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Dive into the research topics where Florian Guillou is active.

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Featured researches published by Florian Guillou.


Biology of Reproduction | 2007

Proliferation of Adult Sertoli Cells Following Conditional Knockout of the Gap Junctional Protein GJA1 (Connexin 43) in Mice

Santhi Sridharan; Liz Simon; Daryl D. Meling; Daniel G. Cyr; David E. Gutstein; Glenn I. Fishman; Florian Guillou; Paul S. Cooke

Abstract GJA1 (also known and referred to here as connexin 43 and abbreviated CX43) is the predominant testicular gap junction protein, and CX43 may regulate Sertoli cell maturation and spermatogenesis. We hypothesized that lack of CX43 would inhibit Sertoli cell differentiation and extend proliferation. To test this, a Sertoli cell-specific Cx43 knockout (SC-Cx43 KO) mouse was generated using Cre-lox technology. Immunohistochemistry indicated that CX43 was not expressed in the Sertoli cells of SC-Cx43 KO mice, but was normal in organs such as the heart. Testicular weight was reduced by 41% and 76% in SC-Cx43 KO mice at 20 and 60 days, respectively, vs. wild-type (wt) mice. Seminiferous tubules of SC-Cx43 KO mice contained only Sertoli cells and actively proliferating early spermatogonia. Sertoli cells normally cease proliferation at 2 wk of age in mice and become terminally differentiated. However, proliferating Sertoli cells were present in SC-Cx43 KO but not wt mice at 20 and 60 days of age. Thyroid hormone receptor alpha (THRA) is high in proliferating Sertoli cells, then declines sharply in adulthood. Thra mRNA expression was increased in 20-day SC-Cx43 KO vs. wt mice, and it showed a trend toward an increase in 60-day mice, indicating that loss of CX43 in Sertoli cells inhibited their maturation. In conclusion, we have generated mice lacking CX43 in Sertoli cells but not other tissues. Our data indicate that CX43 in Sertoli cells is essential for spermatogenesis but not spermatogonial maintenance/proliferation. SC-Cx43 KO mice showed continued Sertoli cell proliferation and delayed maturation in adulthood, indicating that CX43 plays key roles in Sertoli cell development.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

The Wilms tumor gene, Wt1, is required for Sox9 expression and maintenance of tubular architecture in the developing testis

Fei Gao; Sourindra Maiti; Nargis Alam; Zhen Zhang; Jian Min Deng; Richard R. Behringer; Charlotte Lécureuil; Florian Guillou; Vicki Huff

Mutation of the transcription factor and tumor suppressor gene WT1 results in a range of genitourinary anomalies in humans, including 46,XY gonadal dysgenesis, indicating that WT1 plays a critical role in sex determination. However, because knockout of Wt1 in mice results in apoptosis of the genital ridge, it is unknown whether WT1 is required for testis development after the initial steps of sex determination. To address this question, we generated a mouse strain carrying a Wt1 conditional knockout allele and ablated Wt1 function specifically in Sertoli cells by embryonic day 14.5, several days after testis determination. Wt1 knockout resulted in disruption of developing seminiferous tubules and subsequent progressive loss of Sertoli cells and germ cells such that postnatal mutant testes were almost completely devoid of these cell types and were severely hypoplastic. Thus, Wt1 is essential for the maintenance of Sertoli cells and seminiferous tubules in the developing testes. Of particular note, expression of the testis-determining gene Sox9 in mutant Sertoli cells was turned off at embryonic day 14.5 after Wt1 ablation, suggesting that WT1 regulates Sox9, either directly or indirectly, after Sry expression ceases. Our data, along with previous work demonstrating the role of Wt1 at early stages of gonadal development, thus indicate that Wt1 is essential at multiple steps in testicular development.


