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Dive into the research topics where François Tronche is active.

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Featured researches published by François Tronche.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2009

Conditional Inactivation of Androgen Receptor Gene in the Nervous System: Effects on Male Behavioral and Neuroendocrine Responses

Kalina Raskin; Karel De Gendt; Anne Duittoz; Philippe Liere; Guido Verhoeven; François Tronche; Sakina Mhaouty-Kodja

Testosterone (T) profoundly influences central sexual differentiation and functions. In the brain, T signals either directly through androgen receptor (AR) or indirectly through estrogen receptor (ER) following aromatization into E2 (17-β-estradiol). As T, through AR, also controls peripheral male sexual differentiation, the relative contribution of central AR in T-mediated regulation of behavioral and neuroendocrine responses still remains unclear. To address this question, we generated, by using Cre-loxP technology, mice selectively lacking AR expression in the nervous system. The mutant male urogenital tract was normally developed, and mice were able to produce offspring. Nonetheless, sexual motivation and performance as well as aggressive behaviors were affected. Only a low percentage of males displayed a complete sexual behavior and offensive attacks. The latency to show masculine behaviors was increased and copulation length prolonged. Erectile activity during mating was also altered. These alterations occurred despite increased levels of T and its metabolites, and an unaffected number of ERα-immunoreactive cells. Olfactory preference and neuronal activation, mapped by Fos immunoreactivity, following exposure to estrus female-soiled bedding were also normal. At comparable T levels, greater differences in masculine behaviors were observed between gonadectomized control and mutant males. AR invalidation in the nervous system also disrupted the somatotropic axis since mutant males exhibited growth retardation and decreased serum levels of insulin-like growth factor I. Our findings show that central AR is required in T-induced regulation of male-typical behaviors and gonadotrope and somatotropic axes. This genetic model offers a unique opportunity in the understanding of ARs role in cerebral functions of T.


Science | 2013

Chronic stress triggers social aversion via glucocorticoid receptor in dopaminoceptive neurons.

Jacques Barik; Fabio Marti; Carole Morel; Sebastian P. Fernandez; Christophe Lanteri; Gérard Godeheu; Jean-Pol Tassin; Cédric Mombereau; Philippe Faure; François Tronche

Defeat, Distress, and Glucocorticoids Understanding how individuals control emotions and cope with stressful events is a major clinical concern and of importance for the treatment of psychiatric illnesses (see the Perspective by McEwen). Barik et al. (p. 332) discovered that aggressive defeat stress in mice caused glucocortioid release and increased activity in the dopamine system. Deleting the glucocorticoid receptors in dopaminoceptive neurons completely prevented the social avoidance that usually follows aggressive defeat. How the combination of genetic factors and environmental stressors during adolescence determines adult behavior and how their disturbance results in neuropsychiatric disorders is poorly understood. Niwa et al. (p. 335) found that isolation stress during adolescence, which does not cause any long-lasting changes in wild-type mice, induced significant neurochemical and behavioral alterations in mutant mice expressing a dominant-negative variant of the disrupted in schizophrenia 1 gene under the control of the prion protein promoter. These deficits could be reversed by a glucocorticoid receptor antagonist. Aggressive defeat stress in mice causes glucocorticoid release and increased activity in the dopamine system. [Also see Perspective by McEwen] Repeated traumatic events induce long-lasting behavioral changes that are key to organism adaptation and that affect cognitive, emotional, and social behaviors. Rodents subjected to repeated instances of aggression develop enduring social aversion and increased anxiety. Such repeated aggressions trigger a stress response, resulting in glucocorticoid release and activation of the ascending dopamine (DA) system. We bred mice with selective inactivation of the gene encoding the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) along the DA pathway, and exposed them to repeated aggressions. GR in dopaminoceptive but not DA-releasing neurons specifically promoted social aversion as well as dopaminergic neurochemical and electrophysiological neuroadaptations. Anxiety and fear memories remained unaffected. Acute inhibition of the activity of DA-releasing neurons fully restored social interaction in socially defeated wild-type mice. Our data suggest a GR-dependent neuronal dichotomy for the regulation of emotional and social behaviors, and clearly implicate GR as a link between stress resiliency and dopaminergic tone.


