outside of the bees' original range for use either in pure lines or controlled crosses. Moreover, imported drones are present in the environment and mate naturally with queens from the local subspecies. The resulting admixture complicates population genetics analyses, and population stratification can be a major problem for association studies. To better understand Western European honey bee populations, we produced a whole genome sequence and single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) genotype data set from 870 haploid drones and demonstrate its utility for the identification of nine genetic backgrounds and various degrees of admixture in a subset of 629 samples. Five backgrounds identified correspond to subspecies, two to isolated populations on islands and two to managed populations. We also highlight several large haplotype blocks, some of which coincide with the position of centromeres. The largest is 3.6 Mb long and represents 21% of chromosome 11, with two major haplotypes corresponding to the two dominant genetic backgrounds identified. This large naturally phased data set is available as a single vcf file that can now serve as a reference for subsequent populations genomics studies in the honey bee, such as (i) selecting individuals of verified homogeneous genetic backgrounds as references, (ii) imputing genotypes from a lower-density data set generated by an SNP-chip or by low-pass sequencing, or (iii) selecting SNPs compatible with the requirements of genotyping chips., (© 2022 The Authors. Molecular Ecology Resources published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2022
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13. Reconstructing queen genotypes by pool sequencing colonies in eusocial insects: Statistical Methods and their application to honeybee.
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Eynard SE, Vignal A, Basso B, Canale-Tabet K, Le Conte Y, Decourtye A, Genestout L, Labarthe E, Mondet F, and Servin B
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- Animals, Bees genetics, DNA genetics, Genotype, Humans, Insecta genetics, Ecosystem, Reproduction
- Abstract
Eusocial insects are crucial to many ecosystems, and particularly the honeybee (Apis mellifera). One approach to facilitate their study in molecular genetics, is to consider whole-colony genotyping by combining DNA of multiple individuals in a single pool sequencing experiment. Cheap and fast, this technique comes with the drawback of producing data requiring dedicated methods to be fully exploited. Despite this limitation, pool sequencing data have been shown to be informative and cost-effective when working on random mating populations. Here, we present new statistical methods for exploiting pool sequencing of eusocial colonies in order to reconstruct the genotypes of the queen of such colony. This leverages the possibility to monitor genetic diversity, perform genomic-based studies or implement selective breeding. Using simulations and honeybee real data, we show that the new methods allow for a fast and accurate estimation of the queen's genetic ancestry, with correlations of about 0.9 to that obtained from individual genotyping. Also, it allows for an accurate reconstruction of the queen genotypes, with about 2% genotyping error. We further validate these inferences using experimental data on colonies with both pool sequencing and individual genotyping of drones. In brief, in this study we present statistical models to accurately estimate the genetic ancestry and reconstruct the genotypes of the queen from pool sequencing data from workers of an eusocial colony. Such information allows to exploit pool sequencing for traditional population genetics analyses, association studies and for selective breeding. While validated in Apis mellifera, these methods are applicable to other eusocial hymenopterans., (© 2022 The Authors. Molecular Ecology Resources published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2022
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14. Metabolomics and cytotoxicity of monomethylhydrazine (MMH) and (E)-1,1,4,4-tetramethyl-2-tetrazene (TMTZ), two liquid propellants.
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Guyot L, Machon C, Honorat M, Manship B, Bouard C, Vigneron A, Puisieux A, Labarthe E, Jacob G, Dhenain A, Guitton J, and Payen L
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- Animals, Cell Line, Cell Survival drug effects, Cricetulus, Fibroblasts drug effects, Fibroblasts metabolism, Humans, Metabolomics, Mice, Aerosol Propellants toxicity, Azo Compounds toxicity, Monomethylhydrazine toxicity
- Abstract
Hydrazine-based liquid propellants are routinely used for space rocket propulsion, in particular monomethylhydrazine (MMH), although such compounds are highly hazardous. For several years, great efforts were devoted to developing a less hazardous molecule. To explore the toxicological effects of an alternative compound, namely (E)-1,1,4,4-tetramethyl-2-tetrazene (TMTZ), we exposed various cellular animal and human models to this compound and to the reference compound MMH. We observed no cytotoxic effects following exposure to TMTZ in animal, as well as human models. However, although the three animal models were unaffected by MMH, exposure of the human hepatic HepaRG cell model revealed that apoptotic cytotoxic effects were only detectable in proliferative human hepatic HepaRG cells and not in differentiated cells, although major biochemical modifications were uncovered in the latter. The present findings indicate that the metabolic mechanisms of MMH toxicity is close to those described for hydrazine with numerous biochemical alterations induced by mitochondrial disruption, production of radical species, and aminotransferase inhibition. The alternative TMTZ molecule had little impact on cellular viability and proliferation of rodent and human dermic and hepatic cell models. TMTZ did not produce any metabolomic effects and appears to be a promising putative industrial alternative to MMH., (Copyright © 2018. Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
- Published
- 2018
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15. Autosomal and Mitochondrial Adaptation Following Admixture: A Case Study on the Honeybees of Reunion Island.
