Isabelle Godin
French Institute of Health and Medical Research
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Isabelle Godin.
Cell Stem Cell | 2013
Charlotta Böiers; Joana Carrelha; Michael Lutteropp; Sidinh Luc; Joanna C.A. Green; Emanuele Azzoni; Petter S. Woll; Adam Mead; Anne Hultquist; Gemma Swiers; Elisa Gomez Perdiguero; Iain C Macaulay; Luca Melchiori; Tiago C. Luis; Shabnam Kharazi; Tiphaine Bouriez-Jones; Qiaolin Deng; Annica Pontén; Deborah Atkinson; Christina T. Jensen; Ewa Sitnicka; Frederic Geissmann; Isabelle Godin; Rickard Sandberg; Marella de Bruijn; Sten Eirik W. Jacobsen
In jawed vertebrates, development of an adaptive immune-system is essential for protection of the born organism against otherwise life-threatening pathogens. Myeloid cells of the innate immune system are formed early in development, whereas lymphopoiesis has been suggested to initiate much later, following emergence of definitive hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). Herein, we demonstrate that the embryonic lymphoid commitment process initiates earlier than previously appreciated, prior to emergence of definitive HSCs, through establishment of a previously unrecognized entirely immune-restricted and lymphoid-primed progenitor. Notably, this immune-restricted progenitor appears to first emerge in the yolk sac and contributes physiologically to the establishment of lymphoid and some myeloid components of the immune-system, establishing the lymphomyeloid lineage restriction process as an early and physiologically important lineage-commitment step in mammalian hematopoiesis.
Nature Immunology | 2012
Sidinh Luc; Tiago C. Luis; Hanane Boukarabila; Iain C Macaulay; Natalija Buza-Vidas; Tiphaine Bouriez-Jones; Michael Lutteropp; Petter S. Woll; Stephen Loughran; Adam Mead; Anne Hultquist; John Brown; Takuo Mizukami; S Matsuoka; Helen Ferry; Kristina Anderson; Deborah Atkinson; Shamit Soneji; Aniela Domanski; Alison Farley; Alejandra Sanjuan-Pla; Cintia Carella; Roger Patient; Marella de Bruijn; Tariq Enver; Claus Nerlov; C. Clare Blackburn; Isabelle Godin; Sten Eirik W. Jacobsen
The stepwise commitment from hematopoietic stem cells in the bone marrow to T lymphocyte–restricted progenitors in the thymus represents a paradigm for understanding the requirement for distinct extrinsic cues during different stages of lineage restriction from multipotent to lineage-restricted progenitors. However, the commitment stage at which progenitors migrate from the bone marrow to the thymus remains unclear. Here we provide functional and molecular evidence at the single-cell level that the earliest progenitors in the neonatal thymus had combined granulocyte-monocyte, T lymphocyte and B lymphocyte lineage potential but not megakaryocyte-erythroid lineage potential. These potentials were identical to those of candidate thymus-seeding progenitors in the bone marrow, which were closely related at the molecular level. Our findings establish the distinct lineage-restriction stage at which the T cell lineage–commitment process transits from the bone marrow to the remote thymus.
