André Steinmetz
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
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Featured researches published by André Steinmetz.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2008
Lin Xu; Zhong Zhao; Aiwu Dong; Ludivine Soubigou-Taconnat; Jean-Pierre Renou; André Steinmetz; Wen-Hui Shen
ABSTRACT Histone lysines can be mono-, di-, or trimethylated, providing an ample magnitude of epigenetic information for transcription regulation. In fungi, SET2 is the sole methyltransferase responsible for mono-, di-, and trimethylation of H3K36. Here we show that in Arabidopsis thaliana, the degree of H3K36 methylation is regulated by distinct methyltransferases. The SET2 homologs SDG8 and SDG26 each can methylate oligonucleosomes in vitro, and both proteins are localized in the nucleus. While the previously reported loss-of-function sdg8 mutants have an early-flowering phenotype, the loss-of-function sdg26 mutants show a late-flowering phenotype. Consistently, several MADS-box flowering repressors are down-regulated by sdg8 but up-regulated by sdg26. The sdg8 but not the sdg26 mutant plants show a dramatically reduced level of both di- and trimethyl-H3K36 and an increased level of monomethyl-H3K36. SDG8 is thus specifically required for di- and trimethylation of H3K36. Our results further establish that H3K36 di- and tri- but not monomethylation correlates with transcription activation. Finally, we show that SDG8 and VIP4, which encodes a component of the PAF1 complex, act independently and synergistically in transcription regulation. Together our results reveal that the deposition of H3K36 methylation is finely regulated, possibly to cope with the complex regulation of growth and development in higher eukaryotes.
The Plant Cell | 2003
Yu Yu; André Steinmetz; Denise Meyer; A. Spencer Brown; Wen-Hui Shen
Although most of the components of the cell cycle machinery are conserved in all eukaryotes, plants differ strikingly from animals by the absence of a homolog of E-type cyclin, an important regulator involved in G1/S-checkpoint control in animals. By contrast, plants contain a complex range of A-type cyclins, with no fewer than 10 members in Arabidopsis. We previously identified the tobacco A-type cyclin Nicta;CYCA3;2 as an early G1/S-activated gene. Here, we show that antisense expression of Nicta;CYCA3;2 in tobacco plants induces defects in embryo formation and impairs callus formation from leaf explants. The green fluorescent protein (GFP)–Nicta;CYCA3;2 fusion protein was localized in the nucleoplasm. Transgenic tobacco plants overproducing GFP-Nicta;CYCA3;2 could not be regenerated from leaf disc transformation, whereas some transgenic Arabidopsis plants were obtained by the floral-dip transformation method. Arabidopsis plants that overproduce GFP-Nicta;CYCA3;2 showed reduced cell differentiation and endoreplication and a dramatically modified morphology. Calli regenerated from leaf explants of these transgenic Arabidopsis plants were defective in shoot and root regeneration. We propose that Nicta;CYCA3;2 has important functions, analogous to those of cyclin E in animals, in the control of plant cell division and differentiation.
