Cécile Pagan
Pasteur Institute
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Publication
Featured researches published by Cécile Pagan.
PLOS ONE | 2010
Pauline Chaste; Nathalie Clement; Oriane Mercati; Jean-Luc Guillaume; Richard Delorme; Hany Goubran Botros; Cécile Pagan; Samuel Périvier; Isabelle Scheid; Gudrun Nygren; Henrik Anckarsäter; Maria Råstam; Ola Ståhlberg; Carina Gillberg; Emilie Serrano; Nathalie Lemière; Jean-Marie Launay; Marie Christine Mouren-Simeoni; Marion Leboyer; Christopher Gillberg; Ralf Jockers; Thomas Bourgeron
Melatonin is a powerful antioxidant and a synchronizer of many physiological processes. Alteration of the melatonin pathway has been reported in circadian disorders, diabetes and autism spectrum disorders (ASD). However, very little is known about the genetic variability of melatonin receptors in humans. Here, we sequenced the melatonin receptor MTNR1A and MTNR1B, genes coding for MT1 and MT2 receptors, respectively, in a large panel of 941 individuals including 295 patients with ASD, 362 controls and 284 individuals from different ethnic backgrounds. We also sequenced GPR50, coding for the orphan melatonin-related receptor GPR50 in patients and controls. We identified six non-synonymous mutations for MTNR1A and ten for MTNR1B. The majority of these variations altered receptor function. Particularly interesting mutants are MT1-I49N, which is devoid of any melatonin binding and cell surface expression, and MT1-G166E and MT1-I212T, which showed severely impaired cell surface expression. Of note, several mutants possessed pathway-selective signaling properties, some preferentially inhibiting the adenylyl cyclase pathway, others preferentially activating the MAPK pathway. The prevalence of these deleterious mutations in cases and controls indicates that they do not represent major risk factor for ASD (MTNR1A case 3.6% vs controls 4.4%; MTNR1B case 4.7% vs 3% controls). Concerning GPR50, we detected a significant association between ASD and two variations, Δ502–505 and T532A, in affected males, but it did not hold up after Bonferonni correction for multiple testing. Our results represent the first functional ascertainment of melatonin receptors in humans and constitute a basis for future structure-function studies and for interpreting genetic data on the melatonin pathway in patients.
Human Molecular Genetics | 2012
Bruno Etain; Anne Dumaine; Frank Bellivier; Cécile Pagan; Laetitia Francelle; Hany Goubran-Botros; Sarah Moreno; Jasmine Deshommes; Khaled Moustafa; Katia Le Dudal; Flavie Mathieu; Chantal Henry; Jean-Pierre Kahn; Jean-Marie Launay; Thomas W. Mühleisen; Sven Cichon; Thomas Bourgeron; Marion Leboyer; Stéphane Jamain
Patients affected by bipolar disorder (BD) frequently report abnormalities in sleep/wake cycles. In addition, they showed abnormal oscillating melatonin secretion, a key regulator of circadian rhythms and sleep patterns. The acetylserotonin O-methyltransferase (ASMT) is a key enzyme of the melatonin biosynthesis and has recently been associated with psychiatric disorders such as autism spectrum disorders and depression. In this paper, we analysed rare and common variants of ASMT in patients with BD and unaffected control subjects and performed functional analysis of these variants by assaying the ASMT activity in their B-lymphoblastoid cell lines. We sequenced the coding and the regulatory regions of the gene in a discovery sample of 345 patients with BD and 220 controls. We performed an association study on this discovery sample using common variants located in the promoter region and showed that rs4446909 was significantly associated with BD (P= 0.01) and associated with a lower mRNA level (P< 10(-4)) and a lower enzymatic activity (P< 0.05) of ASMT. A replication study and a meta-analysis using 480 independent patients with BD and 672 controls confirmed the significant association between rs4446909 and BD (P= 0.002). These results correlate with the general lower ASMT enzymatic activity observed in patients with BD (P= 0.001) compared with controls. Finally, several deleterious ASMT mutations identified in patients were associated with low ASMT activity (P= 0.01). In this study, we determined how rare and common variations in ASMT might play a role in BD vulnerability and suggest a general role of melatonin as susceptibility factor for BD.