Molecular Cell | 2015
Emilie Hangen; Olivier Feraud; Sylvie Lachkar; Haiwei Mou; Nunzianna Doti; Gian Maria Fimia; Ngoc vy Lam; Changlian Zhu; Isabelle Godin; Kevin Müller; Afroditi Chatzi; Esther Nuebel; Fabiola Ciccosanti; Stephane Flamant; Paule Bénit; Jean Luc Perfettini; Allan Sauvat; Annelise Bennaceur-Griscelli; Karine Ser-Le Roux; Patrick Gonin; Kostas Tokatlidis; Pierre Rustin; Mauro Piacentini; Menotti Ruvo; Klas Blomgren; Guido Kroemer; Nazanine Modjtahedi
Apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF) is a mitochondrial flavoprotein that, beyond its apoptotic function, is required for the normal expression of major respiratory chain complexes. Here we identified an AIF-interacting protein, CHCHD4, which is the central component of a redox-sensitive mitochondrial intermembrane space import machinery. Depletion or hypomorphic mutation of AIF caused a downregulation of CHCHD4 protein by diminishing its mitochondrial import. CHCHD4 depletion sufficed to induce a respiratory defect that mimicked that observed in AIF-deficient cells. CHCHD4 levels could be restored in AIF-deficient cells by enforcing its AIF-independent mitochondrial localization. This modified CHCHD4 protein reestablished respiratory function in AIF-deficient cells and enabled AIF-deficient embryoid bodies to undergo cavitation, a process of programmed cell death required for embryonic morphogenesis. These findings explain how AIF contributes to the biogenesis of respiratory chain complexes, and they establish an unexpected link between the vital function of AIF and the propensity of cells to undergo apoptosis.
Development | 2012
Aurelie Kieusseian; Philippe Brunet de la Grange; Odile Burlen-Defranoux; Isabelle Godin; Ana Cumano
Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs), which are defined by their capacity to reconstitute adult conventional mice, are first found in the dorsal aorta after 10.5 days post coitus (dpc) and in the fetal liver at 11 dpc. However, lympho-myeloid hematopoietic progenitors are detected in the dorsal aorta from 9 dpc, raising the issue of their role in establishing adult hematopoiesis. Here, we show that these progenitors are endowed with long-term reconstitution capacity, but only engraft natural killer (NK)-deficient Rag2γc–/– mice. This novel population, called here immature HSCs, evolves in culture with thrombopoietin and stromal cells, into HSCs, defined by acquisition of CD45 and MHC-1 expression and by the capacity to reconstitute NK-competent mice. This evolution occurs during ontogeny, as early colonization of fetal liver by immature HSCs precedes that of HSCs. Moreover, organ culture experiments show that immature HSCs acquire, in this environment, the features of HSCs.
Nature Immunology | 2016
Tiago C. Luis; Sidinh Luc; Takuo Mizukami; Hanane Boukarabila; Supat Thongjuea; Petter S. Woll; Emanuele Azzoni; Alice Giustacchini; Michael Lutteropp; Tiphaine Bouriez-Jones; Harsh Vaidya; Adam Mead; Deborah Atkinson; Charlotta Böiers; Joana Carrelha; Iain C Macaulay; Roger Patient; Frederic Geissmann; Claus Nerlov; Rickard Sandberg; Marella de Bruijn; C. Clare Blackburn; Isabelle Godin; Sten Eirik W. Jacobsen
The final stages of restriction to the T cell lineage occur in the thymus after the entry of thymus-seeding progenitors (TSPs). The identity and lineage potential of TSPs remains unclear. Because the first embryonic TSPs enter a non-vascularized thymic rudiment, we were able to directly image and establish the functional and molecular properties of embryonic thymopoiesis-initiating progenitors (T-IPs) before their entry into the thymus and activation of Notch signaling. T-IPs did not include multipotent stem cells or molecular evidence of T cell–restricted progenitors. Instead, single-cell molecular and functional analysis demonstrated that most fetal T-IPs expressed genes of and had the potential to develop into lymphoid as well as myeloid components of the immune system. Moreover, studies of embryos deficient in the transcriptional regulator RBPJ demonstrated that canonical Notch signaling was not involved in pre-thymic restriction to the T cell lineage or the migration of T-IPs.
