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Dive into the research topics where Isabelle Pirson is active.

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Featured researches published by Isabelle Pirson.


Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry | 2010

Oligomers of grape-seed procyanidin extract activate the insulin receptor and key targets of the insulin signaling pathway differently from insulin

Gemma Montagut; Sheela Onnockx; Montserrat Vaqué; Cinta Bladé; Mayte Blay; Juan Fernández-Larrea; Gerard Pujadas; M. Josepa Salvadó; Lluís Arola; Isabelle Pirson; Anna Ardévol; Montserrat Pinent

Procyanidins are bioactive flavonoid compounds from fruits and vegetables that possess insulinomimetic properties, decreasing hyperglycaemia in streptozotocin-diabetic rats and stimulating glucose uptake in insulin-sensitive cell lines. Here we show that the oligomeric structures of a grape-seed procyanidin extract (GSPE) interact and induce the autophosphorylation of the insulin receptor in order to stimulate the uptake of glucose. However, their activation differs from insulin activation and results in differences in the downstream signaling. Oligomers of GSPE phosphorylate protein kinase B at Thr308 lower than insulin does, according to the lower insulin receptor activation by procyanidins. On the other hand, they phosphorylate Akt at Ser473 to the same extent as insulin. Moreover, we found that procyanidins phosphorylate p44/p42 and p38 MAPKs much more than insulin does. These results provide further insight into the molecular signaling mechanisms used by procyanidins, pointing to Akt and MAPK proteins as key points for GSPE-activated signaling pathways. Moreover, the differences between GSPE and insulin might help us to understand the wide range of biological effects that procyanidins have.


Trends in Cell Biology | 2000

The visual display of regulatory information and networks

Isabelle Pirson; Nathalie Fortemaison; Christine Jacobs; Sarah Dremier; Jacques Emile Dumont; Carine Maenhaut

Cell regulation and signal transduction are becoming increasingly complex, with reports of new cross-signalling, feedback, and feedforward regulations between pathways and between the multiple isozymes discovered at each step of these pathways. However, this information, which requires pages of text for its description, can be summarized in very simple schemes, although there is no consensus on the drawing of such schemes. This article presents a simple set of rules that allows a lot of information to be inserted in easily understandable displays.


FEBS Journal | 2005

SHIP2 interaction with the cytoskeletal protein Vinexin

Nathalie Paternotte; Jing Zhang; Isabelle Vandenbroere; Katrien Backers; Daniel Blero; Noriyuki Kioka; Jean-Marie Vanderwinden; Isabelle Pirson; Christophe Erneux

The src homology 2 (SH2) domain‐containing inositol 5‐phosphatase 2 (SHIP2) catalyses the dephosphorylation of phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5‐trisphosphate [PtdIns(3,4,5)P3] to phosphatidylinositol 3,4‐bisphosphate [PtdIns(3,4)P2]. We report the identification of the cytoskeletal protein Vinexin as a protein interacting with SHIP2. This was achieved by yeast two‐hybrid screening using the C‐terminal region of SHIP2 as bait. Vinexin has previously been identified as a vinculin‐binding protein that plays a key role in cell spreading and cytoskeletal organization. The interaction between SHIP2 and Vinexin was confirmed in lysates of both COS‐7 cells and mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEF). The C‐terminus was involved in the interaction, as shown by the transfection of a truncated C‐terminus mutant of SHIP2. In addition, we showed the colocalization between Vinexin α and SHIP2 at the periphery of transfected COS‐7 cells. When added in vitro to SHIP2, Vinexin did not affect the PtdIns(3,4,5)P3 5‐phosphatase activity of SHIP2. Enhanced cell adhesion to collagen‐I‐coated dishes was shown upon transfection of either SHIP2 or Vinexin to COS‐7 cells. This effect was no longer observed with either a catalytic mutant or the C‐terminus mutant of SHIP2. It also appears SHIP2 specific; this was not seen with SHIP1. Adhesion to the same matrix was decreased in SHIP2–/– MEF cells compared with MEF+/+ cells. Our data suggest that SHIP2 interaction with Vinexin promotes the localization of SHIP2 at the periphery of the cells leaving its catalytic site intact. The complex formation between Vinexin and SHIP2 may increase cellular adhesion. The data reinforce the concept that SHIP2 is active both as a PtdIns(3,4,5)P3 5‐phosphatase and as a modulator of focal contact formation.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2003

The c-Cbl-associated protein and c-Cbl are two new partners of the SH2-containing inositol polyphosphate 5-phosphatase SHIP2.