The FASEB Journal | 2006

Hepatocyte proliferation during liver regeneration is impaired in mice with liver-specific IGF-1R knockout

Christèle Desbois-Mouthon; Dominique Wendum; Axelle Cadoret; Colette Rey; Patricia Leneuve; Annick Blaise; Chantal Housset; François Tronche; Yves Le Bouc; Martin Holzenberger

Recent evidence indicates that growth hormone (GH) is involved in liver regeneration. To test whether insulin‐like growth factor I (IGF‐I) mediates this effect, we studied liver regeneration induced by partial hepatectomy in liver‐specific IGF type 1 receptor knockout (LIGFREKO) mice. The absence of IGF‐1R caused a significant decrease in hepatocyte proliferation in males (−52%), but not in females, as assessed by Ki67 immunohistochemistry. Cyclin D1 and cyclin A protein levels in the livers of LIGFREKO males were only half those in controls, indicating that cyclin induction during liver regeneration is dependent on IGF‐1R signaling. Analyzing the signaling cascade initiated by IGF‐1R, we observed a lack of IRS‐1 induction in LIGFREKO livers. In contrast, the induction of IRS‐2 synthesis was similar in LIGFREKO and control groups, suggesting the existence of differential regulation of IRS synthesis during liver regeneration. Regenerating livers from LIGFREKO animals also showed significantly less activated ERKs than controls. Our findings demonstrate that IGF‐1R makes a significant contribution to liver regeneration. Using the LIGFREKO model, we provide new evidence that IGF‐1R/IRS‐1/ERK signaling may be the intracellular pathway controlling the cell cycle via cyclin D1 and cyclin A in the regenerating liver.


Brain | 2013

The neural androgen receptor: a therapeutic target for myelin repair in chronic demyelination

Rashad Hussain; Abdel M. Ghoumari; Bartosz Bielecki; Jérôme Steibel; Nelly Boehm; Philippe Liere; Wendy B. Macklin; Narender Kumar; René Habert; Sakina Mhaouty-Kodja; François Tronche; Regine Sitruk-Ware; Michael Schumacher; M. Said Ghandour

Myelin regeneration is a major therapeutic goal in demyelinating diseases, and the failure to remyelinate rapidly has profound consequences for the health of axons and for brain function. However, there is no efficient treatment for stimulating myelin repair, and current therapies are limited to anti-inflammatory agents. Males are less likely to develop multiple sclerosis than females, but often have a more severe disease course and reach disability milestones at an earlier age than females, and these observations have spurred interest in the potential protective effects of androgens. Here, we demonstrate that testosterone treatment efficiently stimulates the formation of new myelin and reverses myelin damage in chronic demyelinated brain lesions, resulting from the long-term administration of cuprizone, which is toxic for oligodendrocytes. In addition to the strong effect of testosterone on myelin repair, the number of activated astrocytes and microglial cells returned to low control levels, indicating a reduction of neuroinflammatory responses. We also identify the neural androgen receptor as a novel therapeutic target for myelin recovery. After the acute demyelination of cerebellar slices in organotypic culture, the remyelinating actions of testosterone could be mimicked by 5α-dihydrotestosterone, a metabolite that is not converted to oestrogens, and blocked by the androgen receptor antagonist flutamide. Testosterone treatment also failed to promote remyelination after chronic cuprizone-induced demyelination in mice with a non-functional androgen receptor. Importantly, testosterone did not stimulate the formation of new myelin sheaths after specific knockout of the androgen receptor in neurons and macroglial cells. Thus, the neural brain androgen receptor is required for the remyelination effect of testosterone, whereas the presence of the receptor in microglia and in peripheral tissues is not sufficient to enhance remyelination. The potent synthetic testosterone analogue 7α-methyl-19-nortestosterone, which has been developed for long-term male contraception and androgen replacement therapy in hypogonadal males and does not stimulate prostate growth, also efficiently promoted myelin repair. These data establish the efficacy of androgens as remyelinating agents and qualify the brain androgen receptor as a promising drug target for remyelination therapy, thus providing the preclinical rationale for a novel therapeutic use of androgens in males with multiple sclerosis.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2013

