Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Jacques Signoret is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Jacques Signoret.


Developmental Biology | 1981

Enzymes involved in DNA replication in the axolotl. II. Control of DNA ligase activity during very early development.

Jacques Signoret; Jacques Lefresne; Denise Vinson; Jean-Claude David

Abstract The light form of DNA ligase (6 S) present in the unfertilized egg of the axolotl undergoes a rapid decay as the egg enters cleavage. At the same time a heavy form of ligase (8.2 S) appears and becomes prominent. This change occurs progressively between 3 and 9 hr of development, and its control has been studied here by experimental analysis. The modification can be brought about by artificial activation of the eggs as well as by normal fertilization. The phenomenon is sensitive to cycloheximide, actinomycin D, α-amanitin, and injury of the female pronucleus by uv irradiation. These results lead to the conclusion that the shift in ligase form involves de novo protein synthesis and transcription of an intact maternal genome. The paternal genome is unable to govern a similar change in haploid androgenetic embryos. The control of ligase replacement appears, therefore, to be the consequence of a direct gene expression revealed for the first time in an egg before cleavage. This expression is differential for paternal and maternal genomes in the same cytoplasm.


Developmental Biology | 1981

Enzymes involved in DNA replication in the axolotl: I. Analysis of the forms and activities of DNA polymerase and DNA ligase during development☆

Danièle Carré; Jacques Signoret; Jacques Lefresne; Jean-Claude David

Abstract DNA polymerases and DNA ligases have been studied during development of the amphibian, axolotl. Three forms of DNA polymerase, I, II, and III, with sedimentation coefficients in sucrose of 9, 6, and 3.1 S, respectively, have been found in the axolotl egg. The activity of these three DNA polymerases is unchanged during early embryonic development. The activity of DNA polymerase III then increases significantly, beginning at the tailbud stage, while the activity of DNA polymerase II increases at the larval stage. DNA polymerase I does not show significant variations during this time. On the basis of their catalytic properties, it appears that DNA polymerases I and II are α-type DNA polymerases whereas DNA polymerase III is a β-type enzyme. Two different DNA ligases are found in the axolotl, one showing a sedimentation coefficient in sucrose of 8.2 S (heavy form) and the other, 6 S (light form). The 6 S enzyme is the major DNA ligase activity found in the egg before and after fertilization. Its activity then decreases during embryonic development. It can be observed again, as the only DNA ligase activity, in some adult tissues. The 8.2 S enzyme appears during the first division cycle of the fertilized egg, is present at all stages of embryonic development, and is absent from the adult tissues tested. Properties of the two DNA ligases at different stages of embryonic development have also been compared.


Developmental Biology | 1983

DNA ligase in axolotl egg: A model for study of gene activity control

Jacques Lefresne; Jean-Claude David; Jacques Signoret

Replacement of the light form of DNA ligase (6 S) by the heavy form (8 S) in activated egg of Axolotl has been studied as a model for change in genetic activity exerted by the female pronucleus. Nuclear transplantation shows that a blastula nucleus is able to govern the replacement of the light ligase by the heavy one. The result is not the same if the grafted nucleus is taken from an androgenetic embryo, devoid of the heavy enzyme. Therefore the change in the properties of the female pronucleus appears stable and autoreproducible. Gamma irradiations delivered at different times after activation establish that the replacement of the ligase forms depends on an intact nucleus up to 3 hr 30 min after activation, and thereafter is achieved independently of any nuclear damage. Inhibitors of DNA replication impede the change of enzymatic form in reversible process, suggesting new chromatin synthesis as prerequisite for expression of the new genetic activity. The quantitative level of DNA ligase activity does not show any dose effect when one or many nuclei are present in the same cytoplasm. However, a change in nucleotide concentration results in a change in DNA ligase activity, indicating cytoplasmic control of enzymatic regulation.