Isabelle Vandenbroere; Nathalie Paternotte; Jacques Emile Dumont; Christophe Erneux; Isabelle Pirson

SHIP2 is a phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-trisphosphate (PtdIns(3,4,5)P(3)) 5-phosphatase which contains motifs susceptible to mediate protein-protein interaction. Using yeast two-hybrid, GST-pulldown, and coimmunoprecipitation studies, we isolated the CAP cDNA as a specific partner of SHIP2 proline-rich domain and showed by GST-pulldown experiments that the interaction took place with the SH3C of CAP. The interaction was not modulated in COS-7 cells stimulated by EGF neither in CHO cells overexpressing the insulin receptor in the presence or absence of insulin stimulation. We also showed that SHIP2 was able to coimmunoprecipitate with endogenous c-Cbl protein in the absence of CAP and with the insulin receptor in CHO-IR cell extracts. The presence of SHIP2 in a complex around the insulin receptor could account for the very specific increase in insulin sensitivity of SHIP2 knock-out mice.


Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology | 1999

IGF-1 or insulin, and the TSH cyclic AMP cascade separately control dog and human thyroid cell growth and DNA synthesis, and complement each other in inducing mitogenesis.

Sandrine Deleu; Isabelle Pirson; Katia Coulonval; Annick Drouin; Martine Taton; Frédéric Clermont; Pierre P. Roger; Takahiro Nakamura; Jacques Emile Dumont; Carine Maenhaut

The regular doubling of cell mass, and therefore of cell protein content, is required for repetitive cell divisions. Preliminary observations have shown that in dog thyrocytes insulin induces protein accumulation but not DNA synthesis, while TSH does not increase protein accumulation but triggers DNA synthesis in the presence of insulin. We show here that EGF and phorbol myristate ester complement insulin action in the same way. HGF is the only factor activating both protein accumulation and DNA synthesis. The effects of insulin on protein accumulation and in permitting the TSH effect are reproduced by IGF-1 and are mediated, at least in part by the IGF-1 receptor. The concentration effect curves are similar for both effects. Similar results are obtained in human thyrocytes. They reflect true cell growth, as shown by increases in RNA content and cell size. Carbachol and fetal calf serum also stimulate protein synthesis and accumulation without triggering DNA synthesis, but they are not permissive for the mitogenic effects of TSH or of the general adenylate cyclase activator, forskolin. Moreover the mitogenic effect of TSH greatly decreased in cells deprived of insulin for 2 days although these cells remain hypertrophic. Hypertrophy may therefore be necessary for cell division, but it is not sufficient to permit it. Three different mechanisms can therefore be distinguished in the mitogenic action of TSH: (1) the increase of cell mass (hypertrophy) induced by insulin or IGF-1; (2) the permissive effect of insulin or IGF-1 on the mitogenic effect of TSH which may involve both the increase of cell mass and the induction of specific proteins such as cyclin D3 and (3) the mitogenic effect of the TSH cyclic AMP cascade proper.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1996

Thyrotropin via Cyclic AMP Induces Insulin Receptor Expression and Insulin Co-stimulation of Growth and Amplifies Insulin and Insulin-like Growth Factor Signaling Pathways in Dog Thyroid Epithelial Cells

Ravshan Burikhanov; Katia Coulonval; Isabelle Pirson; Françoise Lamy; Jacques Emile Dumont; Pierre P. Roger

Despite the similarity of their receptors and signal transduction pathways, insulin is regarded as a regulator of glucose, protein, and lipid metabolism, whereas insulin-like growth factors (IGF-I and IGF-II) mainly act as mitogenic hormones. In the dog thyroid primary culture model, the triggering of DNA synthesis by thyrotropin (TSH) through cAMP, or by cAMP-independent factors including epidermal growth factor, hepatocyte growth factor and phorbol esters, requires insulin or IGFs as comitogenic factors. In the present study, in TSH-treated cells, IGF-I receptors and insulin receptors were paradoxically equivalent in their capacity to elicit the comitogenic pathway, which, however, was mediated only by IGF-I receptors in dog thyroid cells stimulated by cAMP-independent mitogens. Moreover, prior cell exposure to TSH or forskolin increased their responsiveness to insulin, IGF-I, and IGF-II, as seen on DNA synthesis and activation of a common insulin/IGF signaling pathway. To understand these observations, binding characteristics and expression of insulin and IGF-I receptors were examined. To analyze IGF-I receptor characteristics, the unexpected interference of a huge presence of IGF-binding proteins at the cell membrane was avoided using labeled Long R3 IGF-I instead of IGF-I. Strikingly, TSH, through cAMP, time-dependently induced insulin binding and insulin receptor mRNA and protein accumulation without any effect on IGF-I receptors. These findings constitute a first example of an induction of insulin receptor gene expression by a cAMP-mediated hormone. In dog thyroid cells, this allows low physiological insulin concentrations to act as a comitogenic factor and might explain in part the enhanced responsiveness to IGFs in response to TSH. This raises the possibility that TSH-insulin interactions may play a role in the regulation of thyroid growth and function in vivo.


