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Dive into the research topics where Céline Méhats is active.

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Featured researches published by Céline Méhats.


Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology | 2002

Role of cyclic nucleotide signaling in oocyte maturation

Marco Conti; Carsten B Andersen; François J. Richard; Céline Méhats; Sang-Young Chun; Kathleen Horner; Catherine Jin; Alex Tsafriri

The development of the ovarian follicle, oocyte maturation, and ovulation require a complex set of endocrine, paracrine, and autocrine inputs that are translated into the regulation of cyclic nucleotide levels. Changes in intracellular cAMP mediate the gonadotropin regulation of granulosa and theca cell functions. Likewise, a decrease in cAMP concentration in the oocyte has been associated with the resumption of meiosis. Using pharmacological and molecular approaches, we determined that the expression of cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases (PDEs), the enzymes that degrade and inactivate cAMP, is compartmentalized in the ovarian follicle of all species studied, with PDE3 present in the oocytes and PDE4s in granulosa cells. The PDE3 expressed in the mouse oocyte was cloned, and the protein expressed in a heterologous system had properties similar to those of a PDE3A derived from somatic cells. Inhibition of the oocyte PDE3 completely blocked oocyte maturation in vitro and in vivo, demonstrating that the activity of this enzyme is essential for oocyte maturation. Heterologous expression of PDE3A in Xenopus oocyte causes morphological changes distinctive of resumption of meiosis (GVBD), as well as activation of mos translation and MAPK phosphorylation. Using mRNA and antibody microinjection in the Xenopus eggs, we have shown that PDE3 is downstream from the kinase PKB/Akt in the pathway that mediates IGF-1 but not progesterone-induced meiotic resumption. The presence of a similar regulatory module in mammalian oocytes is inferred by pharmacological studies with PDE3 inhibitors and measurement of PDE activity. Thus, PDE3 plays an essential role in the signaling pathway that controls resumption of meiosis in amphibians and mammals. Understanding the regulation of this enzyme may shed some light on the signals that trigger oocyte maturation.


Trends in Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2002

Cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases and their role in endocrine cell signaling

Céline Méhats; Carsten B Andersen; Marcello Filopanti; S.-L. C. Jin; Marco Conti

The discovery that degradation and inactivation of the second messengers cAMP and cGMP are mediated by a complex enzymatic machinery has changed our perspective on cyclic nucleotide-mediated processes. In the cell, these second messengers are inactivated by no fewer than 11 distinct families of phosphodiesterases (PDEs). Much is known about the structure and function of these enzymes, their complex subcellular distribution and regulation. Yet, their potential as targets for therapeutic intervention in a broad range of endocrine abnormalities still needs to be investigated. This review explores the involvement of PDEs in the regulation of intracellular signaling and focuses on the known and potential roles that are of interest to endocrinologists.


The FASEB Journal | 2003

PDE4D plays a critical role in the control of airway smooth muscle contraction

Céline Méhats; S.-L. Catherine Jin; Jan Wahlström; Evelyn Law; Dale T. Umetsu; Marco Conti

The airways of mice deficient in the cAMP phosphodiesterase PDE4D gene are refractory to muscarinic cholinergic stimulation. This study was undertaken to determine whether altered smooth muscle contractility causes the PDE4D−/− phenotype. A major disruption in contractility was observed in isolated PDE4D−/− tracheas, with a 60% reduction in maximal tension and a fivefold decrease in sensitivity to muscarinic cholinergic agonists. Conversely, responses to KCl or arginine vasopressin were unaffected. PDE4D is the predominant PDE4 form in tracheal extracts and PDE4D mRNA is expressed in smooth muscle where muscarinic binding sites are most abundant. Cyclic AMP accumulation in response to acute Gsα‐coupled receptor stimulation was increased up to fourfold in the airway of PDE4D−/− mice when compared with wild‐type. This increase in cAMP was associated with an increased sensitivity to PGE2‐induced relaxation of the PDE4D−/− tracheas. Furthermore, a blockade of prostanoid accumulation in PDE4D−/− tracheas restored the response to muscarinic cholinergic stimulation in vitro and in vivo. These results demonstrate that PDE4D plays a key role in balancing relaxant and contracting cues in airway smooth muscle, suggesting that natural mutations in the PDE4D gene have profound effects on airway tone.—Me´hats, C., Jin, S.‐L. C., Wahlstrom, J., Law, E., Umetsu, D., Conti, M. PDE4D plays a critical role in the control of airway smooth muscle contraction. FASEB J. 17, 1831–1841 (2003)