Translational Psychiatry | 2014
Cécile Pagan; Richard Delorme; Jacques Callebert; Hany Goubran-Botros; Frédérique Amsellem; X Drouot; C Boudebesse; K. Le Dudal; N Ngo-Nguyen; H Laouamri; Christopher Gillberg; Marion Leboyer; Thomas Bourgeron; J-M Launay
Elevated whole-blood serotonin and decreased plasma melatonin (a circadian synchronizer hormone that derives from serotonin) have been reported independently in patients with autism spectrum disorders (ASDs). Here, we explored, in parallel, serotonin, melatonin and the intermediate N-acetylserotonin (NAS) in a large cohort of patients with ASD and their relatives. We then investigated the clinical correlates of these biochemical parameters. Whole-blood serotonin, platelet NAS and plasma melatonin were assessed in 278 patients with ASD, their 506 first-degree relatives (129 unaffected siblings, 199 mothers and 178 fathers) and 416 sex- and age-matched controls. We confirmed the previously reported hyperserotonemia in ASD (40% (35–46%) of patients), as well as the deficit in melatonin (51% (45–57%)), taking as a threshold the 95th or 5th percentile of the control group, respectively. In addition, this study reveals an increase of NAS (47% (41–54%) of patients) in platelets, pointing to a disruption of the serotonin-NAS–melatonin pathway in ASD. Biochemical impairments were also observed in the first-degree relatives of patients. A score combining impairments of serotonin, NAS and melatonin distinguished between patients and controls with a sensitivity of 80% and a specificity of 85%. In patients the melatonin deficit was only significantly associated with insomnia. Impairments of melatonin synthesis in ASD may be linked with decreased 14-3-3 proteins. Although ASDs are highly heterogeneous, disruption of the serotonin-NAS–melatonin pathway is a very frequent trait in patients and may represent a useful biomarker for a large subgroup of individuals with ASD.
Journal of Pineal Research | 2011
Pauline Chaste; Nathalie Clement; Hany Goubran Botros; Jean-Luc Guillaume; Marina Konyukh; Cécile Pagan; Isabelle Scheid; Gudrun Nygren; Henrik Anckarsäter; Maria Råstam; Ola Ståhlberg; I. Carina Gillberg; Jonas Melke; Richard Delorme; Claire S. Leblond; Roberto Toro; Guillaume Huguet; Fabien Fauchereau; Christelle M. Durand; Lydia Boudarene; Emilie Serrano; Nathalie Lemière; Jean-Marie Launay; Marion Leboyer; Ralf Jockers; Christopher Gillberg; Thomas Bourgeron
Abstract: Melatonin is a powerful antioxidant and a synchronizer of many physiological processes. Alteration in melatonin signaling has been reported in a broad range of diseases, but little is known about the genetic variability of this pathway in humans. Here, we sequenced all the genes of the melatonin pathway –AA‐NAT, ASMT, MTNR1A, MTNR1B and GPR50 – in 321 individuals from Sweden including 101 patients with attention‐deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and 220 controls from the general population. We could find several damaging mutations in patients with ADHD, but no significant enrichment compared with the general population. Among these variations, we found a splice site mutation in ASMT (IVS5+2T>C) and one stop mutation in MTNR1A (Y170X) – detected exclusively in patients with ADHD – for which biochemical analyses indicated that they abolish the activity of ASMT and MTNR1A. These genetic and functional results represent the first comprehensive ascertainment of melatonin signaling deficiency in ADHD.
Journal of Pineal Research | 2011
Erik Maronde; Anastasia Saade; Katrin Ackermann; Hany Goubran-Botros; Cécile Pagan; Roman Bux; Thomas Bourgeron; Faramarz Dehghani; Jörg H. Stehle
Abstract: Time of day is communicated to the body through rhythmic cues, including pineal gland melatonin synthesis, which is restricted to nighttime. Whereas in most rodents transcriptional regulation of the arylalkylamine N‐acetyltransferase (Aanat) gene is essential for rhythmic melatonin synthesis, investigations into nonrodent mammalian species have shown post‐transcriptional regulation to be of central importance, with molecular mechanisms still elusive. Therefore, human pineal tissues, taken from routine autopsies were allocated to four time‐of‐death groups (night/dawn/day/dusk) and analyzed for daytime‐dependent changes in phosphorylated AANAT (p31T‐AANAT) and in acetyl‐serotonin‐methyltransferase (ASMT) expression and activity. Protein content, intracellular localization, and colocalization of p31T‐AANAT and ASMT were assessed, using immunoblotting, immunofluorescence, and immunoprecipitation techniques. Fresh sheep pineal gland preparations were used for comparative purposes. The amount of p31T‐AANAT and ASMT proteins as well as their intracellular localization showed no diurnal variation in autoptic human and fresh sheep pineal glands. Moreover, in human and sheep pineal extracts, AANAT could not be dephosphorylated, which was at variance to data derived from rat pineal extracts. P31T‐AANAT and ASMT were often found to colocalize in cellular rod‐like structures that were also partly immunoreactive for the pinealocyte process‐specific marker S‐antigen (arrestin) in both, human and sheep pinealocytes. Protein–protein interaction studies with p31T‐AANAT, ASMT, and S‐antigen demonstrated a direct association and formation of robust complexes, involving also 14‐3‐3. This work provides evidence for a regulation principle for AANAT activity in the human pineal gland, which may not be based on a p31T‐AANAT phosphorylation/dephosphorylation switch, as described for other mammalian species.