Vascular Cell | 2014
Sébastien Gauvrit; Josette Philippe; Matthieu Lesage; Marc Tjwa; Isabelle Godin; Stéphane Germain
BackgroundDicer is an RNase III enzyme that cleaves double stranded RNA and generates functional interfering RNAs that act as important regulators of gene and protein expression. Dicer plays an essential role during mouse development because the deletion of the dicer gene leads to embryonic death. In addition, dicer-dependent interfering RNAs regulate postnatal angiogenesis. However, the role of dicer is not yet fully elucidated during vascular development.MethodsIn order to explore the functional roles of the RNA interference in vascular biology, we developed a new constitutive Cre/loxP-mediated inactivation of dicer in tie2 expressing cells.ResultsWe show that cell-specific inactivation of dicer in Tie2 expressing cells does not perturb early blood vessel development and patterning. Tie2-Cre; dicerfl/fl mutant embryos do not show any blood vascular defects until embryonic day (E)12.5, a time at which hemorrhages and edema appear. Then, midgestational lethality occurs at E14.5 in mutant embryos. The developing lymphatic vessels of dicer-mutant embryos are filled with circulating red blood cells, revealing an impaired separation of blood and lymphatic vasculature.ConclusionThus, these results show that RNA interference perturbs neither vasculogenesis and developmental angiogenesis, nor lymphatic specification from venous endothelial cells but actually provides evidence for an epigenetic control of separation of blood and lymphatic vasculature.
Nature Communications | 2017
Kahia Messaoudi; Ashfaq Ali; Rameez Ishaq; Alberta Palazzo; Dominika Sliwa; Olivier Bluteau; Sylvie Souquere; Delphine Muller; Khadija M. Diop; Valérie Lapierre; Jean-Pierre Marolleau; Patrick Matthias; Isabelle Godin; Gérard Pierron; Steven G. Thomas; Stephen P. Watson; Nathalie Droin; William Vainchenker; Isabelle Plo; Hana Raslova; Najet Debili
Thrombocytopenia is a major side effect of a new class of anticancer agents that target histone deacetylase (HDAC). Their mechanism is poorly understood. Here, we show that HDAC6 inhibition and genetic knockdown lead to a strong decrease in human proplatelet formation (PPF). Unexpectedly, HDAC6 inhibition-induced tubulin hyperacetylation has no effect on PPF. The PPF decrease induced by HDAC6 inhibition is related to cortactin (CTTN) hyperacetylation associated with actin disorganization inducing important changes in the distribution of megakaryocyte (MK) organelles. CTTN silencing in human MKs phenocopies HDAC6 inactivation and knockdown leads to a strong PPF defect. This is rescued by forced expression of a deacetylated CTTN mimetic. Unexpectedly, unlike human-derived MKs, HDAC6 and CTTN are shown to be dispensable for mouse PPF in vitro and platelet production in vivo. Our results highlight an unexpected function of HDAC6–CTTN axis as a positive regulator of human but not mouse MK maturation.Histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors, a class of cancer therapeutics, cause thrombocytopenia via an unknown mechanism. Here, the authors show that HDAC6 inhibition impairs proplatelet formation in human megakaryocytes, and show that this is linked to hyperacetylation of the actin-binding protein cortactin.
Kaufman's Atlas of Mouse Development Supplement#R##N#Coronal Images | 2016
Isabelle Godin
Our understanding of the ontogeny of the hematopoietic system has been strengthened with the discovery that its cells comes from the sequential contribution of two independent pools of hematopoietic progenitors, the first generated in the yolk sac (E7.25) and the second in the aorta region (E9–E11.5). Progenitors from these two pools display different differentiation and maintenance potentials, and both colonize the fetal liver (at E9 and E10), which is the main hematopoietic organ during ontogeny. At the end of gestation, hematopoiesis transiently shifts to the spleen (E12.5) and finally and permanently settles in bone marrow (E15.5). While this sequence has been known for some time, it is only recently that the more functional aspects of hematopoietic development have begun to be unraveled. We are now beginning to understand the types, timings, and origins of the hematopoietic progenitors and their differentiated progeny, together with their molecular phenotypes and maintenance potential. This short overview aims to provide the current view on advances in the field and to highlight the still-unsettled issues.
Development | 1991
Isabelle Godin; Christopher Wylie
Development | 1990
Isabelle Godin; Christopher Wylie; Janet Heasman