Francina Langa
Pasteur Institute
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Publication
Featured researches published by Francina Langa.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2008
Matthias Lochner; Lucie Peduto; Marie Cherrier; Shinichiro Sawa; Francina Langa; Rosa Varona; Dieter Riethmacher; Mustapha Si-Tahar; James P. Di Santo; Gérard Eberl
The nuclear hormone receptor retinoic acid receptor–related orphan receptor γt (RORγt) is required for the generation of T helper 17 cells expressing the proinflammatory cytokine interleukin (IL)-17. In vivo, however, less than half of RORγt+ T cells express IL-17. We report here that RORγt+ Tαβ cells include Foxp3+ cells that coexist with IL-17–producing RORγt+ Tαβ cells in all tissues examined. The Foxp3+ RORγt+ Tαβ express IL-10 and CCL20, and function as regulatory T cells. Furthermore, the ratio of Foxp3+ to IL-17–producing RORγt+ Tαβ cells remains remarkably constant in mice enduring infection and inflammation. This equilibrium is tuned in favor of IL-10 production by Foxp3 and CCL20, and in favor of IL-17 production by IL-6 and IL-23. In the lung and skin, the largest population of RORγt+ T cells express the γδ T cell receptor and produce the highest levels of IL-17 independently of IL-6. Thus, potentially antagonistic proinflammatory IL-17–producing and regulatory Foxp3+ RORγt+ T cells coexist and are tightly controlled, suggesting that a perturbed equilibrium in RORγt+ T cells might lead to decreased immunoreactivity or, in contrast, to pathological inflammation.
Science | 2010
Shinichiro Sawa; Marie Cherrier; Matthias Lochner; Naoko Satoh-Takayama; Hans Joerg Fehling; Francina Langa; James P. Di Santo; Gérard Eberl
Innate Innit? Innate lymphocytes (ILCs) are a recently described population of immune cells that produce cytokines like those associated with T helper cells, but lack the recombined antigen receptors characteristic of T cells. Again, like some T helper cell lineages, a proportion of ILCs express the transcription factor RORγt. These include lymphoid tissue inducer (LTi) cells required for fetal lymphoid tissue organogenesis and a population of natural killer (NK)–like cells that function in gut immune responses. Sawa et al. (p. 665; see the Perspective by Veldhoen and Withers) wondered whether the RORγt-expressing ILCs all develop from the same progenitor population. Indeed, they found a fetal liver progenitor that gave rise to several phenotypically distinct populations. However, the LTi cells were not progenitors for the NK-like cells. It seems the trajectory of different ILC populations is developmentally regulated, and postnatally ILCs are favored that play a role in intestinal defense before the gut is fully colonized by intestinal microbiota. Immune cells develop to preempt intestinal colonization by microbial symbionts. Lymphoid tissue–inducer (LTi) cells initiate the development of lymphoid tissues through the activation of local stromal cells in a process similar to inflammation. LTi cells express the nuclear hormone receptor RORγt, which also directs the expression of the proinflammatory cytokine interleukin-17 in T cells. We show here that LTi cells are part of a larger family of proinflammatory RORγt+ innate lymphoid cells (ILCs) that differentiate from distinct fetal liver RORγt+ precursors. The fate of RORγt+ ILCs is determined by mouse age, and after birth, favors the generation of cells involved in intestinal homeostasis and defense. Contrary to RORγt+ T cells, however, RORγt+ ILCs develop in the absence of microbiota. Our study indicates that RORγt+ ILCs evolve to preempt intestinal colonization by microbial symbionts.
Nature Medicine | 2012
Sophie Dulauroy; Selene E. Di Carlo; Francina Langa; Gérard Eberl; Lucie Peduto
Profibrotic cells that develop upon injury generate permanent scar tissue and impair organ recovery, though their origin and fate are unclear. Here we show that transient expression of ADAM12 (a disintegrin and metalloprotease 12) identifies a distinct proinflammatory subset of platelet-derived growth factor receptor-α–positive stromal cells that are activated upon acute injury in the muscle and dermis. By inducible genetic fate mapping, we demonstrate in vivo that injury-induced ADAM12+ cells are specific progenitors of a major fraction of collagen-overproducing cells generated during scarring, which are progressively eliminated during healing. Genetic ablation of ADAM12+ cells, or knockdown of ADAM12, is sufficient to limit generation of profibrotic cells and interstitial collagen accumulation. ADAM12+ cells induced upon injury are developmentally distinct from muscle and skin lineage cells and are derived from fetal ADAM12+ cells programmed during vascular wall development. Thus, our data identify injury-activated profibrotic progenitors residing in the perivascular space that can be targeted through ADAM12 to limit tissue scarring.
