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Dive into the research topics where Claire Bonal is active.

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Featured researches published by Claire Bonal.


Nature Biotechnology | 2012

Functional beta-cell maturation is marked by an increased glucose threshold and by expression of urocortin 3

Barak Blum; Sinisa Hrvatin; Christian Schuetz; Claire Bonal; Alireza Rezania; Douglas A. Melton

Insulin-expressing cells that have been differentiated from human pluripotent stem cells in vitro lack the glucose responsiveness characteristic of mature beta cells. Beta-cell maturation in mice was studied to find genetic markers that enable screens for factors that induce bona fide beta cells in vitro. We find that functional beta-cell maturation is marked by an increase in the glucose threshold for insulin secretion and by expression of the gene urocortin 3.


The International Journal of Developmental Biology | 2008

Genes controlling pancreas ontogeny

Claire Bonal; Pedro Luis Herrera

The pancreas develops from two separate and independent endodermal primordia. The molecular events supporting the early morphological changes that give rise to the formation of the dorsal and ventral pancreatic buds result from coordinated responses to extrinsic and intrinsic signals. The extrinsic signals are involved in processes dictating whether progenitor cells remain as immature or as committed precursors. After specification, the sequential activation of transcription factors determines cell autonomously the commitment and differentiation of these progenitors. During pancreas development, the roles of extrinsic and intrinsic signals are variable, depending on the particular competence of each progenitor cell. We summarize in this review the main events, at the level of gene expression, which are involved in the early stages of pancreas development.


Gastroenterology | 2009

Pancreatic Inactivation of c-Myc Decreases Acinar Mass and Transdifferentiates Acinar Cells Into Adipocytes in Mice

Claire Bonal; Fabrizio Thorel; Aouatef Ait-Lounis; Walter Reith; Andreas Trumpp; Pedro Luis Herrera

BACKGROUND & AIMS The pancreatic mass is determined by the coordinated expansion and differentiation of progenitor cells and is maintained via tight control of cell replacement rates. The basic helix-loop-helix transcription factor c-Myc is one of the main regulators of these processes in many organs. We studied the requirement of c-Myc in controlling the generation and maintenance of pancreatic mass. METHODS We conditionally inactivated c-Myc in Pdx1+ pancreatic progenitor cells. Pancreata of mice lacking c-Myc (c-Myc(P-/-) mice) were analyzed during development and ageing. RESULTS Pancreatic growth in c-Myc(P-/-) mice was impaired starting on E12.5, in early primordia, because of decreased proliferation and altered differentiation of exocrine progenitors; islet progenitors were spared. Acinar cell maturation was defective in the adult hypotrophic pancreas, which hampered exocrine mass maintenance in aged animals. From 2 to 10 months of age, the c-Myc(P-/-) pancreas was progressively remodeled without inflammatory injury. Loss of acinar cells increased with time, concomitantly with adipose tissue accumulation. Using a genetic cell lineage tracing analysis, we demonstrated that pancreatic adipose cells were derived directly from transdifferentiating acinar cells. This epithelial-to-mesenchyme transition was also observed in normal aged specimens and in pancreatitis. CONCLUSIONS These results provide evidence indicating that c-Myc activity is required for growth and maturation of the exocrine pancreas, and sheds new light on the ontogeny of pancreatic adipose cells in processes of organ degenerescence and tissue involution.


Trends in Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2011

β-Cell regeneration: the pancreatic intrinsic faculty

Renaud Desgraz; Claire Bonal; Pedro Luis Herrera

Type I diabetes (T1D) patients rely on cumbersome chronic injections of insulin, making the development of alternate durable treatments a priority. The ability of the pancreas to generate new β-cells has been described in experimental diabetes models and, importantly, in infants with T1D. Here we discuss recent advances in identifying the origin of new β-cells after pancreatic injury, with and without inflammation, revealing a surprising degree of cell plasticity in the mature pancreas. In particular, the inducible selective near-total destruction of β-cells in healthy adult mice uncovers the intrinsic capacity of differentiated pancreatic cells to spontaneously reprogram to produce insulin. This opens new therapeutic possibilities because it implies that β-cells can differentiate endogenously, in depleted adults, from heterologous origins.