Journal of Pineal Research | 2013
Hany Goubran Botros; Pierre Legrand; Cécile Pagan; Vincent Bondet; Patrick Weber; Mariem Ben-Abdallah; Nathalie Lemière; Guillaume Huguet; Jacques Bellalou; Erik Maronde; Pierre Béguin; Ahmed Haouz; William Shepard; Thomas Bourgeron
Abstract: Melatonin is a synchronizer of many physiological processes. Abnormal melatonin signaling is associated with human disorders related to sleep, metabolism, and neurodevelopment. Here, we present the X‐ray crystal structure of human N‐acetyl serotonin methyltransferase (ASMT), the last enzyme of the melatonin biosynthesis pathway. The polypeptide chain of ASMT consists of a C‐terminal domain, which is typical of other SAM‐dependent O‐methyltransferases, and an N‐terminal domain, which intertwines several helices with another monomer to form the physiologically active dimer. Using radioenzymology, we analyzed 20 nonsynonymous variants identified through the 1000 genomes project and in patients with neuropsychiatric disorders. We found that the majority of these mutations reduced or abolished ASMT activity including one relatively frequent polymorphism in the Han Chinese population (N17K, rs17149149). Overall, we estimate that the allelic frequency of ASMT deleterious mutations ranges from 0.66% in Europe to 2.97% in Asia. Mapping of the variants on to the 3‐dimensional structure clarifies why some are harmful and provides a structural basis for understanding melatonin deficiency in humans.
BMC Medical Genetics | 2011
Cécile Pagan; Hany Goubran Botros; Karine Poirier; Anne Dumaine; Stéphane Jamain; Sarah Moreno; Arjan P.M. de Brouwer; Hilde Van Esch; Richard Delorme; Jean-Marie Launay; Andreas Tzschach; Vera M. Kalscheuer; Didier Lacombe; Sylvain Briault; Frédéric Laumonnier; Martine Raynaud; Bregje W.M. van Bon; Marjolein H. Willemsen; Marion Leboyer; Jamel Chelly; Thomas Bourgeron
BackgroundIntellectual disability (ID) is frequently associated with sleep disorders. Treatment with melatonin demonstrated efficacy, suggesting that, at least in a subgroup of patients, the endogenous melatonin level may not be sufficient to adequately set the sleep-wake cycles. Mutations in ASMT gene, coding the last enzyme of the melatonin pathway have been reported as a risk factor for autism spectrum disorders (ASD), which are often comorbid with ID. Thus the aim of the study was to ascertain the genetic variability of ASMT in a large cohort of patients with ID and controls.MethodsHere, we sequenced all exons of ASMT in a sample of 361 patients with ID and 440 controls. We then measured the ASMT activity in B lymphoblastoid cell lines (BLCL) of patients with ID carrying an ASMT variant and compared it to controls.ResultsWe could identify eleven variations modifying the protein sequence of ASMT (ID only: N13H, N17K, V171M, E288D; controls only: E61Q, D210G, K219R, P243L, C273S, R291Q; ID and controls: L298F) and two deleterious splice site mutations (IVS5+2T>C and IVS7+1G>T) only observed in patients with ID. We then ascertained ASMT activity in B lymphoblastoid cell lines from patients carrying the mutations and showed significantly lower enzyme activity in patients carrying mutations compared to controls (p = 0.004).ConclusionsWe could identify patients with deleterious ASMT mutations as well as decreased ASMT activity. However, this study does not support ASMT as a causative gene for ID since we observed no significant enrichment in the frequency of ASMT variants in ID compared to controls. Nevertheless, given the impact of sleep difficulties in patients with ID, melatonin supplementation might be of great benefit for a subgroup of patients with low melatonin synthesis.
