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Dive into the research topics where Claude Antony is active.

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Featured researches published by Claude Antony.


PLOS Pathogens | 2012

Three-Dimensional Architecture and Biogenesis of Membrane Structures Associated with Hepatitis C Virus Replication

Inés Romero-Brey; Andreas Merz; Abhilash I. Chiramel; Ji-Young Lee; Petr Chlanda; Uta Haselman; Rachel Santarella-Mellwig; Anja Habermann; Simone Hoppe; Stephanie Kallis; Paul Walther; Claude Antony; Jacomine Krijnse-Locker; Ralf Bartenschlager

All positive strand RNA viruses are known to replicate their genomes in close association with intracellular membranes. In case of the hepatitis C virus (HCV), a member of the family Flaviviridae, infected cells contain accumulations of vesicles forming a membranous web (MW) that is thought to be the site of viral RNA replication. However, little is known about the biogenesis and three-dimensional structure of the MW. In this study we used a combination of immunofluorescence- and electron microscopy (EM)-based methods to analyze the membranous structures induced by HCV in infected cells. We found that the MW is derived primarily from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and contains markers of rough ER as well as markers of early and late endosomes, COP vesicles, mitochondria and lipid droplets (LDs). The main constituents of the MW are single and double membrane vesicles (DMVs). The latter predominate and the kinetic of their appearance correlates with kinetics of viral RNA replication. DMVs are induced primarily by NS5A whereas NS4B induces single membrane vesicles arguing that MW formation requires the concerted action of several HCV replicase proteins. Three-dimensional reconstructions identify DMVs as protrusions from the ER membrane into the cytosol, frequently connected to the ER membrane via a neck-like structure. In addition, late in infection multi-membrane vesicles become evident, presumably as a result of a stress-induced reaction. Thus, the morphology of the membranous rearrangements induced in HCV-infected cells resemble those of the unrelated picorna-, corona- and arteriviruses, but are clearly distinct from those of the closely related flaviviruses. These results reveal unexpected similarities between HCV and distantly related positive-strand RNA viruses presumably reflecting similarities in cellular pathways exploited by these viruses to establish their membranous replication factories.


Journal of Insect Physiology | 1982

The chemical basis for sex recognition in Drosophila melanogaster

Claude Antony; Jean-Marc Jallon

Chemical cues were recognized to play a predominant role in initiating male courtship behaviour in Drosophila melanogaster as measured by the number and duration of wing-vibration responses elicited in test males. The effect was associated with compounds specific to the female cuticle, for which we describe a simple extraction procedure. Female active extracts were compared with behaviourally non-active extracts from males, using gas-liquid and thin-layer chromatography. Using these preparative methods, long-chain hydrocarbons were isolated and activity was found only among unsaturated molecules. One, heptacosadiene, inducing the highest level of courtship, appears to be the main aphrodisiac pheromone of the female D. melanogaster. This compound is specific to females of the species and is the most abundant of their cuticular hydrocarbons.


Nature | 2005

Molecular mechanisms of kinetochore capture by spindle microtubules

Kozo Tanaka; Naomi Mukae; Hilary Dewar; Mark van Breugel; Euan K. James; Alan R. Prescott; Claude Antony; Tomoyuki U. Tanaka

For high-fidelity chromosome segregation, kinetochores must be properly captured by spindle microtubules, but the mechanisms underlying initial kinetochore capture have remained elusive. Here we visualized individual kinetochore–microtubule interactions in Saccharomyces cerevisiae by regulating the activity of a centromere. Kinetochores are captured by the side of microtubules extending from spindle poles, and are subsequently transported poleward along them. The microtubule extension from spindle poles requires microtubule plus-end-tracking proteins and the Ran GDP/GTP exchange factor. Distinct kinetochore components are used for kinetochore capture by microtubules and for ensuring subsequent sister kinetochore bi-orientation on the spindle. Kar3, a kinesin-14 family member, is one of the regulators that promote transport of captured kinetochores along microtubules. During such transport, kinetochores ensure that they do not slide off their associated microtubules by facilitating the conversion of microtubule dynamics from shrinkage to growth at the plus ends. This conversion is promoted by the transport of Stu2 from the captured kinetochores to the plus ends of microtubules.


