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Dive into the research topics where Dominique Weil is active.

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Featured researches published by Dominique Weil.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2008

Translationally Repressed mRNA Transiently Cycles through Stress Granules during Stress

Stéphanie Mollet; Nicolas Cougot; Ania Wilczynska; François Dautry; Michel Kress; Edouard Bertrand; Dominique Weil

In mammals, repression of translation during stress is associated with the assembly of stress granules in the cytoplasm, which contain a fraction of arrested mRNA and have been proposed to play a role in their storage. Because physical contacts are seen with GW bodies, which contain the mRNA degradation machinery, stress granules could also target arrested mRNA to degradation. Here we show that contacts between stress granules and GW bodies appear during stress-granule assembly and not after a movement of the two preassembled structures. Despite this close proximity, the GW body proteins, which in some conditions relocalize in stress granules, come from cytosol rather than from adjacent GW bodies. It was previously reported that several proteins actively traffic in and out of stress granules. Here we investigated the behavior of mRNAs. Their residence time in stress granules is brief, on the order of a minute, although stress granules persist over a few hours after stress relief. This short transit reflects rapid return to cytosol, rather than transfer to GW bodies for degradation. Accordingly, most arrested mRNAs are located outside stress granules. Overall, these kinetic data do not support a direct role of stress granules neither as storage site nor as intermediate location before degradation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

CPEB Interacts with an Ovary-specific eIF4E and 4E-T in Early Xenopus Oocytes

Nicola Minshall; Marie Helene Reiter; Dominique Weil; Nancy Standart

CPEB (cytoplasmic polyadenylation element-binding protein) is an important regulator of translation in oocytes and neurons. Although previous studies of CPEB in late Xenopus oocytes involve the eIF4E-binding protein maskin as the key factor for the repression of maternal mRNA, a second mechanism must exist, since maskin is absent earlier in oogenesis. Using co-immunoprecipitation and gel filtration assays, we show that CPEB specifically interacts, via protein/protein interactions, with the RNA helicase Xp54, the RNA-binding proteins P100(Pat1) and RAP55, the eIF4E-binding protein 4E-T, and an eIF4E protein. Remarkably, these CPEB complex proteins have been characterized, in one or more organism, as P-body, maternal, or neuronal granule components. We do not detect interactions with eIF4E1a, the canonical cap-binding factor, eIF4G, or eIF4A or with proteins expressed late in oogenesis, including maskin, PARN, and 4E-BP1. The eIF4E protein was identified as eIF4E1b, a close homolog of eIF4E1a, whose expression is restricted to oocytes and early embryos. Although eIF4E1b possesses all residues required for cap and eIF4G binding, it binds m7GTP weakly, and in pull-down assays, rather than binding eIF4G, it binds 4E-T, in a manner independent of the consensus eIF4E-binding site, YSKEELL. Wild type and Y-A mutant 4E-T (which binds eIF4E1b but not eIF4E1a), when tethered to a reporter mRNA, represses its translation in a cap-dependent manner, and injection of eIF4E1b antibody accelerates meiotic maturation. Altogether, our data suggest that CPEB, partnered with several highly conserved RNA-binding partners, inhibits protein synthesis in oocytes using a novel pairing of 4E-T and eIF4E1b.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 1997

Mutation Profile of All 49 Exons of the Human Myosin VIIA Gene, and Haplotype Analysis, in Usher 1B Families from Diverse Origins

Avital Adato; Dominique Weil; H. Kalinski; Y. Pel-Or; H. Ayadi; C. Petit; Michael Korostishevsky; Batsheva Bonne-Tamir

Usher syndrome types I (USH1A-USH1E) are a group of autosomal recessive diseases characterized by profound congenital hearing loss, vestibular areflexia, and progressive visual loss due to retinitis pigmentosa. The human myosin VIIA gene, located on 11q14, has been shown to be responsible for Usher syndrome type 1B (USH1B). Haplotypes were constructed in 28 USH1 families by use of the following polymorphic markers spanning the USH1B locus: D11S787, D11S527, D11S1789, D11S906, D11S4186, and OMP. Affected individuals and members of their families from 12 different ethnic origins were screened for the presence of mutations in all 49 exons of the myosin VIIA gene. In 15 families myosin VIIA mutations were detected, verifying their classification as USH1B. All these mutations are novel, including three missense mutations, one premature stop codon, two splicing mutations, one frameshift, and one deletion of >2 kb comprising exons 47 and 48, a part of exon 49, and the introns between them. Three mutations were shared by more than one family, consistent with haplotype similarities. Altogether, 16 USH1B haplotypes were observed in the 15 families; most haplotypes were population specific. Several exonic and intronic polymorphisms were also detected. None of the 20 known USH1B mutations reported so far in other world populations were identified in our families.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2009

Role of p54 RNA helicase activity and its C-terminal domain in translational repression, P-body localization and assembly.

Nicola Minshall; Michel Kress; Dominique Weil; Nancy Standart

The RNA helicase p54 (DDX6, Dhh1, Me31B, Cgh-1, RCK) is a prototypic component of P-(rocessing) bodies in cells ranging from yeast to human. Previously, we have shown that it is also a component of the large cytoplasmic polyadenylation element-binding protein translation repressor complex in Xenopus oocytes and that when tethered to the 3 untranslated region, Xp54 represses reporter mRNA translation. Here, we examine the role of the p54 helicase activity in translational repression and in P-body formation. Mutagenesis of conserved p54 helicase motifs activates translation in the tethered function assay, reduces accumulation of p54 in P-bodies in HeLa cells, and inhibits its capacity to assemble P-bodies in p54-depleted cells. Similar results were obtained in four helicase motifs implicated in ATP binding and in coupling ATPase and RNA binding activities. This is accompanied by changes in the interaction of the mutant p54 with the oocyte repressor complex components. Surprisingly, the C-terminal D2 domain alone is sufficient for translational repression and complete accumulation in P-bodies, although it is deficient for P-body assembly. We propose a novel RNA helicase model, in which the D2 domain acts as a protein binding platform and the ATPase/helicase activity allows protein complex remodeling that dictates the balance between repressors and an activator of translation.


RNA | 2012

Multiple binding of repressed mRNAs by the P-body protein Rck/p54

Michèle Ernoult-Lange; Sonia Baconnais; Maryannick Harper; Nicola Minshall; Sylvie Souquere; Thomas Boudier; Marianne Bénard; Philippe Andrey; Gérard Pierron; Michel Kress; Nancy Standart; Eric Le Cam; Dominique Weil

Translational repression is achieved by protein complexes that typically bind 3 UTR mRNA motifs and interfere with the formation of the cap-dependent initiation complex, resulting in mRNPs with a closed-loop conformation. We demonstrate here that the human DEAD-box protein Rck/p54, which is a component of such complexes and central to P-body assembly, is in considerable molecular excess with respect to cellular mRNAs and enriched to a concentration of 0.5 mM in P-bodies, where it is organized in clusters. Accordingly, multiple binding of p54 proteins along mRNA molecules was detected in vivo. Consistently, the purified protein bound RNA with no sequence specificity and high nanomolar affinity. Moreover, bound RNA molecules had a relaxed conformation. While RNA binding was ATP independent, relaxing of bound RNA was dependent on ATP, though not on its hydrolysis. We propose that Rck/p54 recruitment by sequence-specific translational repressors leads to further binding of Rck/p54 along mRNA molecules, resulting in their masking, unwinding, and ultimately recruitment to P-bodies. Rck/p54 proteins located at the 5 extremity of mRNA can then recruit the decapping complex, thus coupling translational repression and mRNA degradation.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 1999

Possible Interaction between USH1B and USH3 Gene Products as Implied by Apparent Digenic Deafness Inheritance

Avital Adato; Hagar Kalinski; Dominique Weil; Hassan Chaib; Michael Korostishevsky; Batsheva Bonne-Tamir

We would like to express our gratitude to Elias Kavakov and his staff members at the Center for Deaf-Blind Persons-Beth David Institute in Tel Aviv. We thank all family members who participated in this study. We also thank Tama Hasson for critical comments on our manuscript. This work was supported in part by an Israel Science Foundation research grant (1140041), a Ministry of Health grant (1140091), and an Applebaum Foundation grant (1140111) (to B.B.T.); and a European Economic Community grant (PL951324; to C.P.). This work was done as part of A. A.s Ph.D. project.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2009

Nucleocytoplasmic Traffic of CPEB1 and Accumulation in Crm1 Nucleolar Bodies

Michèle Ernoult-Lange; Ania Wilczynska; Maryannick Harper; Christelle Aigueperse; François Dautry; Michel Kress; Dominique Weil

The translational regulator CPEB1 plays a major role in the control of maternal mRNA in oocytes, as well as of subsynaptic mRNAs in neurons. Although mainly cytoplasmic, we found that CPEB1 protein is continuously shuttling between nucleus and cytoplasm. Its export is controlled by two redundant NES motifs dependent on the nuclear export receptor Crm1. In the nucleus, CPEB1 accumulates in a few foci most often associated with nucleoli. These foci are different from previously identified nuclear bodies. They contain Crm1 and were called Crm1 nucleolar bodies (CNoBs). CNoBs depend on RNA polymerase I activity, indicating a role in ribosome biogenesis. However, although they form in the nucleolus, they never migrate to the nuclear envelope, precluding a role as a mediator for ribosome export. They could rather constitute a platform providing factors for ribosome assembly or export. The behavior of CPEB1 in CNoBs raises the possibility that it is involved in ribosome biogenesis.


Molecular Cell | 2017

P-Body Purification Reveals the Condensation of Repressed mRNA Regulons

Arnaud Hubstenberger; Maïté Courel; Marianne Bénard; Sylvie Souquere; Michèle Ernoult-Lange; Racha Chouaib; Zhou Yi; Jean-Baptiste Morlot; Annie Munier; Magali Fradet; Maëlle Daunesse; Edouard Bertrand; Gérard Pierron; Julien Mozziconacci; Michel Kress; Dominique Weil

Within cells, soluble RNPs can switch states to coassemble and condense into liquid or solid bodies. Although these phase transitions have been reconstituted inxa0vitro, for endogenous bodies the diversity of the components, the specificity of the interaction networks, and the function of the coassemblies remain to be characterized. Here, by developing axa0fluorescence-activated particle sorting (FAPS) method to purify cytosolic processing bodies (P-bodies) from human epithelial cells, we identified hundreds of proteins and thousands of mRNAs that structure a dense network of interactions, separating P-body from non-P-body RNPs. mRNAs segregating into P-bodies are translationally repressed, but not decayed, and this repression explains part of the poor genome-wide correlation between RNA and protein abundance. P-bodies condense thousands of mRNAs that strikingly encode regulatory processes. Thus, we uncovered how P-bodies, by condensing and segregating repressed mRNAs, provide a physical substrate for the coordinated regulation of posttranscriptional mRNA regulons.


RNA | 2010

Distinct functions of maternal and somatic Pat1 protein paralogs

Aline Marnef; Maria Maldonado; Anthony Bugaut; Shankar Balasubramanian; Michel Kress; Dominique Weil; Nancy Standart

We previously identified Xenopus Pat1a (P100) as a member of the maternal CPEB RNP complex, whose components resemble those of P-(rocessing) bodies, and which is implicated in translational control in Xenopus oocytes. Database searches have identified Pat1a proteins in other vertebrates, as well as paralogous Pat1b proteins. Here we characterize Pat1 proteins, which have no readily discernable sequence features, in Xenopus oocytes, eggs, and early embryos and in human tissue culture cells. xPat1a and 1b have essentially mutually exclusive expression patterns in oogenesis and embryogenesis. xPat1a is degraded during meiotic maturation, via PEST-like regions, while xPat1b mRNA is translationally activated at GVBD by cytoplasmic polyadenylation. Pat1 proteins bind RNA in vitro, via a central domain, with a preference for G-rich sequences, including the NRAS 5 UTR G-quadruplex-forming sequence. When tethered to reporter mRNA, both Pat proteins repress translation in oocytes. Indeed, both epitope-tagged proteins interact with the same components of the CPEB RNP complex, including CPEB, Xp54, eIF4E1b, Rap55B, and ePAB. However, examining endogenous protein interactions, we find that in oocytes only xPat1a is a bona fide component of the CPEB RNP, and that xPat1b resides in a separate large complex. In tissue culture cells, hPat1b localizes to P-bodies, while mPat1a-GFP is either found weakly in P-bodies or disperses P-bodies in a dominant-negative fashion. Altogether we conclude that Pat1a and Pat1b proteins have distinct functions, mediated in separate complexes. Pat1a is a translational repressor in oocytes in a CPEB-containing complex, and Pat1b is a component of P-bodies in somatic cells.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2012

RNA-related nuclear functions of human Pat1b, the P-body mRNA decay factor

Aline Marnef; Dominique Weil; Nancy Standart

Analysis of the nuclear life of human Pat1b, a member of the Pat1 family of RNA-binding proteins that at steady state reside in cytoplasmic P-bodies and silence gene expression there, shows that Pat1b has multiple functions linked to transcription and splicing in nuclear speckles, PML bodies, and nucleolar caps.

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Michel Kress

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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François Dautry

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Michèle Ernoult-Lange

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Maryannick Harper

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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