Oncogene | 2001

The ERK-dependent signalling is stage-specifically modulated by FSH, during primary Sertoli cell maturation

Pascale Crépieux; Sébastien Marion; Nadine Martinat; Véronique Fafeur; Yves Le Vern; Dominique Kerboeuf; Florian Guillou; Eric Reiter

Primary cultures of Sertoli cells provide an interesting model to study how signalling pathways induced by a single hormone in a single cell type evolve, depending on the developmental stage. In vivo, follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) induces proliferation of Sertoli cells in neonate and controls the subsequent differentiation of the entire population. Molecular mechanisms underlying Sertoli cell pleiotropic responses to FSH have long been investigated. But to date, only cAMP-dependent kinase (PKA) activation has been reported to account for most FSH biological activities in male. Here, we demonstrate that FSH activates the ERK MAP kinase pathway following dual coupling of the FSH-R both to Gs and to Gi heterotrimeric proteins, in a PKA- and also Src-dependent manner. This activation is required for FSH-induced proliferation of Sertoli cells isolated 5 days after birth. Consistently, we show that the ERK-mediated FSH mitogenic effect triggers upregulation of cyclin D1. In sharp contrast, at 19 days after birth, as cells proceed through their differentiation program, the ERK pathway is dramatically inhibited by FSH treatment. Taken together, these results show that FSH can exert opposite effects on the ERK signalling cascade during the maturation process of Sertoli cells. Thus, signalling modules triggered by the FSH-R evolve dynamically throughout development of FSH natural target cells.


Developmental Biology | 2009

Sertoli cell Dicer is essential for spermatogenesis in mice

Marilena D. Papaioannou; Jean-Luc Pitetti; Seungil Ro; Chanjae Park; Florence Aubry; Olivier Schaad; Charles E. Vejnar; Françoise Kühne; Patrick Descombes; Evgeny M. Zdobnov; Michael T. McManus; Florian Guillou; Brian D. Harfe; Wei Yan; Bernard Jégou; Serge Nef

Spermatogenesis requires intact, fully competent Sertoli cells. Here, we investigate the functions of Dicer, an RNaseIII endonuclease required for microRNA and small interfering RNA biogenesis, in mouse Sertoli cell function. We show that selective ablation of Dicer in Sertoli cells leads to infertility due to complete absence of spermatozoa and progressive testicular degeneration. The first morphological alterations appear already at postnatal day 5 and correlate with a severe impairment of the prepubertal spermatogenic wave, due to defective Sertoli cell maturation and incapacity to properly support meiosis and spermiogenesis. Importantly, we find several key genes known to be essential for Sertoli cell function to be significantly down-regulated in neonatal testes lacking Dicer in Sertoli cells. Overall, our results reveal novel essential roles played by the Dicer-dependent pathway in mammalian reproductive function, and thus pave the way for new insights into human infertility.


Development | 2008

Wt1 negatively regulates β-catenin signaling during testis development

Hao Chang; Fei Gao; Florian Guillou; Makoto M. Taketo; Vicki Huff; Richard R. Behringer

β-Catenin, as an important effector of the canonical Wnt signaling pathway and as a regulator of cell adhesion, has been demonstrated to be involved in multiple developmental processes and tumorigenesis. β-Catenin expression was found mainly on the Sertoli cell membrane starting from embryonic day 15.5 in the developing testes. However, its potential role in Sertoli cells during testis formation has not been examined. To determine the function of β-catenin in Sertoli cells during testis formation, we either deleted β-catenin or expressed a constitutively active form ofβ -catenin in Sertoli cells. We found that deletion caused no detectable abnormalities. However, stabilization caused severe phenotypes, including testicular cord disruption, germ cell depletion and inhibition of Müllerian duct regression. β-Catenin stabilization caused changes in Sertoli cell identity and misregulation of inter-Sertoli cell contacts. As Wt1 conditional knockout in Sertoli cells causes similar phenotypes to our stabilized β-catenin mutants, we then investigated the relationship of Wt1 and β-catenin in Sertoli cells and found Wt1 inhibits β-catenin signaling in these cells during testis development. Wt1 deletion resulted in upregulation of β-catenin expression in Sertoli cells both in vitro and in vivo. Our study indicates that Sertoli cell expression of β-catenin is dispensable for testis development. However, the suppression of β-catenin signaling in these cells is essential for proper testis formation and Wt1 is a negative regulator of β-catenin signaling during this developmental process.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1983