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Wragg D, Techer MA, Canale-Tabet K, Basso B, Bidanel JP, Labarthe E, Bouchez O, Le Conte Y, Clémencet J, Delatte H, and Vignal A
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- Acclimatization, Adaptation, Physiological, Animals, Bees physiology, DNA, Mitochondrial genetics, Female, Genome, Insect, Genome, Mitochondrial, Male, Mitochondria metabolism, Reunion, Bees genetics, Mitochondria genetics
- Abstract
The honeybee population of the tropical Reunion Island is a genetic admixture of the Apis mellifera unicolor subspecies, originally described in Madagascar, and of European subspecies, mainly A. m. carnica and A. m. ligustica, regularly imported to the island since the late 19th century. We took advantage of this population to study genetic admixing of the tropical-adapted indigenous and temperate-adapted European genetic backgrounds. Whole genome sequencing of 30 workers and 6 males from Reunion, compared with samples from Europe, Madagascar, Mauritius, Rodrigues, and the Seychelles, revealed the Reunion honeybee population to be composed on an average of 53.2 ± 5.9% A. m. unicolor nuclear genomic background, the rest being mainly composed of A. m. carnica and to a lesser extent A. m. ligustica. In striking contrast to this, only 1 out of the 36 honeybees from Reunion had a mitochondrial genome of European origin, suggesting selection has favored the A. m. unicolor mitotype, which is possibly better adapted to the island's bioclimate. Local ancestry was determined along the chromosomes for all Reunion samples, and a test for preferential selection for the A. m. unicolor or European background revealed 15 regions significantly associated with the A. m. unicolor lineage and 9 regions with the European lineage. Our results provide insights into the long-term consequences of introducing exotic specimen on the nuclear and mitochondrial genomes of locally adapted populations., (© The Author 2017. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution.)
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- 2018
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16. (E)-1,1,4,4-Tetramethyl-2-tetrazene (TMTZ): A Prospective Alternative to Hydrazines in Rocket Propulsion.
- Author
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Dhenain A, Darwich C, Sabaté CM, Le DM, Bougrine AJ, Delalu H, Lacôte E, Payen L, Guitton J, Labarthe E, and Jacob G
- Abstract
1,1,4,4-Tetramethyl-2-tetrazene (TMTZ) is considered as a prospective replacement for toxic hydrazines used in liquid rocket propulsion. The heat of formation of TMTZ was computed and measured, giving values well above those of the hydrazines commonly used in propulsion. This led to a predicted maximum I
sp of 337 s for TMTZ/N2 O4 mixtures, which is a value comparable to that of monomethylhydrazine. We found that TMTZ has a vapor pressure well below that of liquid hydrazines, and it is far less toxic. Finally, an improved synthesis is proposed, which is compatible with existing industrial production facilities after minor changes. TMTZ is thus an attractive liquid propellant candidate, with a performance comparable to hydrazines but a lower vapor pressure and toxicity., (© 2017 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.)- Published
- 2017
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17. Whole-genome resequencing of honeybee drones to detect genomic selection in a population managed for royal jelly.
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Wragg D, Marti-Marimon M, Basso B, Bidanel JP, Labarthe E, Bouchez O, Le Conte Y, and Vignal A
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- Animals, Fatty Acids, Genetics, Population, Genome Size, Haploidy, Pilot Projects, Selection, Genetic, Bees genetics, Genome, Insect, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Whole Genome Sequencing methods
- Abstract
Four main evolutionary lineages of A. mellifera have been described including eastern Europe (C) and western and northern Europe (M). Many apiculturists prefer bees from the C lineage due to their docility and high productivity. In France, the routine importation of bees from the C lineage has resulted in the widespread admixture of bees from the M lineage. The haplodiploid nature of the honeybee Apis mellifera, and its small genome size, permits affordable and extensive genomics studies. As a pilot study of a larger project to characterise French honeybee populations, we sequenced 60 drones sampled from two commercial populations managed for the production of honey and royal jelly. Results indicate a C lineage origin, whilst mitochondrial analysis suggests two drones originated from the O lineage. Analysis of heterozygous SNPs identified potential copy number variants near to genes encoding odorant binding proteins and several cytochrome P450 genes. Signatures of selection were detected using the hapFLK haplotype-based method, revealing several regions under putative selection for royal jelly production. The framework developed during this study will be applied to a broader sampling regime, allowing the genetic diversity of French honeybees to be characterised in detail.
