Bénédicte Danis
UCB
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Publication
Featured researches published by Bénédicte Danis.
Annals of Neurology | 2013
Manuela Mazzuferi; Gaurav Kumar; Jonathan van Eyll; Bénédicte Danis; Patrik Foerch; Rafal M. Kaminski
Epigenetic mechanisms involved in transcriptional regulation of multiple molecular pathways are potentially attractive therapeutic interventions for epilepsy, because single target therapies are unlikely to provide both anticonvulsant and disease‐modifying effects.
Nature Communications | 2015
Johnson; Jacques Behmoaras; Leonardo Bottolo; Michelle L. Krishnan; Katharina Pernhorst; Pl Santoscoy; T Rossetti; Doug Speed; Prashant K. Srivastava; Marc Chadeau-Hyam; Nabil Hajji; A Dabrowska; Maxime Rotival; B Razzaghi; S Kovac; K Wanisch; Fw Grillo; A Slaviero; Langley; Kirill Shkura; P Roncon; Tisham De; Manuel Mattheisen; Pitt Niehusmann; Terence J. O'Brien; Slavé Petrovski; M. von Lehe; Per Hoffmann; Johan G. Eriksson; Alison J. Coffey
Gene-regulatory network analysis is a powerful approach to elucidate the molecular processes and pathways underlying complex disease. Here we employ systems genetics approaches to characterize the genetic regulation of pathophysiological pathways in human temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE). Using surgically acquired hippocampi from 129 TLE patients, we identify a gene-regulatory network genetically associated with epilepsy that contains a specialized, highly expressed transcriptional module encoding proconvulsive cytokines and Toll-like receptor signalling genes. RNA sequencing analysis in a mouse model of TLE using 100 epileptic and 100 control hippocampi shows the proconvulsive module is preserved across-species, specific to the epileptic hippocampus and upregulated in chronic epilepsy. In the TLE patients, we map the trans-acting genetic control of this proconvulsive module to Sestrin 3 (SESN3), and demonstrate that SESN3 positively regulates the module in macrophages, microglia and neurons. Morpholino-mediated Sesn3 knockdown in zebrafish confirms the regulation of the transcriptional module, and attenuates chemically induced behavioural seizures in vivo.
Nature Neuroscience | 2016
Michael R. Johnson; Kirill Shkura; Sarah R. Langley; Andrée Delahaye-Duriez; Prashant K. Srivastava; W. David Hill; Owen J. L. Rackham; Gail Davies; Sarah E. Harris; Aida Moreno-Moral; Maxime Rotival; Doug Speed; Slavé Petrovski; Anaïs Katz; Caroline Hayward; David J. Porteous; Blair H. Smith; Sandosh Padmanabhan; Lynne J. Hocking; David C. Liewald; Alessia Visconti; Mario Falchi; Leonardo Bottolo; Tiziana Rossetti; Bénédicte Danis; Manuela Mazzuferi; Patrik Foerch; Alexander Grote; Christoph Helmstaedter; Albert J. Becker
Genetic determinants of cognition are poorly characterized, and their relationship to genes that confer risk for neurodevelopmental disease is unclear. Here we performed a systems-level analysis of genome-wide gene expression data to infer gene-regulatory networks conserved across species and brain regions. Two of these networks, M1 and M3, showed replicable enrichment for common genetic variants underlying healthy human cognitive abilities, including memory. Using exome sequence data from 6,871 trios, we found that M3 genes were also enriched for mutations ascertained from patients with neurodevelopmental disease generally, and intellectual disability and epileptic encephalopathy in particular. M3 consists of 150 genes whose expression is tightly developmentally regulated, but which are collectively poorly annotated for known functional pathways. These results illustrate how systems-level analyses can reveal previously unappreciated relationships between neurodevelopmental disease–associated genes in the developed human brain, and provide empirical support for a convergent gene-regulatory network influencing cognition and neurodevelopmental disease.
