Fabienne Schaller
Aix-Marseille University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Fabienne Schaller.
Biological Psychiatry | 2015
Hamid Meziane; Fabienne Schaller; Sylvian Bauer; Claude Villard; Valéry Matarazzo; Fabrice Riet; Gilles Guillon; Daniel Lafitte; Michel G. Desarménien; Maithé Tauber; Françoise Muscatelli
BACKGROUND Mutations of MAGEL2 have been reported in patients presenting with autism, and loss of MAGEL2 is also associated with Prader-Willi syndrome, a neurodevelopmental genetic disorder. This study aimed to determine the behavioral phenotype of Magel2-deficient adult mice, to characterize the central oxytocin (OT) system of these mutant mice, and to test the curative effect of a peripheral OT treatment just after birth. METHODS We assessed the social and cognitive behavior of Magel2-deficient mice, analyzed the OT system of mutant mice treated or not by a postnatal administration of OT, and determined the effect of this treatment on the brain. RESULTS Magel2 inactivation induces a deficit in social recognition and social interaction and a reduced learning ability in adult male mice. In these mice, we reveal anatomical and functional modifications of the OT system and show that these defects change from birth to adulthood. Daily administration of OT in the first postnatal week was sufficient to prevent deficits in social behavior and learning abilities in adult mutant male mice. We show that this OT treatment partly restores a normal OT system. Thus, we report that an alteration of the OT system around birth has long-term consequences on behavior and on cognition. Importantly, an acute OT treatment of Magel2-deficient pups has a curative effect. CONCLUSIONS Our study reveals that OT plays a crucial role in setting social behaviors during a period just after birth. An early OT treatment in this critical period could be a novel therapeutic approach for the treatment of neurodevelopmental disorders such as Prader-Willi syndrome and autism.
Science Signaling | 2015
Perrine Friedel; Kristopher T. Kahle; Jinwei Zhang; Nicholas T. Hertz; Lucie I. Pisella; Emmanuelle Buhler; Fabienne Schaller; JingJing Duan; Arjun Khanna; Paul Bishop; Kevan M. Shokat; Igor Medina
Immature neurons need WNK1-dependent phosphorylation of KCC2 to prevent a premature switch in the Cl− gradient and the effect of GABA. Keeping immature neurons excited After birth, signaling by the neurotransmitter GABA in the brain switches from excitatory to inhibitory. GABA mediates both the excitatory and inhibitory responses by binding to ligand-gated ion channels that conduct Cl−. Whether opening these channels triggers hyperpolarization (inhibition) or depolarization (excitation) depends on the concentration of Cl− in neurons. Friedel et al. identified phosphorylation events in the K+-Cl− cotransporter KCC2, which depended on the activity of the kinase WNK1, inhibited KCC2 activity, and contributed to the depolarizing effect of GABA-mediated signaling in immature rat neurons by maintaining high internal Cl− concentration. This regulatory mechanism has implications for the normal developmental excitatory-to-inhibitory GABA switch and neurodevelopmental diseases, such as autism, epilepsy, and spasticity. Activation of Cl−-permeable γ-aminobutyric acid type A (GABAA) receptors elicits synaptic inhibition in mature neurons but excitation in immature neurons. This developmental “switch” in the GABA function depends on a postnatal decrease in intraneuronal Cl− concentration mediated by KCC2, a Cl−-extruding K+-Cl− cotransporter. We showed that the serine-threonine kinase WNK1 [with no lysine (K)] forms a physical complex with KCC2 in the developing mouse brain. Dominant-negative mutation, genetic depletion, or chemical inhibition of WNK1 in immature neurons triggered a hyperpolarizing shift in GABA activity by enhancing KCC2-mediated Cl− extrusion. This increase in KCC2 activity resulted from reduced inhibitory phosphorylation of KCC2 at two C-terminal threonines, Thr906 and Thr1007. Phosphorylation of both Thr906 and Thr1007 was increased in immature versus mature neurons. Together, these data provide insight into the mechanism regulating Cl− homeostasis in immature neurons, and suggest that WNK1-regulated changes in KCC2 phosphorylation contribute to the developmental excitatory-to-inhibitory GABA sequence.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2012