The Plant Cell | 2010
Jessica Papuga; Céline Hoffmann; Monika Dieterle; Danièle Moes; Flora Moreau; Stéphane Tholl; André Steinmetz; Clément Thomas
This work systematically examines the expression as well as the actin binding and actin regulatory activities of the Arabidopsis LIM proteins, finding differences in expression and changes in activity, which, for a subset of the LIM proteins, depends on pH and calcium. Recently, a number of two LIM-domain containing proteins (LIMs) have been reported to trigger the formation of actin bundles, a major higher-order cytoskeletal assembly. Here, we analyzed the six Arabidopsis thaliana LIM proteins. Promoter-β-glucuronidase reporter studies revealed that WLIM1, WLIM2a, and WLIM2b are widely expressed, whereas PLIM2a, PLIM2b, and PLIM2c are predominantly expressed in pollen. LIM-green fluorescent protein (GFP) fusions all decorated the actin cytoskeleton and increased actin bundle thickness in transgenic plants and in vitro, although with different affinities and efficiencies. Remarkably, the activities of WLIMs were calcium and pH independent, whereas those of PLIMs were inhibited by high pH and, in the case of PLIM2c, by high [Ca2+]. Domain analysis showed that the C-terminal domain is key for the responsiveness of PLIM2c to pH and calcium. Regulation of LIM by pH was further analyzed in vivo by tracking GFP-WLIM1 and GFP-PLIM2c during intracellular pH modifications. Cytoplasmic alkalinization specifically promoted release of GFP-PLIM2c but not GFP-WLIM1, from filamentous actin. Consistent with these data, GFP-PLIM2c decorated long actin bundles in the pollen tube shank, a region of relatively low pH. Together, our data support a prominent role of Arabidopsis LIM proteins in the regulation of actin cytoskeleton organization and dynamics in sporophytic tissues and pollen.
Cytoskeleton | 2009
Clément Thomas; Stéphane Tholl; Danièle Moes; Monika Dieterle; Jessica Papuga; Flora Moreau; André Steinmetz
Tight regulation of plant actin cytoskeleton organization and dynamics is crucial for numerous cellular processes including cell division, expansion and intracellular trafficking. Among the various actin regulatory proteins, actin-bundling proteins trigger the formation of bundles composed of several parallel actin filaments closely packed together. Actin bundles are present in virtually all plant cells, but their biological roles have rarely been addressed directly. However, decades of research in the plant cytoskeleton field yielded a bulk of data from which an overall picture of the functions supplied by actin bundles in plant cells emerges. Although plants lack several equivalents of animal actin-bundling proteins, they do possess major bundler classes including fimbrins, villins and formins. The existence of additional players is not excluded as exemplified by the recent characterization of plant LIM proteins, which trigger the formation of actin bundles both in vitro and in vivo. This apparent functional redundancy likely reflects the need for plant cells to engineer different types of bundles that act at different sub-cellular locations and exhibit specific function-related properties. By surveying information regarding the properties of plant actin bundles and their associated bundling proteins, the present review aims at clarifying why and how plants make actin bundles.
The Plant Cell | 2006
Clément Thomas; Céline Hoffmann; Monika Dieterle; Marleen Van Troys; Christophe Ampe; André Steinmetz
We used confocal microscopy and in vitro analyses to show that Nicotiana tabacum WLIM1, a LIM domain protein related to animal Cys-rich proteins, is a novel actin binding protein in plants. Green fluorescent protein (GFP)–tagged WLIM1 protein accumulated in the nucleus and cytoplasm of tobacco BY2 cells. It associated predominantly with actin cytoskeleton, as demonstrated by colabeling and treatment with actin-depolymerizing latrunculin B. High-speed cosedimentation assays revealed the ability of WLIM1 to bind directly to actin filaments with high affinity. Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching and fluorescence loss in photobleaching showed a highly dynamic in vivo interaction of WLIM1-GFP with actin filaments. Expression of WLIM1-GFP in BY2 cells significantly delayed depolymerization of the actin cytoskeleton induced by latrunculin B treatment. WLIM1 also stabilized actin filaments in vitro. Importantly, expression of WLIM1-GFP in Nicotiana benthamiana leaves induces significant changes in actin cytoskeleton organization, specifically, fewer and thicker actin bundles than in control cells, suggesting that WLIM1 functions as an actin bundling protein. This hypothesis was confirmed by low-speed cosedimentation assays and direct observation of F-actin bundles that formed in vitro in the presence of WLIM1. Taken together, these data identify WLIM1 as a novel actin binding protein that increases actin cytoskeleton stability by promoting bundling of actin filaments.
