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Featured researches published by Guillaume Cornelis.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B | 2013

Paleovirology of ‘syncytins’, retroviral env genes exapted for a role in placentation

Christian Lavialle; Guillaume Cornelis; Anne Dupressoir; Cécile Esnault; Odile Heidmann; Cécile Vernochet; Thierry Heidmann

The development of the emerging field of ‘paleovirology’ allows biologists to reconstruct the evolutionary history of fossil endogenous retroviral sequences integrated within the genome of living organisms and has led to the retrieval of conserved, ancient retroviral genes ‘exapted’ by ancestral hosts to fulfil essential physiological roles, syncytin genes being undoubtedly among the most remarkable examples of such a phenomenon. Indeed, syncytins are ‘new’ genes encoding proteins derived from the envelope protein of endogenous retroviral elements that have been captured and domesticated on multiple occasions and independently in diverse mammalian species, through a process of convergent evolution. Knockout of syncytin genes in mice provided evidence for their absolute requirement for placenta development and embryo survival, via formation by cell–cell fusion of syncytial cell layers at the fetal–maternal interface. These genes of exogenous origin, acquired ‘by chance’ and yet still ‘necessary’ to carry out a basic function in placental mammals, may have been pivotal in the emergence of mammalian ancestors with a placenta from egg-laying animals via the capture of a founding retroviral env gene, subsequently replaced in the diverse mammalian lineages by new env-derived syncytin genes, each providing its host with a positive selective advantage.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Ancestral capture of syncytin-Car1, a fusogenic endogenous retroviral envelope gene involved in placentation and conserved in Carnivora

Guillaume Cornelis; Odile Heidmann; Sibylle Bernard-Stoecklin; Karine Reynaud; Géraldine Veron; Baptiste Mulot; Anne Dupressoir; Thierry Heidmann

Syncytins are envelope protein genes of retroviral origin that have been captured for a function in placentation. Two such genes have already been identified in simians, two distinct, unrelated genes have been identified in Muridae, and a fifth gene has been identified in the rabbit. Here, we searched for similar genes in the Laurasiatheria clade, which diverged from Euarchontoglires—primates, rodents, and lagomorphs—shortly after mammalian radiation (100 Mya). In silico search for envelope protein genes with full-coding capacity within the dog and cat genomes identified several candidate genes, with one common to both species that displayed placenta-specific expression, which was revealed by RT-PCR analysis of a large panel of tissues. This gene belongs to a degenerate endogenous retroviral element, with precise proviral integration at a site common to dog and cat. Cloning of the gene for an ex vivo pseudotype assay showed fusogenicity on both dog and cat cells. In situ hybridization on placenta sections from both species showed specific expression at the level of the invasive fetal villi within the placental junctional zone, where trophoblast cells fuse into a syncytiotrophoblast layer to form the maternofetal interface. Finally, we show that the gene is conserved among a series of 26 Carnivora representatives, with evidence for purifying selection and conservation of fusogenic activity. The gene is not found in the Pholidota order and, therefore, it was captured before Carnivora radiation, between 60 and 85 Mya. This gene is the oldest syncytin gene identified to date, and it is the first in a new major clade of eutherian mammals.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Captured retroviral envelope syncytin gene associated with the unique placental structure of higher ruminants

Guillaume Cornelis; Odile Heidmann; Séverine A. Degrelle; Cécile Vernochet; Christian Lavialle; Claire Letzelter; Sibylle Bernard-Stoecklin; Alexandre Hassanin; Baptiste Mulot; Michel Guillomot; Isabelle Hue; Thierry Heidmann; Anne Dupressoir

Syncytins are envelope genes of retroviral origin that have been co-opted for a role in placentation and likely contribute to the remarkable diversity of placental structures. Independent capture events have been identified in primates, rodents, lagomorphs, and carnivores, where they are involved in the formation of a syncytium layer at the fetomaternal interface via trophoblast cell–cell fusion. We searched for similar genes within the suborder Ruminantia where the placenta lacks an extended syncytium layer but displays a heterologous cell-fusion process unique among eutherian mammals. An in silico search for intact envelope genes within the Bos taurus genome identified 18 candidates belonging to five endogenous retrovirus families, with one gene displaying both placenta-specific expression, as assessed by quantitative RT-PCR analyses of a large panel of tissues, and conservation in the Ovis aries genome. Both the bovine and ovine orthologs displayed fusogenic activity by conferring infectivity on retroviral pseudotypes and triggering cell–cell fusion. In situ hybridization of placenta sections revealed specific expression in the trophoblast binucleate cells, consistent with a role in the formation—by heterologous cell fusion with uterine cells—of the trinucleate cells of the cow and the syncytial plaques of the ewe. Finally, we show that this gene, which we named “Syncytin-Rum1,” is conserved among 16 representatives of higher ruminants, with evidence for purifying selection and conservation of its fusogenic properties, over 30 millions years of evolution. These data argue for syncytins being a major driving force in the emergence and diversity of the placenta.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Retroviral envelope gene captures and syncytin exaptation for placentation in marsupials