Journal of Cellular Physiology | 1999

Immediate early gene expression in dog thyrocytes in response to growth, proliferation, and differentiation stimuli.

Sandrine Deleu; Isabelle Pirson; Frédéric Clermont; Takahiro Nakamura; Jacques Emile Dumont; Carine Maenhaut

In dog thyroid cells, insulin or IGF‐1 induces cell growth and is required for the mitogenic action of TSH through cyclic AMP, of EGF, and of phorbol esters. HGF per se stimulates cell proliferation and is thus the only full mitogenic agent. TSH and cAMP enhance, whereas EGF phorbol esters and HGF repress differentiation expression. In this study, we have investigated for each factor and regulatory cascade of the intermediate step of immediate early gene induction, that is, c‐myc, c‐jun, jun D, jun B, c‐fos, fos B, fra‐1, fra‐2, and egr1; fra‐1 and fra‐2 expressions were very low. TSH or forskolin increased the levels of c‐myc, jun B, jun D, c‐fos, and fos B while decreasing those of c‐jun and egr1. Phorbol myristate ester stimulated the expression of all the genes. EGF and HGF stimulated the expression of all the genes except jun D and for EGF fos B. All these effects were obtained in the presence and in the absence of insulin, which shows that insulin is not necessary for the effects of the mitogens on immediate early gene expression. The definition of the repertoire of early immediate genes inductible by the various growth cascades provides a framework for the analysis of gene expression in tumors. (1) Insulin was able to induce all the protooncogenes investigated except fos B. This suggests that fos B could be the factor missing for insulin to induce mitogenesis. (2) No characteristic pattern of immediate early gene expression has been observed for insulin, which induces cell hypertrophy and is permissive for the action of the other growth factors. These effects are therefore not accounted for by a specific immediate early gene expression. On the other hand, insulin clearly enhances the effects of TSH, phorbol ester, and EGF on c‐myc, junB, and c‐fos expression. This suggests that the effect of insulin on mitogenesis might result from quantitative differences in the transcription complexes formed. (3) c‐myc, c‐fos, and jun B mRNA induction by all stimulating agents, whether inducing cell hypertrophy, or growth and dedifferentiation, or growth and differentiation, suggests that, although these expressions are not sufficient, they may be necessary for the various growth responses of thyroid cells. (4) The inhibition of c‐jun and egr1 mRNA expression, and the marked induction of jun D mRNA appear to be specific features of the TSH cAMP pathway. They might be related to its differentiating action. (5) fos B, which is induced by TSH, forskolin, phorbol ester, and HGF but not by insulin, could be involved in the mitogenic action of the former factors. J. Cell. Physiol. 181:342–354, 1999.


Molecular Neurobiology | 2011

Progressive Myoclonic Epilepsy-Associated Gene KCTD7 is a Regulator of Potassium Conductance in Neurons

Regis Azizieh; David Orduz; Patrick Van Bogaert; Tristan Bouschet; Wendy Rodriguez; Serge N. Schiffmann; Isabelle Pirson; Marc Abramowicz

The potassium channel tetramerization domain-containing protein 7 (KCTD7) was named after the structural homology of its predicted N-terminal broad complex, tramtrack and bric à brac/poxvirus and zinc finger domain with the T1 domain of the Kv potassium channel, but its expression profile and cellular function are still largely unknown. We have recently reported a homozygous nonsense mutation of KCTD7 in patients with a novel form of autosomal recessive progressive myoclonic epilepsy. Here, we show that KCTD7 expression hyperpolarizes the cell membrane and reduces the excitability of transfected neurons in patch clamp experiments. We found the expression of KCTD7 in the hippocampal and Purkinje cells of the murine brain, an expression profile consistent with our patients’ phenotype. The effect on the plasma membrane resting potential is possibly mediated by Cullin-3, as we demonstrated direct molecular interaction of KCTD7 with Cullin-3 in co-immunoprecipitation assays. Our data link progressive myoclonic epilepsy to an inherited defect of the neuron plasma membrane’s resting potential in the brain.