Plasticity of Hypothalamic Dopamine Neurons during Lactation Results in Dissociation of Electrical Activity and Release

Nicola Romanò; Siew Hoong Yip; David J. Hodson; Anne Guillou; Sébastien Parnaudeau; Siobhan Kirk; François Tronche; Xavier Bonnefont; Paul Le Tissier; Stephen J. Bunn; Dave Grattan; Patrice Mollard; Agnès O. Martin

Tuberoinfundibular dopamine (TIDA) neurons are the central regulators of prolactin (PRL) secretion. Their extensive functional plasticity allows a change from low PRL secretion in the non-pregnant state to the condition of hyperprolactinemia that characterizes lactation. To allow this rise in PRL, TIDA neurons are thought to become unresponsive to PRL at lactation and functionally silenced. Here we show that, contrary to expectations, the electrical properties of the system were not modified during lactation and that the neurons remained electrically responsive to a PRL stimulus, with PRL inducing an acute increase in their firing rate during lactation that was identical to that seen in non-pregnant mice. Furthermore, we show a long-term organization of TIDA neuron electrical activity with an harmonization of their firing rates, which remains intact during lactation. However, PRL-induced secretion of dopamine (DA) at the median eminence was strongly blunted during lactation, at least in part attributable to lack of phosphorylation of tyrosine hydroxylase, the key enzyme involved in DA synthesis. We therefore conclude that lactation, rather than involving electrical silencing of TIDA neurons, represents a condition of decoupling between electrical activity at the cell body and DA secretion at the median eminence.


Biological Psychiatry | 2015

Presynaptic D2 Dopamine Receptors Control Long-Term Depression Expression and Memory Processes in the Temporal Hippocampus

Jill Rocchetti; Elsa Isingrini; Gregory Dal Bo; Sara Sagheby; Aurore Menegaux; François Tronche; Daniel Lévesque; Luc Moquin; Alain Gratton; Tak Pan Wong; Marcelo Rubinstein; Bruno Giros

BACKGROUND Dysfunctional mesocorticolimbic dopamine signaling has been linked to alterations in motor and reward-based functions associated with psychiatric disorders. Converging evidence from patients with psychiatric disorders and use of antipsychotics suggests that imbalance of dopamine signaling deeply alters hippocampal functions. However, given the lack of full characterization of a functional mesohippocampal pathway, the precise role of dopamine transmission in memory deficits associated with these disorders and their dedicated therapies is unknown. In particular, the positive outcome of antipsychotic treatments, commonly antagonizing D2 dopamine receptors (D2Rs), on cognitive deficits and memory impairments remains questionable. METHODS Following pharmacologic and genetic manipulation of dopamine transmission, we performed anatomic, neurochemical, electrophysiologic, and behavioral investigations to uncover the role of D2Rs in hippocampal-dependent plasticity and learning. Naïve mice (n = 4-21) were used in the different procedures. RESULTS Dopamine modulated both long-term potentiation and long-term depression in the temporal hippocampus as well as spatial and recognition learning and memory in mice through D2Rs. Although genetic deletion or pharmacologic blockade of D2Rs led to the loss of long-term potentiation expression, the specific genetic removal of presynaptic D2Rs impaired long-term depression and performances on spatial memory tasks. CONCLUSIONS Presynaptic D2Rs in dopamine fibers of the temporal hippocampus tightly modulate long-term depression expression and play a major role in the regulation of hippocampal learning and memory. This direct role of mesohippocampal dopamine input as uncovered here adds a new dimension to dopamine involvement in the physiology underlying deficits associated with neuropsychiatric disorders.