Genome Biology | 2016
Andrée Delahaye-Duriez; Prashant K. Srivastava; Kirill Shkura; Sarah R. Langley; Liisi Laaniste; Aida Moreno-Moral; Bénédicte Danis; Manuela Mazzuferi; Patrik Foerch; Elena V. Gazina; Kay L. Richards; Steven Petrou; Rafal M. Kaminski; Enrico Petretto; Michael R. Johnson
BackgroundThe relationship between monogenic and polygenic forms of epilepsy is poorly understood and the extent to which the genetic and acquired epilepsies share common pathways is unclear. Here, we use an integrated systems-level analysis of brain gene expression data to identify molecular networks disrupted in epilepsy.ResultsWe identified a co-expression network of 320 genes (M30), which is significantly enriched for non-synonymous de novo mutations ascertained from patients with monogenic epilepsy and for common variants associated with polygenic epilepsy. The genes in the M30 network are expressed widely in the human brain under tight developmental control and encode physically interacting proteins involved in synaptic processes. The most highly connected proteins within the M30 network were preferentially disrupted by deleterious de novo mutations for monogenic epilepsy, in line with the centrality-lethality hypothesis. Analysis of M30 expression revealed consistent downregulation in the epileptic brain in heterogeneous forms of epilepsy including human temporal lobe epilepsy, a mouse model of acquired temporal lobe epilepsy, and a mouse model of monogenic Dravet (SCN1A) disease. These results suggest functional disruption of M30 via gene mutation or altered expression as a convergent mechanism regulating susceptibility to epilepsy broadly. Using the large collection of drug-induced gene expression data from Connectivity Map, several drugs were predicted to preferentially restore the downregulation of M30 in epilepsy toward health, most notably valproic acid, whose effect on M30 expression was replicated in neurons.ConclusionsTaken together, our results suggest targeting the expression of M30 as a potential new therapeutic strategy in epilepsy.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Bénédicte Danis; Marijke van Rikxoort; Anita Kretschmann; Jiong Zhang; Patrice Godard; Lidija Andonovic; Franziska Siegel; Pitt Niehusmann; Etienne Hanon; Daniel Delev; Marec von Lehe; Rafal M. Kaminski; Alexander Pfeifer; Patrik Foerch
Epilepsy is one of the most common neurological disorders characterized by recurrent seizures due to neuronal hyperexcitability. Here we compared miRNA expression patterns in mesial temporal lobe epilepsy with and without hippocampal sclerosis (mTLE + HS and mTLE −HS) to investigate the regulatory mechanisms differentiating both patient groups. Whole genome miRNA sequencing in surgically resected hippocampi did not reveal obvious differences in expression profiles between the two groups of patients. However, one microRNA (miR-184) was significantly dysregulated, which was confirmed by qPCR. We observed that overexpression of miR-184 inhibited cytokine release after LPS stimulation in primary microglial cells, while it did not affect the viability of murine primary neurons and primary astrocytes. Pathway analysis revealed that miR-184 is potentially involved in the regulation of inflammatory signal transduction and apoptosis. Dysregulation of some the potential miR-184 target genes was confirmed by qPCR and 3′UTR luciferase reporter assay. The reduced expression of miR-184 observed in patients with mTLE + HS together with its anti-inflammatory effects indicate that miR-184 might be involved in the modulation of inflammatory processes associated with hippocampal sclerosis which warrants further studies elucidating the role of miR-184 in the pathophysiology of mTLE.
European Journal of Neuroscience | 2015
Christian Vogl; Shota Tanifuji; Bénédicte Danis; Veronique Daniels; Patrik Foerch; Christian Wolff; Benjamin J. Whalley; Sumiko Mochida; Gary J. Stephens
Synaptic vesicle glycoprotein (SV)2A is a transmembrane protein found in secretory vesicles and is critical for Ca2+‐dependent exocytosis in central neurons, although its mechanism of action remains uncertain. Previous studies have proposed, variously, a role of SV2 in the maintenance and formation of the readily releasable pool (RRP) or in the regulation of Ca2+ responsiveness of primed vesicles. Such previous studies have typically used genetic approaches to ablate SV2 levels; here, we used a strategy involving small interference RNA (siRNA) injection to knockdown solely presynaptic SV2A levels in rat superior cervical ganglion (SCG) neuron synapses. Moreover, we investigated the effects of SV2A knockdown on voltage‐dependent Ca2+ channel (VDCC) function in SCG neurons. Thus, we extended the studies of SV2A mechanisms by investigating the effects on vesicular transmitter release and VDCC function in peripheral sympathetic neurons. We first demonstrated an siRNA‐mediated SV2A knockdown. We showed that this SV2A knockdown markedly affected presynaptic function, causing an attenuated RRP size, increased paired‐pulse depression and delayed RRP recovery after stimulus‐dependent depletion. We further demonstrated that the SV2A–siRNA‐mediated effects on vesicular release were accompanied by a reduction in VDCC current density in isolated SCG neurons. Together, our data showed that SV2A is required for correct transmitter release at sympathetic neurons. Mechanistically, we demonstrated that presynaptic SV2A: (i) acted to direct normal synaptic transmission by maintaining RRP size, (ii) had a facilitatory role in recovery from synaptic depression, and that (iii) SV2A deficits were associated with aberrant Ca2+ current density, which may contribute to the secretory phenotype in sympathetic peripheral neurons.
Journal of Molecular Neuroscience | 2015
Anita Kretschmann; Bénédicte Danis; Lidija Andonovic; Khalid Abnaof; Marijke van Rikxoort; Franziska Siegel; Manuela Mazzuferi; Patrice Godard; Etienne Hanon; Holger Fröhlich; Rafal M. Kaminski; Patrik Foerch; Alexander Pfeifer
Genome Research | 2017
Prashant K. Srivastava; Marta Bagnati; Andrée Delahaye-Duriez; Jeong-Hun Ko; Maxime Rotival; Sarah R. Langley; Kirill Shkura; Manuela Mazzuferi; Bénédicte Danis; Jonathan van Eyll; Patrik Foerch; Jacques Behmoaras; Rafal M. Kaminski; Enrico Petretto; Michael R. Johnson
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2016
Rainer Surges; Anita Kretschmann; Khalid Abnaof; Marijke van Rikxoort; Kirsten Ridder; Holger Fröhlich; Bénédicte Danis; Rafal M. Kaminski; Patrik Foerch; Christian E. Elger; Frank Weinsberg; Alexander Pfeifer
Neurotherapeutics | 2018
Seon-Ah Chong; Silvia Balosso; Catherine Vandenplas; Gregory Szczesny; Etienne Hanon; Kasper Claes; Xavier Van Damme; Bénédicte Danis; Jonathan van Eyll; Christian Wolff; Annamaria Vezzani; Rafal M. Kaminski; Isabelle Niespodziany