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Dive into the research topics where Daniel Mesnard is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniel Mesnard.


Nature | 2010

KAP1 controls endogenous retroviruses in embryonic stem cells.

Helen M. Rowe; Johan Jakobsson; Daniel Mesnard; Jacques Rougemont; Séverine Reynard; Tugce Aktas; Pierre V Maillard; Hillary Layard-Liesching; Sonia Verp; François Spitz; Daniel B. Constam; Didier Trono

More than forty per cent of the mammalian genome is derived from retroelements, of which about one-quarter are endogenous retroviruses (ERVs). Some are still active, notably in mice the highly polymorphic early transposon (ETn)/MusD and intracisternal A-type particles (IAP). ERVs are transcriptionally silenced during early embryogenesis by histone and DNA methylation (and reviewed in ref. 7), although the initiators of this process, which is essential to protect genome integrity, remain largely unknown. KAP1 (KRAB-associated protein 1, also known as tripartite motif-containing protein 28, TRIM28) represses genes by recruiting the histone methyltransferase SETDB1, heterochromatin protein 1 (HP1) and the NuRD histone deacetylase complex, but few of its physiological targets are known. Two lines of evidence suggest that KAP1-mediated repression could contribute to the control of ERVs: first, KAP1 can trigger permanent gene silencing during early embryogenesis, and second, a KAP1 complex silences the retrovirus murine leukaemia virus in embryonic cells. Consistent with this hypothesis, here we show that KAP1 deletion leads to a marked upregulation of a range of ERVs, in particular IAP elements, in mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells and in early embryos. We further demonstrate that KAP1 acts synergistically with DNA methylation to silence IAP elements, and that it is enriched at the 5′ untranslated region (5′UTR) of IAP genomes, where KAP1 deletion leads to the loss of histone 3 lysine 9 trimethylation (H3K9me3), a hallmark of KAP1-mediated repression. Correspondingly, IAP 5′UTR sequences can impose in cis KAP1-dependent repression on a heterologous promoter in ES cells. Our results establish that KAP1 controls endogenous retroelements during early embryonic development.


Development | 2006

Nodal specifies embryonic visceral endoderm and sustains pluripotent cells in the epiblast before overt axial patterning

Daniel Mesnard; Marcela Guzman-Ayala; Daniel B. Constam

Anteroposterior (AP) polarity in the mammalian embryo is specified during gastrulation when naive progenitor cells in the primitive ectoderm are recruited into the primitive streak to form mesoderm and endoderm. At the opposite pole, this process is inhibited by signals previously induced in distal visceral endoderm (DVE). Both DVE and primitive streak formation, and hence positioning of the AP axis, rely on the TGFβ family member Nodal and its proprotein convertases Furin and Pace4. Here, we show that Nodal and Furin are initially co-expressed in the primitive endoderm together with a subset of DVE markers such as Lefty1 and Hex. However, with the appearance of extra-embryonic ectoderm (ExE), DVE formation is transiently inhibited. During this stage, Nodal activity is essential to specify embryonic VE and restrict the expression of Furin to the extra-embryonic region. Activation of Nodal is also necessary to maintain determinants of pluripotency such as Oct4, Nanog and Foxd3 during implantation, and to stimulate elongation of the egg cylinder, before inducing DVE and germ layer formation. We conclude that Nodal is already activated in primitive endoderm, but induces a functional DVE only after promoting the expansion of embryonic VE and pluripotent progenitor cells in the epiblast.


Genes & Development | 2008

VACTERL/caudal regression/Currarino syndrome-like malformations in mice with mutation in the proprotein convertase Pcsk5

Dorota Szumska; Guido Pieles; Rachid Essalmani; M Bilski; Daniel Mesnard; K Kaur; Angela Franklyn; K El Omari; J Jefferis; Jamie Bentham; J M Taylor; Jürgen E. Schneider; Sebastian J. Arnold; P Johnson; Z Tymowska-Lalanne; David K. Stammers; Kieran Clarke; Stefan Neubauer; A Morris; Steve D.M. Brown; C Shaw-Smith; Armando Cama; Valeria Capra; J Ragoussis; Daniel B. Constam; Nabil G. Seidah; Annik Prat; Shoumo Bhattacharya

