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Dive into the research topics where Henri-Marc Bourbon is active.

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Featured researches published by Henri-Marc Bourbon.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2008

Comparative genomics supports a deep evolutionary origin for the large, four-module transcriptional mediator complex

Henri-Marc Bourbon

The multisubunit Mediator (MED) complex bridges DNA-bound transcriptional regulators to the RNA polymerase II (PolII) initiation machinery. In yeast, the 25 MED subunits are distributed within three core subcomplexes and a separable kinase module composed of Med12, Med13 and the Cdk8-CycC pair thought to control the reversible interaction between MED and PolII by phosphorylating repeated heptapeptides within the Rpb1 carboxyl-terminal domain (CTD). Here, MED conservation has been investigated across the eukaryotic kingdom. Saccharomyces cerevisiae Med2, Med3/Pgd1 and Med5/Nut1 subunits are apparent homologs of metazoan Med29/Intersex, Med27/Crsp34 and Med24/Trap100, respectively, and these and other 30 identified human MED subunits have detectable counterparts in the amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum, indicating that none is specific to metazoans. Indeed, animal/fungal subunits are also conserved in plants, green and red algae, entamoebids, oomycetes, diatoms, apicomplexans, ciliates and the ‘deep-branching’ protists Trichomonas vaginalis and Giardia lamblia. Surprisingly, although lacking CTD heptads, T. vaginalis displays 44 MED subunit homologs, including several CycC, Med12 and Med13 paralogs. Such observations have allowed the identification of a conserved 17-subunit framework around which peripheral subunits may be assembled, and support a very ancient eukaryotic origin for a large, four-module MED. The implications of this comprehensive work for MED structure–function relationships are discussed.


Genes & Development | 2010

Functional conservation of Mei4 for meiotic DNA double-strand break formation from yeasts to mice

Rajeev Kumar; Henri-Marc Bourbon; Bernard de Massy

Meiotic recombination is initiated by the programmed induction of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) catalyzed by the evolutionarily conserved Spo11 protein. Studies in yeast have shown that DSB formation requires several other proteins, the role and conservation of which remain unknown. Here we show that two of these Saccharomyces cerevisiae proteins, Mei4 and Rec114, are evolutionarily conserved in most eukaryotes. Mei4(-/-) mice are deficient in meiotic DSB formation, thus showing the functional conservation of Mei4 in mice. Cytological analyses reveal that, in mice, MEI4 is localized in discrete foci on the axes of meiotic chromosomes that do not overlap with DMC1 and RPA foci. We thus propose that MEI4 acts as a structural component of the DSB machinery that ensures meiotic DSB formation on chromosome axes. We show that mouse MEI4 and REC114 proteins interact directly, and we identify conserved motifs as required for this interaction. Finally, the unexpected, concomitant absence of Mei4 and Rec114, as well as of Mnd1, Hop2, and Dmc1, in some eukaryotic species (particularly Neurospora crassa, Drosophila melanogaster, and Caenorhabditis elegans) suggests the existence of Mei4-Rec114-dependent and Mei4-Rec114-independent mechanisms for DSB formation, and a functional relationship between the chromosome axis and DSB formation.


The EMBO Journal | 2007

Distinct roles for Mediator Cdk8 module subunits in Drosophila development

Nicolas Loncle; Muriel Boube; Laurent Joulia; Claire Boschiero; Michel Werner; David L. Cribbs; Henri-Marc Bourbon

Mediator (MED) is a conserved multisubunit complex bridging transcriptional activators and repressors to the general RNA polymerase II initiation machinery. In yeast, MED is organized in three core modules and a separable ‘Cdk8 module’ consisting of the cyclin‐dependent kinase Cdk8, its partner CycC, Med12 and Med13. This regulatory module, specifically required for cellular adaptation to environmental cues, is thought to act through the Cdk8 kinase activity. Here we have investigated the functions of the four Cdk8 module subunits in the metazoan model Drosophila. Physical interactions detected among the four fly subunits provide support for a structurally conserved Cdk8 module. We analyzed the in vivo functions of this module using null mutants for Cdk8, CycC, Med12 and Med13. Each gene is required for the viability of the organism but not of the cell. Cdk8–CycC and Med12–Med13 act as pairs, which share some functions but also have distinct roles in developmental gene regulation. These data reveal functional attributes of the Cdk8 module, apart from its regulated kinase activity, that may contribute to the diversification of genetic programs.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2001

Distinctive Features of Drosophila Alternative Splicing Factor RS Domain: Implication for Specific Phosphorylation, Shuttling, and Splicing Activation

Eric Allemand; Renata Gattoni; Henri-Marc Bourbon; James Stévenin; Javier F. Cáceres; Johann Soret; Jamal Tazi

ABSTRACT The human splicing factor 2, also called human alternative splicing factor (hASF), is the prototype of the highly conserved SR protein family involved in constitutive and regulated splicing of metazoan mRNA precursors. Here we report that the Drosophila homologue of hASF (dASF) lacks eight repeating arginine-serine dipeptides at its carboxyl-terminal region (RS domain), previously shown to be important for both localization and splicing activity of hASF. While this difference has no effect on dASF localization, it impedes its capacity to shuttle between the nucleus and cytoplasm and abolishes its phosphorylation by SR protein kinase 1 (SRPK1). dASF also has an altered splicing activity. While being competent for the regulation of 5′ alternative splice site choice and activation of specific splicing enhancers, dASF fails to complement S100-cytoplasmic splicing-deficient extracts. Moreover, targeted overexpression of dASF in transgenic flies leads to higher deleterious developmental defects than hASF overexpression, supporting the notion that the distinctive structural features at the RS domain between the two proteins are likely to be functionally relevant in vivo.