Guillaume Cornelis; Cécile Vernochet; Quentin Carradec; Sylvie Souquere; Baptiste Mulot; François Catzeflis; Maria Nilsson; Brandon R. Menzies; Marilyn B. Renfree; Gérard Pierron; Ulrich Zeller; Odile Heidmann; Anne Dupressoir; Thierry Heidmann

Significance Syncytins are “captured” genes of retroviral origin, corresponding to the fusogenic envelope gene of endogenized retroviruses. They are present in a series of eutherian mammals, including humans and mice where they play an essential role in placentation. Here we show that marsupials—which diverged from eutherian mammals ∼190 Mya but still possess a primitive, short-lived placenta (rapidly left by the embryo for development in an external pouch)—have also captured such genes. The present characterization of the syncytin-Opo1 gene in the opossum placenta, together with the identification of two additional endogenous retroviral envelope gene captures, allow a recapitulation of the natural history of these unusual genes and definitely extends their “symbiotic niche” to all clades of placental mammals. Syncytins are genes of retroviral origin captured by eutherian mammals, with a role in placentation. Here we show that some marsupials—which are the closest living relatives to eutherian mammals, although they diverged from the latter ∼190 Mya—also possess a syncytin gene. The gene identified in the South American marsupial opossum and dubbed syncytin-Opo1 has all of the characteristic features of a bona fide syncytin gene: It is fusogenic in an ex vivo cell–cell fusion assay; it is specifically expressed in the short-lived placenta at the level of the syncytial feto–maternal interface; and it is conserved in a functional state in a series of Monodelphis species. We further identify a nonfusogenic retroviral envelope gene that has been conserved for >80 My of evolution among all marsupials (including the opossum and the Australian tammar wallaby), with evidence for purifying selection and conservation of a canonical immunosuppressive domain, but with only limited expression in the placenta. This unusual captured gene, together with a third class of envelope genes from recently endogenized retroviruses—displaying strong expression in the uterine glands where retroviral particles can be detected—plausibly correspond to the different evolutionary statuses of a captured retroviral envelope gene, with only syncytin-Opo1 being the present-day bona fide syncytin active in the opossum and related species. This study would accordingly recapitulate the natural history of syncytin exaptation and evolution in a single species, and definitely extends the presence of such genes to all major placental mammalian clades.


PLOS Genetics | 2013

Differential Evolutionary Fate of an Ancestral Primate Endogenous Retrovirus Envelope Gene, the EnvV Syncytin, Captured for a Function in Placentation

Cécile Esnault; Guillaume Cornelis; Odile Heidmann; Thierry Heidmann

Syncytins are envelope genes of retroviral origin that have been co-opted for a role in placentation. They promote cell–cell fusion and are involved in the formation of a syncytium layer—the syncytiotrophoblast—at the materno-fetal interface. They were captured independently in eutherian mammals, and knockout mice demonstrated that they are absolutely required for placenta formation and embryo survival. Here we provide evidence that these “necessary” genes acquired “by chance” have a definite lifetime with diverse fates depending on the animal lineage, being both gained and lost in the course of evolution. Analysis of a retroviral envelope gene, the envV gene, present in primate genomes and belonging to the endogenous retrovirus type V (ERV-V) provirus, shows that this captured gene, which entered the primate lineage >45 million years ago, behaves as a syncytin in Old World monkeys, but lost its canonical fusogenic activity in other primate lineages, including humans. In the Old World monkeys, we show—by in situ analyses and ex vivo assays—that envV is both specifically expressed at the level of the placental syncytiotrophoblast and fusogenic, and that it further displays signs of purifying selection based on analysis of non-synonymous to synonymous substitution rates. We further show that purifying selection still operates in the primate lineages where the gene is no longer fusogenic, indicating that degeneracy of this ancestral syncytin is a slow, lineage-dependent, and multi-step process, in which the fusogenic activity would be the first canonical property of this retroviral envelope gene to be lost.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Retroviral envelope syncytin capture in an ancestrally diverged mammalian clade for placentation in the primitive Afrotherian tenrecs

Guillaume Cornelis; Cécile Vernochet; Sébastien Malicorne; Sylvie Souquere; Athanasia C. Tzika; Steven M. Goodman; François Catzeflis; Terence J. Robinson; Michel C. Milinkovitch; Gérard Pierron; Odile Heidmann; Anne Dupressoir; Thierry Heidmann