Valéry Matarazzo; Fabienne Schaller; Emmanuelle Nédélec; Alexandre Benani; Luc Pénicaud; Françoise Muscatelli; Emmanuel Moyse; Sylvian Bauer
Leptin is an adipocyte-derived hormone that controls energy balance by acting primarily in the CNS, but its action is lost in common forms of obesity due to central leptin resistance. One potential mechanism for such leptin resistance is an increased hypothalamic expression of Suppressor of cytokine signaling 3 (Socs3), a feedback inhibitor of the Jak-Stat pathway that prevents Stat3 activation. Ample studies have confirmed the important role of Socs3 in leptin resistance and obesity. However, the degree to which Socs3 participates in the regulation of energy homeostasis in nonobese conditions remains largely undetermined. In this study, using adult mice maintained under standard diet, we demonstrate that Socs3 deficiency in the mediobasal hypothalamus (MBH) reduces food intake, protects against body weight gain, and limits adiposity, suggesting that Socs3 is necessary for normal body weight maintenance. Mechanistically, MBH Socs3-deficient mice display increased hindbrain sensitivity to endogenous, meal-related satiety signals, mediated by oxytocin signaling. Thus, oxytocin signaling likely mediates the effect of hypothalamic leptin on satiety circuits of the caudal brainstem. This provides an anatomical substrate for the effect of leptin on meal size, and more generally, a mechanism for how the brain controls short-term food intake as a function of the energetic stores available in the organism to maintain energy homeostasis. Any dysfunction in this pathway could potentially lead to overeating and obesity.
PLOS Genetics | 2013
Anne Rieusset; Fabienne Schaller; Unga A. Unmehopa; Valéry Matarazzo; Françoise Watrin; Matthias Linke; Béatrice Georges; Jocelyn M. Bischof; Femke Dijkstra; Monique Bloemsma; Severine Corby; François Michel; Rachel Wevrick; Ulrich Zechner; Dick F. Swaab; Keith Dudley; Laurent Bezin; Françoise Muscatelli
Genomic imprinting is a process that causes genes to be expressed from one allele only according to parental origin, the other allele being silent. Diseases can arise when the normally active alleles are not expressed. In this context, low level of expression of the normally silent alleles has been considered as genetic noise although such expression has never been further studied. Prader-Willi Syndrome (PWS) is a neurodevelopmental disease involving imprinted genes, including NDN, which are only expressed from the paternally inherited allele, with the maternally inherited allele silent. We present the first in-depth study of the low expression of a normally silent imprinted allele, in pathological context. Using a variety of qualitative and quantitative approaches and comparing wild-type, heterozygous and homozygous mice deleted for Ndn, we show that, in absence of the paternal Ndn allele, the maternal Ndn allele is expressed at an extremely low level with a high degree of non-genetic heterogeneity. The level of this expression is sex-dependent and shows transgenerational epigenetic inheritance. In about 50% of mutant mice, this expression reduces birth lethality and severity of the breathing deficiency, correlated with a reduction in the loss of serotonergic neurons. In wild-type brains, the maternal Ndn allele is never expressed. However, using several mouse models, we reveal a competition between non-imprinted Ndn promoters which results in monoallelic (paternal or maternal) Ndn expression, suggesting that Ndn allelic exclusion occurs in the absence of imprinting regulation. Importantly, specific expression of the maternal NDN allele is also detected in post-mortem brain samples of PWS individuals. Our data reveal an unexpected epigenetic flexibility of PWS imprinted genes that could be exploited to reactivate the functional but dormant maternal alleles in PWS. Overall our results reveal high non-genetic heterogeneity between genetically identical individuals that might underlie the variability of the phenotype.