Genetics Research | 2001

Dominant modifiers of the polyhomeotic extra-sex-combs phenotype induced by marked P element insertional mutagenesis in Drosophila.

Marie-Odile Fauvarque; Patrick Laurenti; Antoine Boivin; Sébastien Bloyer; Henri-Marc Bourbon; Jean-Maurice Dura

Members of the Polycomb group (Pc-G) and trithorax group (trx-G) of genes, as well as the enhancers of trx-G and Pc-G (ETP), function together to maintain segment identity during Drosophila development. In order to obtain new marked P mutations in these genes, we screened for dominant modifiers of the extra-sex-combs phenotype displayed by males mutant for the polyhomeotic (ph) gene, a member of the Pc-G group. Five P(lacW) insertions in four different genes were found to stably suppress ph: two are allelic to trithorax, one is the first allele specific to the Minute(2)21C gene, and the remaining two define new trx-G genes, toutatis (tou) in 48A and taranis (tara) in 89B10-13. tou is predicted to encode a 3109 amino acid sequence protein (TOU), which contains a TAM DNA-binding domain, a WAKZ motif, two PHD zinc fingers and a C-terminal bromodomain, and as such is likely to be involved in regulation of chromatin structure as a subunit of a novel chromatin remodelling complex. In a previous study, we found that insertion of a P(ph) transposable element containing ph regulatory sequences creates a high frequency of mutations modifying ph homeotic phenotypes. One such insertion enhanced the ph phenotype and we show that it is a new allele of UbcD1/eff, a gene encoding a ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme that is involved in telomere association and potentially in chromatin remodelling.


Gene | 1995

Novel Drosophila melanogaster genes encoding RRM-type RNA-binding proteins identified by a degenerate PCR strategy

Stéphanie Brand; Sébastien Pichoff; Stéphane Noselli; Henri-Marc Bourbon

We are interested in identifying Drosophila melanogaster RNA-binding proteins involved in important developmental decisions made at the level of mRNA processing, stability, localization or translational control. A large subset of the proteins known to interact with specific RNA sequences shares an evolutionarily conserved 80-90-amino-acid (aa) domain referred to as an RNA-recognition motif (RRM), including two ribonucleoprotein identifier sequences known as RNP-1 and RNP-2. Hence, we have herein applied degenerate polymerase chain reaction (PCR) methodology to clone three additional members (termed rox2, rox8 and rox21) of the D. melanogaster RRM-protein gene superfamily encoding putative trans-acting regulatory factors. Representative cDNA clones were isolated, the conceptual aa sequences of the candidate Rox proteins were inferred from their nucleotide sequences, and database searches were conducted. Rox2 displays extensive aa sequence similarities to putative RNA-binding proteins encoded by the genomes of the plants Oryza sativa and Arabidopsis thaliana; Rox21 resembles essential metazoan pre-mRNA splicing factors; as described elsewhere, Rox8 is likely a fly homolog of the two human TIA-1-type nucleolysins [Brand and Bourbon, Nucleic Acids Res. 21 (1993) 3699-3704].


bioRxiv | 2018

The Mediator CDK8-Cyclin C complex modulates vein patterning in Drosophila by stimulating Mad-dependent transcription

Xiao Li; Mengmeng Liu; Xingjie Ren; Nicolas Loncle; Qun Wang; Rajitha-Udakara-Sampath Hemba-Waduge; Muriel Boube; Henri-Marc Bourbon; Jian-Quan Ni; Jun-Yuan Ji

