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Dive into the research topics where David F. Vincent is active.

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Featured researches published by David F. Vincent.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2009

iNKT cell development is orchestrated by different branches of TGF-beta signaling.

Jean-Marc Doisne; Laurent Bartholin; Kai-Ping Yan; Celine Garcia; Nadia Duarte; Jean-Benoît Le Luduec; David F. Vincent; Farhan S. Cyprian; Branka Horvat; Sylvie Martel; Ruth Rimokh; Régine Losson; Kamel Benlagha; Julien C. Marie

Invariant natural killer T (iNKT) cells constitute a distinct subset of T lymphocytes exhibiting important immune-regulatory functions. Although various steps of their differentiation have been well characterized, the factors controlling their development remain poorly documented. Here, we show that TGF-β controls the differentiation program of iNKT cells. We demonstrate that TGF-β signaling carefully and specifically orchestrates several steps of iNKT cell development. In vivo, this multifaceted role of TGF-β involves the concerted action of different pathways of TGF-β signaling. Whereas the Tif-1γ branch controls lineage expansion, the Smad4 branch maintains the maturation stage that is initially repressed by a Tif-1γ/Smad4-independent branch. Thus, these three different branches of TGF-β signaling function in concert as complementary effectors, allowing TGF-β to fine tune the iNKT cell differentiation program.


Nature | 2017

Modulating the therapeutic response of tumours to dietary serine and glycine starvation

Oliver D.K. Maddocks; Dimitris Athineos; Eric C. Cheung; Pearl Lee; Tong Zhang; Niels J. F. van den Broek; Gillian M. Mackay; Christiaan F. Labuschagne; Flore Kruiswijk; Julianna Blagih; David F. Vincent; Kirsteen J. Campbell; Fatih Ceteci; Owen J. Sansom; Karen Blyth; Karen H. Vousden

The non-essential amino acids serine and glycine are used in multiple anabolic processes that support cancer cell growth and proliferation (reviewed in ref. 1). While some cancer cells upregulate de novo serine synthesis, many others rely on exogenous serine for optimal growth. Restriction of dietary serine and glycine can reduce tumour growth in xenograft and allograft models. Here we show that this observation translates into more clinically relevant autochthonous tumours in genetically engineered mouse models of intestinal cancer (driven by Apc inactivation) or lymphoma (driven by Myc activation). The increased survival following dietary restriction of serine and glycine in these models was further improved by antagonizing the anti-oxidant response. Disruption of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (using biguanides) led to a complex response that could improve or impede the anti-tumour effect of serine and glycine starvation. Notably, Kras-driven mouse models of pancreatic and intestinal cancers were less responsive to depletion of serine and glycine, reflecting an ability of activated Kras to increase the expression of enzymes that are part of the serine synthesis pathway and thus promote de novo serine synthesis.


Genesis | 2008

Generation of mice with conditionally activated transforming growth factor beta signaling through the TβRI/ALK5 receptor

Laurent Bartholin; Farhan S. Cyprian; David F. Vincent; Celine Garcia; Sylvie Martel; Branka Horvat; Cyril Berthet; Sophie Goddard-Léon; Isabelle Treilleux; Ruth Rimokh; Julien C. Marie

We generated a transgenic mouse strain (LSL‐TβRICA) containing a latent constitutively active TGFβ type I receptor (TβRI/ALK5) by using a knock‐in strategy into the X chromosome‐linked hypoxanthine phosphoribosyl‐transferase (Hprt) locus. Transgene expression, under the control of the ubiquitous CAG (human cytomegalovirus enhancer and chicken β‐actin) promoter, is repressed by a floxed transcriptional “Stop” (LSL, Lox‐Stop‐Lox). In the presence of cre‐recombinase, the “Stop” is excised to allow TβRICA transgene expression. We showed that restricted expression of TβRICA in T lymphocytes efficiently activates TGFβ signaling and rescues the T‐cell autoimmune disorders of TGFβRII conditional knockouts. Unexpectedly, our study reveals that TGFβ signaling upregulation controls T‐cell activation but does not impair their development or their peripheral homeostasis. In addition to the information provided on TGFβ effects on T‐cell biology, LSL‐TβRICA mouse constitutes an attractive tool to address the effect of TGFβ signaling upregulation in any cell type expressing the cre‐recombinase. genesis 46:724–731, 2008. Published 2008 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


Nature Communications | 2016

Inactivation of TGFβ receptors in stem cells drives cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma

Patrizia Cammareri; Aidan M. Rose; David F. Vincent; Jun Wang; Ai Nagano; Silvana Libertini; Rachel A. Ridgway; Dimitris Athineos; Philip J. Coates; Angela McHugh; Celine Pourreyron; Jasbani H.S. Dayal; Jonas Larsson; Simone Weidlich; Lindsay C. Spender; Gopal P. Sapkota; Karin J. Purdie; Charlotte M. Proby; Catherine A. Harwood; Irene M. Leigh; Hans Clevers; Nick Barker; Stefan Karlsson; Catrin Pritchard; Richard Marais; Claude Chelala; Andrew P. South; Owen J. Sansom; Gareth J. Inman