Cerebral Cortex | 2018
Baptiste Riffault; Nazim Kourdougli; Camille Dumon; Nadine Ferrand; Emmanuelle Buhler; Fabienne Schaller; Caroline Chambon; Claudio Rivera; Jean-Luc Gaiarsa; Christophe Porcher
The brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) is synthesized as a precursor, namely proBDNF, which can be processed into mature BDNF (mBDNF). Evidences suggest that proBDNF signaling through p75NTR may account for the emergence of neurological disorders. These findings support the view that the relative availability of mBDNF and proBDNF forms is an important mechanism underlying brain circuit formation and cognitive functions. Here we describe novel insights into the proBDNF/p75NTR mechanisms and function in vivo in modulating neuronal circuit and synaptic plasticity during the first postnatal weeks in rats. Our results showed that increased proBDNF/p75NTR signaling during development maintains a depolarizing γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) response in a KCC2-dependent manner in mature neuronal cells. This resulted in altered excitation/inhibition balance and enhanced neuronal network activity. The enhanced proBDNF/p75NTR signaling ultimately led to increased seizure susceptibility that was abolished by in vivo injection of function blocking p75NTR antibody. Altogether, our study shed new light on how proBDNF/p75NTR signaling can orchestrate the GABA excitatory/inhibitory developmental sequence leading to depolarizing and excitatory actions of GABA in adulthood and subsequent epileptic disorders.
PLOS ONE | 2016
Robin Cloarec; Sylvian Bauer; Hervé Luche; Emmanuelle Buhler; Emilie Pallesi-Pocachard; Manal Salmi; Sandra Courtens; Annick Massacrier; Pierre Grenot; Natacha Teissier; Françoise Watrin; Fabienne Schaller; Homa Adle-Biassette; Pierre Gressens; Marie Malissen; Thomas Stamminger; Daniel N. Streblow; Nadine Bruneau; Pierre Szepetowski
Background Congenital cytomegalovirus infections are a leading cause of neurodevelopmental disorders in human and represent a major health care and socio-economical burden. In contrast with this medical importance, the pathophysiological events remain poorly known. Murine models of brain cytomegalovirus infection, mostly neonatal, have brought recent insights into the possible pathogenesis, with convergent evidence for the alteration and possible involvement of brain immune cells. Objectives and Methods In order to confirm and expand those findings, particularly concerning the early developmental stages following infection of the fetal brain, we have created a model of in utero cytomegalovirus infection in the developing rat brain. Rat cytomegalovirus was injected intraventricularly at embryonic day 15 (E15) and the brains analyzed at various stages until the first postnatal day, using a combination of gene expression analysis, immunohistochemistry and multicolor flow cytometry experiments. Results Rat cytomegalovirus infection was increasingly seen in various brain areas including the choroid plexi and the ventricular and subventricular areas and was prominently detected in CD45low/int, CD11b+ microglial cells, in CD45high, CD11b+ cells of the myeloid lineage including macrophages, and in CD45+, CD11b– lymphocytes and non-B non-T cells. In parallel, rat cytomegalovirus infection of the developing rat brain rapidly triggered a cascade of pathophysiological events comprising: chemokines upregulation, including CCL2-4, 7 and 12; infiltration by peripheral cells including B-cells and monocytes at E17 and P1, and T-cells at P1; and microglia activation at E17 and P1. Conclusion In line with previous findings in neonatal murine models and in human specimen, our study further suggests that neuroimmune alterations might play critical roles in the early stages following cytomegalovirus infection of the brain in utero. Further studies are now needed to determine which role, whether favorable or detrimental, those putative double-edge swords events actually play.
