Publications by authors named "Sarah G"

Flowering date in perennial fruit trees is an important trait for fruit production. Depending on the winter and spring temperatures, flowering of olive may be advanced, delayed, or even suppressed. Deciphering the genetic control of flowering date is thus key to help selecting cultivars better adapted to the current climate context.

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By revealing that the grape berry loses one H+ per accumulated sucrose at the inception of ripening, adopting a single fruit paradigm elucidates the fundamentals of the malate-sugar nexus, previously obscured by asynchrony in population-based models of ripening. More broadly, the development of the individual fruit was revisited from scratch to capture the simultaneous changes in gene expression and metabolic fluxes in a kinetically relevant way from flowering to overripening. Dynamics in water, tartrate, malate, hexoses, and K+ fluxes obtained by combining individual single fruit growth and concentration data allowed to define eleven sub-phases in fruit development, which distributed on a rigorous curve in RNAseq PCA.

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Thanks to several backcrosses with an initial L. × (previously ) interspecific cross, the MrRUN1/MrRPV1 locus (resistance to downy and powdery mildews) was introgressed in genotypes phenotypically close to varieties. To check the consequences of introgressing parts of the genome on gene expression during fruit development, we conducted a comparative RNA-seq study on single berries from different cultivars and × hybrids, including 'G5' and two derivative microvine lines, 'MV102' (resistant) and 'MV32' (susceptible) segregating for the MrRUN1/RPV1 locus.

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The timing of floral budbreak in apple has a significant effect on fruit production and quality. Budbreak occurs as a result of a complex molecular mechanism that relies on accurate integration of external environmental cues, principally temperature. In the pursuit of understanding this mechanism, especially with respect to aiding adaptation to climate change, a QTL at the top of linkage group (LG) 9 has been identified by many studies on budbreak, but the genes underlying it remain elusive.

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Article Synopsis
  • Scientists studied how wild olives mix with farmed olives in the Mediterranean region.
  • They looked at different olive tree populations in countries like France, Spain, and Morocco to understand their genetics.
  • Surprisingly, they found more mixed wild olives than pure ones, suggesting that farmed olives are affecting the natural wild populations.
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Chimerism is the phenomenon when several genotypes coexist in a single individual. Used to understand plant ontogenesis they also have been valorised through new cultivar breeding. Viticulture has been taking economic advantage out of chimeras when the variant induced an important modification of wine type such as berry skin colour.

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We elucidate grapevine evolution and domestication histories with 3525 cultivated and wild accessions worldwide. In the Pleistocene, harsh climate drove the separation of wild grape ecotypes caused by continuous habitat fragmentation. Then, domestication occurred concurrently about 11,000 years ago in Western Asia and the Caucasus to yield table and wine grapevines.

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Vanilla planifolia, the species cultivated to produce one of the world's most popular flavors, is highly prone to partial genome endoreplication, which leads to highly unbalanced DNA content in cells. We report here the first molecular evidence of partial endoreplication at the chromosome scale by the assembly and annotation of an accurate haplotype-phased genome of V. planifolia.

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Background: LGBTQ+ people experience significant barriers in accessing health care including inadequate provider knowledge and stigma in health care settings. Undergraduate medical education programs have increased efforts to integrate LGBTQ+ health topics, such as comprehensive sexual history taking and gender-affirming practices, into their curriculums to provide clinically inclusive care for LGBTQ+ patients.

Approach: A Topic Steward was appointed to oversee the integration of LGBTQ+ health topics throughout the existing undergraduate medical curriculum.

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Winter dormancy is an adaptative mechanism that temperate and boreal trees have developed to protect their meristems against low temperatures. In apple trees (), cold temperatures induce bud dormancy at the end of summer/beginning of the fall. Apple buds stay dormant during winter until they are exposed to a period of cold, after which they can resume growth (budbreak) and initiate flowering in response to warmer temperatures in spring.

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Background: Niemann-Pick disease type C is an autosomal-recessive, lysosomal storage disorder with variable age of onset and a heterogeneous clinical presentation that includes neurological, psychiatric, and visceral findings. Serial intrathecal injections of 2-hydroxypropyl-beta-cyclodextrin are being evaluated as a treatment modality for Niemann-Pick disease type C with a subset of patients requiring anesthesia for this procedure.

