Jean Coll
Pasteur Institute
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Jean Coll.
The EMBO Journal | 1992
Vincent Laudet; C Hänni; Jean Coll; F Catzeflis; Dominique Stehelin
Nuclear receptor genes represent a large family of genes encoding receptors for various hydrophobic ligands such as steroids, vitamin D, retinoic acid and thyroid hormones. This family also contains genes encoding putative receptors for unknown ligands. Nuclear receptor gene products are composed of several domains important for transcriptional activation, DNA binding (C domain), hormone binding and dimerization (E domain). It is not known whether these genes have evolved through gene duplication from a common ancestor or if their different domains came from different independent sources. To test these possibilities we have constructed and compared the phylogenetic trees derived from two different domains of 30 nuclear receptor genes. The tree built from the DNA binding C domain clearly shows a common progeny of all nuclear receptors, which can be grouped into three subfamilies: (i) thyroid hormone and retinoic acid receptors, (ii) orphan receptors and (iii) steroid hormone receptors. The tree constructed from the central part of the E domain which is implicated in transcriptional regulation and dimerization shows the same distribution in three subfamilies but two groups of receptors are in a different position from that in the C domain tree: (i) the Drosophila knirps family genes have acquired very different E domains during evolution, and (ii) the vitamin D and ecdysone receptors, as well as the FTZ‐F1 and the NGF1B genes, seem to have DNA binding and hormone binding domains belonging to different classes. These data suggest a complex evolutionary history for nuclear receptor genes in which gene duplication events and swapping between domains of different origins took place.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005
Nathalie Berteaux; Séverine Lottin; Didier Monté; Sébastien Pinte; Brigitte Quatannens; Jean Coll; Hubert Hondermarck; Jean-Jacques Curgy; Thierry Dugimont; Eric Adriaenssens
The imprinted H19 gene has riboregulatory functions. We show here that H19 transcription is up-regulated during the S-phase of growth-stimulated cells and that the H19 promoter is activated by E2F1 in breast cancer cells. H19 repression by pRb and E2F6 confirms the E2F1-dependent control of the H19 promoter. Consistently, we demonstrate by chromatin immunoprecipitation assays that endogenous E2F1 is recruited to the H19 promoter in vivo. The functionality of E2F promoter sites was further confirmed by gel shift and mutagenesis experiments, revealing that these sites are required for binding and promoter response to E2F1 exogenous expression and serum stimulation. Furthermore, we show that H19 overexpression confers a growth advantage on breast cancer cells released from growth arrest as well as in asynchronously growing cells. The H19 knockdown by small interfering RNA duplexes impedes S-phase entry in both wild-type and stably H19-transfected cells. Based on these findings, we conclude that the H19 RNA is actively linked to E2F1 to promote cell cycle progression of breast cancer cells. This clearly supports the H19 oncogenic function in breast tumor genesis.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2008
Nathalie Berteaux; Nathalie Aptel; Guy Cathala; Céline Genton; Jean Coll; Anthony Daccache; Nathalie Spruyt; Hubert Hondermarck; Thierry Dugimont; Jean-Jacques Curgy; Thierry Forné; Eric Adriaenssens
ABSTRACT The H19/IGFf2 locus belongs to a large imprinted domain located on human chromosome 11p15.5 (homologue to mouse distal chromosome 7). The H19 gene is expressed from the maternal allele, while IGF2 is paternally expressed. Natural antisense transcripts and intergenic transcription have been involved in many aspects of eukaryotic gene expression, including genomic imprinting and RNA interference. However, apart from the identification of some IGF2 antisense transcripts, few data are available on that topic at the H19/IGF2 locus. We identify here a novel transcriptional activity at both the human and the mouse H19/IGF2 imprinted loci. This activity occurs antisense to the H19 gene and has the potential to produce a single 120-kb transcript that we called the 91H RNA. This nuclear and short-lived RNA is not imprinted in mouse but is expressed predominantly from the maternal allele in both mice and humans within the H19 gene region. Moreover, the transcript is stabilized in breast cancer cells and overexpressed in human breast tumors. Finally, knockdown experiments showed that, in humans, 91H, rather than affecting H19 expression, regulates IGF2 expression in trans.
American Journal of Pathology | 1998
Eric Adriaenssens; Lionel Dumont; Séverine Lottin; Domitille Bolle; Alain Leprêtre; Alice Delobelle; Fatima Bouali; Thierry Dugimont; Jean Coll; Jean-Jacques Curgy
In a previous study we described the expression of the H19 gene by in situ hybridization (ISH) in normal breast and in benign or malignant breast tumors (Dugimont T, Curgy JJ, Wernert N, Delobelle A, Raes MB, Joubel A, Stehelin D, Coll J: Biol Cell 1995, 85:117-124). In the present work, 1) we extend the previous one to a statistically useful number of adenocarcinomas, including 10 subclasses, 2) we provide information on the precise ISH localization of the H19 RNA by using, on serial tissue sections, antibodies delineating specifically the stromal or the epithelial component of the breast, and 3) we consider relationships between the H19 gene expression and various clinicopathological information as tumor values (T0 to T4), grades, steroid receptors, lymph node status, and molecular features as the p53 gene product and the Ki-67/MIB1 protein, which is specific to proliferating cells. Data indicate that 1) in 72.5% of studied breast adenocarcinomas an overall H19 gene expression is increased when compared with healthy tissues, 2) the H19 gene is generally overexpressed in stromal cells (92.2%) and rarely in epithelial cells (2.9% only), 3) an up-regulation of the H19 gene is significantly correlated with the tumor values and the presence of both estrogen and progesterone receptors, and 4) at the cellular level, the H19 gene demonstrates an independent expression versus accumulation of both the p53 protein and the Ki-67/MIB-1 cell-cycle marker.