Hypertension | 2013

Preeclampsia-Like Symptoms Induced in Mice by Fetoplacental Expression of STOX1 Are Reversed by Aspirin Treatment

Ludivine Doridot; Bruno Passet; Céline Méhats; Virginie Rigourd; Sandrine Barbaux; Aurélien Ducat; Françoise Mondon; Marthe Vilotte; Johann Castille; Michelle Breuiller-Fouché; Nathalie Daniel; Fabienne Le Provost; Anne-Laure Bauchet; Véronique Baudrie; Alexandre Hertig; Christophe Buffat; Umberto Simeoni; Guy Germain; Jean-Luc Vilotte; Daniel Vaiman

Preeclampsia (PE) is a common human-specific pregnancy disorder defined by hypertension and proteinuria during gestation and responsible for maternal and fetal morbimortality. STOX1, encoding a transcription factor, was the first gene associated with PE as identified by positional cloning approaches. Its overexpression in choriocarcinoma cells mimics the transcriptional consequences of PE in the human placenta. Here, we created transgenic mouse strains overexpressing human STOX1. Wild-type female mice crossed with transgenic male mice reproduce accurately the symptoms of severe PE: gestational hypertension, proteinuria, and elevated plasma levels of soluble fms-like tyrosine kinase 1 and soluble endoglin. Placental and kidney histology were altered. Symptoms were prevented or alleviated by aspirin treatment. STOX1-overexpressing mice constitute a unique model for studying PE, allow testing therapeutic approaches, and assessing the long-term effects of the preeclamptic syndrome.


Current Pharmaceutical Design | 2014

DNA Methylation, An Epigenetic Mode of Gene Expression Regulation in Reproductive Science

Rosamaria Calicchio; Ludivine Doridot; Francisco Miralles; Céline Méhats; Daniel Vaiman

DNA methylation is an important part of the epigenetic code governing gene expression. In human reproductive diseases, recent studies have shown the existence of deviations from the normal methylation profile at various genome loci. In this review, this type of epigenetic alterations is explored in pathological spermatogenesis, ovarian diseases, placental syndromes, such as preeclampsia and Intra- Uterine Growth Restriction, uterine diseases such as endometriosis, and putative pathophysiological effects of Assisted Reproductive Technologies. We review the notion of epigenetics, the technical methods available to analyze methylation, and the known associations between reproductive diseases and DNA methylation, focusing on human pathologies and on animal models when available. We show that imprinted genes control regions (ICRs) are a prominent and frequent target of methylation anomalies in reproductive disorders, but such alterations also affect non-imprinted genes. The mechanistic aspects of gene regulation in response to methylation anomalies are also discussed in this review when they have been investigated.


American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2010

Secreted surfactant protein A from fetal membranes induces stress fibers in cultured human myometrial cells

Michelle Breuiller-Fouché; Olivier Dubois; Mourad Sediki; Ignacio Garcia-Verdugo; Nades Palaniyar; Zahra Tanfin; Audrey Chissey; Dominique Cabrol; Gilles Charpigny; Céline Méhats

In the present study, we investigated the ability of human fetal membranes (amnion and choriodecidua) to regulate human maternal uterine cell functions through the secretion of surfactant protein (SP)-A and SP-D at the end of pregnancy. We detected the expression of both SP-A (SP-A1 and SP-A2) and SP-D by quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction. Immunohistochemistry revealed that human fetal membranes expressed both SP-A and SP-D. By Western blot analysis, we demonstrated that SP-A protein expression was predominant in choriodecidua, whereas the amnion predominantly expressed SP-D. Only the secretion of SP-A was evidenced in the culture supernatants of amnion and choriodecidua explants by immunodot blot and confirmed by Western blot. Exogenous human purified SP-A induced stress fiber formation in cultured human myometrial cells via a pathway involving Rho-kinase. Conditioned medium from choriodecidua and amnion explants mimicked the SP-A effect. Treatment of myometrial cells with SP-A-depleted conditioned medium from choriodecidua or amnion explants failed to change the actin dynamic. These data indicate that SP-A released by human fetal membranes is able to exert a paracrine regulation of F-actin filament organization in myometrial cells.