Purification of equine gonadotropins and comparative study of their acid-dissociation and receptor-binding specificity

Florian Guillou; Yves Combarnous

Abstract A method for the simultaneous purification of luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) from equine pituitaries is briefly described. Different forms of each hormone were obtained. The total yield of LH was 24.2 mg·kg −1 with a recovery of 22% and the yield of FSH was 26 mg·kg −1 with a recovery of 34%. The specific activities of both hormones, measured in homologous equine radio-receptor assays are equal to or higher than those of the preparations described so far. In all species studied so far the acid-dissociation curves of LH and FSH are similar; this is an agreement with the view that the binding of the common α-subunit and the specific β-subunits involves polypeptide regions which are identical in both hormones. In contrast, the acid-dissociation p K a of equine LH was found to be considerably lower (3.9) than that of equine FSH (5.8). The equine gonadotropins exhibit a much lower specificity with receptors of a porcine testicular fraction compared with an equine fraction. Equine LH exhibited a binding activity on FSH receptors from a porcine testicular fraction equal to 20% that of equine FSH instead of only 1% for an equine binding fraction. Similarly, all the equine FSH preparations tested exhibited a five-fold higher binding-activity on porcine LH receptors than on equine LH receptors. In the porcine system, pregnant mare serum gonadotropin behaved like equine LH towards LH and FSH receptors. In contrast, on equine binding fraction, pregnant mare serum gonadotropin was only 4% as active as equine LH and was devoid of FSH activity. All the data we have obtained are consistent with the ‘negative specificity’ model we proposed recently.


Developmental Biology | 2009

Testis cord differentiation after the sex determination stage is independent of Sox9 but fails in the combined absence of Sox9 and Sox8

Francisco Barrionuevo; Ina Georg; Harry Scherthan; Charlotte Lécureuil; Florian Guillou; Michael Wegner; Gerd Scherer

Sox9 and Sox8 are transcription factors expressed in embryonic and postnatal Sertoli cells of the mouse testis. Sox9 inactivation prior to the sex determination stage leads to complete XY sex reversal. In contrast, there is normal embryonic testis development in Sox8 mutants which are initially fertile, but later develop progressive seminiferous tubule failure and infertility. To determine whether Sox9 is required for testis development after the initial steps of sex determination, we crossed Sox9(flox) mice with an AMH-Cre transgenic line thereby completely deleting Sox9 in Sertoli cells by E14.0. Conditional Sox9 null mutants show normal embryonic testis development and are initially fertile, but, like Sox8(-/-) mutants, become sterile from dysfunctional spermatogenesis at about 5 months. To see whether Sox8 may compensate for the absence of Sox9 during embryonic testis differentiation, we generated a Sox9 conditional knockout on a Sox8 mutant background. In the double mutants, differentiation of testis cords into seminiferous testis tubules ceases after P6 in the absence of one Sox8 allele, and after P0 in the absence of both Sox8 alleles, leading to complete primary infertility. Sox9,Sox8 double nullizygous testes show upregulation of early ovary-specific markers and downregulation of Sertoli intercellular junctions at E15.5. Their very low Amh levels still cause complete regression of the Müllerian duct but with reduced penetrance. This study shows that testis cord differentiation is independent of Sox9, and that concerted Sox9 and Sox8 function in post E14.0 Sertoli cells is essential for the maintenance of testicular function.


The EMBO Journal | 2006

Prepubertal testis development relies on retinoic acid but not rexinoid receptors in Sertoli cells

Nadège Vernet; Christine Dennefeld; Florian Guillou; Pierre Chambon; Norbert B. Ghyselinck; Manuel Mark