Mechanisms of Development | 1979

Evidence for a DNA ligase change related to early cleavage in axolotl egg

Jean-Claude David; Denise Vinson; Jacques Lefresne; Jacques Signoret

A definite change in the forms of DNA ligase appears when the axolotl egg enters cleavage. Sucrose gradient and phosphocellulose chromatography show that the a 6S form of DNA ligase exists before division, i.e. in unfertilised and fertilised egg, and a 8.2S form is present at the first division. N-ethylmaleimide sensitivity and heat stability are different for the two forms. The possible significance of this early change is discussed.


International Review of Cytology-a Survey of Cell Biology | 1986

Control of the expression of genes for DNA ligase in eukaryotes.

Jacques Signoret; Jean-Claude David

Publisher Summary This chapter discusses the control of the expression of genes for DNA ligase in eukaryotes. The definite molecular form of an enzyme represents the terminal product of a specific gene activity. The presence and the amount of active substance offer a model for the regulation of gene expression. The situation encountered with DNA ligase appeared to be especially favorable for an experimental approach of this matter, and the results accumulated over the past 5 years constitute the basis of the chapter. The chapter discusses tests for the different levels of gene expression. The best-suited method for determining the pattern of DNA ligase activity is fractionation following centrifugation on sucrose gradient. At least three categories of mechanisms may be involved in any change of enzymatic pattern. First, an epigenetic modification of the elaborated product might activate a preexisting inactive form already present in the cytoplasm. Second, de novo synthesis of a new enzyme might occur, directed by masked messengers of maternal origin accumulated during oogenesis. Third, complete gene expression involving transcription and translation might account for the production of a new molecular form.


Developmental Biology | 1986

Evidence for a change in molecular form of DNA ligase in early development of the sea urchin Psammechinus miliaris

Jacques Signoret; Pierre Thiebaud; Jacques Lefresne; Jean-Claude David

A change in the molecular form of DNA ligase appears when the sea urchin egg enters cleavage. Sucrose gradient analysis and DNA cellulose chromatography show that a slower migrating form (7 S) of enzyme exists in unfertilized eggs and in sperm. A faster migrating form of DNA ligase (7.8 S) is present in developing embryos as well as in artificially activated eggs. The timing of this early biochemical event has been determined, following fertilization or activation. The change in molecular form of DNA ligase has been shown to be sensitive to drugs inhibiting protein synthesis, gene transcription, or DNA replication. Consequently the appearance of the faster migrating form of enzyme is assumed to result from expression of the corresponding gene, transcription, and translation. RNA extracted from testes and from cleaving stages, assayed in vitro and in vivo, have been shown to carry the information for, respectively, 7 S and 7.8 S DNA ligase according to the origin of the RNA.


Experimental Cell Research | 1985

Molecular duality of DNA ligase in axolotl corresponds to distinctive transcriptional information

Pierre Thiebaud; Jacques Signoret; Jacques Lefresne; Christiane Rimbaut; Denise Buffe; Jean-Claude David

Based upon the use of specific antibodies and sucrose gradient sedimentation analysis, the present work describes the use of the post-transcriptional equipment of the urodele egg to compare the information contained in two RNA samples extracted from respectively liver and activated axolotl eggs. It is shown that besides the normal DNA ligase activity present in the host Pleurodeles eggs, RNA can translate for the specific carried information revealing a difference between the two samples. Moreover, unlike in nuclear transplantation, the homologous DNA ligases are not mutually exclusive. These observations give a new convincing support of the genetic basis of the molecular duality of DNA ligases.