Diabetologia | 2011

Genetic evidence of the programming of beta cell mass and function by glucocorticoids in mice

B. Valtat; C. Dupuis; D. Zenaty; A. Singh-Estivalet; François Tronche; Bernadette Bréant; Bertrand Blondeau

Aims/hypothesisPrenatal exposure to excess glucocorticoids associates with low birthweight in rodents, primates and humans and its involvement in programming glucose homeostasis is suspected. Our aim was to further dissect the role of glucocorticoids on beta cell development and function in mice.MethodsUsing the model of maternal general food restriction during the last week of pregnancy, we thoroughly studied in the CD1 mouse—mothers and fetal and adult offspring—the pancreatic, metabolic and molecular consequences of maternal undernutrition associated with excess glucocorticoids. The specific involvement of the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) was studied in mutant fetuses lacking GR in pancreatic precursors or mature beta cells.ResultsMaternal general food restriction in the mouse is associated with decreased maternal glucose and increased corticosterone levels. Fetuses from underfed dams had increased corticosterone levels, decreased pancreatic endocrine gene expression but increased exocrine gene expression and a lower beta cell mass. The offspring of these dams had a low birthweight, permanent postnatal growth retardation and, as adults, impaired glucose tolerance, decreased beta cell mass (−50%) and massively reduced islet expression (−80%) of most of the genes involved in beta cell function (e.g. Pdx1, Sur1 [also known as Abcc8], insulin). Moreover, using mutant fetuses lacking GR in pancreatic precursors or beta cells we show that the deleterious effect of undernutrition on fetal beta cell development requires the presence of the GR in pancreatic precursor cells.Conclusions/interpretationThese results demonstrate the crucial role of excess fetal glucocorticoids and the importance of GR signalling in progenitor cells to programme beta cell mass and dysfunction.


Translational Psychiatry | 2013

dcc orchestrates the development of the prefrontal cortex during adolescence and is altered in psychiatric patients

Colleen Manitt; Conrad Eng; Matthew Pokinko; R. T. Ryan; Angélica Torres-Berrío; Juan Pablo Lopez; S. V. Yogendran; M. Daubaras; Alanna Grant; E. R. E. Schmidt; François Tronche; Paul Krimpenfort; Helen M. Cooper; R. J. Pasterkamp; Bryan Kolb; Gustavo Turecki; Tak Pan Wong; Eric J. Nestler; Bruno Giros; Cecilia Flores

Adolescence is a period of heightened susceptibility to psychiatric disorders of medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) dysfunction and cognitive impairment. mPFC dopamine (DA) projections reach maturity only in early adulthood, when their control over cognition becomes fully functional. The mechanisms governing this protracted and unique development are unknown. Here we identify dcc as the first DA neuron gene to regulate mPFC connectivity during adolescence and dissect the mechanisms involved. Reduction or loss of dcc from DA neurons by Cre-lox recombination increased mPFC DA innervation. Underlying this was the presence of ectopic DA fibers that normally innervate non-cortical targets. Altered DA input changed the anatomy and electrophysiology of mPFC circuits, leading to enhanced cognitive flexibility. All phenotypes only emerged in adulthood. Using viral Cre, we demonstrated that dcc organizes mPFC wiring specifically during adolescence. Variations in DCC may determine differential predisposition to mPFC disorders in humans. Indeed, DCC expression is elevated in brains of antidepressant-free subjects who committed suicide.


