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  • Florence Corellou
Florence Corellou

Florence Corellou
  • PhD. CNRS Researcher HDR
  • Researcher at CNRS, LPCV Grenoble, France

About

44
Publications
8,876
Reads
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2,279
Citations
Current institution
CNRS, LPCV Grenoble, France
Current position
  • Researcher
Additional affiliations
August 2013 - present
Membrane Biogenesis Laboratory, Bordeaux France
Position
  • CNRS researcher
September 2001 - June 2002
Flanders Institute for Biotechnology
Position
  • PostDoc Position
May 2000 - June 2001
Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom
Position
  • PostDoc Position

Publications

Publications (44)
Article
Full-text available
Biological rhythms that allow organisms to adapt to the solar cycle are generated by endogenous circadian clocks. In higher plants, many clock components have been identified and cellular rhythmicity is thought to be driven by a complex transcriptional feedback circuitry. In the small genome of the green unicellular alga Ostreococcus tauri, two of...
Article
Full-text available
In eukaryotic cells, the basic machinery of cell cycle control is highly conserved. In particular, many cellular events during cell cycle progression are controlled by cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs). The cell cycle in animal early embryos, however, differs substantially from that of somatic cells or yeasts. For example, cell cycle checkpoints that...
Article
Full-text available
Alteration of fatty-acid unsaturation is a universal response to temperature changes. Marine microalgae display the largest diversity of polyunsaturated fatty-acid (PUFA) whose content notably varies according to temperature. The physiological relevance and the molecular mechanisms underlying these changes are however, still poorly understood. The...
Article
Eukaryotic Δ6-desaturases are microsomal enzymes that balance the synthesis of ω-3 and ω-6 C18-polyunsaturated-fatty-acids (C18-PUFA) accordingly to their specificity. In several microalgae, including Ostreococcus tauri, plastidic C18-PUFA are strictly regulated by environmental cues suggesting an autonomous control of Δ6-desaturation of plastidic...
Article
Full-text available
Eukaryotic Δ6-desaturases are microsomal enzymes that balance the synthesis of ω-3 and ω-6 C18-polyunsaturated-fatty-acids (C18-PUFA) accordingly to their specificity. In several microalgae, including Ostreococcus tauri, plastidic C18-PUFA are strictly regulated by environmental cues suggesting an autonomous control of Δ6-desaturation of plastidic...
Preprint
Eukaryotic Δ6-desaturases are microsomal enzymes which balance the synthesis of ω-3 and ω-6 C18-polyunsaturated-fatty-acids (PUFA) accordingly to their specificity. In several microalgae, including O. tauri , plastidic C18-PUFA are specifically regulated by environmental cues suggesting an autonomous control of Δ6-desaturation of plastidic PUFA. Se...
Article
The tiny picoalga, Ostreococcus tauri, originating from the Thau Lagoon is a member of the marine phytoplankton. Because of its highly reduced genome and small cell size, while retaining the fundamental requirements of a eukaryotic photosynthetic cell, it became a popular model organism for studying photosynthesis or circadian clock-related process...
Conference Paper
Marine microalgae represent a significant resource for producing a variety of lipid compounds, as well as for identifying new genes with industrial potential. In the minimal model green microalga Ostreococcus tauri (Ot), most of the 13 in silico identified desaturases display a plastidial target peptide. The cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 680...
Article
Full-text available
The pico-alga Ostreococcus tauri is a minimal photosynthetic eukaryote that has been implemented as model system. O. tauri is known to efficiently produce docosahexaenoic acid (DHA). We provide a comprehensive study of the glycerolipidome of O.tauri and validate this species as model for related picoeukaryotes. Ostreococcus lipids displayed unique...
Article
Daylight is the primary cue used by circadian clocks to entrain to the day/night cycle so as to synchronize physiological processes with periodic environmental changes induced by Earth rotation. However, the temporal daylight pattern is not the same every day due to erratic weather fluctuations or regular seasonal changes. Then, how do circadian cl...
Article
The green microscopic alga Ostreococcus tauri has recently emerged as a promising model for understanding how circadian clocks, which drive the daily biological rhythms of many organisms, synchronize to the day/night cycle in changing weather and seasons. Here, we analyze translational reporter time series data for the central clock genes CCA1 and...
Preprint
The green microscopic alga Ostreococcus tauri has recently emerged as a promising model for understanding how circadian clocks, which drive the daily biological rythms of many organisms, synchronize to the day/night cycle in changing weather and seasons. Here, we analyze translational reporter time series data of its central clock genes CCA1 and TO...
Article
Full-text available
