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Dive into the research topics where Christelle Rochefort is active.

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Featured researches published by Christelle Rochefort.


Neuron | 2005

Activity-Dependent Adjustments of the Inhibitory Network in the Olfactory Bulb following Early Postnatal Deprivation

Armen Saghatelyan; Pascal Roux; Michele Migliore; Christelle Rochefort; David Desmaisons; Pierre Charneau; Gordon M. Shepherd; Pierre-Marie Lledo

The first-order sensory relay for olfactory processing, the main olfactory bulb (MOB), retains the ability to acquire new interneurons throughout life. It is therefore a particularly appropriate region for studying the role of experience in sculpting neuronal networks. We found that nostril closure decreased the number of newborn granule cells in the MOB, the complexity of their dendritic arborization, and their spine density, without affecting the preexisting population of granule cells. Accordingly, the frequency of miniature synaptic inhibitory events received by mitral cells was reduced. However, due to a compensatory increase in newborn granule cell excitability, action potential-dependent GABA release was dramatically enhanced, thus counteracting the reduction in spine density and leading to an unaltered synchronization of mitral cell firing activity. Together, this study reveals a unique form of adaptive response brought about exclusively by the cohort of newborn cells and used to maintain normal functioning of the MOB.


Science | 2011

Cerebellum Shapes Hippocampal Spatial Code

Christelle Rochefort; Arnaud Arabo; Marion André; Bruno Poucet; Etienne Save; Laure Rondi-Reig

Cerebellar protein kinase C–dependent mechanisms process self-motion information needed for spatial representation and accurate navigation. Spatial representation is an active process that requires complex multimodal integration from a large interacting network of cortical and subcortical structures. We sought to determine the role of cerebellar protein kinase C (PKC)–dependent plasticity in spatial navigation by recording the activity of hippocampal place cells in transgenic L7PKCI mice with selective disruption of PKC-dependent plasticity at parallel fiber–Purkinje cell synapses. Place cell properties were exclusively impaired when L7PKCI mice had to rely on self-motion cues. The behavioral consequence of such a deficit is evidenced here by selectively impaired navigation capabilities during a path integration task. Together, these results suggest that cerebellar PKC-dependent mechanisms are involved in processing self-motion signals essential to the shaping of hippocampal spatial representation.


Frontiers in Neural Circuits | 2013

The cerebellum: a new key structure in the navigation system

Christelle Rochefort; Julie M. Lefort; Laure Rondi-Reig

Early investigations of cerebellar function focused on motor learning, in particular on eyeblink conditioning and adaptation of the vestibulo-ocular reflex, and led to the general view that cerebellar long-term depression (LTD) at parallel fiber (PF)–Purkinje cell (PC) synapses is the neural correlate of cerebellar motor learning. Thereafter, while the full complexity of cerebellar plasticities was being unraveled, cerebellar involvement in more cognitive tasks—including spatial navigation—was further investigated. However, cerebellar implication in spatial navigation remains a matter of debate because motor deficits frequently associated with cerebellar damage often prevent the dissociation between its role in spatial cognition from its implication in motor function. Here, we review recent findings from behavioral and electrophysiological analyses of cerebellar mutant mouse models, which show that the cerebellum might participate in the construction of hippocampal spatial representation map (i.e., place cells) and thereby in goal-directed navigation. These recent advances in cerebellar research point toward a model in which computation from the cerebellum could be required for spatial representation and would involve the integration of multi-source self-motion information to: (1) transform the reference frame of vestibular signals and (2) distinguish between self- and externally-generated vestibular signals. We eventually present herein anatomical and functional connectivity data supporting a cerebello-hippocampal interaction. Whilst a direct cerebello-hippocampal projection has been suggested, recent investigations rather favor a multi-synaptic pathway involving posterior parietal and retrosplenial cortices, two regions critically involved in spatial navigation.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Zif268/egr1 gene controls the selection, maturation and functional integration of adult hippocampal newborn neurons by learning.