We have identified an ethylnitrosourea (ENU)-induced recessive mouse mutation (Vcc) with a pleiotropic phenotype that includes cardiac, tracheoesophageal, anorectal, anteroposterior patterning defects, exomphalos, hindlimb hypoplasia, a presacral mass, renal and palatal agenesis, and pulmonary hypoplasia. It results from a C470R mutation in the proprotein convertase PCSK5 (PC5/6). Compound mutants (Pcsk5(Vcc/null)) completely recapitulate the Pcsk5(Vcc/Vcc) phenotype, as does an epiblast-specific conditional deletion of Pcsk5. The C470R mutation ablates a disulfide bond in the P domain, and blocks export from the endoplasmic reticulum and proprotein convertase activity. We show that GDF11 is cleaved and activated by PCSK5A, but not by PCSK5A-C470R, and that Gdf11-deficient embryos, in addition to having anteroposterior patterning defects and renal and palatal agenesis, also have a presacral mass, anorectal malformation, and exomphalos. Pcsk5 mutation results in abnormal expression of several paralogous Hox genes (Hoxa, Hoxc, and Hoxd), and of Mnx1 (Hlxb9). These include known Gdf11 targets, and are necessary for caudal embryo development. We identified nonsynonymous mutations in PCSK5 in patients with VACTERL (vertebral, anorectal, cardiac, tracheoesophageal, renal, limb malformation OMIM 192350) and caudal regression syndrome, the phenotypic features of which resemble the mouse mutation. We propose that Pcsk5, at least in part via GDF11, coordinately regulates caudal Hox paralogs, to control anteroposterior patterning, nephrogenesis, skeletal, and anorectal development.


Development | 2013

De novo DNA methylation of endogenous retroviruses is shaped by KRAB-ZFPs/KAP1 and ESET

Helen M. Rowe; Marc Friedli; Sandra Offner; Sonia Verp; Daniel Mesnard; Tugce Aktas; Didier Trono

Endogenous retroviruses (ERVs) undergo de novo DNA methylation during the first few days of mammalian embryogenesis, although the factors that control the targeting of this process are largely unknown. We asked whether KAP1 (KRAB-associated protein 1) is involved in this mechanism because of its previously defined role in maintaining the silencing of ERVs through the histone methyltransferase ESET and histone H3 lysine 9 trimethylation. Here, we demonstrate that introduced ERV sequences are sufficient to direct rapid de novo methylation of a flanked promoter in embryonic stem (ES) cells. This mechanism requires the presence of an ERV sequence-recognizing KRAB zinc-finger protein (ZFP) and both KAP1 and ESET. Furthermore, this process can also take place on a strong cellular promoter and leads to methylation signatures that are subsequently maintained in vivo throughout embryogenesis. Finally, we show that methylation of ERVs residing in the genome is affected by knockout of KAP1 in early embryos. KRAB-ZFPs, KAP1 and ESET are thus likely to be responsible for the early embryonic instatement of stable epigenetic marks at ERV-containing loci.


The EMBO Journal | 2008

Cripto recruits Furin and PACE4 and controls Nodal trafficking during proteolytic maturation

Marie-Hélène Blanchet; J. Ann Le Good; Daniel Mesnard; Viola Oorschot; Stéphane Baflast; Gabriella Minchiotti; Judith Klumperman; Daniel B. Constam

The glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)‐anchored proteoglycan Cripto binds Nodal and its type I receptor Alk4 to activate Smad2,3 transcription factors, but a role during Nodal precursor processing has not been described. We show that Cripto also binds the proprotein convertases Furin and PACE4 and localizes Nodal processing at the cell surface. When coexpressed as in early embryonic cells, Cripto and uncleaved Nodal already associated during secretion, and a Cripto‐interacting region in the Nodal propeptide potentiated the effect of proteolytic maturation on Nodal signalling. Disruption of the trans‐Golgi network (TGN) by brefeldin A blocked secretion, but export of Cripto and Nodal to the cell surface was not inhibited, indicating that Nodal is exposed to extracellular convertases before entering the TGN/endosomal system. Density fractionation and antibody uptake experiments showed that Cripto guides the Nodal precursor in detergent‐resistant membranes to endocytic microdomains marked by GFP–Flotillin. We conclude that Nodal processing and endocytosis are coupled in signal‐receiving cells.