Nature | 2011

Miwi catalysis is required for piRNA amplification- independent LINE1 transposon silencing

Michael Reuter; Philipp Berninger; Shinichiro Chuma; Hardik Shah; Mihoko Hosokawa; Charlotta Funaya; Claude Antony; Ravi Sachidanandam; Ramesh S. Pillai

Repetitive-element-derived Piwi-interacting RNAs (piRNAs) act together with Piwi proteins Mili (also known as Piwil2) and Miwi2 (also known as Piwil4) in a genome defence mechanism that initiates transposon silencing via DNA methylation in the mouse male embryonic germ line. This silencing depends on the participation of the Piwi proteins in a slicer-dependent piRNA amplification pathway and is essential for male fertility. A third Piwi family member, Miwi (also known as Piwil1), is expressed in specific postnatal germ cells and associates with a unique set of piRNAs of unknown function. Here we show that Miwi is a small RNA-guided RNase (slicer) that requires extensive complementarity for target cleavage in vitro. Disruption of its catalytic activity in mice by a single point mutation causes male infertility, and mutant germ cells show increased accumulation of LINE1 retrotransposon transcripts. We provide evidence for Miwi slicer activity directly cleaving transposon messenger RNAs, offering an explanation for the continued maintenance of repeat-derived piRNAs long after transposon silencing is established in germline stem cells. Furthermore, our study supports a slicer-dependent silencing mechanism that functions without piRNA amplification. Thus, Piwi proteins seem to act in a two-pronged mammalian transposon silencing strategy: one promotes transcriptional repression in the embryo, the other reinforces silencing at the post-transcriptional level after birth.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997

Retrograde Transport of KDEL-bearing B-fragment of Shiga Toxin

Ludger Johannes; Danièle Tenza; Claude Antony; Bruno Goud

To investigate retrograde transport along the biosynthetic/secretory pathway, we have constructed a recombinant Shiga toxin B-fragment carrying an N-glycosylation site and a KDEL retrieval motif at its carboxyl terminus (B-Glyc-KDEL). After incubation with HeLa cells, B-Glyc-KDEL was progressively glycosylated in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and remained stably associated with this compartment. B-fragment with a nonfunctional KDEL sequence (B-Glyc-KDELGL) was glycosylated with about the same kinetics as B-Glyc-KDEL but localized at steady state to the Golgi apparatus. Morphological studies showed that B-Glyc-KDEL was delivered from the plasma membrane, via endosomes and the cisternae of the Golgi apparatus, to the ER. Moreover, the addition of a sulfation site allowed us to show that B-Glyc-KDEL on transit to the ER entered the Golgi apparatus through the trans-Golgi network. Transport of B-Glyc-KDEL to the ER was slowed down by nocodazole, indicating that microtubules are important for the retrograde pathway. Our results document the existence of a continuous pathway from the plasma membrane to the endoplasmic reticulum via the Golgi apparatus and show that a fully folded exogenous protein arriving in the endoplasmic reticulum via this pathway can undergo N-glycosylation.


Developmental Cell | 2004

Clathrin Adaptor epsinR Is Required for Retrograde Sorting on Early Endosomal Membranes

Agnès Saint-Pol; Belén Yélamos; Mohamed Amessou; Ian G. Mills; Marc Dugast; Danièle Tenza; Peter Schu; Claude Antony; Harvey T. McMahon; Christophe Lamaze; Ludger Johannes

Retrograde transport links early/recycling endosomes to the trans-Golgi network (TGN), thereby connecting the endocytic and the biosynthetic/secretory pathways. To determine how internalized molecules are targeted to the retrograde route, we have interfered with the function of clathrin and that of two proteins that interact with it, AP1 and epsinR. We found that the glycosphingolipid binding bacterial Shiga toxin entered cells efficiently when clathrin expression was inhibited. However, retrograde transport of Shiga toxin to the TGN was strongly inhibited. This allowed us to show that for Shiga toxin, retrograde sorting on early/recycling endosomes depends on clathrin and epsinR, but not AP1. EpsinR was also involved in retrograde transport of two endogenous proteins, TGN38/46 and mannose 6-phosphate receptor. In conclusion, our work reveals the existence of clathrin-independent and -dependent transport steps in the retrograde route, and establishes a function for clathrin and epsinR at the endosome-TGN interface.


Nature | 2011

The endonuclease activity of Mili fuels piRNA amplification that silences LINE1 elements.

