8 results on '"Jacquier NMA"'
Search Results
2. In planta haploid induction by kokopelli mutants.
- Author
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Jacquier NMA, Calhau ARM, Fierlej Y, Martinant JP, Rogowsky PM, Gilles LM, and Widiez T
- Subjects
- Haploidy, Pollen, Plant Breeding, Zea mays
- Abstract
Competing Interests: Conflict of interest statement. A patent application covering the results of this manuscript was submitted. N.M.A.J., L.M.G., and J.P.M. are employees of Limagrain Europe. T.W. and P.R. are involved in collaborative research with Limagrain Europe. P.R. is a member of the operational directorate of the PlantAlliance consortium.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Evaluation of genome and base editing tools in maize protoplasts.
- Author
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Fierlej Y, Jacquier NMA, Guille L, Just J, Montes E, Richard C, Loue-Manifel J, Depège-Fargeix N, Gaillard A, Widiez T, and Rogowsky PM
- Abstract
Introduction: Despite its rapid worldwide adoption as an efficient mutagenesis tool, plant genome editing remains a labor-intensive process requiring often several months of in vitro culture to obtain mutant plantlets. To avoid a waste in time and money and to test, in only a few days, the efficiency of molecular constructs or novel Cas9 variants (clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR)-associated protein 9) prior to stable transformation, rapid analysis tools are helpful., Methods: To this end, a streamlined maize protoplast system for transient expression of CRISPR/Cas9 tools coupled to NGS (next generation sequencing) analysis and a novel bioinformatics pipeline was established., Results and Discussion: Mutation types found with high frequency in maize leaf protoplasts had a trend to be the ones observed after stable transformation of immature maize embryos. The protoplast system also allowed to conclude that modifications of the sgRNA (single guide RNA) scaffold leave little room for improvement, that relaxed PAM (protospacer adjacent motif) sites increase the choice of target sites for genome editing, albeit with decreased frequency, and that efficient base editing in maize could be achieved for certain but not all target sites. Phenotypic analysis of base edited mutant maize plants demonstrated that the introduction of a stop codon but not the mutation of a serine predicted to be phosphorylated in the bHLH (basic helix loop helix) transcription factor ZmICEa (INDUCER OF CBF EXPRESSIONa) caused abnormal stomata, pale leaves and eventual plant death two months after sowing., Competing Interests: YF and AG were employed by MAS Seeds, NMAJ is presently employed by Limagrain Europe, TW has currently a collaborative research project with Limagrain Europe, and PR is a member of the operational directorate of the PlantAlliance consortium. The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Fierlej, Jacquier, Guille, Just, Montes, Richard, Loue-Manifel, Depège-Fargeix, Gaillard, Widiez and Rogowsky.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Absent daddy, but important father.
- Author
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Jacquier NMA and Widiez T
- Subjects
- Humans, Fathers
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Lipid anchoring and electrostatic interactions target NOT-LIKE-DAD to pollen endo-plasma membrane.
- Author
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Gilles LM, Calhau ARM, La Padula V, Jacquier NMA, Lionnet C, Martinant JP, Rogowsky PM, and Widiez T
- Subjects
- Static Electricity, Cell Membrane metabolism, Lipids chemistry, Phospholipases A metabolism, Pollen metabolism, Zea mays enzymology
- Abstract
Phospholipases cleave phospholipids, major membrane constituents. They are thus essential for many developmental processes, including male gamete development. In flowering plants, mutation of phospholipase NOT-LIKE-DAD (NLD, also known as MTL or ZmPLA1) leads to peculiar defects in sexual reproduction, notably the induction of maternal haploid embryos. Contrary to previous reports, NLD does not localize to cytosol and plasma membrane of sperm cells but to the pollen endo-plasma membrane (endo-PM), a specific membrane derived from the PM of the pollen vegetative cell that encircles the two sperm cells. After pollen tube burst, NLD localizes at the apical region of the egg apparatus. Pharmacological approaches coupled with targeted mutagenesis revealed that lipid anchoring together with electrostatic interactions are involved in the attachment of NLD to this atypical endo-PM. Membrane surface-charge and lipid biosensors indicated that phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate is enriched in the endo-PM, uncovering a unique example of how membrane electrostatic properties can define a specific polar domain (i.e., endo-PM), which is critical for plant reproduction and gamete formation., (© 2021 Gilles et al.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Maize In Planta Haploid Inducer Lines: A Cornerstone for Doubled Haploid Technology.