Significance Syncytins are genes of retroviral origin that have been captured by their host as symbionts for a function in placentation. They can mediate cell–cell fusion, consistent with their ancestral retroviral envelope gene status, and are involved in fusion of mononucleate trophoblast cells to form the syncytial layer—the syncytiotrophoblast—of the feto–maternal interface. We proposed that such genes have been pivotal for the emergence of placental mammals from egg-laying animals and should be present all along the Placentalia radiation. We searched for syncytins in a superorder of eutherian mammals that emerged ancestrally during the Cretaceous terrestrial revolution and identified syncytin-Ten1, conserved over millions years of evolution of the Afrotherian tenrecs, regarded as among the most primitive of living mammals. Syncytins are fusogenic envelope (env) genes of retroviral origin that have been captured for a function in placentation. Syncytins have been identified in Euarchontoglires (primates, rodents, Leporidae) and Laurasiatheria (Carnivora, ruminants) placental mammals. Here, we searched for similar genes in species that retained characteristic features of primitive mammals, namely the Malagasy and mainland African Tenrecidae. They belong to the superorder Afrotheria, an early lineage that diverged from Euarchotonglires and Laurasiatheria 100 Mya, during the Cretaceous terrestrial revolution. An in silico search for env genes with full coding capacity within a Tenrecidae genome identified several candidates, with one displaying placenta-specific expression as revealed by RT-PCR analysis of a large panel of Setifer setosus tissues. Cloning of this endogenous retroviral env gene demonstrated fusogenicity in an ex vivo cell–cell fusion assay on a panel of mammalian cells. Refined analysis of placental architecture and ultrastructure combined with in situ hybridization demonstrated specific expression of the gene in multinucleate cellular masses and layers at the materno–fetal interface, consistent with a role in syncytium formation. This gene, which we named “syncytin-Ten1,” is conserved among Tenrecidae, with evidence of purifying selection and conservation of fusogenic activity. To our knowledge, it is the first syncytin identified to date within the ancestrally diverged Afrotheria superorder.


Journal of Virology | 2014

Capture of syncytin-Mar1, a Fusogenic Endogenous Retroviral Envelope Gene Involved in Placentation in the Rodentia Squirrel-Related Clade

François Redelsperger; Guillaume Cornelis; Cécile Vernochet; Bud C. Tennant; François Catzeflis; Baptiste Mulot; Odile Heidmann; Thierry Heidmann; Anne Dupressoir

ABSTRACT Syncytin genes are fusogenic envelope protein (env) genes of retroviral origin that have been captured for a function in placentation. Within rodents, two such genes have previously been identified in the mouse-related clade, allowing a demonstration of their essential role via knockout mice. Here, we searched for similar genes in a second major clade of the Rodentia order, the squirrel-related clade, taking advantage of the complete sequencing of the ground squirrel Ictidomys tridecemlineatus genome. In silico search for env genes with full coding capacity identified several candidate genes with one displaying placenta-specific expression, as revealed by quantitative reverse transcription-PCR analysis of a large panel of tissues. This gene belongs to a degenerate endogenous retroviral element, with recognizable hallmarks of an integrated provirus. Cloning of the gene in an expression vector for ex vivo cell-cell fusion and pseudotype assays demonstrated fusogenicity on a large panel of mammalian cells. In situ hybridization on placenta sections showed specific expression in domains where trophoblast cells fuse into a syncytiotrophoblast at the fetomaternal interface, consistent with a role in syncytium formation. Finally, we show that the gene is conserved among the tribe Marmotini, thus dating its capture back to about at least 25 million years ago, with evidence for purifying selection and conservation of fusogenic activity. This gene that we named syncytin-Mar1 is distinct from all seven Syncytin genes identified to date in eutherian mammals and is likely to be a major effector of placentation in its related clade. IMPORTANCE Syncytin genes are fusogenic envelope genes of retroviral origin, ancestrally captured for a function in placentation. Within rodents, two such genes had been previously identified in the mouse-related clade. Here, in the squirrel-related rodent clade, we identified the envelope gene of an endogenous retrovirus with all the features of a Syncytin: it is specifically expressed in the placenta of the woodchuck Marmota monax, at the level of cells fusing into a syncytium; it can trigger cell-cell and virus-cell fusion ex vivo; and it has been conserved for >25 million years of evolution, suggesting an essential role in its host physiology. Remarkably, syncytin-Mar1 is unrelated to all other Syncytin genes identified thus far in mammals (primates, muroids, carnivores, and ruminants). These results extend the range of retroviral envelope gene “domestication” in mammals and show that these events occurred independently, on multiple occasions during evolution to improve placental development in a process of convergent evolution.