Serena De Fazio; Nenad Bartonicek; Monica Di Giacomo; Cei Abreu-Goodger; Aditya Sankar; Charlotta Funaya; Claude Antony; Pedro N. Moreira; Anton J. Enright; Dónal O’Carroll

Piwi proteins and Piwi-interacting RNAs (piRNAs) have conserved functions in transposon silencing. The murine Piwi proteins Mili and Miwi2 (also called Piwil2 and Piwil4, respectively) direct epigenetic LINE1 and intracisternal A particle transposon silencing during genome reprogramming in the embryonic male germ line. Piwi proteins are proposed to be piRNA-guided endonucleases that initiate secondary piRNA biogenesis; however, the actual contribution of their endonuclease activities to piRNA biogenesis and transposon silencing remain unknown. To investigate the role of Piwi-catalysed endonucleolytic activity, we engineered point mutations in mice that substitute the second aspartic acid to an alanine in the DDH catalytic triad of Mili and Miwi2, generating the MiliDAH and Miwi2DAH alleles, respectively. Analysis of Mili-bound piRNAs from homozygous MiliDAH fetal gonadocytes revealed a failure of transposon piRNA amplification, resulting in the marked reduction of piRNA bound within Miwi2 ribonuclear particles. We find that Mili-mediated piRNA amplification is selectively required for LINE1, but not intracisternal A particle, silencing. The defective piRNA pathway in MiliDAH mice results in spermatogenic failure and sterility. Surprisingly, homozygous Miwi2DAH mice are fertile, transposon silencing is established normally and no defects in secondary piRNA biogenesis are observed. In addition, the hallmarks of piRNA amplification are observed in Miwi2-deficient gonadocytes. We conclude that cycles of intra-Mili secondary piRNA biogenesis fuel piRNA amplification that is absolutely required for LINE1 silencing.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2010

Cep152 acts as a scaffold for recruitment of Plk4 and CPAP to the centrosome

Onur Cizmecioglu; Marc Arnold; Ramona Bahtz; Florian Settele; Lena Ehret; Uta Haselmann-Weiß; Claude Antony; Ingrid Hoffmann

Cep152 interacts with the cryptic Polo-box of Plk4 and is required for Plk4-induced centriole overduplication.


The EMBO Journal | 2012

Mouse Rif1 is a key regulator of the replication-timing programme in mammalian cells

Daniela Cornacchia; Vishnu Dileep; Jean Pierre Quivy; Rossana Foti; Federico Tili; Rachel Santarella-Mellwig; Claude Antony; Geneviève Almouzni; David M. Gilbert; Sara B C Buonomo

The eukaryotic genome is replicated according to a specific spatio‐temporal programme. However, little is known about both its molecular control and biological significance. Here, we identify mouse Rif1 as a key player in the regulation of DNA replication timing. We show that Rif1 deficiency in primary cells results in an unprecedented global alteration of the temporal order of replication. This effect takes place already in the first S‐phase after Rif1 deletion and is neither accompanied by alterations in the transcriptional landscape nor by major changes in the biochemical identity of constitutive heterochromatin. In addition, Rif1 deficiency leads to both defective G1/S transition and chromatin re‐organization after DNA replication. Together, these data offer a novel insight into the global regulation and biological significance of the replication‐timing programme in mammalian cells.


The EMBO Journal | 2005

Nup155 regulates nuclear envelope and nuclear pore complex formation in nematodes and vertebrates

Cerstin Franz; Peter Askjaer; Wolfram Antonin; Carmen López Iglesias; Uta Haselmann; Malgorzata Schelder; Ario de Marco; Matthias Wilm; Claude Antony; Iain W. Mattaj

Nuclear envelope (NE) formation during cell division in multicellular organisms is a central yet poorly understood biological process. We report that the conserved nucleoporin Nup155 has an essential function in NE formation in Caenorhabditis elegans embryos and in Xenopus laevis egg extracts. In vivo depletion of Nup155 led to failure of nuclear lamina formation and defects in chromosome segregation at anaphase. Nup155 depletion inhibited accumulation of nucleoporins at the nuclear periphery, including those recruited to chromatin early in NE formation. Electron microscopy analysis revealed that Nup155 is also required for the formation of a continuous nuclear membrane in vivo and in vitro. Time‐course experiments indicated that Nup155 is recruited to chromatin at the time of NE sealing, suggesting that nuclear pore complex assembly has to progress to a relatively late stage before NE membrane assembly occurs.

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Danièle Tenza

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Eric Karsenti

École Normale Supérieure

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Uta Haselmann

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Charlotta Funaya

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Frédéric Mallard

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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