Nature Genetics | 2006
Sedigheh Delmaghani; Francisco Castillo; Vincent Michel; Michel Leibovici; Asadollah Aghaie; Uri Ron; Lut Van Laer; Nir Ben-Tal; Guy Van Camp; Dominique Weil; Francina Langa; Mark Lathrop; Paul Avan; Christine Petit
Auditory neuropathy is a particular type of hearing impairment in which neural transmission of the auditory signal is impaired, while cochlear outer hair cells remain functional. Here we report on DFNB59, a newly identified gene on chromosome 2q31.1–q31.3 mutated in four families segregating autosomal recessive auditory neuropathy. DFNB59 encodes pejvakin, a 352-residue protein. Pejvakin is a paralog of DFNA5, a protein of unknown function also involved in deafness. By immunohistofluorescence, pejvakin is detected in the cell bodies of neurons of the afferent auditory pathway. Furthermore, Dfnb59 knock-in mice, homozygous for the R183W variant identified in one DFNB59 family, show abnormal auditory brainstem responses indicative of neuronal dysfunction along the auditory pathway. Unlike previously described sensorineural deafness genes, all of which underlie cochlear cell pathologies, DFNB59 is the first human gene implicated in nonsyndromic deafness due to a neuronal defect.
PLOS Biology | 2011
Corinne Grey; Pauline Barthès; Gaëlle Chauveau-Le Friec; Francina Langa; Frédéric Baudat; Bernard de Massy
The nature of the PRDM9 zinc finger domain determines the location of hotspots for meiotic recombination in the genome and promotes local histone H3K4 trimethylation.
Glia | 2000
Minerva Giménez y Ribotta; Francina Langa; Véronique Menet; Alain Privat
In the cerebellum of adult mammals, glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) and vimentin (VIM) are coexpressed in Golgi epithelial cells (GEC), also known as Bergmann glia. In this study we used three transgenic knockout mice (GFAP, VIM and double GFAP and VIM) to analyze the involvement of these proteins in the building of glial filaments and in neuron‐glia interactions. The cerebella of VIM, GFAP, and GFAP/VIM mutant mice were processed by the rapid Golgi method and also for electron microscopy. In VIM mutant mice, Bergmann fibers are hypertrophic with thickened appendages. In the electron microscope they appear as large glial profiles devoid of glial filaments, with embedded dendritic thorns and parallel fiber boutons. In addition, signs of degeneration are observed in Purkinje cells. In GFAP mutant mice, GEC exhibit fine, delicate processes, as those seen in wild‐type animals, however, a large accumulation of lamellae and granular appendages was observed along their surfaces, which came into contact with each other. The electron microscope exhibited fine and scarce astroglial profiles containing some glial filaments, a stunted glia limitans, and the presence of large extracellular spaces. In double mutant mice, the two phenotypes are expressed but appear attenuated, with a total absence of glial filaments and the general appearance of immaturity for GEC. In conclusion, it appears that the absence of each of the proteins yields a specific phenotype and that the defects are not necessarily additive. GLIA 31:69–83, 2000.
