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Institution

University of Rennes

EducationRennes, France
About: University of Rennes is a education organization based out in Rennes, France. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Catalysis. The organization has 18404 authors who have published 40374 publications receiving 995327 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This poster presents a poster presented at the European Society of Cardiology Congress on Wednesday, 5 February 2020 entitled “Cardiology and Cardiac Rhythm Management: Promoting Consistency in Patients with Challenging Stroke”.
Abstract: Published on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved. © The Author(s) 2020.

230 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A collection of articles selected for this special issue that show, use, or debate the concept of holobiont to approach taxonomically and ecologically diverse organisms, from humans and plants to sponges and insects are highlighted.
Abstract: In the recent years, the holobiont concept has emerged as a theoretical and experimental framework to study the interactions between hosts and their associated microbial communities in all types of ecosystems. The spread of this concept in many branches of biology results from the fairly recent realization of the ubiquitous nature of host-associated microbes and their central role in host biology, ecology, and evolution. Through this special series “Host-microbiota interactions: from holobiont theory to analysis,” we wanted to promote this field of research which has considerable implications for human health, food production, and ecosystem protection. In this preface, we highlight a collection of articles selected for this special issue that show, use, or debate the concept of holobiont to approach taxonomically and ecologically diverse organisms, from humans and plants to sponges and insects. We also identify some theoretical and methodological challenges and propose directions for future research on holobionts.

229 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the effect of the types of alkaline earth metal ions (Mg2+, Ca2+ and Ba2+) and concentration of Al2O3 and BaO on the refractive index and the effective emission linewidths of the 4I13/2−4I15/2 transition of Er3+ ions in phosphate glasses was investigated.
Abstract: The effect of the types of alkaline earth metal ions (Mg2+, Ca2+ and Ba2+) and concentration of Al2O3 and BaO on the refractive index and the effective emission linewidths of the 4I13/2−4I15/2 transition of Er3+ ions in phosphate glasses, 64P2O5 · 12Al2O3 · 3.5( Er 2 O 3 + La 2 O 3 )·20.5 MO ( M = Mg , Ca , Ba ) and 64P2O5 · 3.5(Er2O3+La2O3) · (21.5 − x)Al2O3 · (11+x) BaO (x=0,3.5,6.5 and 9.5) , were investigated. A single mode Er3+ doped phosphate glass fiber with a core diameter of 4 μm was fabricated by the rod-in-tube technique. A new Er3+ doped fiber amplifier is demonstrated pumping with a 980 nm fiber pigtailed-laser diode. A gain per unit length greater than 2 dB/cm is demonstrated, which is the largest gain per unit length for fiber amplifiers to our knowledge.

229 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Transposable elements (TEs) represent an important fraction of plant genomes and are likely to play a pivotal role in fuelling genome reorganization and functional changes following allopolyploidization, but available evidence indicates that TE proliferation in the short or the long term after allopolyPloidization may be restricted to a few TEs.
Abstract: Transposable elements (TEs) represent an important fraction of plant genomes and are likely to play a pivotal role in fuelling genome reorganization and functional changes following allopolyploidization. Various processes associated with allopolyploidy (i.e. genetic redundancy, bottlenecks during the formation of allopolyploids or genome shock following genome merging) may allow accumulation of TE insertions. Our objective in carrying out a survey of the literature and a comparative analysis across different allopolyploid systems is to shed light on the structural, epigenetic and functional modifications driven by TEs during allopolyploidization and subsequent diploidization. The available evidence indicates that TE proliferation in the short or the long term after allopolyploidization may be restricted to a few TEs, in specific polyploid systems. By contrast, data indicate major structural changes in the TE genome fraction immediately after allopolyploidization, mainly through losses of TE sequences as a result of recombination. Emerging evidence also suggests that TEs are targeted by substantial epigenetic changes, which may impact gene expression and genome stability. Furthermore, TEs may directly or indirectly support the evolution of new functionalities in allopolyploids during diploidization. All data stress allopolyploidization as a shock associated with drastic genome reorganization. Mechanisms controlling TEs during allopolyploidization as well as their impact on diploidization are discussed.

229 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A structural study of the Kolar greenstone belt and surrounding granite-gneiss terrains combined with U-Pb dating reveals that the middle and lower crustal tectonoplutonic pattern of the eastern Dharwar craton developed during a major magmatic accretion event between 2550 and 2530 Ma.
Abstract: [1] The structural study of the Kolar greenstone belt and surrounding granite-gneiss terrains combined with U-Pb dating reveals that the middle and lower crustal tectonoplutonic pattern of the eastern Dharwar craton developed during a major magmatic accretion event between 2550 and 2530 Ma The granite-greenstone pattern resulted from the interference of gravity-driven sagging of the greenstones (ie, diapirism), E-W bulk inhomogeneous shortening combined with horizontal N-S stretching, and syntectonic juvenile pluton emplacement Bulk inhomogeneous contraction is accommodated by the synchronous development of a pervasive, N-S trending vertical foliation, shallow stretching lineation, and conjugate strike-slip shear zone pattern within and outside the greenstone belt, resulting in regional horizontal pure shear deformation The plutons around the greenstone belt record regional contraction by developing one set of strike-slip C-S fabrics of the shear zone pattern The development of the granite-greenstone pattern was coeval and compatible with deformation during juvenile magmatic accretion, melting, and granulite metamorphism in the lower crust The Kolar example points to a specific crustal rheology that allowed sagduction of the greenstones and regional distributed bulk inhomogeneous strain, due to mechanical homogeneity and low viscosity provided by large-scale melting during the accretion event This example further suggests specific boundary conditions to the craton that allowed E-W inhomogeneous shortening to be accommodated by N-S stretching and spreading of the crust without significant tectonic thickening Such tectonoplutonic pattern is specific to the Archean and may develop as a consequence of mantle plume activity in intracontinental settings

229 citations


Authors

Showing all 18470 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Philippe Froguel166820118816
Bart Staels15282486638
Yi Yang143245692268
Geoffrey Burnstock141148899525
Shahrokh F. Shariat118163758900
Lutz Ackermann11666945066
Douglas R. MacFarlane11086454236
Elliott H. Lieb10751257920
Fu-Yuan Wu10736742039
Didier Sornette104129544157
Stefan Hild10345268228
Pierre I. Karakiewicz101120740072
Philippe Dubois101109848086
François Bondu10044069284
Jean-Michel Savéant9851733518
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202321
2022176
20212,655
20202,735
20192,670
20182,378