Development | 2007

Unique mechanisms of growth regulation and tumor suppression upon Apc inactivation in the pancreas

Alessandra Strom; Claire Bonal; Ruth Ashery-Padan; Naoko Hashimoto; M. Luisa Campos; Andreas Trumpp; Tetsuo Noda; Yoshiaki Kido; Francisco X. Real; Fabrizio Thorel; Pedro Luis Herrera

β-catenin signaling is heavily involved in organogenesis. Here, we investigated how pancreas differentiation, growth and homeostasis are affected following inactivation of an endogenous inhibitor of β-catenin, adenomatous polyposis coli (Apc). In adult mice, Apc-deficient pancreata were enlarged, solely as a result of hyperplasia of acinar cells, which accumulatedβ -catenin, with the sparing of islets. Expression of a target ofβ -catenin, the proto-oncogene c-myc (Myc), was increased in acinar cells lacking Apc, suggesting that c-myc expression is essential for hyperplasia. In support of this hypothesis, we found that conditional inactivation of c-myc in pancreata lacking Apc completely reversed the acinar hyperplasia. Apc loss in organs such as the liver, colon and kidney, as well as experimental misexpression of c-myc in pancreatic acinar cells, led to tumor formation with high penetrance. Surprisingly, pancreas tumors failed to develop following conditional pancreas Apc inactivation. In Apc-deficient acini of aged mice, our studies revealed a cessation of their exaggerated proliferation and a reduced expression of c-myc, in spite of the persistent accumulation of β-catenin. In conclusion, our work shows that β-catenin modulation of c-myc is an essential regulator of acinar growth control, and unveils an unprecedented example of Apc requirement in the pancreas that is both temporally restricted and cell-specific. This provides new insights into the mechanisms of tumor pathogenesis and tumor suppression in the pancreas.


Diabetes | 2010

The Transcription Factor Rfx3 Regulates β-Cell Differentiation, Function, and Glucokinase Expression

Aouatef Ait-Lounis; Claire Bonal; Queralt Seguín-Estévez; Christoph D. Schmid; Philipp Bucher; Pedro Luis Herrera; Bénédicte Durand; Paolo Meda; Walter Reith

OBJECTIVE Pancreatic islets of perinatal mice lacking the transcription factor Rfx3 exhibit a marked reduction in insulin-producing β-cells. The objective of this work was to unravel the cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying this deficiency. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS Immunofluorescence studies and quantitative RT-PCR experiments were used to study the emergence of insulin-positive cells, the expression of transcription factors implicated in the differentiation of β-cells from endocrine progenitors, and the expression of mature β-cell markers during development in Rfx3−/− and pancreas-specific Rfx3-knockout mice. RNA interference experiments were performed to document the consequences of downregulating Rfx3 expression in Min6 β-cells. Quantitative chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP), ChIP sequencing, and bandshift experiments were used to identify Rfx3 target genes. RESULTS Reduced development of insulin-positive cells in Rfx3−/− mice was not due to deficiencies in endocrine progenitors or β-lineage specification, but reflected the accumulation of insulin-positive β-cell precursors and defective β-cells exhibiting reduced insulin, Glut-2, and Gck expression. Similar incompletely differentiated β-cells developed in pancreas-specific Rfx3-deficient embryos. Defective β-cells lacking Glut-2 and Gck expression dominate in Rfx3-deficent adults, leading to glucose intolerance. Attenuated Glut-2 and glucokinase expression, and impaired glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, were also induced by RNA interference–mediated inhibition of Rfx3 expression in Min6 cells. Finally, Rfx3 was found to bind in Min6 cells and human islets to two well-known regulatory sequences, Pal-1 and Pal-2, in the neuroendocrine promoter of the glucokinase gene. CONCLUSIONS Our results show that Rfx3 is required for the differentiation and function of mature β-cells and regulates the β-cell promoter of the glucokinase gene.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2012

PPARβ/δ affects pancreatic β cell mass and insulin secretion in mice

Jose Iglesias; Sebastian Barg; David Vallois; Shawon Lahiri; Catherine Roger; Akadiri Yessoufou; Sylvain Pradevand; Angela McDonald; Claire Bonal; Frank Reimann; Fiona M. Gribble; Marie-Bernard Debril; Daniel Metzger; Pierre Chambon; Pedro Luis Herrera; Guy A. Rutter; Marc Prentki; Bernard Thorens; Walter Wahli

