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Dive into the research topics where Christine Vande Velde is active.

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Featured researches published by Christine Vande Velde.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2010

Gain and loss of function of ALS-related mutations of TARDBP (TDP-43) cause motor deficits in vivo

Edor Kabashi; Li Lin; Miranda L. Tradewell; Patrick A. Dion; Valérie Bercier; Patrick Bourgouin; Daniel Rochefort; Samar Bel Hadj; Heather D. Durham; Christine Vande Velde; Guy A. Rouleau; Pierre Drapeau

TDP-43 has been found in inclusion bodies of multiple neurological disorders, including amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, frontotemporal dementia, Parkinsons disease and Alzheimers disease. Mutations in the TDP-43 encoding gene, TARDBP, have been subsequently reported in sporadic and familial ALS patients. In order to investigate the pathogenic nature of these mutants, the effects of three consistently reported TARDBP mutations (A315T, G348C and A382T) were tested in cell lines, primary cultured motor neurons and living zebrafish embryos. Each of the three mutants and wild-type (WT) human TDP-43 localized to nuclei when expressed in COS1 and Neuro2A cells by transient transfection. However, when expressed in motor neurons from dissociated spinal cord cultures these mutant TARDBP alleles, but less so for WT TARDBP, were neurotoxic, concomitant with perinuclear localization and aggregation of TDP-43. Finally, overexpression of mutant, but less so of WT, human TARDBP caused a motor phenotype in zebrafish (Danio rerio) embryos consisting of shorter motor neuronal axons, premature and excessive branching as well as swimming deficits. Interestingly, knock-down of zebrafisfh tardbp led to a similar phenotype, which was rescued by co-expressing WT but not mutant human TARDBP. Together these approaches showed that TARDBP mutations cause motor neuron defects and toxicity, suggesting that both a toxic gain of function as well as a novel loss of function may be involved in the molecular mechanism by which mutant TDP-43 contributes to disease pathogenesis.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2011

TAR DNA-Binding Protein 43 (TDP-43) Regulates Stress Granule Dynamics via Differential Regulation of G3BP and TIA-1

Karli K. McDonald; Anaı̈s Aulas; Laurie Destroismaisons; Sarah Pickles; Evghenia Beleac; William Camu; Guy A. Rouleau; Christine Vande Velde

TAR deoxyribonucleic acid-binding protein 43 (TDP-43) is a multifunctional protein with roles in transcription, pre-messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) splicing, mRNA stability and transport. TDP-43 interacts with other heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoproteins (hnRNPs), including hnRNP A2, via its C-terminus and several hnRNP family members are involved in the cellular stress response. This relationship led us to investigate the role of TDP-43 in cellular stress. Our results demonstrate that TDP-43 and hnRNP A2 are localized to stress granules (SGs), following oxidative stress, heat shock and exposure to thapsigargin. TDP-43 contributes to both the assembly and maintenance of SGs in response to oxidative stress and differentially regulates key SGs components, including TIA-1 and G3BP. The controlled aggregation of TIA-1 is disrupted in the absence of TDP-43 resulting in slowed SG formation. In addition, TDP-43 regulates the levels of G3BP mRNA, a SG nucleating factor. The disease-associated mutation TDP-43(R361S) is a loss-of-function mutation with regards to SG formation and confers alterations in levels of G3BP and TIA-1. In contrast, a second mutation TDP-43(D169G) does not impact this pathway. Thus, mutations in TDP-43 are mechanistically divergent. Finally, the cellular function of TDP-43 extends beyond splicing and places TDP-43 as a participant of the central cellular response to stress and an active player in RNA storage.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

ALS-linked mutant superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1) alters mitochondrial protein composition and decreases protein import

Quan Li; Christine Vande Velde; Adrian Israelson; Jing Xie; Aaron O. Bailey; Meng-Qui Dong; Seung-Joo Chun; Tamal Roy; Leah Winer; John R. Yates; Roderick A. Capaldi; Don W. Cleveland; Timothy M. Miller