Sertoli cells (SC) are instrumental to stem spermatogonia differentiation, a process that critically depends on retinoic acid (RA). We show here that selective ablation of RA receptor alpha (RARalpha) gene in mouse SC, singly (RaraSer−/− mutation) or in combination with RARbeta and RARgamma genes (Rara/b/gSer−/− mutation), abolishes cyclical gene expression in these cells. It additionally induces testis degeneration and delays spermatogonial expression of Stra8, two hallmarks of RA deficiency. As identical defects are generated upon inactivation of RARalpha in the whole organism, our data demonstrate that all the functions exerted by RARalpha in male reproduction are Sertoli cell‐autonomous. They further indicate that RARalpha is a master regulator of the cyclical activity of SC and controls paracrine pathways required for spermatogonia differentiation and germ cell survival. Most importantly, we show that the ablation of all RXR (alpha, beta and gamma isotypes) in SC does not recapitulate the phenotype generated upon ablation of all three RARs, thereby providing the first evidence that RARs exert functions in vivo independently of RXRs.


Molecular Endocrinology | 2013

An Essential Role for Insulin and IGF1 Receptors in Regulating Sertoli Cell Proliferation, Testis Size, and FSH Action in Mice

Jean-Luc Pitetti; Pierre Calvel; Céline Zimmermann; Marilena D. Papaioannou; Florence Aubry; Christopher R. Cederroth; Françoise Urner; Betty Fumel; Michel Crausaz; Mylène Docquier; Pedro Luis Herrera; François P. Pralong; Marc Germond; Florian Guillou; Bernard Jégou; Serge Nef

Testis size and sperm production are directly correlated to the total number of adult Sertoli cells (SCs). Although the establishment of an adequate number of SCs is crucial for future male fertility, the identification and characterization of the factors regulating SC survival, proliferation, and maturation remain incomplete. To investigate whether the IGF system is required for germ cell (GC) and SC development and function, we inactivated the insulin receptor (Insr), the IGF1 receptor (Igf1r), or both receptors specifically in the GC lineage or in SCs. Whereas ablation of insulin/IGF signaling appears dispensable for GCs and spermatogenesis, adult testes of mice lacking both Insr and Igf1r in SCs (SC-Insr;Igf1r) displayed a 75% reduction in testis size and daily sperm production as a result of a reduced proliferation rate of immature SCs during the late fetal and early neonatal testicular period. In addition, in vivo analyses revealed that FSH requires the insulin/IGF signaling pathway to mediate its proliferative effects on immature SCs. Collectively, these results emphasize the essential role played by growth factors of the insulin family in regulating the final number of SCs, testis size, and daily sperm output. They also indicate that the insulin/IGF signaling pathway is required for FSH-mediated SC proliferation.


Endocrinology | 2008

Spermatogenesis and Sertoli cell activity in mice lacking Sertoli cell receptors for follicle stimulating hormone and androgen

Margaret H. Abel; Paul J. Baker; Harry M. Charlton; Ana Monteiro; Guido Verhoeven; K. De Gendt; Florian Guillou; Peter J. O'Shaughnessy

Spermatogenesis in the adult male depends on the action of FSH and androgen. Ablation of either hormone has deleterious effects on Sertoli cell function and the progression of germ cells through spermatogenesis. In this study we generated mice lacking both FSH receptors (FSHRKO) and androgen receptors on the Sertoli cell (SCARKO) to examine how FSH and androgen combine to regulate Sertoli cell function and spermatogenesis. Sertoli cell number in FSHRKO-SCARKO mice was reduced by about 50% but was not significantly different from FSHRKO mice. In contrast, total germ cell number in FSHRKO-SCARKO mice was reduced to 2% of control mice (and 20% of SCARKO mice) due to a failure to progress beyond early meiosis. Measurement of Sertoli cell-specific transcript levels showed that about a third were independent of hormonal action on the Sertoli cell, whereas others were predominantly androgen dependent or showed redundant control by FSH and androgen. Results show that FSH and androgen act through redundant, additive, and synergistic regulation of spermatogenesis and Sertoli cell activity. In addition, the Sertoli cell retains a significant capacity for activity, which is independent of direct hormonal regulation.

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Dive into the Florian Guillou's collaboration.

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Pascale Crépieux

François Rabelais University

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Nadine Martinat

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Yves Combarnous

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Isabelle Fontaine

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Elodie Kara

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Sébastien Marion

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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