D
Didier Merdinoglu
Researcher at University of Strasbourg
Publications - 89
Citations - 9032
Didier Merdinoglu is an academic researcher from University of Strasbourg. The author has contributed to research in topics: Plasmopara viticola & Downy mildew. The author has an hindex of 36, co-authored 87 publications receiving 7987 citations. Previous affiliations of Didier Merdinoglu include Institut national de la recherche agronomique & Centre national de la recherche scientifique.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The grapevine genome sequence suggests ancestral hexaploidization in major angiosperm phyla.
Olivier Jaillon,Jean-Marc Aury,Benjamin Noel,Alberto Policriti,Christian Clepet,Alberto Casagrande,Nathalie Choisne,Sébastien Aubourg,Nicola Vitulo,Claire Jubin,Alessandro Vezzi,Fabrice Legeai,Philippe Hugueney,Corinne Dasilva,David S. Horner,Erica Mica,Delphine Jublot,Julie Poulain,Clémence Bruyère,Alain Billault,Béatrice Segurens,Michel Gouyvenoux,Edgardo Ugarte,Federica Cattonaro,Véronique Anthouard,Virginie Vico,Cristian Del Fabbro,Michael Alaux,Gabriele Di Gaspero,Vincent Dumas,Nicoletta Felice,Sophie Paillard,Irena Juman,Marco Moroldo,Simone Scalabrin,Aurélie Canaguier,Isabelle Le Clainche,G Malacrida,Eléonore Durand,Graziano Pesole,Valérie Laucou,Philippe Chatelet,Didier Merdinoglu,Massimo Delledonne,Mario Pezzotti,Alain Lecharny,Claude Scarpelli,François Artiguenave,M. Enrico Pè,Giorgio Valle,Michele Morgante,Michel Caboche,Anne-Françoise Adam-Blondon,Jean Weissenbach,Francis Quetier,Patrick Wincker +55 more
TL;DR: A high-quality draft of the genome sequence of grapevine is obtained from a highly homozygous genotype, revealing the contribution of three ancestral genomes to the grapevine haploid content and explaining the chronology of previously described whole-genome duplication events in the evolution of flowering plants.
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Bread, beer and wine: Saccharomyces cerevisiae diversity reflects human history
TL;DR: The results suggest intimate association between man and wine yeast across centuries, and hypothesize that yeast followed man and vine migrations as a commensal member of grapevine flora.
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Multiple origins of cultivated grapevine (Vitis vinifera L. ssp. sativa) based on chloroplast DNA polymorphisms.
Rosa Arroyo-García,L. Ruiz-Garcia,L. Bolling,Rafael Ocete,M. A. López,Claire Arnold,Ali Ergül,G. Söylemezo˝Lu,Hakan Uzun,F. Cabello,Javier Ibáñez,Mallikarjuna K. Aradhya,Atanas Atanassov,Ivan Atanassov,S. Balint,José Luis Cenis,L. Costantini,S. Gorislavets,Maria Stella Grando,B. Y. Klein,Patrick McGovern,Didier Merdinoglu,Ivan Pejić,Frédérique Pelsy,N. Primikirios,V. Risovannaya,Kalliopi A. Roubelakis-Angelakis,H. Snoussi,Petraq Sotiri,Shubhada Tamhankar,Patrice This,L. Troshin,J. M. Malpica,François Lefort,José M. Martínez-Zapater +34 more
TL;DR: The results suggest the existence of at least two important origins for the cultivated germplasm, one in the Near East and another in the western Mediterranean region, the latter of which gave rise to many of the current Western European cultivars.
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Sampling strategy in molecular microbial ecology: influence of soil sample size on DNA fingerprinting analysis of fungal and bacterial communities.
Lionel Ranjard,David P. H. Lejon,Christophe Mougel,Lucie Schehrer,Didier Merdinoglu,Rémi Chaussod +5 more
TL;DR: Principal component analysis analysis revealed that sampling aliquots of soil > or =1 g are required to obtain robust and reproducible fingerprinting analysis of the genetic structure of fungal communities, however, the smallest samples could be adequate for the detection of minor populations masked by dominant ones in larger samples.
Journal ArticleDOI
The challenge of adapting grapevine varieties to climate change.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used the ARPEGE-Climat general circulation model to simulate dates of bud break, flowering and veraison for Riesling and Gewurztraminer, two winegrape varieties grown in Alsace, France.