Plant Physiology | 2009
Alexandre Berr; Lin Xu; Juan Gao; Valérie Cognat; André Steinmetz; Aiwu Dong; Wen-Hui Shen
Covalent modifications of histone lysine residues by methylation play key roles in the regulation of chromatin structure and function. In contrast to H3K9 and H3K27 methylations that mark repressive states of transcription and are absent in some lower eukaryotes, H3K4 and H3K36 methylations are considered as active marks of transcription and are highly conserved in all eukaryotes from yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) to Homo sapiens. Paradoxically, protein complexes catalyzing H3K4 and H3K36 methylations are less-extensively characterized in higher eukaryotes, particularly in plants. Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) contains 12 SET DOMAIN GROUP (SDG) proteins phylogenetic classified to Trithorax Group (TrxG) and thus potentially involved in H3K4 and H3K36 methylations. So far only some genes of this family had been functionally characterized. Here we report on the genetic and molecular characterization of SDG25, a previously uncharacterized member of the Arabidopsis TrxG family. We show that the loss-of-function mutant sdg25-1 has an early flowering phenotype associated with suppression of FLOWERING LOCUS C (FLC) expression. Recombinant SDG25 proteins could methylate histone H3 from oligonucleosomes and mutant sdg25-1 plants showed weakly reduced levels of H3K36 dimethylation at FLC chromatin. Interestingly, sdg25-1 transcriptome shared a highly significant number of differentially expressed genes with that of sdg26-1, a previously characterized mutant exhibiting late-flowering phenotype and elevated FLC expression. Taken together, our results provide, to our knowledge, the first demonstration for a biological function of SDG25 and reveal additional layers of complexity of overlap and nonoverlap functions of the TrxG family genes in Arabidopsis.
Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1984
Géraldine Bonnard; François Michel; Jacques Henry Weil; André Steinmetz
SummaryThe gene encoding the tRNAUAALeufrom broad bean chloroplasts has been located on a 5.1 kbp long BamHI fragment by analysis of the DNA sequence of an XbaI subfragment. This gene is 536 bp long and is split in the anticodon region. The 451 bp long intron shows high sequence homology over about 100 bp from each end with the corresponding regions of the maize chloroplast tRNAUAALeuintron. These conserved sequences are probably involved in the splicing reaction, for they can be folded into a secondary structure which is very similar to the postulated structure of the intron from the autosplicable ribosomal RNA precursor of Tetrahymena. Very little sequence conservation is found in the 5′-and 3′-flanking regions of the broad bean and maize chloroplast tRNAUAALeugenes.
Plant Physiology | 2009
Christina Hofmann; Annette Niehl; Adrian Sambade; André Steinmetz; Manfred Heinlein
The tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) movement protein (MP) required for the cell-to-cell spread of viral RNA interacts with the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) as well as with the cytoskeleton during infection. Whereas associations of MP with ER and microtubules have been intensely investigated, research on the role of actin has been rather scarce. We demonstrate that Nicotiana benthamiana plants transgenic for the actin-binding domain 2 of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) fimbrin (AtFIM1) fused to green fluorescent protein (ABD2:GFP) exhibit a dynamic ABD2:GFP-labeled actin cytoskeleton and myosin-dependent Golgi trafficking. These plants also support the movement of TMV. In contrast, both myosin-dependent Golgi trafficking and TMV movement are dominantly inhibited when ABD2:GFP is expressed transiently. Inhibition is mediated through binding of ABD2:GFP to actin filaments, since TMV movement is restored upon disruption of the ABD2:GFP-labeled actin network with latrunculin B. Latrunculin B shows no significant effect on the spread of TMV infection in either wild-type plants or ABD2:GFP transgenic plants under our treatment conditions. We did not observe any binding of MP along the length of actin filaments. Collectively, these observations demonstrate that TMV movement does not require an intact actomyosin system. Nevertheless, actin-binding proteins appear to have the potential to exert control over TMV movement through the inhibition of myosin-associated protein trafficking along the ER membrane.