Placenta | 2011

A syncytin-like endogenous retrovirus envelope gene of the guinea pig specifically expressed in the placenta junctional zone and conserved in Caviomorpha

Cécile Vernochet; Odile Heidmann; Anne Dupressoir; Guillaume Cornelis; Philippe Dessen; François Catzeflis; Thierry Heidmann

Syncytins are genes of retroviral origin that have been co-opted by mammalian hosts for a function in placentation. Two such genes have already been identified in simians, as well as two distinct, unrelated ones in Muridae and a fifth in the rabbit. Here we searched for similar genes in the guinea pig, which belongs to the Caviomorpha lineage within the Hystricognathi suborder of rodents and displays a placental structural organization with several characteristic features comparable to those of the human organ, including deep trophoblast invasion of maternal tissues. An in silico search for envelope (env) genes with full coding capacity identified a candidate gene that showed specific expression in the placenta, as revealed by RT-qPCR using RNAs from a large panel of tissues. This gene belongs to an endogenous retroviral element present at a single-copy in the guinea pig genome, still displaying a retroviral organization - with a degenerate gag and pol, but an intact env gene. In situ hybridization of guinea pig placenta sections demonstrated specific expression at the level of the invasive trophoblast-containing junctional zone, as observed in humans for syncytin-1 and consistent with a role in invasion of the maternal uterine tissues. The identified gene displays a conserved open reading frame in the Caviomorpha, consistent with an entry date >30 million years, and sequence analyses showed purifying selection of the gene. Conclusively, despite the absence of a demonstrated fusogenic activity, it is likely that the identified env gene - that we named syncytin-like env-Cav1 - exerts a physiological function possibly related to trophoblast invasion, in the course of caviomorph placentation.


eLife | 2017

Molecular conservation of marsupial and eutherian placentation and lactation

Michael W. Guernsey; Edward B. Chuong; Guillaume Cornelis; Marilyn B. Renfree; Julie C. Baker

Eutherians are often mistakenly termed ‘placental mammals’, but marsupials also have a placenta to mediate early embryonic development. Lactation is necessary for both infant and fetal development in eutherians and marsupials, although marsupials have a far more complex milk repertoire that facilitates morphogenesis of developmentally immature young. In this study, we demonstrate that the anatomically simple tammar placenta expresses a dynamic molecular program that is reminiscent of eutherian placentation, including both fetal and maternal signals. Further, we provide evidence that genes facilitating fetal development and nutrient transport display convergent co-option by placental and mammary gland cell types to optimize offspring success. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.27450.001


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

An endogenous retroviral envelope syncytin and its cognate receptor identified in the viviparous placental Mabuya lizard

Guillaume Cornelis; Mathis Funk; Cécile Vernochet; Francisca Leal; Oscar A. Tarazona; Guillaume Meurice; Odile Heidmann; Anne Dupressoir; Aurélien Miralles; Martha Patricia Ramirez-Pinilla; Thierry Heidmann

Significance Retroviral envelope gene capture and exaptation for a placental function has been demonstrated in mammals. Remarkably, placental structures have also emerged on rare occasions in nonmammalian vertebrates, resulting in related modes of reproduction. The Mabuya lizard, which emerged 25 Mya, possesses a placenta closely related to that of mammals. Here, we identified a specific retroviral envelope gene capture that shows all the characteristic features of a bona fide mammalian syncytin, being conserved in Mabuya evolution, expressed in the placenta, and fusogenic. Together with the present identification of its cognate receptor, these results show that syncytin capture is not restricted to mammals and is likely to be a major driving force for placenta emergence. Syncytins are envelope genes from endogenous retroviruses that have been captured during evolution for a function in placentation. They have been found in all placental mammals in which they have been searched, including marsupials. Placental structures are not restricted to mammals but also emerged in some other vertebrates, most frequently in lizards, such as the viviparous Mabuya Scincidae. Here, we performed high-throughput RNA sequencing of a Mabuya placenta transcriptome and screened for the presence of retroviral env genes with a full-length ORF. We identified one such gene, which we named “syncytin-Mab1,” that has all the characteristics expected for a syncytin gene. It encodes a membrane-bound envelope protein with fusogenic activity ex vivo, is expressed at the placental level as revealed by in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry, and is conserved in all Mabuya species tested, spanning over 25 My of evolution. Its cognate receptor, required for its fusogenic activity, was searched for by a screening assay using the GeneBridge4 human/Chinese hamster radiation hybrid panel and found to be the MPZL1 gene, previously identified in mammals as a signal-transducing transmembrane protein involved in cell migration. Together, these results show that syncytin capture is not restricted to placental mammals, but can also take place in the rare nonmammalian vertebrates in which a viviparous placentotrophic mode of reproduction emerged. It suggests that similar molecular tools have been used for the convergent evolution of placentation in independently evolved and highly distant vertebrates.

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Géraldine Veron

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Sibylle Bernard-Stoecklin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Sébastien Malicorne

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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