Alexandra Veyrac; Alexandra Gros; Elodie Bruel-Jungerman; Christelle Rochefort; Felix B. Kleine Borgmann; Sebastian Jessberger; Serge Laroche

New neurons are continuously added to the dentate gyrus of the adult mammalian brain. During the critical period of a few weeks after birth when newborn neurons progressively mature, a restricted fraction is competitively selected to survive in an experience-dependent manner, a condition for their contribution to memory processes. The mechanisms that control critical stages of experience-dependent functional incorporation of adult newborn neurons remain largely unknown. Here, we identify a unique transcriptional regulator of the functional integration of newborn neurons, the inducible immediate early gene zif268/egr1. We show that newborn neurons in zif268-KO mice undergo accelerated death during the critical period of 2–3 wk around their birth and exhibit deficient neurochemical and morphological maturation, including reduced GluR1 expression, increased NKCC1/KCC2b chloride cotransporter ratio, altered dendritic development, and marked spine growth defect. Investigating responsiveness of newborn neurons to activity-dependent expression of zif268 in learning, we demonstrate that in the absence of zif268, training in a spatial learning task during this critical period fails to recruit newborn neurons and promote their survival, leading to impaired long-term memory. This study reveals a previously unknown mechanism for the control of the selection, functional maturation, and experience-dependent recruitment of dentate gyrus newborn neurons that depends on the inducible immediate early gene zif268, processes that are critical for their contribution to hippocampal-dependent long-term memory.


Journal of Physiology-paris | 2002

Making scents of olfactory neurogenesis

Alan Carleton; Christelle Rochefort; Javier Morante-Oria; David Desmaisons; Jean-Didier Vincent; Gilles Gheusi; Pierre-Marie Lledo

Olfaction was long considered to belong more to the realm of art than to that of science. As a result, how the brain perceives, discriminates, and recognizes odorant molecules is still a mystery. Recent progress has nonetheless been made at early stages of the olfactory pathway when olfactory studies entered into the molecular era to elucidate the first contact of an odor molecule with a receptor. Our group focuses on the analysis of odor information in the olfactory bulb, the first processing relay in the mammalian brain. Using this model, we are attempting to decipher the code for odorant information. Furthermore, the olfactory bulb also provides an attractive model to investigate neuronal proliferation, differentiation, migration, and neuronal death, processes involving an interplay between genetic and epigenetic influences. Finally, our goal is to explore the possible consequences of the olfactory bulb plasticity, in olfactory performance. For these purposes, we aim to combine morphological, electrophysiological and behavioral approaches to investigate: (1) how the olfactory bulb processes odor molecule information, (2) how neural precursors differentiate into olfactory bulb interneurons, (3) how these newly-generated neurons integrate into an operational neural network, (4) what role they play in the adult olfactory bulb, and (5) how are basic olfactory functions maintained in such a sensory system subjected to continuous renewal of a large percentage of its neuronal population. These questions should provide new fuel for the molecular and cellular bases of sensory perception and shed light onto cellular bases of learning and memory.


Frontiers in Neural Circuits | 2013

Young and intense: FoxP2 immunoreactivity in Area X varies with age, song stereotypy, and singing in male zebra finches

Christopher K. Thompson; Fabian Schwabe; Alexander Schoof; Ezequiel Mendoza; Jutta Gampe; Christelle Rochefort; Constance Scharff

FOXP2 is a transcription factor functionally relevant for learned vocalizations in humans and songbirds. In songbirds, FoxP2 mRNA expression in the medium spiny neurons of the basal ganglia song nucleus Area X is developmentally regulated and varies with singing conditions in different social contexts. How individual neurons in Area X change FoxP2 expression across development and in social contexts is not known, however. Here we address this critical gap in our understanding of FoxP2 as a link between neuronal networks and behavior. We used a statistically unbiased analysis of FoxP2-immunoreactivity (FoxP2-IR) on a neuron-by-neuron basis and found a bimodal distribution of FoxP2-IR neurons in Area X: weakly-stained and intensely-stained. The density of intensely-stained FoxP2-IR neurons was 10 times higher in juveniles than in adults, exponentially decreased with age, and was negatively correlated with adult song stability. Three-week old neurons labeled with BrdU were more than five times as likely to be intensely-stained than weakly-stained. The density of FoxP2-IR putative migratory neurons with fusiform-shaped nuclei substantially decreased as birds aged. The density of intensely-stained FoxP2-IR neurons was not affected by singing whereas the density of weakly-stained FoxP2-IR neurons was. Together, these data indicate that young Area X medium spiny neurons express FoxP2 at high levels and decrease expression as they become integrated into existing neural circuits. Once integrated, levels of FoxP2 expression correlate with singing behavior. Together, these findings raise the possibility that FoxP2 levels may orchestrate song learning and song stereotypy in adults by a common mechanism.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2013

Mature Purkinje Cells Require the Retinoic Acid-Related Orphan Receptor-α (RORα) to Maintain Climbing Fiber Mono-Innervation and Other Adult Characteristics