Circadian clocks are biological timekeepers that allow living cells to time their activity in anticipation of predictable environmental changes. Detailed understanding of the circadian network of higher plants, such as Arabidopsis thaliana, is hampered by the high number of partially redundant genes. However, the picoeukaryotic alga Ostreococcus ta...
Article
Full-text available
The marine environment has unique properties of light transmission, with an attenuation of long wavelengths within the first meters of the water column. Marine organisms have therefore evolved specific blue-light receptors such as aureochromes to absorb shorter-wavelength light. Here, we identify and characterize a light, oxygen, or voltage sensing...
Article
Full-text available
The storage of photosynthetic carbohydrate products such as starch is subject to complex regulation, effected at both transcriptional and post-translational levels. The relevant genes in plants show pronounced daily regulation. Their temporal RNA expression profiles, however, do not predict the dynamics of metabolite levels, due to the divergence o...
Article
Full-text available
Circadian rhythms are ubiquitous in eukaryotes, and coordinate numerous aspects of behaviour, physiology and metabolism, from sleep/wake cycles in mammals to growth and photosynthesis in plants. This daily timekeeping is thought to be driven by transcriptional-translational feedback loops, whereby rhythmic expression of 'clock' gene products regula...
Preprint
The microscopic green alga Ostreococcus tauri is rapidly emerging as a promising model organism in the green lineage. In particular, recent results by Corellou et al. [Plant Cell, 21, 3436 (2009)] and Thommen et al. [PLoS Comput. Biol. 6, e1000990 (2010)] strongly suggest that its circadian clock is a simplified version of Arabidopsis thaliana cloc...
Article
Full-text available
The microscopic green alga Ostreococcus tauri is rapidly emerging as a promising model organism in the green lineage. In particular, recent results by Corellou et al. [Plant Cell 21, 3436 (2009)] and Thommen et al. [PLOS Comput. Biol. 6, e1000990 (2010)] strongly suggest that its circadian clock is a simplified version of Arabidopsis thaliana clock...
Article
Full-text available
The development of systemic approaches in biology has put emphasis on identifying genetic modules whose behavior can be modeled accurately so as to gain insight into their structure and function. However, most gene circuits in a cell are under control of external signals and thus, quantitative agreement between experimental data and a mathematical...
Article
Full-text available
Although the decision to proceed through cell division depends largely on the metabolic status or the size of the cell, the timing of cell division is often set by internal clocks such as the circadian clock. Light is a major cue for circadian clock entrainment, and for photosynthetic organisms it is also the main source of energy supporting cell g...
Article
Cryptochromes (Crys) are blue light receptors believed to have evolved from the DNA photolyase protein family, implying that light control and light protection share a common ancient origin. In this paper, we report the identification of five genes of the Cry/photolyase family (CPF) in two green algae of the Ostreococcus genus. Phylogenetic analyse...
Article
Full-text available
Living organisms such as plants and animals have evolved endogenous clocks in order to anticipate the environmental changes associated with the earth's rotation and to orchestrate biological processes in the course of the 24 hour daily cycle. We have recently identified clock components in the primitive green picoalga Ostreococcus tauri, a promisin...
Article
Full-text available
Picoeukaryotes represent an important, yet poorly characterized component of marine phytoplankton. The recent genome availability for two species of Ostreococcus and Micromonas has led to the emergence of picophytoplankton comparative genomics. Sequencing has revealed many unexpected features about genome structure and led to several hypotheses on...
Preprint
The development of systemic approaches in biology has put emphasis on identifying genetic modules whose behavior can be modeled accurately so as to gain insight into their structure and function. However most gene circuits in a cell are under control of external signals and thus quantitative agreement between experimental data and a mathematical mo...
Article
Full-text available
Cell division often occurs at specific times of the day in animal and photosynthetic organisms. Studies in unicellular photosynthetic algae, such as Chlamydomonas or Euglena, have shown that the photoperiodic control of cell division is mediated through the circadian clock. However, the underlying mechanisms remain unknown. We have studied the mole...
Chapter
Plants are photosynthetic organisms, which use light, as main source of energy, for growth and development. Because sun-light is also mutagenic, many organisms, from most kingdoms, have evolved an internal time-tracking system, so-called the circadian, which restricts cell division to specific times of the day in when DNA is less exposed to UV dama...
Article
Full-text available
Upon the incidence of DNA stress, the ataxia telangiectasia-mutated (ATM) and Rad3-related (ATR) signaling kinases activate a transient cell cycle arrest that allows cells to repair DNA before proceeding into mitosis. Although the ATM-ATR pathway is highly conserved over species, the mechanisms by which plant cells stop their cell cycle in response...
Article
Full-text available
We report here our research on the modelling of biological circadian rhythms (i.e.� 24 h) in a unicellular green alga,Ostreococcus tauri. Such rhythms are the result of the regulation of gene- tic transcription. We present several models de- signed by physicians and computer scientists, in order to identify molecular actors of the circa- dian clock...
Article
Full-text available
Cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) are the main regulators of cell cycle progression in eukaryotes. The role and regulation of canonical CDKs, such as the yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) Cdc2 or plant CDKA, have been extensively characterized. However, the function of the plant-specific CDKB is not as well understood. Besides being involved in cell c...
Article
Full-text available
Fucus zygotes polarise and germinate a rhizoid before their first asymmetrical division. The role of microtubules (MTs) in orienting the first division plane has been extensively studied by immunofluorescence approaches. In the present study, the re-organisation of MT arrays during the development of Fucus zygotes and embryos was followed in vivo a...
Article
Whereas Glc is stored in small-sized hydrosoluble glycogen particles in archaea, eubacteria, fungi, and animal cells, photosynthetic eukaryotes have resorted to building starch, which is composed of several distinct polysaccharide fractions packed into a highly organized semicrystalline granule. In plants, both the initiation of polysaccharide synt...
Article
Full-text available
The dual-specificity CDC25 phosphatases are critical positive regulators of cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs). Even though an antagonistic Arabidopsis thaliana WEE1 kinase has been cloned and tyrosine phosphorylation of its CDKs has been demonstrated, no valid candidate for a CDC25 protein has been reported in higher plants. We identify a CDC25-relat...
Article
Full-text available
Although iterative development can be uncoupled from morphogenesis in plant organs, the relationship between the cell cycle and developmental events is not well established in embryos. Zygotes of fucoid algae, including Fucus and Pelvetia are particularly well suited for studying the interaction(s) between cell cycle progression and the early morph...
Article
Full-text available
The acquisition and expression of polarity during early embryogenesis underlies developmental pattern. In many multicellular organisms an initial asymmetric division of the zygote is critical to the determination of different cell fates of the early embryonic cells. Zygotes of the marine fucoid algae are initially apolar and become polarized in res...
Article
In eukaryotic cells, the basic machinery of cell cycle control is highly conserved. In particular, many cellular events during cell cycle progression are controlled by cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs). The cell cycle in animal early embryos, however, differs substantially from that of somatic cells or yeasts. For example, cell cycle checkpoints that...
Article
In the past few years, there have been exciting advances in our understanding of the mechanisms that control morphogenesis in fucoid embryos. In this article we review recent findings from our laboratories concerning 1) polarity establishment and expression in the zygote and 2) development of the zygote into a multicellular embryo.
Article
Full-text available
S/M checkpoints prevent various aspects of cell division when DNA has not been replicated. Such checkpoints are stringent in yeast and animal somatic cells but are usually partial or not present in animal embryos. Because little is known about S/M checkpoints in plant cells and embryos, we have investigated the effect of aphidicolin, a specific inh...
Article
Full-text available
The correct orchestration of cell cycle and differentiation is required for the development of all organisms. In plants, there is little data on the molecular mechanisms involved in the coordination of both of these processes. The zygote of the brown alga Fucus is a model to study plant early embryogenesis. Polarisation of the Fucus zygote occurs a...
Article
Fucoid algae, including the genus Fucus and Pelvetia, are recognized as model systems to study early embryogenesis in plants. In particular the zygotes of these fucoid algae are highly suitable experimental systems for investigating the establishment of polarity and its requirement for later embryogenesis. However, the transduction pathways involve...

Questions

Question (1)
Question
Hy everybody, I am looking for a way to stop gene expression during harvesting of microalgae to ensure reliable RNAseq in response to temperature. I am affraid working on ice and performing centrifugation at 4°C and bieng quick is not enough...
I saw that RNA protect for cell i(qiagen) costs about 300 € for 250 mL and that 5 Volume have to be added to the culture media.... For me each sample volume is 50mL so this is NOT affordable. Any other clue how I could easily prevent gene expression from the time I start collecting the cells? Many thanks

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