Current Biology | 2004

The Anterior-Posterior Axis Emerges Respecting the Morphology of the Mouse Embryo that Changes and Aligns with the Uterus before Gastrulation

Daniel Mesnard; Mario Filipe; José António Belo; Magdalena Zernicka-Goetz

BACKGROUND When the anterior-posterior axis of the mouse embryo becomes explicit at gastrulation, it is almost perpendicular to the long uterine axis. This led to the belief that the uterus could play a key role in positioning this future body axis. RESULTS Here, we demonstrate that when the anterior-posterior axis first emerges it does not respect the axes of the uterus but, rather, the morphology of the embryo. Unexpectedly, the emerging anterior-posterior axis is initially aligned not with the long, but the short axis of the embryo. Then whether the embryo develops in vitro or in utero, the anterior-posterior axis becomes aligned with the long axis of embryo just prior to gastrulation. Of three mechanisms that could account for this apparent shift in anterior-posterior axis orientation-cell migration, spatial change of gene expression, or change in embryo shape-lineage tracing studies favor a shape change accompanied by restriction of the expression domain of anterior markers. This property of the embryo must be modulated by interactions with the uterus as ultimately the anterior-posterior and long axes of the embryo align with the left-right uterine axis. CONCLUSIONS The emerging anterior-posterior axis relates to embryo morphology rather than that of the uterus. The apparent shift in its orientation to align with the long embryonic axis and with the uterus is associated with a change in embryo shape and a refinement of anterior gene expression pattern. This suggests an interdependence between anterior-posterior gene expression, the shape of the embryo, and the uterus.


Genes & Development | 2011

The microenvironment patterns the pluripotent mouse epiblast through paracrine Furin and Pace4 proteolytic activities

Daniel Mesnard; Martyn Donnison; Christophe Fuerer; Peter L. Pfeffer; Daniel B. Constam

The fate of pluripotent cells in early mouse embryos is controlled by graded Nodal signals that are activated by the endoproteases Furin and Pace4. Soluble forms of Furin and Pace4 cleave proNodal in vitro and after secretion in transfected cells, but direct evidence for paracrine activity in vivo is elusive. Here, we show that Furin and Pace4 are released by the extraembryonic microenvironment, and that they cleave a membrane-bound reporter substrate in adjacent epiblast cells and activate Nodal to maintain pluripotency. Secreted Pace4 and Furin also stimulated mesoderm formation, whereas endoderm was only induced by Pace4, correlating with a difference in the spatiotemporal distribution of these proteolytic activities. Our analysis of paracrine Furin and Pace4 activities and their in vivo functions significantly advances our understanding of how the epiblast is patterned by its microenvironment. Adding cell-cell communication to the pleiotropic portfolio of these proteases provides a new framework to study proprotein processing also in other relevant contexts.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2010

Imaging proprotein convertase activities and their regulation in the implanting mouse blastocyst

Daniel Mesnard; Daniel B. Constam

The CLIP biosensor reveals the spatiotemporal activity of the Nodal proprotein convertases Furin and Pace4 during embryonic development.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2015

PC7 and the related proteases Furin and Pace4 regulate E-cadherin function during blastocyst formation

Sylvain Bessonnard; Daniel Mesnard; Daniel B. Constam

Targeted deletion of PC7 and the related proprotein convertases Furin and Pace4, combined with live imaging of their activities, unmasks their overlapping and complementary functions in morula compaction and ICM formation in mouse blastocysts and in E-cadherin precursor processing.


Developmental Cell | 2006

The Nodal Precursor Acting via Activin Receptors Induces Mesoderm by Maintaining a Source of Its Convertases and BMP4

Nadav Ben-Haim; Cindy C. Lu; Marcela Guzman-Ayala; L. Pescatore; Daniel Mesnard; Mirko Bischofberger; Felix Naef; Elizabeth J. Robertson; Daniel B. Constam

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Daniel B. Constam

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Didier Trono

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Marcela Guzman-Ayala

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Sonia Verp

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Helen M. Rowe

University College London

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Christophe Fuerer

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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