- Published
- 2016
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18. Quantification and kinetic study in plasma and tissues of (E)-1,1,4,4-tetramethyl-2-tetrazene, a liquid propellant and a transformation product of 1,1-dimethyl hydrazine.
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Payen L, Honorat M, Bouard C, Jacob G, Terreux R, Delalu H, Labarthe E, and Guitton J
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- Animals, Dimethylhydrazines blood, Female, Metabolic Clearance Rate, Mice, Organ Specificity, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Tissue Distribution, Chromatography, Liquid methods, Dimethylhydrazines pharmacokinetics, Dimethylhydrazines toxicity, Tandem Mass Spectrometry methods, Toxicity Tests methods
- Abstract
(E)-1,1,4,4-tetramethyl-2-tetrazene (TMTZ) is formed from the oxidation of the unsymmetrical 1,1-dimethylhydrazine (UDMH) and is used as a storable liquid fuel which can be considered as a new potential propellant for space rocket propulsion. To better understand the toxicological behavior of the compound, an intraperitoneal administration of TMTZ was performed in mice to define its toxicokinetics and tissue distribution. A fully validated liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) assay was developed to determine TMTZ levels in biological samples. Determination of TMTZ was achieved using 50 μL of plasma or tissue solution. Precipitation with ammonium sulfate and acetonitrile was used for sample preparation. Liquid chromatography was performed on an Atlantis HILIC Silica column (Waters; 3 μm, 150 mm × 2.1 mm i.d.). Isocratic elution with a mixture of ammonium acetate buffer (pH 5, 100 mM)/water/acetonitrile (3:2:95, v/v/v) was used. The detection was conducted using an electrospray source in positive ion mode. TMTZ and (15)N2-TMTZ (internal standard) were quantitated in selected reaction monitoring mode using the transition m/z 117→72 and 119→74, respectively. Standard curves exhibited excellent linearity in the range of 10-500 ng/mL for plasma and 50-2000 ng/mL for all tissues (heart, liver, brain, kidney, and lung) analyzed, and acceptable precision and accuracy (<10 %) were obtained. The elimination rate constant strongly suggests that TMTZ was very quickly eliminated from the body. The results of tissue distribution experiments indicated that TMTZ underwent a rapid distribution into limited organs such as the liver, kidney, and brain.
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- 2015
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19. A duck RH panel and its potential for assisting NGS genome assembly.
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Rao M, Morisson M, Faraut T, Bardes S, Fève K, Labarthe E, Fillon V, Huang Y, Li N, and Vignal A
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- Animals, Cell Line, Chickens genetics, Cricetinae, Female, Fibroblasts metabolism, Genetic Markers, Genotyping Techniques, Ducks genetics, Radiation Hybrid Mapping methods, Sequence Analysis, DNA methods
- Abstract
Background: Owing to the low cost of the high throughput Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) technology, more and more species have been and will be sequenced. However, de novo assemblies of large eukaryotic genomes thus produced are composed of a large number of contigs and scaffolds of medium to small size, having no chromosomal assignment. Radiation hybrid (RH) mapping is a powerful tool for building whole genome maps and has been used for several animal species, to help assign sequence scaffolds to chromosomes and determining their order., Results: We report here a duck whole genome RH panel obtained by fusing female duck embryonic fibroblasts irradiated at a dose of 6,000 rads, with HPRT-deficient Wg3hCl2 hamster cells. The ninety best hybrids, having an average retention of 23.6% of the duck genome, were selected for the final panel. To allow the genotyping of large numbers of markers, as required for whole genome mapping, without having to cultivate the hybrid clones on a large scale, three different methods involving Whole Genome Amplification (WGA) and/or scaling down PCR volumes by using the Fluidigm BioMark(TM) Integrated Fluidic Circuits (IFC) Dynamic Array(TM) for genotyping were tested. RH maps of APL12 and APL22 were built, allowing the detection of intrachromosomal rearrangements when compared to chicken. Finally, the panel proved useful for checking the assembly of sequence scaffolds and for mapping EST located on one of the smallest microchromosomes., Conclusion: The Fluidigm BioMark(TM) Integrated Fluidic Circuits (IFC) Dynamic Array(TM) genotyping by quantitative PCR provides a rapid and cost-effective method for building RH linkage groups. Although the vast majority of genotyped markers exhibited a picture coherent with their associated scaffolds, a few of them were discordant, pinpointing potential assembly errors. Comparative mapping with chicken chromosomes GGA21 and GGA11 allowed the detection of the first chromosome rearrangements on microchromosomes between duck and chicken. As in chicken, the smallest duck microchromosomes appear missing in the assembly and more EST data will be needed for mapping them. Altogether, this underlines the added value of RH mapping to improve genome assemblies.
- Published
- 2012
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