Dysregulations of CDK8 and its regulatory partner CycC, two subunits of the conserved Mediator complex, have been linked to diverse human diseases such as cancer, thus it is essential to understand the regulatory network mobilizing the CDK8-CycC complex in both normal development and tumorigenesis. To identify upstream regulators or downstream effectors of CDK8, we performed a dominant modifier genetic screen in Drosophila based on the defects in vein patterning caused by specific depletion or overexpression of CDK8 or CycC in wing imaginal discs. We identified 26 genomic loci whose haploinsufficiency can modify these CDK8-specific phenotypes. Further analysis of two deficiency lines and mutant alleles led us to identify interactions between CDK8-CycC and the components of the Decapentaplegic (Dpp, the Drosophila homolog of TGFβ) signaling pathway. We observed that CDK8-CycC positively regulates transcription activated by Mad (Mothers against dpp), the primary transcription factor downstream of the Dpp/TGFβ signaling pathway. CDK8 can directly interact with Mad in vitro through the linker region between the DNA-binding MH1 (Mad homology 1) domain and the carboxy terminal MH2 transactivation domain. Besides CDK8 and CycC, further analyses of other subunits of the Mediator complex have revealed six additional Mediator subunits that are required for Mad-dependent transcription in the wing discs, including Med12, Med13, Med15, Med23, Med24, and Med31. Furthermore, CDK9 and Yorkie also positively regulate Mad-dependent gene expression in vivo. These results suggest that the Mediator complex may coordinate with other transcription cofactors in regulating Mad-dependent transcription during the wing vein patterning in Drosophila. Significance CDK8 is a conserved subunit of the transcription cofactor Mediator complex that bridges transcription factors with RNA Polymerase II in eukaryotes. Here we explore the role of CDK8 in Drosophila by performing a dominant modifier genetic screen based on vein patterning defects caused by alteration of CDK8-specific activities. We show that components of the Dpp/TGFβ signaling pathway genetically interact with CDK8; CDK8 positively regulates gene expression activated by Mad, the key transcription factor downstream of Dpp/TGFβ signaling, by directly interacting with the linker region of Mad protein. Given the fundamental roles of Dpp/TGFβ signaling in regulating development and its misregulation in various diseases, understanding how Mad/Smad interacts the Mediator complex may have broad implications in understanding and treating these diseases.


PLOS Genetics | 2017

Tissue-specific enhancer repression through molecular integration of cell signaling inputs

Luis Humberto Mojica-Vazquez; Mikhail H. Benetah; Aissette Baanannou; Sandra Bernat-Fabre; Bart Deplancke; David L. Cribbs; Henri-Marc Bourbon; Muriel Boube

Drosophila leg morphogenesis occurs under the control of a relatively well-known genetic cascade, which mobilizes both cell signaling pathways and tissue-specific transcription factors. However, their cross-regulatory interactions, deployed to refine leg patterning, remain poorly characterized at the gene expression level. Within the genetically interacting landscape that governs limb development, the bric-à-brac2 (bab2) gene is required for distal leg segmentation. We have previously shown that the Distal-less (Dll) homeodomain and Rotund (Rn) zinc-finger activating transcription factors control limb-specific bab2 expression by binding directly a single critical leg/antennal enhancer (LAE) within the bric-à-brac locus. By genetic and molecular analyses, we show here that the EGFR-responsive C15 homeodomain and the Notch-regulated Bowl zinc-finger transcription factors also interact directly with the LAE enhancer as a repressive duo. The appendage patterning gene bab2 is the first identified direct target of the Bowl repressor, an Odd-skipped/Osr family member. Moreover, we show that C15 acts on LAE activity independently of its regular partner, the Aristaless homeoprotein. Instead, we find that C15 interacts physically with the Dll activator through contacts between their homeodomain and binds competitively with Dll to adjacent cognate sites on LAE, adding potential new layers of regulation by C15. Lastly, we show that C15 and Bowl activities regulate also rn expression. Our findings shed light on how the concerted action of two transcriptional repressors, in response to cell signaling inputs, shapes and refines gene expression along the limb proximo-distal axis in a timely manner.


Archive | 1990

Functional Analysis of the Nucleolin Gene Promoter from the Mouse

Barbara J. Stevens; Valerie Housset; Patrick Calvas; François Amalric; Henri-Marc Bourbon

The gene coding for a major, nonribosomal protein of the nucleolus, nucleolin, has been isolated and characterized in three rodent species (Bourbon et al., 1988a and b). A sequence comparison of the 5′ terminal regions indicated a remarkable conservation within around 800bp upstream from the start sites and extending about 825bp downstream into the first intron. It was determined that this highly conserved region constituted an extended CpG island (Bird, 1987), whose boundaries and G+C content are likewise conserved in the three species (Bourbon et al., 1988b). In an attempt to define DNA elements of the 5′ terminal regions which are potentially active in the transcriptional regulation of the gene, we made a compilation of the conserved sequences and identified stretches, termed homology blocks, in which 7 out of 8 nt had been conserved among the species. This evolution-oriented approach to define motifs important for promoter function provided us with a series of putative cis-acting regulatory elements. In this work, we have tested the effectiveness of the 5′ upstream region which contains these conserved motifs to act as a promoter using a functional assay and we have determined the relative promotion strength of the region.


Cell | 2002

Evidence for a mediator of RNA polymerase II transcriptional regulation conserved from yeast to man.

Muriel Boube; Laurent Joulia; David L. Cribbs; Henri-Marc Bourbon

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Muriel Boube

Paul Sabatier University

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Laurent Joulia

Paul Sabatier University

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David L. Cribbs

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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David L. Cribbs

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Eric Allemand

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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François Amalric

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jamal Tazi

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Maggy Fostier

Paul Sabatier University

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Nicolas Loncle

Paul Sabatier University

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