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Dive into the research topics where Eric Quéinnec is active.

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Featured researches published by Eric Quéinnec.


Developmental Biology | 2011

Somatic stem cells express Piwi and Vasa genes in an adult ctenophore: ancient association of "germline genes" with stemness.

Alexandre Alié; Lucas Leclère; Muriel Jager; Cyrielle Dayraud; Patrick Chang; Hervé Le Guyader; Eric Quéinnec; Michaël Manuel

Stem cells are essential for animal development and adult tissue homeostasis, and the quest for an ancestral gene fingerprint of stemness is a major challenge for evolutionary developmental biology. Recent studies have indicated that a series of genes, including the transposon silencer Piwi and the translational activator Vasa, specifically involved in germline determination and maintenance in classical bilaterian models (e.g., vertebrates, fly, nematode), are more generally expressed in adult multipotent stem cells in other animals like flatworms and hydras. Since the progeny of these multipotent stem cells includes both somatic and germinal derivatives, it remains unclear whether Vasa, Piwi, and associated genes like Bruno and PL10 were ancestrally linked to stemness, or to germinal potential. We have investigated the expression of Vasa, two Piwi paralogues, Bruno and PL10 in Pleurobrachia pileus, a member of the early-diverging phylum Ctenophora, the probable sister group of cnidarians. These genes were all expressed in the male and female germlines, and with the exception of one of the Piwi paralogues, they showed similar expression patterns within somatic territories (tentacle root, comb rows, aboral sensory complex). Cytological observations and EdU DNA-labelling and long-term retention experiments revealed concentrations of stem cells closely matching these gene expression areas. These stem cell pools are spatially restricted, and each specialised in the production of particular types of somatic cells. These data unveil important aspects of cell renewal within the ctenophore body and suggest that Piwi, Vasa, Bruno, and PL10 belong to a gene network ancestrally acting in two distinct contexts: (i) the germline and (ii) stem cells, whatever the nature of their progeny.


Development Genes and Evolution | 2004

hedgehog is a segment polarity gene in a crustacean and a chelicerate

Franck Simonnet; Jean Deutsch; Eric Quéinnec

The evolution of arthropod segmentation has been studied by comparing expression patterns of pair-rule and segment polarity genes in various species. In Drosophila, the formation and maintenance of the parasegmental boundaries depend on the interactions between the wingless (wg), engrailed (en) and hedgehog (hh) genes. Until now, the expression pattern of hh has not been analysed to such a great extent as en or wg. We report the cloning and expression analysis of hh genes from Euscorpius flavicaudis, a chelicerate, and Artemia franciscana, a branchiopod crustacean. Our data provide evidence that hh, being expressed in the posterior part of every segment, is a segment polarity gene in both organisms. Additional hh expression sites were observed in the rostrum and appendages of Euscorpius and in the gut of Artemia. From the available data on hh expression in various bilaterians, we review the various hypotheses on the evolution of hh function and we suggest an ancestral role of hh in proctodeum specification and gut formation.


Journal of Experimental Zoology | 2011

New insights on ctenophore neural anatomy: Immunofluorescence study in Pleurobrachia pileus (Müller, 1776)

Muriel Jager; Roxane Chiori; Alexandre Alié; Cyrielle Dayraud; Eric Quéinnec; Michaël Manuel

Ctenophores are non-bilaterian animals sharing with cnidarians and bilaterians the presence of sensory receptors, nerve cells, and synapses, absent in placozoans and sponges. Although recent immunofluorescence studies have renewed our knowledge of cnidarian neuro-anatomy, ctenophores have been much less investigated despite their importance to understanding the origin and early evolution of the nervous system. In this study, the neuro-anatomy of the ctenophore Pleurobrachia pileus (Müller, 1776) was explored by whole-mount fluorescent antibody staining using antibodies against tyrosylated -tubulin, FMRFamide, and vasopressin. We describe the morphology of nerve nets and their local specializations, and the organization of the aboral neuro-sensory complex comprising the apical organ and polar fields. Two distinct nerve nets are distinguished: a mesogleal nerve net, loosely organized throughout body mesoglea, and a much more compact “nerve net” with polygonal meshes in the ectodermal epithelium. The latter is organized as a plexus of short nerve cords. This epithelial nervous system contains distinct sub-populations of dispersed FMRFamide and vasopressin immunoreactive nerve cells. In the aboral neuro-sensory complex, our most significant observations include specialized nerve nets underlying the apical organ and polar fields, a tangential bundle of actin-rich fibers (interpreted as a muscle) within the polar fields, and distinct groups of neurons labeled by anti-FMRFamide and anti-vasopressin antibodies, within the apical organ floor. These results are discussed in a comparative perspective.


Evolution & Development | 2000

Barnacle duplicate engrailed genes: divergent expression patterns and evidence for a vestigial abdomen

Jean-Michel Gibert; Emmanuèle Mouchel-Vielh; Eric Quéinnec; Jean Deutsch

SUMMARY Cirripedes (barnacles) are crustaceans that are characterized by a very peculiar body plan, in particular by the lack of an abdomen. To study their body plan, we searched for their engrailed gene. We found two engrailed (en.a/en.b) genes in cirripedes. The two engrailed genes of the rhizocephalan barnacle Sacculina carcini are expressed in the posterior compartment of developing segments and appendages. When the neuroectoderm differentiates into epidermis and neuroderm the expression patterns of en.a and en.b diverge dramatically. en.a expression fades in segment epidermis whereas it is subsequently detected ventrally in reiterated putative neural cells. At the same time, en.b expression increases in the epidermis, which makes it a very good segmentation marker. Five tiny en.b stripes are observed between the sixth thoracic segment and the telson. We interpret these stripes as the molecular definition of vestigial abdominal segments, being the remnant of an ancestral state in keeping with the bodyplan of maxillopod crustaceans. engrailed expression is the first molecular evidence for a segmented abdomen in barnacles.


Development Genes and Evolution | 2006

Orthodenticle and empty spiracles genes are expressed in a segmental pattern in chelicerates

Franck Simonnet; Marie-Louise Célérier; Eric Quéinnec

Members of the orthodenticle (otd/Otx) and empty spiracles (ems/Emx) gene families are head gap genes that encode homeodomain-containing DNA-binding proteins. Although numerous studies show their central role in developmental processes in brain specification, a surprisingly high number of other developmental processes have been shown to involve their expression. In this paper, we report the identification and expression of ems and otd in two chelicerate species: a scorpion, Euscorpius flavicaudis (Chactidae, Scorpiona, Arachnida, Euchelicerata) and a spider, Tegenaria saeva (Aranea, Arachnida, Euchelicerata). We show that both ems and otd are expressed not only in an anterior head domain but also along the entire anterior–posterior axis during embryonic development. The expression patterns for both genes are typically segmental and concern neurectodermal territories. During patterning of the opisthosoma, ems and otd are expressed in the lateral ectoderm just anterior to the limb bud primordia giving rise to respiratory organs and spinnerets (spider). This common pattern found in two divergent species thus appears to be a conserved character of chelicerates. These results are discussed in terms of evolutionary origin of respiratory organs and/or functional pathway recruitment.


Development Genes and Evolution | 2001

The caudal gene of the barnacle Sacculina carcini is not expressed in its vestigial abdomen.

Nicolas Rabet; Jean-Michel Gibert; Eric Quéinnec; Jean Deutsch; Emmanuèle Mouchel-Vielh

Abstract. We report the characterization of a caudal gene from the rhizocephalan cirripede Sacculina carcini and its embryonic and larval expression patterns. Cirripedes are maxillopodan crustaceans that are devoid of any complete abdominal segment at the adult stage. We currently explore the genetic basis of this peculiar body plan. In a previous study we have shown that they probably lack the abdominalA gene, while possessing the other Hox genes shared by arthropods. However, at least a part of the genetic program might be conserved, since the engrailed.a and engrailed.b genes are expressed in a posterior region that we interpret as a relic of an ancestral abdomen. Here we show first that the Sacculina caudal gene is expressed early in embryogenesis, which makes it the earliest genetic marker evidenced in the development of Sacculina and of any other crustacean species. It is expressed later in the embryo in the caudal papilla, a posterior proliferating zone of cells. During the larval stages, the caudal gene is first expressed in the whole thoracic region; then its expression regresses to the posterior end of the larva. Surprisingly, it is never expressed in the vestigial abdomen. This lack of expression of the Sacculina caudal gene in a posterior region, at odds with what is known in all other studied metazoan species, might be correlated with the defective development of the abdomen.


Development Genes and Evolution | 1999

Cloning and expression of the engrailed.a gene of the barnacle Sacculina carcini.

Eric Quéinnec; Emmanuèle Mouchel-Vielh; Monique Guimonneau; Jean-Michel Gibert; Yves Turquier; Jean Deutsch

Abstract Cirripedia (barnacles) constitute a crustacean monophyletic taxon which is very well defined by several synapomorphies. In particular, all cirripedes are composed of six thoracic segments, but are devoid of any complete abdominal segment. This body plan is preserved in the adult in non-parasitic groups, while the parasitic rhizocephalan cirripedes completely lose arthropodian segmentation at the adult stage. These traits make them a particularly favourable model for studying the formation and maintenance of segmental identity. For the above reasons, it seemed worthwhile to look at the segmentation gene engrailed in a cirripede. A complete engrailed.a cDNA was isolated from larvae of the rhizocephalan cirripede Sacculina carcini. Its expression was monitored during larval development by use of the monoclonal antibody MAb4D9 directed against the Drosophila homologous proteins. The Sacculina engrailed.a gene is expressed during the second and third larval stages in stripes within a posterior area corresponding to the presumptive trunk segments. Surprisingly, these stripes appear in a posterior to anterior sequence. Six engrailed.a stripes characterize the thoracic segments of the cirripedean ground plan.


Development Genes and Evolution | 2002

Heterospecific transgenesis in Drosophila suggests that engrailed.a is regulated by POU proteins in the crustacean Sacculina carcini

Jean-Michel Gibert; Nicolas Joannin; Marylin Blin; Catherine Rigolot; Emmanuèle Mouchel-Vielh; Eric Quéinnec; Jean Deutsch

Abstract. Almost all knowledge of the regulation of segmentation genes in arthropods comes from Drosophila. In order to study the regulation of the segment-polarity gene engrailed in a non-insect arthropod we focussed on putative regulatory regions of the engrailed.a (en.a) gene in the barnacle crustacean Sacculina carcini. In this animal, en.a is expressed in segmental stripes like the engrailed genes of other arthropods. As transgenesis in Sacculina is not possible at present, we have used Drosophila as a test tube. The Sacculina en.a intron is able to induce a specific expression of lacZ in the Drosophila wing imaginal disc. This pattern is not an engrailed-like pattern, but does suggest that some Drosophila transcription factors interact with the Sacculina en.a intron. We show that two Drosophila POU proteins, Nubbin and VVL, and Engrailed itself bind to the Sacculina en.a intron in vitro and that they regulate this expression in vivo. The conservation of POU protein binding sites in metazoans suggests that Sacculina POU proteins could recognize the same sequences. Hence, we looked at the expression of nubbin and vvl homologues in Sacculina larvae. Indeed, their expression patterns are consistent with a putative regulatory function on en.a in segments and appendages. Remarkably, the vvl homologue is expressed in Sacculina in a striking striped pattern that is very different from the vvl pattern in Drosophila embryos, and is complementary to the Sacculinaen.a pattern. These experiments suggest that the Sacculina engrailed.a gene is regulated by POU proteins.


bioRxiv | 2018

The genome of the jellyfish Clytia hemisphaerica and the evolution of the cnidarian life-cycle

Lucas Leclère; Coralie Horin; Sandra Chevalier; Pascal Lapébie; Philippe Dru; Sophie Peron; Muriel Jager; Thomas Condamine; Karen Pottin; Séverine Romano; Julia Steger; Chiara Sinigaglia; Carine Barreau; Gonzalo Quiroga-Artigas; Antonella Ruggiero; Cécile Fourrage; Johanna E. M. Kraus; Julie Poulain; Jean-Marc Aury; Patrick Wincker; Eric Quéinnec; Ulrich Technau; Michaël Manuel; Tsuyoshi Momose; Evelyn Houliston; Richard R. Copley

Jellyfish (medusae) are a distinctive life-cycle stage of medusozoan cnidarians. They are major marine predators, with integrated neurosensory, muscular and organ systems. The genetic foundations of this complex form are largely unknown. We report the draft genome of the hydrozoan jellyfish Clytia hemisphaerica and use multiple transcriptomes to determine gene use across life-cycle stages. Medusa, planula larva and polyp are each characterised by distinct transcriptome signatures reflecting abrupt life cycle transitions, and all deploy a mixture of phylogenetically old and new genes. Medusa specific transcription factors, including many with bilaterian orthologs, associate with diverse neurosensory structures. Compared to Clytia, the polyp-only hydrozoan Hydra has lost many of the medusa-expressed transcription factors, despite similar overall rates of gene content and sequence evolution. Absence of expression and gene loss among Clytia orthologs of genes patterning the anthozoan aboral pole, secondary axis and endomesoderm support simplification of planulae and polyps in Hydrozoa, including loss of bilateral symmetry. Consequently, although the polyp and planula are generally considered the ancestral cnidarian forms, in Clytia the medusa maximally deploys ancestral cnidarian–bilaterian transcription factor gene complexity.


Current Biology | 2009

Phylogenomics Revives Traditional Views on Deep Animal Relationships

Hervé Philippe; Romain Derelle; Philippe Lopez; Kerstin Pick; Carole Borchiellini; Nicole Boury-Esnault; Jean Vacelet; Emmanuelle Renard; Evelyn Houliston; Eric Quéinnec; Corinne Da Silva; Patrick Wincker; Hervé Le Guyader; Sally P. Leys; Daniel J. Jackson; Fabian Schreiber; Dirk Erpenbeck; Burkhard Morgenstern; Gert Wörheide; Michaël Manuel

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Evelyn Houliston

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Hervé Philippe

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Patrick Wincker

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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