Cerebral Cortex | 2018
Fanny Sandrine Martineau; Surajit Sahu; Vanessa Plantier; Emmanuelle Buhler; Fabienne Schaller; Lauriane Fournier; Geneviève Chazal; Hiroshi Kawasaki; Alfonso Represa; Françoise Watrin; Jean-Bernard Manent
Abstract The neocortex is a 6-layered laminated structure with a precise anatomical and functional organization ensuring proper function. Laminar positioning of cortical neurons, as determined by termination of neuronal migration, is a key determinant of their ability to assemble into functional circuits. However, the exact contribution of laminar placement to dendrite morphogenesis and synapse formation remains unclear. Here we manipulated the laminar position of cortical neurons by knocking down doublecortin (Dcx), a crucial effector of migration, and show that misplaced neurons fail to properly form dendrites, spines, and functional glutamatergic and GABAergic synapses. We further show that knocking down Dcx in properly positioned neurons induces similar but milder defects, suggesting that the laminar misplacement is the primary cause of altered neuronal development. Thus, the specific laminar environment of their fated layers is crucial for the maturation of cortical neurons, and influences their functional integration into developing cortical circuits.
eLife | 2017
Valéry Matarazzo; Laura Caccialupi; Fabienne Schaller; Yuri Shvarev; Nazim Kourdougli; Alessandra Bertoni; Clément Menuet; Nicolas Voituron; Evan S. Deneris; Patricia Gaspar; Laurent Bezin; Pascale Durbec; Gérard Hilaire; Françoise Muscatelli
Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) is a genetic neurodevelopmental disorder that presents with hypotonia and respiratory distress in neonates. The Necdin-deficient mouse is the only model that reproduces the respiratory phenotype of PWS (central apnea and blunted response to respiratory challenges). Here, we report that Necdin deletion disturbs the migration of serotonin (5-HT) neuronal precursors, leading to altered global serotonergic neuroarchitecture and increased spontaneous firing of 5-HT neurons. We show an increased expression and activity of 5-HT Transporter (SERT/Slc6a4) in 5-HT neurons leading to an increase of 5-HT uptake. In Necdin-KO pups, the genetic deletion of Slc6a4 or treatment with Fluoxetine, a 5-HT reuptake inhibitor, restored normal breathing. Unexpectedly, Fluoxetine administration was associated with respiratory side effects in wild-type animals. Overall, our results demonstrate that an increase of SERT activity is sufficient to cause the apneas in Necdin-KO pups, and that fluoxetine may offer therapeutic benefits to PWS patients with respiratory complications.
Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2017
Valerio Conti; Aurelie Carabalona; Emilie Pallesi-Pocachard; Richard J. Leventer; Fabienne Schaller; Elena Parrini; Agathe A. Deparis; Françoise Watrin; Emmanuelle Buhler; Francesca Novara; Stefano Lise; Alistair T. Pagnamenta; Usha Kini; Jenny C. Taylor; Orsetta Zuffardi; Alfonso Represa; David Antony Keays; Renzo Guerrini; Antonio Falace; Carlos Cardoso
Birth defects that involve the cerebral cortex - also known as malformations of cortical development (MCD) - are important causes of intellectual disability and account for 20-40% of drug-resistant epilepsy in childhood. High-resolution brain imaging has facilitated in vivo identification of a large group of MCD phenotypes. Despite the advances in brain imaging, genomic analysis and generation of animal models, a straightforward workflow to systematically prioritize candidate genes and to test functional effects of putative mutations is missing. To overcome this problem, an experimental strategy enabling the identification of novel causative genes for MCD was developed and validated. This strategy is based on identifying candidate genomic regions or genes via array-CGH or whole-exome sequencing and characterizing the effects of their inactivation or of overexpression of specific mutations in developing rodent brains via in utero electroporation. This approach led to the identification of the C6orf70 gene, encoding for a putative vesicular protein, to the pathogenesis of periventricular nodular heterotopia, a MCD caused by defective neuronal migration.
Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience | 2018
Robin Cloarec; Sylvian Bauer; Natacha Teissier; Fabienne Schaller; Hervé Luche; Sandra Courtens; Manal Salmi; Vanessa Pauly; Emilie Bois; Emilie Pallesi-Pocachard; Emmanuelle Buhler; François Michel; Pierre Gressens; Marie Malissen; Thomas Stamminger; Daniel N. Streblow; Nadine Bruneau; Pierre Szepetowski