PPARβ/δ protects against obesity by reducing dyslipidemia and insulin resistance via effects in muscle, adipose tissue, and liver. However, its function in pancreas remains ill defined. To gain insight into its hypothesized role in β cell function, we specifically deleted Pparb/d in the epithelial compartment of the mouse pancreas. Mutant animals presented increased numbers of islets and, more importantly, enhanced insulin secretion, causing hyperinsulinemia. Gene expression profiling of pancreatic β cells indicated a broad repressive function of PPARβ/δ affecting the vesicular and granular compartment as well as the actin cytoskeleton. Analyses of insulin release from isolated PPARβ/δ-deficient islets revealed an accelerated second phase of glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. These effects in PPARβ/δ-deficient islets correlated with increased filamentous actin (F-actin) disassembly and an elevation in protein kinase D activity that altered Golgi organization. Taken together, these results provide evidence for a repressive role for PPARβ/δ in β cell mass and insulin exocytosis, and shed a new light on PPARβ/δ metabolic action.


Biochemical Society Transactions | 2008

Experimental models of β-cell regeneration

Claire Bonal; Isabelle Avril; Pedro Luis Herrera

The control of glucose metabolism by pancreatic endocrine cells throughout life relies on a tight regulation of the mass of insulin-producing beta-cells. How this homoeostasis is achieved is not well understood. Over the last few years, experimental rodent models with altered beta-cell mass, and, more recently, new transgenic approaches designed to tackle this problem, have provided abundant information. Processes such as beta-cell proliferation and apoptosis, or even beta-cell differentiation from poorly characterized progenitor cells, whether immature or differentiated, appear to be implicated. A complex picture is thus emerging in which the nature of the pancreatic lesion appears to determine the kind of regenerative response. The environment formed by acinar and ductal cells, and also by vascular and neuronal structures, which surround islets and penetrate into their beta-cell core, might play crucial roles so far unsuspected, which should be explored in the near future.


Diabetes | 2013

Nogo-A Downregulation Improves Insulin Secretion in Mice

Claire Bonal; Delphine Baronnier; Caroline Pot; Mahdia Benkhoucha; Martin E. Schwab; Patrice H. Lalive; Pedro Luis Herrera

Type 2 diabetes (T2D) is characterized by β-cell dysfunction and the subsequent depletion of insulin production, usually in a context of increased peripheral insulin resistance. T2D patients are routinely treated with oral antidiabetic agents such as sulfonylureas or dipeptidyl peptidase-4 antagonists, which promote glucose- and incretin-dependent insulin secretion, respectively. Interestingly, insulin secretion may also be induced by neural stimulation. Here we report the expression of Nogo-A in β-cells. Nogo-A is a membrane protein that inhibits neurite outgrowth and cell migration in the central nervous system. We observed that Nogo-A–deficient mice display improved insulin secretion and glucose clearance. This was associated with a stronger parasympathetic input and higher sensitivity of β-cells to the cholinergic analog carbachol. Insulin secretion was also improved in diabetic db/db mice treated with neutralizing antibody against Nogo-A. Together, these findings suggest that promoting the vagal stimulation of insulin secretion through the selective inhibition of Nogo-A could be a novel therapeutic approach in T2D.


Current Opinion in Organ Transplantation | 2007

Understanding the extrinsic and intrinsic signals involved in pancreas and β-cell development: from endoderm to β cells.

Claire Bonal; Pedro Luis Herrera

Purpose of reviewTo summarize recent progress in understanding of the extrinsic and intrinsic signals directing pancreas development from early endoderm. Recent findingsThe pancreatic mesoderm was shown not only to play a permissive role in pancreas determination but also to control endocrine commitment and maturation through the interplay between Notch and fibroblast growth factor signaling. The requirement of Wnt (wingless-type)/β-catenin signaling in the expansion of the acinar cell lineage, and the spatial–temporal specificity of PDX1 (pancreatic and duodenal homeobox) activity, which is needed for proper acinar development, were also demonstrated. A novel factor, IA1 (insulinoma-associated 1), was identified as an endocrine marker downstream of Ngn3 (neurogenin); MAFB (musculo-aponeurotic fibrosarcoma) was shown to be a marker of α-cell and β-cell precursors, and ARX (aristaless-related homeobox), a marker of α-cell progenitors, was revealed to directly antagonize PAX4 (paired homeobox) in determining α-cell and β-cell lineages. SummaryCell fate specification results from combined effects of extrinsic and intrinsic regulators and sensitivity of target cells to them, which vary depending on the precise stage of cell commitment or differentiation. Knowledge of the hierarchy of the different factors influencing pancreas development will aid in developing new cell therapies to treat diabetes.

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Barak Blum

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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