The Team of Diatom Functional Genomics (R. Annunziata, A. Ritter, A.E. Fortunato, A. Manzotti, S. Cheminant Navarro, J.P. Bouly and A. Falciatore), in collaboration with the team of Biology of Genomes (Nicolas Agier) and Marco Cosentino Lagomarsino at the LCQB characterized the circadian rhythms of the marine diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutum and identified the bHLH-PAS protein RITMO1 as the first known regulator of these rhythms in these algae. This study, published on Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) adds new elements to our understanding of diatom biology and offers new perspectives to elucidate timekeeping mechanisms in marine algae.
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Angela Falciatore received the Prix Coup d'Elan 2018 from the Bettencourt Foundation. This prize will help to improve infrastructures and working conditions for researchers in the Life Sciences. Starting in January 2019, Angela will lead the department "Chloroplast Biology and Light Sensing in Microalgae" in IBPC, Paris.
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The Diatom Functional Genomics Team (L Taddei, GR Stella, JP Bouly, M. Jaubert and A. Falciatore) reported novel strategies to deal with environmental light stress in marine diatoms. Their results recently published on Plant Physiology reveal that diatoms modulate non-photochemical quenching of excess excitation by activating different members of the LHCX protein family, with different light intensity activation thresholds and different patterns of association with photosystem II. This leads to mechanistically different and physically segregated excess energy quenching processes, as required for proper light-stress acclimation in the extremely variable conditions of the oceans.
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Angela Falciatore and Andrés Ritter organize the Algae workshop at 8th annual meeting EFOR network, May 2nd and 3rd 2017 Paris
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The Diatom Functional Genomics Team (Angela Falciatore and Antonio E. Fortunato) contributed to the manuscript “Evolutionary genomics of the cold-adapted diatom Fragilariopsis cylindrus”, published on Nature in January 2017. This study, coordinated by Prof. Thomas Mock, University of East Anglia, Norwich, has revealed the existence of highly diverged alleles in the genome of this polar diatom species that may be involved in adaptation to environmental fluctuations in the Southern Ocean.
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The team of Diatom Functional Genomics just published a paper describing how marine diatoms efficiently attune acclimation responses in highly variable ocean environments. L.Taddei*, G.R. Stella*, A. Rogato, B. Bailleul, A.E. Fortunato, R. Annunziata, R. Sanges, M. Thaler, B. Lepetit, J. Lavaud, M. Jaubert, G. Finazzi, J.P. Bouly, A. Falciatore. Multi-signal control of expression of the LHCX protein family in marine diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutum. Journal Experimental Botany, in press.
*co-first-authors
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A.E. Fortunato, M. Jaubert, J.P. Bouly, M. Thaler and A. Falciatore from the Diatom Functional Genomics team in collaboration with J.S. Bernardes (Statistical Genomics and Biological Physics), A. Carbone (Analytical Genomics) and other international collaborators published on The Plant Cell the paper “Diatom Phytochromes Reveal the Existence of Far-Red-Light-Based Sensing in the Ocean.” Full text paper.
Plant Cell Editor’s comment on this work.
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