Plant Molecular Biology | 2003
Estelle Marquet-Blouin; F.B. Bouche; André Steinmetz; C.P. Muller
Although edible vaccines seem to be feasible, antigens of human pathogens have mostly been expressed in plants that are not attractive for human consumption (such as potatoes) unless they are cooked. Boiling may reduce the immunogenicity of many antigens. More recently, the technology to transform fruit and vegetable plants have become perfected. We transformed carrot plants with Agrobacterium tumefaciens to generate plants (which can be eaten raw) transgenic for an immunodominant antigen of the measles virus, a major pathogen in man. The hemagglutinin (H) glycoprotein is the principle target of neutralizing and protective antibodies against measles. Copy numbers of the H transgene were verified by Southern blot and specific transcription was confirmed by RT-PCR. The H protein was detected by western blot in the membrane fraction of transformed carrot plants. The recombinant protein seemed to have a 8% lower molecular weight than the viral protein. Although this suggests a different glycosylation pattern, proper folding of the transgenic protein was confirmed by conformational-dependent monoclonal antibodies. Immunization of mice with leaf or root extracts induced high titres of IgG1 and IgG2a antibodies that cross-reacted strongly with the measles virus and neutralized the virus in vitro. These results demonstrate that transgenic carrot plants can be used as an efficient expression system to produce highly immunogenic viral antigens. Our study may pave the way towards an edible vaccine against measles which could be complementary to the current live-attenuated vaccine.
The Plant Cell | 1992
Rachel Baltz; Jean-Luc Evrard; Claire Domon; André Steinmetz
We have recently described a sunflower cDNA sequence coding for a pollenspecific protein (SF3) with putative zinc finger domains (Baltz et al., 1992). In a more recent analysis we have found that these domains correspond to the conserved LIM motif identified so far only in a family of metal binding, cysteine-rich proteins from animais. This motif, n~55 amino acids long, is characterized by a unique organization of cysteine and histidine residues into two adjacent putative zinc fingers. LIM motif-containing proteins include developmental regulators such as the rat insulin gene enhancer binding protein ISL-1 (Karlsson et al., 1990), the Caenorhabdifis elegans proteins LIN-11 (Freyd et al., 1990) and MEC-3 (Way and Chalfie, 1988), the Drosophila APTEROUS protein (Cohen et al., 1992), the XenopusXLIM-1 protein (Tairaet al., 1992), and the mammalian oncoproteins TTG-1 and TTG-2 (also known as RHOMQ) of the rhombotin family (McGuire et ai., 1989; Boehm et al., 1990, 1991; Royer-Pokora et al., 1991). The mammalian cysteine-rich proteins CRlP (Birkenmeyer and Gordon, 1986), hCRP (Liebhaber et al., 1990; Wang et al., 1992), and ESP-l (Nalik et al., 1989), all of which are of yet unknown function, also contain LIM motifs. LIM motifs are found either alone (in CRIP, TTG-1, TTGP, ESP-1, and hCRP) or in association with a homeodomain (in MEC-3, ISL-1, LIM-11, XLIM-1, and APTEROUS). Figure 1 shows an alignment of the LIM motifs of the pollen-specific protein SF3 with those of the animal LIM proteins. ConSeNed residues are shown in bold type. Aclose examination of a number of semiconserved positions (see boxed residues) shows evidence for the existence of two subfamilies of LIM proteins: subfamily A, which includes SF3, hCRP, CRlP and ESP-1, and subfamily B, which comprises the seven other proteins. The most frequently occurring metalchelating residues in the potential zinc fingers are cysteines and histidines. However, in the majority of the LIM proteins, aspartate (D) is the last residue in the second finger (position 57). This is not necessarily surprising because aspartate has been identified as a metal-chelating residue in zinc-containing enzymes (Vallee and Auld, 1990). As potential zinc finger domains, the LIM motifs could be directly involved in DNA binding, although a possible role in protein-protein interactions has been