Protein Expression and Purification | 2011
Mariem Ben-Abdallah; Vincent Bondet; Fabien Fauchereau; Pierre Béguin; Hany Goubran-Botros; Cécile Pagan; Thomas Bourgeron; Jacques Bellalou
N-acetyl serotonin methyl transferase (ASMT) is the last enzyme in the melatonin synthesis pathway. Evidence linking autism-related disorders with disorders of melatonin metabolism, and, more specifically, with mutations of the gene encoding ASMT, prompted us to investigate the properties and localization of this enzyme. As a first step, we undertook to overproduce the protein in a recombinant host. Early attempts to produce ASMT in recombinant Escherichia coli yielded only insoluble and heavily degraded material. However, recombinant ASMT (rASMT) could be produced in soluble, active form and purified in milligram amounts when the gene was cloned and expressed in Leishmania tarentolae.
PLOS ONE | 2017
Magali Pettazzoni; Roseline Froissart; Cécile Pagan; Marie T. Vanier; Séverine Ruet; Philippe Latour; Nathalie Guffon; Alain Fouilhoux; Dominique P. Germain; Thierry Levade; Christine Vianey-Saban; Monique Piraud; David Cheillan
Background The biological diagnosis of sphingolipidoses currently relies on the measurement of specific enzymatic activities and/or genetic studies. Lysosphingolipids have recently emerged as potential biomarkers of sphingolipidoses and Niemann-Pick type C in plasma. Methodology We developed a sensitive and specific method enabling the simultaneous quantification of lysosphingolipids by LC-MS/MS: lysoglobotriaosylceramide for Fabry disease, lysohexosylceramide (i.e. lysoglucosylceramide and/or lysogalactosylceramide) for Gaucher and Krabbe diseases, lysosphingomyelin and its carboxylated analogue lysosphingomyelin-509 for Niemann-Pick type A or B, and C diseases, lysoGM1 ganglioside for GM1gangliosidosis and lysoGM2 ganglioside for GM2 gangliosidosis. Findings The diagnostic performances were validated in plasma samples analysing a large series of patients affected with sphingolipidoses and Niemann-Pick type C disease (n = 98), other inborn errors of metabolism (n = 23), and controls (n = 228). The multiplex measurement of lysosphingolipids allowed the screening of Fabry (including female patients and late-onset variants), Gaucher and infantile Krabbe, Niemann-Pick type A/B and C diseases with high sensitivity and specificity. LysoGM1 and LysoGM2 were elevated in most of the patients affected with GM1 and GM2 gangliosidosis respectively. In amniotic fluid supernatant from pregnancies presenting non-immune hydrops fetalis (n = 77, including previously diagnosed Gaucher (n = 5), GM1 gangliosidosis (n = 4) and galactosialidosis (n = 4) fetuses) and from normal pregnancies (n = 15), a specific and dramatic increase of lysohexosylceramide was observed only in the Gaucher amniotic fluid samples. Interpretation This multiplex assay which allows the simultaneous measurement of lysosphingolipids in plasma modifies the diagnostic strategy of sphingolipidoses and Niemann-Pick type C. Furthermore, in pregnancies presenting non-immune hydrops fetalis, lysohexosylceramide measurement in amniotic fluid offers a rapid screening of fetal Gaucher disease without waiting for glucocerebrosidase activity measurement in cultured amniocytes.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Cécile Pagan; Hany Goubran-Botros; Richard Delorme; Marion Benabou; Nathalie Lemière; Kerren Murray; Frédérique Amsellem; Jacques Callebert; Pauline Chaste; Stéphane Jamain; Fabien Fauchereau; Guillaume Huguet; Erik Maronde; Marion Leboyer; Jean-Marie Launay; Thomas Bourgeron
Autism spectrum disorders (ASD) are characterized by a wide genetic and clinical heterogeneity. However, some biochemical impairments, including decreased melatonin (crucial for circadian regulation) and elevated platelet N-acetylserotonin (the precursor of melatonin) have been reported as very frequent features in individuals with ASD. To address the mechanisms of these dysfunctions, we investigated melatonin synthesis in post-mortem pineal glands - the main source of melatonin (9 patients and 22 controls) - and gut samples - the main source of serotonin (11 patients and 13 controls), and in blood platelets from 239 individuals with ASD, their first-degree relatives and 278 controls. Our results elucidate the enzymatic mechanism for melatonin deficit in ASD, involving a reduction of both enzyme activities contributing to melatonin synthesis (AANAT and ASMT), observed in the pineal gland as well as in gut and platelets of patients. Further investigations suggest new, post-translational (reduced levels of 14-3-3 proteins which regulate AANAT and ASMT activities) and post-transcriptional (increased levels of miR-451, targeting 14-3-3ζ) mechanisms to these impairments. This study thus gives insights into the pathophysiological pathways involved in ASD.