Mutations in superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1) cause familial ALS. Mutant SOD1 preferentially associates with the cytoplasmic face of mitochondria from spinal cords of rats and mice expressing SOD1 mutations. Two-dimensional gels and multidimensional liquid chromatography, in combination with tandem mass spectrometry, revealed 33 proteins that were increased and 21 proteins that were decreased in SOD1G93A rat spinal cord mitochondria compared with SOD1WT spinal cord mitochondria. Analysis of this group of proteins revealed a higher-than-expected proportion involved in complex I and protein import pathways. Direct import assays revealed a 30% decrease in protein import only in spinal cord mitochondria, despite an increase in the mitochondrial import components TOM20, TOM22, and TOM40. Recombinant SOD1G93A or SOD1G85R, but not SOD1WT or a Parkinsons disease-causing, misfolded α-synucleinE46K mutant, decreased protein import by >50% in nontransgenic mitochondria from spinal cord, but not from liver. Thus, altered mitochondrial protein content accompanied by selective decreases in protein import into spinal cord mitochondria comprises part of the mitochondrial damage arising from mutant SOD1.


PLOS Pathogens | 2010

Requirement of NOX2 and Reactive Oxygen Species for Efficient RIG-I-Mediated Antiviral Response through Regulation of MAVS Expression

Anton Soucy-Faulkner; Espérance Mukawera; Karin Fink; Alexis Martel; Loubna Jouan; Yves Nzengue; Daniel Lamarre; Christine Vande Velde; Nathalie Grandvaux

The innate immune response is essential to the host defense against viruses, through restriction of virus replication and coordination of the adaptive immune response. Induction of antiviral genes is a tightly regulated process initiated mainly through sensing of invading virus nucleic acids in the cytoplasm by RIG-I like helicases, RIG-I or Mda5, which transmit the signal through a common mitochondria-associated adaptor, MAVS. Although major breakthroughs have recently been made, much remains unknown about the mechanisms that translate virus recognition into antiviral genes expression. Beside the reputed detrimental role, reactive oxygen species (ROS) act as modulators of cellular signaling and gene regulation. NADPH oxidase (NOX) enzymes are a main source of deliberate cellular ROS production. Here, we found that NOX2 and ROS are required for the host cell to trigger an efficient RIG-I-mediated IRF-3 activation and downstream antiviral IFNβ and IFIT1 gene expression. Additionally, we provide evidence that NOX2 is critical for the expression of the central mitochondria-associated adaptor MAVS. Taken together these data reveal a new facet to the regulation of the innate host defense against viruses through the identification of an unrecognized role of NOX2 and ROS.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Misfolded SOD1 associated with motor neuron mitochondria alters mitochondrial shape and distribution prior to clinical onset.

Christine Vande Velde; Karli K. McDonald; Yasmin Boukhedimi; Melissa McAlonis-Downes; Christian S. Lobsiger; Samar Bel Hadj; Andre Zandona; Jean-Pierre Julien; Sameer B. Shah; Don W. Cleveland

Mutations in superoxide dismutase (SOD1) are causative for inherited amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. A proportion of SOD1 mutant protein is misfolded onto the cytoplasmic face of mitochondria in one or more spinal cord cell types. By construction of mice in which mitochondrially targeted enhanced green fluorescent protein is selectively expressed in motor neurons, we demonstrate that axonal mitochondria of motor neurons are primary in vivo targets for misfolded SOD1. Mutant SOD1 alters axonal mitochondrial morphology and distribution, with dismutase active SOD1 causing mitochondrial clustering at the proximal side of Schmidt-Lanterman incisures within motor axons and dismutase inactive SOD1 producing aberrantly elongated axonal mitochondria beginning pre-symptomatically and increasing in severity as disease progresses. Somal mitochondria are altered by mutant SOD1, with loss of the characteristic cylindrical, networked morphology and its replacement by a less elongated, more spherical shape. These data indicate that mutant SOD1 binding to mitochondria disrupts normal mitochondrial distribution and size homeostasis as early pathogenic features of SOD1 mutant-mediated ALS.


Molecular Neurodegeneration | 2012

Endogenous TDP-43, but not FUS, contributes to stress granule assembly via G3BP

Anaïs Aulas; Stéphanie Stabile; Christine Vande Velde

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a fatal neurodegenerative disease characterized by the selective loss of upper and lower motor neurons, a cell type that is intrinsically more vulnerable than other cell types to exogenous stress. The interplay between genetic susceptibility and environmental exposures to toxins has long been thought to be relevant to ALS. One cellular mechanism to overcome stress is the formation of small dense cytoplasmic domains called stress granules (SG) which contain translationally arrested mRNAs. TDP-43 (encoded by TARDBP) is an ALS-causative gene that we have previously implicated in the regulation of the core stress granule proteins G3BP and TIA-1. TIA-1 and G3BP localize to SG under nearly all stress conditions and are considered essential to SG formation. Here, we report that TDP-43 is required for proper SG dynamics, especially SG assembly as marked by the secondary aggregation of TIA-1. We also show that SG assembly, but not initiation, requires G3BP. Furthermore, G3BP can rescue defective SG assembly in cells depleted of endogenous TDP-43. We also demonstrate that endogenous TDP-43 and FUS do not have overlapping functions in this cellular process as SG initiation and assembly occur normally in the absence of FUS. Lastly, we observe that SG assembly is a contributing factor in the survival of neuronal-like cells responding to acute oxidative stress. These data raise the possibility that disruptions of normal stress granule dynamics by loss of nuclear TDP-43 function may contribute to neuronal vulnerability in ALS.


Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience | 2015

Alterations in stress granule dynamics driven by TDP-43 and FUS: a link to pathological inclusions in ALS?

Anaïs Aulas; Christine Vande Velde

Stress granules (SGs) are RNA-containing cytoplasmic foci formed in response to stress exposure. Since their discovery in 1999, over 120 proteins have been described to be localized to these structures (in 154 publications). Most of these components are RNA binding proteins (RBPs) or are involved in RNA metabolism and translation. SGs have been linked to several pathologies including inflammatory diseases, cancer, viral infection, and neurodegenerative diseases such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD). In ALS and FTD, the majority of cases have no known etiology and exposure to external stress is frequently proposed as a contributor to either disease initiation or the rate of disease progression. Of note, both ALS and FTD are characterized by pathological inclusions, where some well-known SG markers localize with the ALS related proteins TDP-43 and FUS. We propose that TDP-43 and FUS serve as an interface between genetic susceptibility and environmental stress exposure in disease pathogenesis. Here, we will discuss the role of TDP-43 and FUS in SG dynamics and how disease-linked mutations affect this process.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2015

G3BP1 promotes stress-induced RNA granule interactions to preserve polyadenylated mRNA

Anaïs Aulas; Guillaume Caron; Christos G. Gkogkas; Nguyen-Vi Mohamed; Laurie Destroismaisons; Nahum Sonenberg; Nicole Leclerc; J. Alex Parker; Christine Vande Velde

The TDP-43 target G3BP1 is essential for a functional interaction between stress granules and processing bodies.


Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis | 2012

Misfolded SOD1 and ALS: Zeroing in on mitochondria

Sarah Pickles; Christine Vande Velde

Mutations in SOD1, causative for a subset of familial ALS cases, are associated with the formation of non-normal SOD1 conformers. Recent studies have defined this pool of SOD1 as misfolded and new antibodies have been developed to selectively detect misfolded SOD1 in vivo and in vitro. We will review these new tools and expand on the evidence demonstrating mitochondria as a common intersecting point for misfolded SOD1.


Mitochondrion | 2012

The human MSH5 (MutSHomolog 5) protein localizes to mitochondria and protects the mitochondrial genome from oxidative damage.

Sylvie Bannwarth; Alexia Figueroa; Konstantina Fragaki; Laurie Destroismaisons; Sandra Lacas-Gervais; Françoise Lespinasse; Fanny Vandenbos; Ludivine A. Pradelli; Jean-Ehrland Ricci; Agnès Rötig; Jean-François Michiels; Christine Vande Velde; Véronique Paquis-Flucklinger

MutS homologs play a central role in maintaining genetic stability. We show that MSH5 (MutSHomolog 5) is localized into the mitochondria of germ and somatic cells. This protein binds to mtDNA and interacts with the Twinkle helicase and the DNA polymerase gamma. hMSH5 stimulates mtDNA repair in response to DNA damage induced by oxidative stress. Furthermore, we observed a subsarcolemmal accumulation of hMSH5 in COX negative muscle fibers of patients presenting a mitochondrial myopathy. We report a novel localization for hMSH5 suggesting that this protein may have functions other than those known in meiotic recombination.

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Sarah Pickles

Université de Montréal

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Anaïs Aulas

Université de Montréal

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Yoko Ito

Université de Montréal

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Ariel Wilson

Université de Montréal

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