Developmental Biology | 1987

Changes in the catalytic properties of DNA ligases during early sea urchin development

Claude Prigent; Dominique Maniey; Jacques Lefresne; David Epel; Jacques Signoret; Jean-Claude David

Two distinct DNA ligases are expressed during early sea urchin embryogenesis. A light form (50 kDa) is found in unfertilized eggs (oocyte form) and a heavier enzyme (110 kDa) is observed at the two-cell stage (embryonic form). The chronology of the change reveals that the embryonic form is detected 90 min after fertilization. After the two proteins were purified, their catalytic properties were studied using different substrates. The oocyte ligase acts only on deoxypolymers while the embryonic form also ligates heteropolymers. The two enzymes were found to undergo both nick and cohesive-end ligation. With different kinds of restriction sites it was observed that the embryonic enzyme could also ligate blunt-ended DNA. These catalytic properties account for sealing of exogenous DNA and concatenation following DNA injection into eggs. The role of the oocyte form of the enzyme is unclear; one speculation is a role in repair of DNA breaks which might accumulate during long-term sperm and oocyte storage in the gonad.


Development Genes and Evolution | 1995

Differential stability of Xenopus c-myc RNA during oogenesis in axolotl Involvement of the 3′ untranslated region in vivo

Y. Andéol; Jacques Lefresne; Ch. Houillon; Jacques Signoret

We have used the axolotl oocyte (Ambystoma mexicanum Shaw) to study the stability of exogenously injected Xenopus RNAs. Three different cellular developmental stages have been analysed: (1) the growing oocyte (stage III–IV of vitellogenesis), (2) the full-grown oocyte at the end of vitellogenesis (stage VI) and (3) the progesterone-matured stage VI oocyte. Three exogenous RNAs have been synthesized in vitro from a c-myc Xenopus cDNA clone. One transcript is 2.3 kb long (full length), the second is 1.5 kb long, with most of the 3′ untranslated region (3′UTR) removed, and the third corresponds to the 3′UTR (0.8 kb). After injection or coinjection of these exogenous Xenopus RNAs into axolotl oocytes, the stability of the molecules was studied after 5 min, 6 h and 21 h by extraction of total RNA and Northern blot analysis.Results show a difference in Xenopus RNA stability during axolotl oogenesis. In growing oocytes, the three synthetic transcripts are gradually degraded. The absence of the 3′UTR is not therefore sufficient to stabilize the transcript during early oogenesis. No degradation is observed in full-grown oocytes, suggesting the existence of stabilizing factors at the end of oogenesis. When stage VI oocytes are induced to mature by progesterone, only the 2.3 and 1.5 kb Xenopus RNAs disappear. This suggests a role for germinal vesicle breakdown in this degradation process as well as the existence of a factor present in the nucleus and involved in the specific destabilization of these RNAs after oocyte maturation. This degradation might implicate several destabilizing sequences localized in the coding or in the 3′UTR of the c-myc gene. In contrast, the 0.8 kb transcript (3′UTR) is not degraded during this period and remains very stable. Therefore, degradation appears distinct from one transcript to another and from one region to another within the same molecule. During maturation, the behaviour of the 2.3 and 1.5 kb transcripts is different when coinjected with the 3′UTR, suggesting a role in trans of this untranslated molecule in c-myc stability. Our approach allows us to analyse the role of the coding and 3′UTR regions of the c-myc RNA in the control of mRNA degradation in vivo.


Journal of Plant Physiology | 1992

Ras-related proto-oncogenes are transcripted in leaves and callus from sugarbeet

Daniel Hagège; Yannick Andeol; Martine Boccara; Paulette Schmitt; Jean-Marc Jeltsch; Edilberto Barrientos; Jacques Signoret; Thomas Gaspar

Summary Northern analysis of RNAs, extracted from normal sugarbeet callus cultures (grown with growth regulators) and from leaves derived from the mother strain, when hybridized with a Xenopus c-Ki- ras probe, reveal the presence of two transcripts in the plant material. The level of RNA detected is slightly higher (approximately 2 fold) in callus culture, when compared with leaves from the mother strain. Involvement of cellular oncogenes in the control of plant cells cultured in vitro is suggested.

Collaboration


Dive into the Jacques Signoret's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Y. Andéol

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jacques Lefresne

University of Caen Lower Normandy

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M. Loir

University of Rennes

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge