Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Chrystel Lafont is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Chrystel Lafont.


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

Rapid sensing of circulating ghrelin by hypothalamic appetite-modifying neurons

Marie Schaeffer; Fanny Langlet; Chrystel Lafont; François Molino; David J. Hodson; Thomas Roux; Laurent Lamarque; Pascal Verdié; Emmanuel Bourrier; Bénédicte Dehouck; Jean-Louis Banères; Jean Martinez; Pierre-François Méry; Jacky Marie; Eric Trinquet; Jean-Alain Fehrentz; Vincent Prevot; Patrice Mollard

To maintain homeostasis, hypothalamic neurons in the arcuate nucleus must dynamically sense and integrate a multitude of peripheral signals. Blood-borne molecules must therefore be able to circumvent the tightly sealed vasculature of the blood–brain barrier to rapidly access their target neurons. However, how information encoded by circulating appetite-modifying hormones is conveyed to central hypothalamic neurons remains largely unexplored. Using in vivo multiphoton microscopy together with fluorescently labeled ligands, we demonstrate that circulating ghrelin, a versatile regulator of energy expenditure and feeding behavior, rapidly binds neurons in the vicinity of fenestrated capillaries, and that the number of labeled cell bodies varies with feeding status. Thus, by virtue of its vascular connections, the hypothalamus is able to directly sense peripheral signals, modifying energy status accordingly.


Circulation | 2011

Delayed Postconditioning in the Mouse Heart In Vivo

François Roubille; Alicia Franck-Miclo; Aurélie Covinhes; Chrystel Lafont; Frédéric Cransac; Stéphane Combes; Anne Vincent; Pierre Fontanaud; Catherine Sportouch-Dukhan; Christelle Redt-Clouet; Joël Nargeot; Christophe Piot; Stéphanie Barrère-Lemaire

Background— Reperfusion during acute myocardial infarction remains the best treatment for reducing infarct size. Postconditioning, applied at the onset of reperfusion, reduces myocardial infarction both in animals and humans. The objective of this study was to identify the time delay to apply postconditioning at reperfusion, allowing preservation of cardioprotection in the mouse myocardium. This is a major issue in the management of acute myocardial infarction patients. Methods and Results— Mice were subjected to 40 minutes of ischemia and 60 minutes of reperfusion (IR60′). Postconditioning protocols corresponding to repetitive ischemia (3 cycles of 1 minute of ischemia and 1 minute of reperfusion) were applied during early reperfusion at various time durations (&Dgr;t) after reopening of the coronary artery (&Dgr;t=10 seconds, 1, 5, 10, 15, 20, 30, and 45 minutes; PostC&Dgr;t). Infarct size/area at risk was reduced by 71% in PostC&Dgr;1 compared with IR60′ mice (P=5×10−6). There was a linear correlation (r2=0.91) between infarct size and &Dgr;t, indicating that the cardioprotective effect of delayed postconditioning was progressively attenuated when &Dgr;t time increased. The protective effect of PostC&Dgr;1 and PostC&Dgr;15 was still effective when the duration of reperfusion was prolonged to 24 hours (IR24 hours; PostC&Dgr;1 and PostC&Dgr;15 versus IR24 hours, P=0.001). Similar results were obtained for internucleosomal DNA fragmentation and lactate dehydrogenase release. Conclusions— This study in our in vivo mouse model of myocardial IR shows for the first time that delaying the intervention of postconditioning to 30 minutes does not abrogate the cardioprotective effect of postconditioning. This finding provides evidence that the time window of protection afforded by postconditioning may be larger than initially reported.


Trends in Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2012

A tridimensional view of pituitary development and function

Patrice Mollard; David J. Hodson; Chrystel Lafont; Karine Rizzoti; Jacques Drouin

Recent advances in tridimensional (3D) tissue imaging have considerably enriched our view of the pituitary gland and its development. Whereas traditional histology of the pituitary anterior lobe portrayed this tissue as a patchwork of cells, 3D imaging revealed that cells of each lineage form extensive and structured homotypic networks. In the adult gland these networks contribute to the robustness and coordination of the cell response to secretagogs. In addition, the network organization adapts to changes in endocrine environment, as revealed by the sexually dimorphic growth hormone (GH) cell network. Further work is required to establish better the molecular basis for homotypic and heterotypic interactions in the pituitary as well as the implications of these interactions for pituitary function and dysfunction in humans.


Nature Communications | 2012

Existence of long-lasting experience-dependent plasticity in endocrine cell networks

David J. Hodson; Marie Schaeffer; Nicola Romanò; Pierre Fontanaud; Chrystel Lafont; Jerome Birkenstock; François Molino; Helen Christian; Joe Lockey; Danielle Carmignac; Marta Fernandez-Fuente; Paul Le Tissier; Patrice Mollard

Experience-dependent plasticity of cell and tissue function is critical for survival by allowing organisms to dynamically adjust physiological processes in response to changing or harsh environmental conditions. Despite the conferred evolutionary advantage, it remains unknown whether emergent experience-dependent properties are present in cell populations organized as networks within endocrine tissues involved in regulating body-wide homeostasis. Here we show, using lactation to repeatedly activate a specific endocrine cell network in situ in the mammalian pituitary, that templates of prior demand are permanently stored through stimulus-evoked alterations to the extent and strength of cell–cell connectivity. Strikingly, following repeat stimulation, evolved population behaviour leads to improved tissue output. As such, long-lasting experience-dependent plasticity is an important feature of endocrine cell networks and underlies functional adaptation of hormone release.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Related pituitary cell lineages develop into interdigitated 3D cell networks

Lionel Budry; Chrystel Lafont; Taoufik El Yandouzi; Norbert Chauvet; Geneviève Conejero; Jacques Drouin; Patrice Mollard

The pituitary gland has long been considered to be a random patchwork of hormone-producing cells. By using pituitary-scale tridimensional imaging for two of the least abundant cell lineages, the corticotropes and gonadotropes, we have now uncovered highly organized and interdigitated cell networks that reflect homotypic and heterotypic interactions between cells. Although newly differentiated corticotrope cells appear on the ventral surface of the gland, they rapidly form homotypic strands of cells that extend from the lateral tips of the anterior pituitary along its ventral surface and into the medial gland. As the corticotrope network is established away from the microvasculature, cell morphology changes from rounded, to polygonal, and finally to cells with long cytoplasmic processes or cytonemes that connect corticotropes to the perivascular space. Gonadotropes differentiate later and are positioned in close proximity to corticotropes and capillaries. Blockade of corticotrope terminal differentiation produced by knockout of the gene encoding the transcription factor Tpit results in smaller gonadotropes within an expanded cell network, particularly in the lateral gland. Thus, pituitary-scale tridimensional imaging reveals highly structured cell networks of unique topology for each pituitary lineage. The sequential development of interdigitated cell networks during organogenesis indicate that extensive cell:cell interactions lead to a highly ordered cell positioning rather than random patchwork.


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

Pituitary growth hormone network responses are sexually dimorphic and regulated by gonadal steroids in adulthood

Claudia Sánchez-Cárdenas; Pierre Fontanaud; Zhenhe He; Chrystel Lafont; Anne-Cécile Meunier; Marie Schaeffer; Danielle Carmignac; François Molino; Nathalie Coutry; Xavier Bonnefont; Laurie-Anne Gouty-Colomer; Elodie Gavois; David J. Hodson; Paul Le Tissier; Iain C. A. F. Robinson; Patrice Mollard

There are well-recognized sex differences in many pituitary endocrine axes, usually thought to be generated by gonadal steroid imprinting of the neuroendocrine hypothalamus. However, the recognition that growth hormone (GH) cells are arranged in functionally organized networks raises the possibility that the responses of the network are different in males and females. We studied this by directly monitoring the calcium responses to an identical GH-releasing hormone (GHRH) stimulus in populations of individual GH cells in slices taken from male and female murine GH-eGFP pituitary glands. We found that the GH cell network responses are sexually dimorphic, with a higher proportion of responding cells in males than in females, correlated with greater GH release from male slices. Repetitive waves of calcium spiking activity were triggered by GHRH in some males, but were never observed in females. This was not due to a permanent difference in the network architecture between male and female mice; rather, the sex difference in the proportions of GH cells responding to GHRH were switched by postpubertal gonadectomy and reversed with hormone replacements, suggesting that the network responses are dynamically regulated in adulthood by gonadal steroids. Thus, the pituitary gland contributes to the sexually dimorphic patterns of GH secretion that play an important role in differences in growth and metabolism between the sexes.


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

Cellular in vivo imaging reveals coordinated regulation of pituitary microcirculation and GH cell network function

Chrystel Lafont; Michel G. Desarménien; Mathieu Cassou; François Molino; Jérôme Lecoq; David J. Hodson; Alain Lacampagne; Gérard Mennessier; Taoufik El Yandouzi; Danielle Carmignac; Pierre Fontanaud; Helen Christian; Nathalie Coutry; Marta Fernandez-Fuente; Serge Charpak; Paul Le Tissier; Iain C. A. F. Robinson; Patrice Mollard

Growth hormone (GH) exerts its actions via coordinated pulsatile secretion from a GH cell network into the bloodstream. Practically nothing is known about how the network receives its inputs in vivo and releases hormones into pituitary capillaries to shape GH pulses. Here we have developed in vivo approaches to measure local blood flow, oxygen partial pressure, and cell activity at single-cell resolution in mouse pituitary glands in situ. When secretagogue (GHRH) distribution was modeled with fluorescent markers injected into either the bloodstream or the nearby intercapillary space, a restricted distribution gradient evolved within the pituitary parenchyma. Injection of GHRH led to stimulation of both GH cell network activities and GH secretion, which was temporally associated with increases in blood flow rates and oxygen supply by capillaries, as well as oxygen consumption. Moreover, we observed a time-limiting step for hormone output at the perivascular level; macromolecules injected into the extracellular parenchyma moved rapidly to the perivascular space, but were then cleared more slowly in a size-dependent manner into capillary blood. Our findings suggest that GH pulse generation is not simply a GH cell network response, but is shaped by a tissue microenvironment context involving a functional association between the GH cell network activity and fluid microcirculation.


Journal of Endocrinology | 2009

Characterization of adherens junction protein expression and localization in pituitary cell networks

Norbert Chauvet; Taoufik El-Yandouzi; Marie-Noëlle Mathieu; Audrey Schlernitzauer; Evelyne Galibert; Chrystel Lafont; Paul Le Tissier; Iain C. A. F. Robinson; Patrice Mollard; Nathalie Coutry

Our view of anterior pituitary organization has been altered with the recognition that folliculo-stellate (FS) and somatotroph cell populations form large-scale three-dimensional homotypic networks. This morphological cellular organization may optimize communication within the pituitary gland promoting coordinated pulsatile secretion adapted to physiological needs. The aim of this study was to identify the molecules involved in the formation and potential functional organization and/or signaling within these cell-cell networks. Here, we have focused on one class of cell adhesion molecules, the cadherins, since beta-catenin has been detected in the GH cell network. We have characterized, by qPCR and immunohistochemistry, their cellular expression and distribution. We have also examined whether their expression could be modulated during pituitary tissue remodeling. The mouse anterior pituitary has a restricted and cell-type specific repertoire of cadherin expression: cadherin-11 is exclusively expressed in TSH cells; N-cadherin displays a ubiquitous expression pattern but with different levels of expression between endocrine cell types; E-cadherin is restricted to homotypic contacts between FS cells; while cadherin-18 is expressed both in somatotrophs and FS cells. Thus, each cell type presents a defined combinatorial expression of different subsets of cadherins. This cell-type specific cadherin expression profile emerges early during development and undergoes major changes during postnatal development. These results suggest the existence within the anterior pituitary of cell-cell contact signaling based on a defined pattern of cadherin expression, which may play a crucial role in cellular recognition during the formation and fate of pituitary cell homotypic networks.


Cell Calcium | 2012

Coordination of calcium signals by pituitary endocrine cells in situ

David J. Hodson; Nicola Romanò; Marie Schaeffer; Pierre Fontanaud; Chrystel Lafont; Tatiana Fiordelisio; Patrice Mollard

The pulsatile secretion of hormones from the mammalian pituitary gland drives a wide range of homeostatic responses by dynamically altering the functional set-point of effector tissues. To accomplish this, endocrine cell populations residing within the intact pituitary display large-scale changes in coordinated calcium-spiking activity in response to various hypothalamic and peripheral inputs. Although the pituitary gland is structurally compartmentalized into specific and intermingled endocrine cell networks, providing a clear morphological basis for such coordinated activity, the mechanisms which facilitate the timely propagation of information between cells in situ remain largely unexplored. Therefore, the aim of the current review is to highlight the range of signalling modalities known to be employed by endocrine cells to coordinate intracellular calcium rises, and discuss how these mechanisms are integrated at the population level to orchestrate cell function and tissue output.


Endocrinology | 2010

Different degrees of somatotroph ablation compromise pituitary growth hormone cell network structure and other pituitary endocrine cell types.

Eleanor Waite; Chrystel Lafont; Danielle Carmignac; Norbert Chauvet; Nathalie Coutry; Helen Christian; Iain C. A. F. Robinson; Patrice Mollard; Paul Le Tissier

We have generated transgenic mice with somatotroph-specific expression of a modified influenza virus ion channel, (H37A)M2, leading to ablation of GH cells with three levels of severity, dependent on transgene copy number. GH-M2(low) mice grow normally and have normal-size pituitaries but 40-50% reduction in pituitary GH content in adult animals. GH-M2(med) mice have male-specific transient growth retardation and a reduction in pituitary GH content by 75% at 42 d and 97% by 100 d. GH-M2(high) mice are severely dwarfed with undetectable pituitary GH. The GH secretory response of GH-M2(low) and GH-M2(med) mice to GH-releasing peptide-6 and GHRH was markedly attenuated. The content of other pituitary hormones was affected depending on transgene copy number: no effect in GH-M2(low) mice, prolactin and TSH reduced in GH-M2(med) mice, and all hormones reduced in GH-M2(high) mice. The effect on non-GH hormone content was associated with increased macrophage invasion of the pituitary. Somatotroph ablation affected GH cell network organization with limited disruption in GH-M2(low) mice but more severe disruption in GH-M2(med) mice. The remaining somatotrophs formed tight clusters after puberty, which contrasts with GHRH-M2 mice with a secondary reduction in somatotrophs that do not form clusters. A reduction in pituitary beta-catenin staining was correlated with GH-M2 transgene copy number, suggesting M2 expression has an effect on cell-cell communication in somatotrophs and other pituitary cell types. GH-M2 transgenic mice demonstrate that differing degrees of somatotroph ablation lead to correlated secondary effects on cell populations and cellular network organization.

Collaboration


Dive into the Chrystel Lafont's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Marie Schaeffer

University of Montpellier

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Norbert Chauvet

University of Montpellier

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

François Molino

French Institute of Health and Medical Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Patrice Mollard

French Institute of Health and Medical Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

G. Alonso

University of Montpellier

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Juliette van Dijk

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge