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Dive into the research topics where Eugenia Basyuk is active.

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Featured researches published by Eugenia Basyuk.


Developmental Cell | 2003

Retroviral Genomic RNAs Are Transported to the Plasma Membrane by Endosomal Vesicles

Eugenia Basyuk; Thierry Galli; Marylène Mougel; Jean-Marie Blanchard; Marc Sitbon; Edouard Bertrand

The viral genomes of alpha- and gamma-retroviruses follow an outbound route through the cytoplasm before assembling with the budding particle at the plasma membrane. We show here that murine leukemia virus (MLV) RNAs are transported on lysosomes and transferrin-positive endosomes. Transport on transferrin-positive vesicles requires both Gag and Env polyproteins. In the presence of Env, Gag is rerouted from lysosomes to transferrin-positive endosomes, and virion production becomes highly sensitive to drugs poisoning vesicular and endosomal traffic. Vesicular transport of the RNA does not require prior endocytosis, indicating that it is recruited directly from the cytosol. Viral prebudding complexes containing Env, Gag, and retroviral RNAs are thus formed on endosomes, and subsequently routed to the plasma membrane. This may allow retroviruses to hijack the endosomal machinery as part of their biosynthetic pathway. More generally, tethering to vesicles may provide an efficient mechanism for directed RNA transport.


Oncogene | 1999

Loss of expression of the candidate tumor suppressor gene ZAC in breast cancer cell lines and primary tumors.

Benoit Bilanges; Annie Varrault; Eugenia Basyuk; Carmen Rodríguez; Abhijit Mazumdar; Colette Pantaloni; Joël Bockaert; Charles Theillet; Dietmar Spengler; Laurent Journot

Loss of chromosome 6q21-qter is the second most frequent loss of chromosomal material in sporadic breast neoplasms suggesting the presence of at least one tumor suppressor gene on 6q. We recently isolated a cDNA encoding a new zinc finger protein which we named ZAC according to its functional properties, namely induction of apoptosis and control of cell cycle progression. ZAC is expressed in normal mammary gland and maps to 6q24-q25, a recognized breast cancer hot spot on 6q. In the present report, we investigated the possible inactivation of ZAC in breast cancer cell lines and primary tumors. We detected no mutation in ZAC coding region in a panel of 45 breast tumors with allelic imbalance of 6q24-q25. However, a survey of eight breast cancer cell lines showed a deeply reduced (three cell lines) or complete loss of (five cell lines) ZAC expression. Treatment of three of these cell lines with the methylation-interfering agent 5-azacytidine induced ZAC re-expression. In addition, Northern blot and RNase protection assay analysis of ZAC expression in 23 unselected primary breast tumors showed a reduced expression in several samples. Together with its functional properties and chromosomal localization, these findings substantiate ZAC as a good candidate for the tumor suppressor gene on 6q24-q25.


Nature Methods | 2013

FISH-quant: automatic counting of transcripts in 3D FISH images

Florian Mueller; Adrien Senecal; Katjana Tantale; Hervé Marie-Nelly; Nathalie Ly; Olivier Collin; Eugenia Basyuk; Edouard Bertrand; Xavier Darzacq; Christophe Zimmer

Transcription is inherently stochastic even in clonal cell populations 1. Studies at single-cell-single-molecule level enable a quantitative understanding of the underlying regulatory mechanisms 2,3. A widely used technique is single-molecule RNA fluorescence in-situ hybridization (FISH), in which fluorescent probes target the mRNA of interest and individual molecules appear as bright diffraction-limited spots (Fig. 1a,b) 3. Recent experimental progress makes FISH easy to use 4 , but a dedicated image analysis tool is currently missing. Available methods allow counting of isolated mature mRNAs but cannot reliably quantify the dense mRNA aggregates at transcription sites (TS) in three dimensions (3D), particularly of highly transcribing genes 4. We developed FISH-QUANT to close this gap (Supplementary Note 1)


Journal of Cell Biology | 2011

Real-time imaging of cotranscriptional splicing reveals a kinetic model that reduces noise: implications for alternative splicing regulation.

Ute Schmidt; Eugenia Basyuk; Marie-Cécile Robert; Minoru Yoshida; Jean-Philippe Villemin; Didier Auboeuf; Stuart Aitken; Edouard Bertrand

A combination of several rate-limiting steps allows for efficient control of alternative splicing.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Endosomal Trafficking of HIV-1 Gag and Genomic RNAs Regulates Viral Egress

Dorothée Molle; Carolina Segura-Morales; Gregory Camus; Clarisse Berlioz-Torrent; Jørgen Kjems; Eugenia Basyuk; Edouard Bertrand

HIV-1 Gag can assemble and generate virions at the plasma membrane, but it is also present in endosomes where its role remains incompletely characterized. Here, we show that HIV-1 RNAs and Gag are transported on endosomal vesicles positive for TiVamp, a v-SNARE involved in fusion events with the plasma membrane. Inhibition of endosomal traffic did not prevent viral release. However, inhibiting lysosomal degradation induced an accumulation of Gag in endosomes and increased viral production 7-fold, indicating that transport of Gag to lysosomes negatively regulates budding. This also suggested that endosomal Gag-RNA complexes could access retrograde pathways to the cell surface and indeed, depleting cells of TiVamp-reduced viral production. Moreover, inhibition of endosomal transport prevented the accumulation of Gag at sites of cellular contact. HIV-1 Gag could thus generate virions using two pathways, either directly from the plasma membrane or through an endosome-dependent route. Endosomal Gag-RNA complexes may be delivered at specific sites to facilitate cell-to-cell viral transmission.


Nature Communications | 2016

A single-molecule view of transcription reveals convoys of RNA polymerases and multi-scale bursting

Katjana Tantale; Florian Mueller; Alja Kozulic-Pirher; Annick Lesne; Jean-Marc Victor; Marie-Cécile Robert; Serena Capozi; Racha Chouaib; Volker Bäcker; Julio Mateos-Langerak; Xavier Darzacq; Christophe Zimmer; Eugenia Basyuk; Edouard Bertrand

Live-cell imaging has revealed unexpected features of gene expression. Here using improved single-molecule RNA microscopy, we show that synthesis of HIV-1 RNA is achieved by groups of closely spaced polymerases, termed convoys, as opposed to single isolated enzymes. Convoys arise by a Mediator-dependent reinitiation mechanism, which generates a transient but rapid succession of polymerases initiating and escaping the promoter. During elongation, polymerases are spaced by few hundred nucleotides, and physical modelling suggests that DNA torsional stress may maintain polymerase spacing. We additionally observe that the HIV-1 promoter displays stochastic fluctuations on two time scales, which we refer to as multi-scale bursting. Each time scale is regulated independently: Mediator controls minute-scale fluctuation (convoys), while TBP-TATA-box interaction controls sub-hour fluctuations (long permissive/non-permissive periods). A cellular promoter also produces polymerase convoys and displays multi-scale bursting. We propose that slow, TBP-dependent fluctuations are important for phenotypic variability of single cells.


Retrovirology | 2007

A real-time view of the TAR:Tat:P-TEFb complex at HIV-1 transcription sites

Dorothée Molle; Paolo Maiuri; Stéphanie Boireau; Edouard Bertrand; Anna Knezevich; Alessandro Marcello; Eugenia Basyuk

HIV-1 transcription is tightly regulated: silent in long-term latency and highly active in acutely-infected cells. Transcription is activated by the viral protein Tat, which recruits the elongation factor P-TEFb by binding the TAR sequence present in nascent HIV-1 RNAs. In this study, we analyzed the dynamic of the TAR:Tat:P-TEFb complex in living cells, by performing FRAP experiments at HIV-1 transcription sites. Our results indicate that a large fraction of Tat present at these sites is recruited by Cyclin T1. We found that in the presence of Tat, Cdk9 remained bound to nascent HIV-1 RNAs for 71s. In contrast, when transcription was activated by PMA/ionomycin, in the absence of Tat, Cdk9 turned-over rapidly and resided on the HIV-1 promoter for only 11s. Thus, the mechanism of trans-activation determines the residency time of P-TEFb at the HIV-1 gene, possibly explaining why Tat is such a potent transcriptional activator. In addition, we observed that Tat occupied HIV-1 transcription sites for 55s, suggesting that the TAR:Tat:P-TEFb complex dissociates from the polymerase following transcription initiation, and undergoes subsequent cycles of association/dissociation.


RNA | 2014

Stable assembly of HIV-1 export complexes occurs cotranscriptionally

Isabel Nawroth; Florian Mueller; Eugenia Basyuk; Nancy Beerens; Ulrik L. Rahbek; Xavier Darzacq; Edouard Bertrand; Jørgen Kjems; Ute Schmidt

The HIV-1 Rev protein mediates export of unspliced and singly spliced viral transcripts by binding to the Rev response element (RRE) and recruiting the cellular export factor CRM1. Here, we investigated the recruitment of Rev to the transcription sites of HIV-1 reporters that splice either post- or cotranscriptionally. In both cases, we observed that Rev localized to the transcription sites of the reporters and recruited CRM1. Rev and CRM1 remained at the reporter transcription sites when cells were treated with the splicing inhibitor Spliceostatin A (SSA), showing that the proteins associate with RNA prior to or during early spliceosome assembly. Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) revealed that Rev and CRM1 have similar kinetics as the HIV-1 RNA, indicating that Rev, CRM1, and RRE-containing RNAs are released from the site of transcription in one single export complex. These results suggest that cotranscriptional formation of a stable export complex serves as a means to ensure efficient export of unspliced viral RNAs.


Molecular Cancer Research | 2005

The candidate tumor suppressor gene ZAC is involved in keratinocyte differentiation and its expression is lost in basal cell carcinomas

Eugenia Basyuk; Vincent Coulon; Anne Le Digarcher; Marjorie Coisy-Quivy; Jean-Pierre Molès; Alberto Gandarillas; Laurent Journot

ZAC is a zinc finger transcription factor that induces apoptosis and cell cycle arrest in various cell lines. The corresponding gene is maternally imprinted and localized on chromosome 6q24-q25, a region harboring an unidentified tumor suppressor gene for a variety of solid neoplasms. ZAC expression is lost or down-regulated in some breast, ovary, and pituitary tumors and in an in vitro model of ovary epithelial cell transformation. In the present study, we examined ZAC expression in normal skin and found a high expression level in basal keratinocytes and a lower, more heterogeneous, expression in the first suprabasal differentiating layers of epidermis. In vitro, ZAC was up-regulated following induction of keratinocyte differentiation. Conversely, ZAC expression triggered keratinocyte differentiation as indicated by induction of involucrin expression. Interestingly, we found a dramatic loss of ZAC expression in basal cell carcinoma, a neoplasm characterized by a relatively undifferentiated morphology. In contrast, ZAC expression was maintained in squamous cell carcinomas that retain the squamous differentiated phenotype. Altogether, these data suggest a role for ZAC at an early stage of keratinocyte differentiation and further support its role in carcinogenesis.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2016

Visualization of single endogenous polysomes reveals the dynamics of translation in live human cells

Xavier Pichon; Amandine Bastide; Adham Safieddine; Racha Chouaib; Aubin Samacoits; Eugenia Basyuk; Marion Peter; Florian Mueller; Edouard Bertrand

Pichon et al. describe a method to visualize translation of single endogenous mRNPs in live cells and provide evidence for specialized translation factories, as well as measurements of translation elongation rate, ribosome loading, and movements of single polysomes.

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Rémy Bordonné

University of Montpellier

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Laurent Journot

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Katjana Tantale

University of Montpellier

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Carolina Segura-Morales

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Dorothée Molle

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Xavier Darzacq

University of California

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Annick Lesne

University of Montpellier

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