PLOS Genetics | 2009
Tomoji Mashimo; Ouadah Hadjebi; Fabiola Amair-Pinedo; Toshiko Tsurumi; Francina Langa; Tadao Serikawa; Constantino Sotelo; Jean-Louis Guénet; Jose Luis Rosa
The HERC gene family encodes proteins with two characteristic domains: HECT and RCC1-like. Proteins with HECT domains have been described to function as ubiquitin ligases, and those that contain RCC1-like domains have been reported to function as GTPases regulators. These two activities are essential in a number of important cellular processes such as cell cycle, cell signaling, and membrane trafficking. Mutations affecting these domains have been found associated with retinitis pigmentosa, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, and cancer. In humans, six HERC genes have been reported which encode two subgroups of HERC proteins: large (HERC1-2) and small (HERC3-6). The giant HERC1 protein was the first to be identified. It has been involved in membrane trafficking and cell proliferation/growth through its interactions with clathrin, M2-pyruvate kinase, and TSC2 proteins. Mutations affecting other members of the HERC family have been found to be associated with sterility and growth retardation. Here, we report the characterization of a recessive mutation named tambaleante, which causes progressive Purkinje cell degeneration leading to severe ataxia with reduced growth and lifespan in homozygous mice aged over two months. We mapped this mutation in mouse chromosome 9 and then performed positional cloning. We found a G⇔A transition at position 1448, causing a Gly to Glu substitution (Gly483Glu) in the highly conserved N-terminal RCC1-like domain of the HERC1 protein. Successful transgenic rescue, with either a mouse BAC containing the normal copy of Herc1 or with the human HERC1 cDNA, validated our findings. Histological and biochemical studies revealed extensive autophagy associated with an increase of the mutant protein level and a decrease of mTOR activity. Our observations concerning this first mutation in the Herc1 gene contribute to the functional annotation of the encoded E3 ubiquitin ligase and underline the crucial and unexpected role of this protein in Purkinje cell physiology.
PLOS Biology | 2014
Costis Papanayotou; Ataaillah Benhaddou; Anne Camus; Aitana Perea-Gomez; Alice Jouneau; Valérie Mezger; Francina Langa; Sascha Ott; Délara Sabéran-Djoneidi; Jérôme Collignon
HBE, a newly discovered enhancer element, mediates the influence of pluripotency factors and Activin/Nodal signaling on early Nodal expression in the mouse embryo, and controls the activation of later-acting Nodal enhancers.
Oncogene | 2001
Francina Langa; Isabelle Lafon; Sandrine Vandormael-Pournin; Michel Vidaud; Charles Babinet; Dominique Morello
c-Myc is a protooncogene involved in the control of cellular proliferation, differentiation and apoptosis. Like many other early response genes, regulation of c-myc expression is mainly controlled at the level of mRNA stability. Multiple cis-acting destabilizing elements have been described that are located both in the protein-coding region and in the 3′ untranslated region (3′ UTR). However, it is not known when they function during development and whether they act as partly redundant or independent elements to regulate c-myc mRNA level of expression. To begin to address these questions, we created a series of c-myc alleles modified in the 3′ UTR, using homologous recombination and the Cre/loxP system, and analysed the consequences of these modifications in ES cells and transgenic animals. We found that deletion of the complete 3′ UTR, including runs of Us and AU-rich elements proposed, on the basis of cell-culture assays, to be involved in the control of c-myc mRNA stability, did not alter the steady-state level of c-myc mRNA in any of the various situations analysed in vivo. Moreover, mice homozygous for the 3′ UTR-deleted gene were perfectly healthy and fertile. Our results therefore strongly suggest that the 3′ UTR of c-myc mRNA does not play a major role in the developmental control of c-myc expression.
Mechanisms of Development | 2007
Vincent Hyenne; Céline Souilhol; Michel Cohen-Tannoudji; Silvia Cereghini; Christine Petit; Francina Langa; Bernard Maro; Marie-Christine Simmler
Vezatin, a protein associated to adherens junctions in epithelial cells, is already expressed in mouse oocytes and during pre-implantation development. Using a floxed strategy to generate a vezatin-null allele, we show that the lack of zygotic vezatin is embryonic lethal, indicating that vezatin is an essential gene. Homozygous null embryos are able to elicit a decidual response but as early as day 6.0 post-coitum mutant implantation sites are devoid of embryonic structures. Mutant blastocysts are morphologically normal, but only half of them are able to hatch upon in vitro culture and the blastocyst outgrowths formed after 3.5 days in culture exhibit severe abnormalities, in particular disrupted intercellular adhesion and clear signs of cellular degeneration. Notably, the junctional proteins E-cadherin and beta-catenin are delocalized and not observed at the plasma membrane anymore. These in vitro observations reinforce the idea that homozygous vezatin-null mutants die at the time of implantation because of a defect in intercellular adhesion. Together these results indicate that the absence of zygotic vezatin is deleterious for the implantation process, most likely because cadherin-dependent intercellular adhesion is impaired in late blastocysts when the maternal vezatin is lost.