Melanoma patients treated with oncogenic BRAF inhibitors can develop cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (cSCC) within weeks of treatment, driven by paradoxical RAS/RAF/MAPK pathway activation. Here we identify frequent TGFBR1 and TGFBR2 mutations in human vemurafenib-induced skin lesions and in sporadic cSCC. Functional analysis reveals these mutations ablate canonical TGFβ Smad signalling, which is localized to bulge stem cells in both normal human and murine skin. MAPK pathway hyperactivation (through BrafV600E or KrasG12D knockin) and TGFβ signalling ablation (through Tgfbr1 deletion) in LGR5+ve stem cells enables rapid cSCC development in the mouse. Mutation of Tp53 (which is commonly mutated in sporadic cSCC) coupled with Tgfbr1 deletion in LGR5+ve cells also results in cSCC development. These findings indicate that LGR5+ve stem cells may act as cells of origin for cSCC, and that RAS/RAF/MAPK pathway hyperactivation or Tp53 mutation, coupled with loss of TGFβ signalling, are driving events of skin tumorigenesis.


American Journal of Pathology | 2012

Tif1γ Suppresses Murine Pancreatic Tumoral Transformation by a Smad4-Independent Pathway

David F. Vincent; Johann Gout; Nicolas Chuvin; Roxane M. Pommier; Philippe Bertolino; Nicolas Jonckheere; Doriane Ripoche; Bastien Kaniewski; Sylvie Martel; Jean-Baptiste Langlois; Sophie Goddard-Léon; Amélie Colombe; Marc Janier; Isabelle Van Seuningen; Régine Losson; Ulrich Valcourt; Isabelle Treilleux; Pierre Dubus; Nabeel Bardeesy; Laurent Bartholin

Transcriptional intermediary factor 1γ (TIF1γ; alias, TRIM33/RFG7/PTC7/ectodermin) belongs to an evolutionarily conserved family of nuclear factors that have been implicated in stem cell pluripotency, embryonic development, and tumor suppression. TIF1γ expression is markedly down-regulated in human pancreatic tumors, and Pdx1-driven Tif1γ inactivation cooperates with the Kras(G12D) oncogene in the mouse pancreas to induce intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasms. In this study, we report that aged Pdx1-Cre; LSL-Kras(G12D); Tif1γ(lox/lox) mice develop pancreatic ductal adenocarcinomas (PDACs), an aggressive and always fatal neoplasm, demonstrating a Tif1γ tumor-suppressive function in the development of pancreatic carcinogenesis. Deletion of SMAD4/DPC4 (deleted in pancreatic carcinoma locus 4) occurs in approximately 50% of human cases of PDAC. We, therefore, assessed the genetic relationship between Tif1γ and Smad4 signaling in pancreatic tumors and found that Pdx1-Cre; LSL-Kras(G12D); Smad4(lox/lox); Tif1γ(lox/lox) (alias, KSSTT) mutant mice exhibit accelerated tumor progression. Consequently, Tif1γ tumor-suppressor effects during progression from a premalignant to a malignant state in our mouse model of pancreatic cancer are independent of Smad4. These findings establish, for the first time to our knowledge, that Tif1γ and Smad4 both regulate an intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm-to-PDAC sequence through distinct tumor-suppressor programs.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2013

Isolation and Culture of Mouse Primary Pancreatic Acinar Cells

Johann Gout; Roxane M. Pommier; David F. Vincent; Bastien Kaniewski; Sylvie Martel; Ulrich Valcourt; Laurent Bartholin

This protocol permits rapid isolation (in less than 1 hr) of murine pancreatic acini, making it possible to maintain them in culture for more than one week. More than 20 x 10(6) acinar cells can be obtained from a single murine pancreas. This protocol offers the possibility to independently process as many as 10 pancreases in parallel. Because it preserves acinar architecture, this model is well suited for studying the physiology of the exocrine pancreas in vitro in contrast to cell lines established from pancreatic tumors, which display many genetic alterations resulting in partial or total loss of their acinar differentiation.


Cell Death and Disease | 2013

Lysyl oxidase activity regulates oncogenic stress response and tumorigenesis

Clotilde Wiel; Arnaud Augert; David F. Vincent; Delphine Gitenay; David Vindrieux; B Le Calvé; Hélène Lallet-Daher; C Reynaud; Isabelle Treilleux; Laurent Bartholin; E Lelievre; David Bernard

