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Dive into the research topics where Damien Reynaud is active.

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Featured researches published by Damien Reynaud.


Nature | 2013

FOXO3A directs a protective autophagy program in haematopoietic stem cells.

Matthew R. Warr; Mikhail Binnewies; Johanna Flach; Damien Reynaud; Trit Garg; Ritu Malhotra; Jayanta Debnath; Emmanuelle Passegué

Blood production is ensured by rare, self-renewing haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). How HSCs accommodate the diverse cellular stresses associated with their life-long activity remains elusive. Here we identify autophagy as an essential mechanism protecting HSCs from metabolic stress. We show that mouse HSCs, in contrast to their short-lived myeloid progeny, robustly induce autophagy after ex vivo cytokine withdrawal and in vivo calorie restriction. We demonstrate that FOXO3A is critical to maintain a gene expression program that poises HSCs for rapid induction of autophagy upon starvation. Notably, we find that old HSCs retain an intact FOXO3A-driven pro-autophagy gene program, and that ongoing autophagy is needed to mitigate an energy crisis and allow their survival. Our results demonstrate that autophagy is essential for the life-long maintenance of the HSC compartment and for supporting an old, failing blood system.


Nature | 2014

Replication stress is a potent driver of functional decline in ageing haematopoietic stem cells

Johanna Flach; Sietske T. Bakker; Mary Mohrin; Pauline C. Conroy; Eric M. Pietras; Damien Reynaud; Silvia Alvarez; Morgan E. Diolaiti; Fernando Ugarte; E. Camilla Forsberg; Michelle M. Le Beau; Bradley A. Stohr; Juan Mendez; Ciaran G. Morrison; Emmanuelle Passegué

Haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) self-renew for life, thereby making them one of the few blood cells that truly age. Paradoxically, although HSCs numerically expand with age, their functional activity declines over time, resulting in degraded blood production and impaired engraftment following transplantation. While many drivers of HSC ageing have been proposed, the reason why HSC function degrades with age remains unknown. Here we show that cycling old HSCs in mice have heightened levels of replication stress associated with cell cycle defects and chromosome gaps or breaks, which are due to decreased expression of mini-chromosome maintenance (MCM) helicase components and altered dynamics of DNA replication forks. Nonetheless, old HSCs survive replication unless confronted with a strong replication challenge, such as transplantation. Moreover, once old HSCs re-establish quiescence, residual replication stress on ribosomal DNA (rDNA) genes leads to the formation of nucleolar-associated γH2AX signals, which persist owing to ineffective H2AX dephosphorylation by mislocalized PP4c phosphatase rather than ongoing DNA damage. Persistent nucleolar γH2AX also acts as a histone modification marking the transcriptional silencing of rDNA genes and decreased ribosome biogenesis in quiescent old HSCs. Our results identify replication stress as a potent driver of functional decline in old HSCs, and highlight the MCM DNA helicase as a potential molecular target for rejuvenation therapies.


Cancer Cell | 2011

IL-6 controls leukemic multipotent progenitor cell fate and contributes to chronic myelogenous leukemia development

Damien Reynaud; Eric M. Pietras; Keegan Barry-Holson; Alain Mir; Mikhail Binnewies; Marion Jeanne; Olga Sala-Torra; Jerald P. Radich; Emmanuelle Passegué

Using a mouse model recapitulating the main features of human chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML), we uncover the hierarchy of leukemic stem and progenitor cells contributing to disease pathogenesis. We refine the characterization of CML leukemic stem cells (LSCs) to the most immature long-term hematopoietic stem cells (LT-HSCs) and identify some important molecular deregulations underlying their aberrant behavior. We find that CML multipotent progenitors (MPPs) exhibit an aberrant B-lymphoid potential but are redirected toward the myeloid lineage by the action of the proinflammatory cytokine IL-6. We show that BCR/ABL activity controls Il-6 expression thereby establishing a paracrine feedback loop that sustains CML development. These results describe how proinflammatory tumor environment affects leukemic progenitor cell fate and contributes to CML pathogenesis.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Invasive breast cancer reprograms early myeloid differentiation in the bone marrow to generate immunosuppressive neutrophils

Amy-Jo Casbon; Damien Reynaud; Chanhyuk Park; Emily Khuc; Dennis D. Gan; Koen Schepers; Emmanuelle Passegué; Zena Werb

Significance We show that tumor reprogramming of hematopoiesis in bone marrow occurs at the onset of malignant conversion and results in systemic expansion of circulating activated neutrophils that preferentially accumulate in lungs. Our data are, to our knowledge, the first to show that activation and not inhibition of myeloid differentiation is responsible for expansion and activity of T cell-suppressive myeloid cells; a tumor-derived factor targets the immature hematopoietic compartment to drive myeloid expansion; granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) is the only hematopoietic growth factor to increase in serum during early tumor development; prolonged G-CSF induces production of Rb1low neutrophils and not short-term mobilization; and G-CSF acts in a cell intrinsic manner to expand multipotent progenitors to increase production of tumor-derived Ly6G+ neutrophils. Expansion of myeloid cells associated with solid tumor development is a key contributor to neoplastic progression. Despite their clinical relevance, the mechanisms controlling myeloid cell production and activity in cancer remains poorly understood. Using a multistage mouse model of breast cancer, we show that production of atypical T cell-suppressive neutrophils occurs during early tumor progression, at the onset of malignant conversion, and that these cells preferentially accumulate in peripheral tissues but not in the primary tumor. Production of these cells results from activation of a myeloid differentiation program in bone marrow (BM) by a novel mechanism in which tumor-derived granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) directs expansion and differentiation of hematopoietic stem cells to skew hematopoiesis toward the myeloid lineage. Chronic skewing of myeloid production occurred in parallel to a decrease in erythropoiesis in BM in mice with progressive disease. Significantly, we reveal that prolonged G-CSF stimulation is both necessary and sufficient for the distinguishing characteristics of tumor-induced immunosuppressive neutrophils. These results demonstrate that prolonged G-CSF may be responsible for both the development and activity of immunosuppressive neutrophils in cancer.