- Author
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Jacquier NMA, Gilles LM, Martinant JP, Rogowsky PM, and Widiez T
- Subjects
- Chromosomes, Plant genetics, Crops, Agricultural genetics, Crops, Agricultural growth & development, Crosses, Genetic, Diploidy, Gene Editing, Genome, Plant, Haploidy, Homozygote, Hybrid Vigor, Models, Genetic, Molecular Biology methods, Phenotype, Seeds genetics, Seeds growth & development, Zea mays growth & development, Plant Breeding methods, Zea mays genetics
- Abstract
Doubled haploid (DH) technology produces strictly homozygous fertile plant thanks to doubling the chromosomes of a haploid embryo/seedling. Haploid embryos are derived from either male or female germ line cells and hold only half the number of chromosomes found in somatic plant tissues, albeit in a recombinant form due to meiotic genetic shuffling. DH production allows to rapidly fix these recombinant haploid genomes in the form of perfectly homozygous plants (inbred lines), which are produced in two rather than six or more generations. Thus, DH breeding enables fast evaluation of phenotypic traits on homogenous progeny. While for most crops haploid embryos are produced by costly and often genotype-dependent in vitro methods, for maize, two unique in planta systems are available to induce haploid embryos directly in the seed. Two "haploid inducer lines", identified from spontaneous maize mutants, are able to induce embryos of paternal or maternal origin. Although effortless crosses with lines of interest are sufficient to trigger haploid embryos, substantial improvements were necessary to bring DH technology to large scale production. They include the development of modern haploid inducer lines with high induction rates (8-12%), and methods to sort kernels with haploid embryos from the normal ones. Chromosome doubling represents also a crucial step in the DH process. Recent identification of genomic loci involved in spontaneous doubling opens up perspectives for a fully in planta DH pipeline in maize. Although discovered more than 60 years ago, maize haploid inducer lines still make headlines thanks to novel applications and findings. Indeed, maternal haploid induction was elegantly diverted to deliver genome editing machinery in germplasm recalcitrant to transformation techniques. The recent discovery of two molecular players controlling haploid induction allowed to revisit the mechanistic basis of maize maternal haploid induction and to successfully translate haploid induction ability to other crops., (© 2021. The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Overview of In Vitro and In Vivo Doubled Haploid Technologies.
- Author
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Seguí-Simarro JM, Jacquier NMA, and Widiez T
- Subjects
- Haploidy, In Vitro Techniques, Phenotype, Pollen genetics, Pollen growth & development, Seeds genetics, Seeds growth & development, Crops, Agricultural genetics, Crops, Agricultural growth & development, Plant Breeding methods
- Abstract
Doubled haploids (DH) have become a powerful tool to assist in different basic research studies, and also in applied research. The principal (but not the only) and routine use of DH by breeding companies is to produce pure lines for hybrid seed production in different crop species. Several decades after the discovery of haploid inducer lines in maize and of anther culture as a method to produce haploid plants from pollen precursors, the biotechnological revolution of the last decades allowed to the development of a variety of approaches to pursue the goal of doubled haploid production. Now, it is possible to produce haploids and DHs in many different species, because when a method does not work properly, there are several others to test. In this chapter, we overview the currently available approaches used to produce haploids and DHs by using methods based on in vitro culture, or involving the in vivo induction of haploid embryo development, or a combination of both., (© 2021. Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Puzzling out plant reproduction by haploid induction for innovations in plant breeding.
- Author
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Jacquier NMA, Gilles LM, Pyott DE, Martinant JP, Rogowsky PM, and Widiez T
- Subjects
- Crops, Agricultural genetics, Reproduction genetics, Haploidy, Phenotype, Plant Breeding
- Abstract
Mixing maternal and paternal genomes in embryos is not only responsible for the evolutionary success of sexual reproduction, but is also a cornerstone of plant breeding. However, once an interesting gene combination is obtained, further genetic mixing is problematic. To rapidly fix genetic information, doubled haploid plants can be produced: haploid embryos having solely the genetic information from one parent are allowed to develop, and chromosome doubling generates fully homozygous plants. A powerful path to the production of doubled haploids is based on haploid inducer lines. A simple cross between a haploid inducer line and the line with gene combinations to be fixed will trigger haploid embryo development. However, the exact mechanism behind in planta haploid induction remains an enduring mystery. The recent discoveries of molecular actors triggering haploid induction in the maize crop and the model Arabidopsis thaliana pinpoint an essential role of processes related to gamete development, gamete interactions and genome stability. These findings enabled translation of haploid induction capacity to other crops as well as the use of haploid inducer lines to deliver genome editing machinery into various crop varieties. These recent advances not only hold promise for the next generations of plant breeding strategies, but they also provide a deeper insight into the fundamental bases of sexual reproduction in plants.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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