Aims: The aim of this study was to evaluate the safety of anesthesia provided for patients undergoing intrathecal injection of 2-hydroxypropyl-beta-cyclodextrin.

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Hybridizations between closely related species commonly occur in the domestication process of many crops. Banana cultivars are derived from such hybridizations between species and subspecies of the Musa genus that have diverged in various tropical Southeast Asian regions and archipelagos. Among the diploid and triploid hybrids generated, those with seedless parthenocarpic fruits were selected by humans and thereafter dispersed through vegetative propagation.

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In this study, we looked for genetic factors in the pepper (Capsicum annuum) germplasm that control the number of potato virus Y (PVY) particles entering the plant (i.e. effective population size at inoculation) and the PVY accumulation at the systemic level (i.

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The olive (Olea europaea L. subsp. europaea) is one of the oldest and most socio-economically important cultivated perennial crop in the Mediterranean region.

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Article Synopsis
  • - A half-diallel population of 624 vine plants was created by crossing five elite grapevine cultivars and genotyped using a method called GBS, leading to a detailed genetic map for Vitis vinifera L.
  • - This genetic map, the densest of its kind for grapevines, spans 1378.3-cM and organizes 4437 markers across 19 chromosomes, with high coverage of the grapevine genome at 98.8%.
  • - The research supports future genetic studies to enhance grape breeding efforts, particularly in developing varieties resilient to climate change, and the techniques used may benefit other perennial fruit crops.
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Cultivated wheats are derived from an intricate history of three genomes, A, B, and D, present in both diploid and polyploid species. It was recently proposed that the D genome originated from an ancient hybridization between the A and B lineages. However, this result has been questioned, and a robust phylogeny of wheat relatives is still lacking.

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  • Myrtle rust disease, caused by a fungus, threatens global biodiversity and economies tied to the Myrtaceae family, first reported in New Caledonia in 2013.
  • The use of predictive molecular markers for disease resistance is emerging as a cost-effective method to control the disease, though previous genomic resources in endemic species were lacking.
  • Recent advancements in sequencing technologies now allow for transcriptome analysis of New Caledonia's Myrtaceae species, enabling researchers to study gene expression differences in response to myrtle rust.
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Article Synopsis
  • Base composition varies significantly in plant genomes, especially at third codon positions, leading to biased synonymous codon usage.
  • The causes of this variation are debated, with potential contributors being mutational bias, selection, and GC-biased gene conversion (gBGC).
  • Research indicates that gBGC is a strong influence on base composition variation in angiosperms, suggesting its importance in genetic studies of plant species, particularly those with high GC content.
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Plant domestication has led to considerable phenotypic modifications from wild species to modern varieties. However, although changes in key traits have been well documented, less is known about the underlying molecular mechanisms, such as the reduction of molecular diversity or global gene co-expression patterns. In this study, we used a combination of gene expression and population genetics in wild and crop tomato to decipher the footprints of domestication.

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We produced a unique large data set of reference transcriptomes to obtain new knowledge about the evolution of plant genomes and crop domestication. For this purpose, we validated a RNA-Seq data assembly protocol to perform comparative population genomics. For the validation, we assessed and compared the quality of de novo Illumina short-read assemblies using data from two crops for which an annotated reference genome was available, namely grapevine and sorghum.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study examines how temperature during the grapevine developmental cycle affects fruit composition and the challenges of understanding this relationship amid global warming.
  • It utilizes DRCF grapevine mutants grown under controlled temperature conditions to analyze the physiological and transcriptomic responses of grapes at key developmental stages.
  • Findings indicate that high temperatures accelerate berry development and alter gene expression related to cell expansion, while negatively impacting tannin synthesis and delaying malate breakdown, highlighting grapevines' adaptability to temperature variations.
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Article Synopsis
  • Gigwa is a web-based tool designed to help researchers easily explore and analyze large genomic variation data sets, addressing challenges from next-generation sequencing.
  • It allows users to filter data based on various variant features and genotype patterns, enhancing the analysis of genomic data.
  • With a scalable storage system using MongoDB, Gigwa can function in single-user or multi-user modes, making it accessible for both individual researchers and collaborative communities.
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