Journal of Immunology | 2017

Immune Modifications in Fetal Membranes Overlying the Cervix Precede Parturition in Humans.

Louis Marcellin; Thomas Schmitz; Meriem Messaoudene; Driss Chader; Christophe Parizot; Sébastien Jacques; Jérémy Delaire; Jean Gogusev; Alain Schmitt; Corinne Lesaffre; Michelle Breuiller-Fouché; Anne Caignard; Daniel Vaiman; François Goffinet; D. Cabrol; Guy Gorochov; Céline Méhats

In humans, parturition is currently viewed as an intrauterine outbreak of inflammation, accompanied by a massive release of proinflammatory cytokines at the maternal–fetal interface that comprises the maternal decidua, placenta, and fetal membranes. At term, fetal membranes overlying the cervix, the future site of rupture, show altered morphology and are termed the zone of altered morphology (ZAM). These alterations occur in normal fetal membranes during late pregnancy, in preparation for labor. In this study, transcriptome, flow cytometry, electron microscopy, and immunohistochemistry analyses collectively highlight a local shift in gene expression and lymphocyte activation in the ZAM. Just before labor, we show that highly polymorphic HLA-A, -B, and -C determinants of fetal origin are selectively exposed in the ZAM to the maternal immune system. A graft rejection-like program occurs in the ZAM, which involves 1) the activation of cytotoxic decidual NK cells, and 2) the decline of decidual immunotolerant M2-like macrophages. Comparison with a prior cohort of fetal membranes shows that acute inflammation only takes place after these first steps of immune modifications. Our results therefore strongly argue in favor of local immune remodeling at the onset of parturition.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Lung microRNA deregulation associated with impaired alveolarization in rats after intrauterine growth restriction

Pauline Dravet-Gounot; Cécile Morin; Sébastien Jacques; Florent Dumont; Fabiola Ely-Marius; Daniel Vaiman; Pierre-Henri Jarreau; Céline Méhats; Elodie Zana-Taïeb; Bernard Mari

Intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) was recently described as an independent risk factor of bronchopulmonary dysplasia, the main respiratory sequelae of preterm birth. We previously showed impaired alveolarization in rat pups born with IUGR induced by a low-protein diet (LPD) during gestation. We conducted a genome-wide analysis of gene expression and found the involvement of several pathways such as cell adhesion. Here, we describe our unbiased microRNA (miRNA) profiling by microarray assay and validation by qPCR at postnatal days 10 and 21 (P10 and P21) in lungs of rat pups with LPD-induced lung-alveolarization disorder after IUGR. We identified 13 miRNAs with more than two-fold differential expression between control lungs and LPD-induced IUGR lungs. Validated and predicted target genes of these miRNAs were related to “tissue repair” at P10 and “cellular communication regulation” at P21. We predicted the deregulation of several genes associated with these pathways. Especially, E2F3, a transcription factor involved in cell cycle control, was expressed in developing alveoli, and its mRNA and protein levels were significantly increased at P21 after IUGR. Hence, IUGR affects the expression of selected miRNAs during lung alveolarization. These results provide a basis for deciphering the mechanistic contributions of IUGR to impaired alveolarization.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Cyclic AMP-specific PDE4 phosphodiesterases as critical components of cyclic AMP signaling.

Marco Conti; Wito Richter; Céline Méhats; Gabriel Livera; Jy-Young Park; Catherine Jin


American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2007

Cellular mechanisms underlying prostaglandin-induced transient cAMP signals near the plasma membrane of HEK-293 cells

Thomas C. Rich; Wenkuan Xin; Céline Méhats; Kathryn A. Hassell; Leslie A. Piggott; Xuan Le; Jeffrey W. Karpen; Marco Conti

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Marco Conti

University of California

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D. Cabrol

Paris Descartes University

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Jean Gogusev

Paris Descartes University

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Louis Marcellin

Paris Descartes University

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Kathryn A. Hassell

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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