Chen Xr; Heck N; Ann M. Lohof; Christelle Rochefort; Morel Mp; Wehrlé R; Mohamed Doulazmi; Serge Marty; Cannaya; Avci Hx; Jean Mariani; Laure Rondi-Reig; Guilan Vodjdani; Rachel M. Sherrard; Sotelo C; Isabelle Dusart

Neuronal maturation during development is a multistep process regulated by transcription factors. The transcription factor RORα (retinoic acid-related orphan receptor α) is necessary for early Purkinje cell (PC) maturation but is also expressed throughout adulthood. To identify the role of RORα in mature PCs, we used Cre-lox mouse genetic tools in vivo that delete it specifically from PCs between postnatal days 10–21. Up to 14 d of age, differences between mutant and control PCs were not detectable: both were mono-innervated by climbing fibers (CFs) extending along their well-developed dendrites with spiny branchlets. By week 4, mutant mice were ataxic, some PCs had died, and remaining PC soma and dendrites were atrophic, with almost complete disappearance of spiny branchlets. The innervation pattern of surviving RORα-deleted PCs was abnormal with several immature characteristics. Notably, multiple functional CF innervation was reestablished on these mature PCs, simultaneously with the relocation of CF contacts to the PC soma and their stem dendrite. This morphological modification of CF contacts could be induced even later, using lentivirus-mediated depletion of rora from adult PCs. These data show that the late postnatal expression of RORα cell-autonomously regulates the maintenance of PC dendritic complexity, and the CF innervation status of the PC (dendritic vs somatic contacts, and mono-innervation vs multi-innervation). Thus, the differentiation state of adult neurons is under the control of transcription factors; and in their absence, adult neurons lose their mature characteristics and acquire some characteristics of an earlier developmental stage.


The Cerebellum | 2015

Cerebellar Contribution to Spatial Navigation: New Insights into Potential Mechanisms

Julie M. Lefort; Christelle Rochefort; Laure Rondi-Reig

The contribution of the cerebellum to the non-motor aspects of spatial navigation is now established, but the mechanisms of its participation remain unclear. The L7-PKCI mouse model, in which inhibited PKC activity suppresses parallel fiber-Purkinje cell long-term depression (LTD), provides the opportunity to study their spatial abilities in the absence of any motor impairment. L7-PKCI mice are deficient in the spatial but not the cued version of the watermaze task. Their performances are preserved when alleys guide their trajectories in the starmaze task, suggesting that cerebellar PKC-dependent mechanisms are required for the production of an optimal trajectory toward a goal. Furthermore, electrophysiological recordings in freely moving L7-PKCI mice revealed that their hippocampal place cell properties are affected when they have to rely on self motion information: in the absence of external information as well as in a conflicting situation between self-motion and external information. This suggests that the cerebellum is involved in the processing of self-motion information and is required for the construction of the spatial representation in the hippocampus.


bioRxiv | 2018

Anatomical and physiological foundations of cerebello-hippocampal interactions

Thomas C Watson; Pauline Obiang; Arturo Torres-Herraez; Aurélie Watilliaux; Patrice Coulon; Christelle Rochefort; Laure Rondi-Reig

Multiple lines of evidence suggest that functionally intact cerebello-hippocampal interactions are required for appropriate spatial processing. However, how the cerebellum anatomically and physiologically engages with the hippocampus to sustain such interactions remains unknown. Using rabies virus as retrograde transneuronal tracer, we reveal that the dorsal hippocampus receives input from topographically restricted and disparate regions of the cerebellum. By simultaneously recording local field potential from both the dorsal hippocampus and anatomically connected cerebellar regions, we additionally demonstrate that the two structures interact, in a behaviorally dynamic manner, through subregion-specific synchronization of neuronal oscillations in the 6-12Hz frequency range. Together, these results reveal a novel neural network macro-architecture through which we can understand how a brain region classically associated with motor control, the cerebellum, may influence hippocampal neuronal activity and related functions, such as spatial navigation.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2002

Enriched Odor Exposure Increases the Number of Newborn Neurons in the Adult Olfactory Bulb and Improves Odor Memory

Christelle Rochefort; Gilles Gheusi; Jean-Didier Vincent; Pierre-Marie Lledo

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David Desmaisons

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jean-Didier Vincent

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Julie M. Lefort

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Laure Rondi-Reig

French Institute of Health and Medical Research

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Alexandra Gros

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Alexandra Veyrac

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Ann M. Lohof

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Armen Saghatelyan

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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