Cell Stem Cell | 2015

Functionally Distinct Subsets of Lineage-Biased Multipotent Progenitors Control Blood Production in Normal and Regenerative Conditions

Eric M. Pietras; Damien Reynaud; Yoon-A. Kang; Daniel E. Carlin; Fernando J. Calero-Nieto; Andrew D. Leavitt; Joshua M. Stuart; Berthold Göttgens; Emmanuelle Passegué

Despite great advances in understanding the mechanisms underlying blood production, lineage specification at the level of multipotent progenitors (MPPs) remains poorly understood. Here, we show that MPP2 and MPP3 are distinct myeloid-biased MPP subsets that work together with lymphoid-primed MPP4 cells to control blood production. We find that all MPPs are produced in parallel by hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs), but with different kinetics and at variable levels depending on hematopoietic demands. We also show that the normally rare myeloid-biased MPPs are transiently overproduced by HSCs in regenerating conditions, hence supporting myeloid amplification to rebuild the hematopoietic system. This shift is accompanied by a reduction in self-renewal activity in regenerating HSCs and reprogramming of MPP4 fate toward the myeloid lineage. Our results support a dynamic model of blood development in which HSCs convey lineage specification through independent production of distinct lineage-biased MPP subsets that, in turn, support lineage expansion and differentiation.


eLife | 2015

Functional evidence implicating chromosome 7q22 haploinsufficiency in myelodysplastic syndrome pathogenesis

Jasmine Wong; Kelley Weinfurtner; Maria del pilar Alzamora; Scott C. Kogan; Michael R. Burgess; Yan Zhang; Joy Nakitandwe; Jing Ma; Jinjun Cheng; Shann-Ching Chen; Theodore T. Ho; Johanna Flach; Damien Reynaud; Emmanuelle Passegué; James R. Downing; Kevin Shannon

Chromosome 7 deletions are highly prevalent in myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) and likely contribute to aberrant growth through haploinsufficiency. We generated mice with a heterozygous germ line deletion of a 2-Mb interval of chromosome band 5A3 syntenic to a commonly deleted segment of human 7q22 and show that mutant hematopoietic cells exhibit cardinal features of MDS. Specifically, the long-term hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) compartment is expanded in 5A3+/del mice, and the distribution of myeloid progenitors is altered. 5A3+/del HSCs are defective for lymphoid repopulating potential and show a myeloid lineage output bias. These cell autonomous abnormalities are exacerbated by physiologic aging and upon serial transplantation. The 5A3 deletion partially rescues defective repopulation in Gata2 mutant mice. 5A3+/del hematopoietic cells exhibit decreased expression of oxidative phosphorylation genes, increased levels of reactive oxygen species, and perturbed oxygen consumption. These studies provide the first functional data linking 7q22 deletions to MDS pathogenesis. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.07839.001


Cell Stem Cell | 2013

Myeloproliferative Neoplasia Remodels the Endosteal Bone Marrow Niche into a Self-Reinforcing Leukemic Niche

Koen Schepers; Eric M. Pietras; Damien Reynaud; Johanna Flach; Mikhail Binnewies; Trit Garg; Amy J. Wagers; Edward C. Hsiao; Emmanuelle Passegué


Blood | 2003

In vitro identification of human pro-B cells that give rise to macrophages, natural killer cells, and T cells.

Damien Reynaud; Nathalie Lefort; Elodie Manie; Laure Coulombel; Yves Levy


Blood | 2004

Characterization of DNA-binding-dependent and -independent functions of SCL/TAL1 during human erythropoiesis

Emmanuel Ravet; Damien Reynaud; Monique Titeux; Brigitte Izac; Serge Fichelson; Paul-Henri Romeo; Anne Dubart-Kupperschmitt; Françoise Pflumio


Experimental Hematology | 2018

Inflammatory Changes in the Bone Marrow Microenvironment Drive Both Niche and Blood System Remodeling during Aging

Evgenia Verovskaya; Fernando J. Calero-Nieto; Damien Reynaud; Si Yi Zhang; Aurelie Herault; Sietske T. Bakker; Eric M. Pietras; Arthur Svendsen; Xiaonan Wang; Sarah Kinston; Theodore T. Ho; Berthold Göttgens; Emmanuelle Passegué

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Johanna Flach

University of California

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Serge Fichelson

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Koen Schepers

University of California

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Theodore T. Ho

University of California

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Trit Garg

University of California

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