Biological Psychiatry | 2010

Glucocorticoid Receptors in Dopaminoceptive Neurons, Key for Cocaine, Are Dispensable for Molecular and Behavioral Morphine Responses

Jacques Barik; Sébastien Parnaudeau; Aurélie Lampin Saint Amaux; Bruno P. Guiard; Jose Felipe Golib Dzib; Olivier Bocquet; Alain Bailly; Arndt Benecke; François Tronche

BACKGROUND Psychostimulants and opiates trigger similar enduring neuroadaptations within the reward circuitry thought to underlie addiction. Transcription factors are key to mediating these enduring behavioral alterations. The facilitation of these maladaptive changes by glucocorticoid hormones suggests that the glucocorticoid receptor (GR), a transcription factor involved in the stress response, could be a common mediator of responses to pharmacologically distinct classes of abused drugs. METHODS We employed mouse models carrying GR gene inactivation in either dopamine or dopaminoceptive neurons to determine the involvement of this transcription factor in behavioral responses to cocaine and morphine. We then combined microarray analysis, drug-elicited immediate early gene induction, and in vivo microdialysis to elucidate the molecular underpinnings of these responses. RESULTS Inactivating GR within dopaminoceptive neurons markedly reduces cocaine-induced conditioned place preference and the expression of locomotor sensitization. In striking contrast, GR had no effect on behavioral morphine responses in either dopaminoceptive or dopamine neurons. The dopaminoceptive mutation engenders alterations in the expression of striatal genes that are implicated in glutamatergic transmission and plasticity. Within the nucleus accumbens, impaired cellular responses to cocaine are conspicuous; a pronounced deficit in cocaine-elicited extracellular dopamine release, expression of the key IEGs c-Fos and Zif268, and phosphorylation of extracellular signal-regulated kinases 1/2 in mutants were observed. In contrast, these molecular and neurochemical changes were not observed in response to morphine, mirroring the lack of effect on behavioral responses to morphine. CONCLUSION Combined behavioral and molecular approaches have identified a subset of neurons in which GR differentially influences cocaine- and morphine-induced responses.


Diabetes | 2013

Fetal PGC-1α Overexpression Programs Adult Pancreatic β-Cell Dysfunction

Bérengère Valtat; Jean-Pierre Riveline; Ping Zhang; Amrit Singh-Estivalet; Mathieu Armanet; Nicolas Venteclef; A. Besseiche; Daniel P. Kelly; François Tronche; Pascal Ferré; Jean-François Gautier; Bernadette Bréant; B. Blondeau

Adult β-cell dysfunction, a hallmark of type 2 diabetes, can be programmed by adverse fetal environment. We have shown that fetal glucocorticoids (GCs) participate in this programming through inhibition of β-cell development. Here we have investigated the molecular mechanisms underlying this regulation. We showed that GCs stimulate the expression of peroxisome proliferator–activated receptor-γ coactivator-1α (PGC-1α), a coregulator of the GCs receptor (GR), and that the overexpression of PGC-1α represses genes important for β-cell development and function. More precisely, PGC-1α inhibited the expression of the key β-cell transcription factor pancreatic duodenal homeobox 1 (Pdx1). This repression required the GR and was mediated through binding of a GR/PGC-1α complex to the Pdx1 promoter. To explore PGC-1α function, we generated mice with inducible β-cell PGC-1α overexpression. Mice overexpressing PGC-1α exhibited at adult age impaired glucose tolerance associated with reduced insulin secretion, decreased β-cell mass, and β-cell hypotrophy. Interestingly, PGC-1α expression in fetal life only was sufficient to impair adult β-cell function whereas β-cell PGC-1α overexpression from adult age had no consequence on β-cell function. Altogether, our results demonstrate that the GR and PGC-1α participate in the fetal programming of adult β-cell function through inhibition of Pdx1 expression.

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Carole Morel

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Kalina Raskin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Tak Pan Wong

Douglas Mental Health University Institute

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Won Seok Choi

University of Washington

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Zhengui Xia

University of Washington

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