Experimental Cell Research | 1991

Differential regulation of protooncogenes c-jun and jun D expressions by protein tyrosine kinase, protein kinase C, and cyclic-AMP mitogenic pathways in dog primary thyrocytes: TSH and cyclic-AMP induce proliferation but downregulate C-jun expression.

Sophie Reuse; Isabelle Pirson; Jacques Emile Dumont

The expressions of the protooncogenes c-jun and jun D have been investigated in dog thyrocytes in a primary culture whose proliferation is stimulated by three distinct intracellular signaling pathways (1) the thyrotropin (TSH) or forskolin-cyclic-AMP-mediated cascade; (2) the protein kinase C pathway activated by diacylglycerol (DAG) and phorbol esters (TPA); (3) a protein tyrosine kinase system activated by epidermal growth factor (EGF). While the first cascade is compatible with the differentiated state of the cell, the two latter pathways induce dedifferentiation. Following the stimulation by TPA or EGF, the expression of c-jun was increased and the expression of jun D was faintly increased. Both expressions are superinduced in the presence of cycloheximide as in mitogenically stimulated fibroblasts but, in the presence of cycloheximide alone, the expressions of c-jun and jun D are clearly unstable with time. This indicates that cycloheximide controls should be included at all time points examined in such experiments. Increasing intracellular concentrations of cyclic-AMP by forskolin or TSH was followed by an inhibition of the expression of c-jun. This inhibition was independent of protein synthesis. Similarly, the TPA or EGF stimulation of c-jun expression was also inhibited by TSH or forskolin, as in fibroblasts in which cyclic-AMP inhibits proliferation. Our results show that the expression of c-jun is not universally correlated with the stimulation of cell proliferation. The stimulation of c-jun expression is not common between the three mitogenic pathways. It thus represents another of the very different responses elicited by the cyclic-AMP cascade as compared to the more studied tyrosine kinase and protein kinase C mitogenic pathways.


PLOS Genetics | 2013

tRNA Methyltransferase Homolog Gene TRMT10A Mutation in Young Onset Diabetes and Primary Microcephaly in Humans

Mariana Igoillo-Esteve; Anne Genin; Nelle Lambert; Julie Désir; Isabelle Pirson; Baroj Abdulkarim; Nicolas Simonis; Anaïs Drielsma; Lorella Marselli; Piero Marchetti; Pierre Vanderhaeghen; Decio L. Eizirik; Wim Wuyts; Cécile Julier; Ali J. Chakera; Sian Ellard; Andrew T. Hattersley; Marc Abramowicz; Miriam Cnop

We describe a new syndrome of young onset diabetes, short stature and microcephaly with intellectual disability in a large consanguineous family with three affected children. Linkage analysis and whole exome sequencing were used to identify the causal nonsense mutation, which changed an arginine codon into a stop at position 127 of the tRNA methyltransferase homolog gene TRMT10A (also called RG9MTD2). TRMT10A mRNA and protein were absent in lymphoblasts from the affected siblings. TRMT10A is ubiquitously expressed but enriched in brain and pancreatic islets, consistent with the tissues affected in this syndrome. In situ hybridization studies showed that TRMT10A is expressed in human embryonic and fetal brain. TRMT10A is the mammalian ortholog of S. cerevisiae TRM10, previously shown to catalyze the methylation of guanine 9 (m1G9) in several tRNAs. Consistent with this putative function, in silico topology prediction indicated that TRMT10A has predominant nuclear localization, which we experimentally confirmed by immunofluorescence and confocal microscopy. TRMT10A localizes to the nucleolus of β- and non-β-cells, where tRNA modifications occur. TRMT10A silencing induces rat and human β-cell apoptosis. Taken together, we propose that TRMT10A deficiency negatively affects β-cell mass and the pool of neurons in the developing brain. This is the first study describing the impact of TRMT10A deficiency in mammals, highlighting a role in the pathogenesis of microcephaly and early onset diabetes. In light of the recent report that the type 2 diabetes candidate gene CDKAL1 is a tRNA methylthiotransferase, the findings in this family suggest broader relevance of tRNA methyltransferases in the pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes.

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Jacques Emile Dumont

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Carine Maenhaut

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Pierre P. Roger

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Françoise Lamy

Free University of Brussels

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Chantal Degraef

Free University of Brussels

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Christophe Erneux

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Katia Coulonval

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Marc Abramowicz

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Catherine Ledent

Université libre de Bruxelles

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