Cellular senescence, a stable proliferation arrest, is induced in response to various stresses. Oncogenic stress-induced senescence (OIS) results in blocked proliferation and constitutes a fail-safe program counteracting tumorigenesis. The events that enable a tumor in a benign senescent state to escape from OIS and become malignant are largely unknown. We show that lysyl oxidase activity contributes to the decision to maintain senescence. Indeed, in human epithelial cell the constitutive expression of the LOX or LOXL2 protein favored OIS escape, whereas inhibition of lysyl oxidase activity was found to stabilize OIS. The relevance of these in vitro observations is supported by in vivo findings: in a transgenic mouse model of aggressive pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC), increasing lysyl oxidase activity accelerates senescence escape, whereas inhibition of lysyl oxidase activity was found to stabilize senescence, delay tumorigenesis, and increase survival. Mechanistically, we show that lysyl oxidase activity favors the escape of senescence by regulating the focal-adhesion kinase. Altogether, our results demonstrate that lysyl oxidase activity participates in primary tumor growth by directly impacting the senescence stability.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2017

TGFβ pathway limits dedifferentiation following WNT and MAPK pathway activation to suppress intestinal tumourigenesis

Patrizia Cammareri; David F. Vincent; Michael C. Hodder; Rachel A. Ridgway; Claudio Murgia; Max Nobis; Andrew D. Campbell; Julia Varga; David J. Huels; Chithra Subramani; Katie L H Prescott; Colin Nixon; Ann Hedley; Simon T. Barry; Florian R. Greten; Gareth J. Inman; Owen J. Sansom

Recent studies have suggested increased plasticity of differentiated cells within the intestine to act both as intestinal stem cells (ISCs) and tumour-initiating cells. However, little is known of the processes that regulate this plasticity. Our previous work has shown that activating mutations of Kras or the NF-κB pathway can drive dedifferentiation of intestinal cells lacking Apc. To investigate this process further, we profiled both cells undergoing dedifferentiation in vitro and tumours generated from these cells in vivo by gene expression analysis. Remarkably, no clear differences were observed in the tumours; however, during dedifferentiation in vitro we found a marked upregulation of TGFβ signalling, a pathway commonly mutated in colorectal cancer (CRC). Genetic inactivation of TGFβ type 1 receptor (Tgfbr1/Alk5) enhanced the ability of KrasG12D/+ mutation to drive dedifferentiation and markedly accelerated tumourigenesis. Mechanistically this is associated with a marked activation of MAPK signalling. Tumourigenesis from differentiated compartments is potently inhibited by MEK inhibition. Taken together, we show that tumours arising in differentiated compartments will be exposed to different suppressive signals, for example, TGFβ and blockade of these makes tumourigenesis more efficient from this compartment.


Cancer Research | 2015

TIF1γ Suppresses Tumor Progression by Regulating Mitotic Checkpoints and Chromosomal Stability.

Roxane M. Pommier; Johann Gout; David F. Vincent; Lindsay B. Alcaraz; Nicolas Chuvin; Sylvie Martel; Bastien Kaniewski; Guillaume Devailly; Geneviève Fourel; Pascal Bernard; Caroline Moyret-Lalle; Stéphane Ansieau; Alain Puisieux; Ulrich Valcourt; Stéphanie Sentis; Laurent Bartholin

The transcription accessory factor TIF1γ/TRIM33/RFG7/PTC7/Ectodermin functions as a tumor suppressor that promotes development and cellular differentiation. However, its precise function in cancer has been elusive. In the present study, we report that TIF1γ inactivation causes cells to accumulate chromosomal defects, a hallmark of cancer, due to attenuations in the spindle assembly checkpoint and the post-mitotic checkpoint. TIF1γ deficiency also caused a loss of contact growth inhibition and increased anchorage-independent growth in vitro and in vivo. Clinically, reduced TIF1γ expression in human tumors correlated with an increased rate of genomic rearrangements. Overall, our work indicates that TIF1γ exerts its tumor-suppressive functions in part by promoting chromosomal stability.


Genesis | 2010

A rapid strategy to detect the recombined allele in LSL-TβRICA transgenic mice

David F. Vincent; Bastien Kaniewski; Shannon E. Powers; Colin Havenar-Daughton; Julien C. Marie; David Wotton; Laurent Bartholin

We have previously generated a transgenic mouse strain (LSL‐TβRICA) containing a Cre‐inducible constitutively active TGFβ type I receptor (Bartholin et al., 2008, Genesis 46: 724–731). Transgene expression depends on the excision of a floxed‐transcriptional STOP (LSL, Lox‐STOP‐Lox) located upstream the TβRICA coding sequence. To evaluate the correct excision of the STOP signal in the presence of Cre‐recombinase, we developed a rapid screening based on an original PCR genotyping strategy. More precisely, we designed a set of primers flanking the LSL containing region. The size of the amplified products will differ according to recombination status of the LSL‐TβRICA allele. Indeed, the size of the STOP containing PCR product is 1.93 kb, but is reduced to 0.35 kb when the STOP signal is removed after Cre‐mediated recombination. We validated excision in several compartments, including pancreas, liver, T lymphocytes, and embryos using different Cre expressing transgenic mouse strains. This represents a simple and efficient way of monitoring the tissue specific recombination of the LSL‐TβRICA allele. genesis 48:559–562, 2010.

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Richard Marais

University of Manchester

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Isabelle Treilleux

École normale supérieure de Lyon

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Catherine A. Harwood

Queen Mary University of London

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