Oncogene | 1998
Thierry Dugimont; Claire Montpellier; Eric Adriaenssens; Séverine Lottin; Lionel Dumont; Violetta Iotsova; Christian Lagrou; Dominique Stehelin; Jean Coll; Jean-Jacques Curgy
The developmentally regulated H19 gene displays several remarkable properties: expression of an apparently non-translated mRNA, genomic imprinting (maternal allele only expressed), relaxation of the imprinting and/or epigenetic lesions demonstrated in some tumors. Despite several observations after relaxation of imprinting status of the gene, data on trans and cis-acting factors required for the human H19 gene expression are still missing. As a first approach to address identification of factors involved in the regulation of the gene, we found that cells from a p53 antisense-transfected HeLa clone displayed increased amounts of H19 transcripts when compared to the non-transfected cells. Moreover, a HeLa clone stably transfected with a temperature sensitive (ts) 143 Ala p53 mutant exhibited temperature-dependent regulation of H19 expression. This preliminary indication of the repressing effect of the p53 protein on H19 expression has been confirmed by transient cotransfection experiments in HeLa cells, using luciferase surrogate constructs under the control of the 823 bp sequence immediately upstream of the transcription start point of the H19 gene, and different constructs containing sense, antisense or a ts 143 Ala mutant p53 cDNA. We observed an increase of H19 promoter-driven activity in transient cotransfections with the antisense p53 cDNA and the temperature sensitive mutant p53 at the non-permissive temperature, but a decrease with sense wild-type p53 cDNA. Furthermore, the cotransfection experiments were repeated in a cell line lacking endogenous p53. (Calu 6 cells) and the results provided additional evidence for a down regulation of the expression of the H19 gene by the p53 protein.
Cell | 1986
Thomas Graf; Fritz v. Weizsaecker; Sigrid Grieser; Jean Coll; Dominique Stehelin; T Patschinsky; Klaus Bister; Catherine Bechade; Georges Calothy; Achim Leutz
MH2, an avian retrovirus containing the v-myc and v-mil oncogenes, rapidly transforms chick hematopoietic cells in vitro. The transformed cells belong to the macrophage lineage and proliferate in the absence of exogenous growth factors. Here we analyze a series of MH2 deletion mutants and show that these two oncogenes together establish an autocrine growth system in which v-myc stimulates cell proliferation, while v-mil induces the production of chicken myelomonocytic growth factor (cMGF). We also demonstrate that these two oncogenes cooperate in vivo. MH2 efficiently induces monocytic leukemias and liver tumors, while deletion mutants lacking either a functional v-mil or v-myc do not.
Oncogene | 1999
Eric Adriaenssens; Séverine Lottin; Thierry Dugimont; W Fauquette; Jean Coll; J P Dupouy; B Boilly; Jean-Jacques Curgy
H19 is an imprinted and developmentally regulated gene whose product remains apparently untranslated. In a previous study on breast adenocarcinomas, we reported that overexpression of the H19 gene was significantly correlated with the presence of steroid receptors, suggesting the putative role of hormones in H19 transcription. To determine the mode of steroid action, we have detected levels of H19 RNA synthesis during mammary gland development by in situ hybridization (ISH): two peaks of H19 transcription occur during puberty and pregnancy. Furthermore, we demonstrated by ISH that in the uterus H19 RNA synthesis is high during estrus and metestrus phases. To test steroid control of H19 transcription, ovariectomized and adrenalectomized mice were supplemented, 1 week after surgery, with 17-β-estradiol (E2, 20 μg/kg/day), progesterone (P, 1 mg/kg/day) or corticosterone (B, 0.3 mg/kg/day) for 2 weeks. According to ISH data, E2 and to a lesser extent B stimulated H19 transcription in the uterus, whereas P inhibited it. To confirm the in vivo results, in vitro experiments were performed using cultures of MCF-7 cells (a hormone-sensitive mammary cell line). E2 stimulated the endogenous H19 gene of this cell line and tamoxifen inhibited this effect. Furthermore, we performed transient cotransfections in MCF-7, in HBL-100 (another hormone-sensitive mammary cell line) and in BT-20 (a hormone-insensitive mammary cell line) with various constructs of ERα (WT or mutated) and PR-A, in presence or absence of steroid hormones. We demonstrated that ERα up-regulated the H19 promoter in MCF-7 and in HBL-100, whereas PR-A did not have any effect per se. Moreover, in MCF-7, PR-A antagonized clearly the ERα-mediated promoter enhancement, but in HBL-100 this counteracting effect on the ERα up-regulation was not found. Interestingly, the same experiments performed in BT-20 cell line provided very similar results as those obtained in MCF-7 cells, with a clear down-regulation mediated by PR-A on the H19 promoter. All these in vitro data are in agreement with in vivo results. In addition, data obtained with ERα mutants indicate that H19 promoter activation is both ligand-dependent and ligand-independent. We have thus demonstrated that H19 gene expression is controlled by steroid hormones; furthermore, this gene is highly expressed in hormone-sensitive organs when the hormonal stimulation is accompanied with a morphological repair.
Oncogene | 2002
Se verine Lottin; Anne-Sophie Vercoutter-Edouart; Eric Adriaenssens; Xavier Czeszak; Je roà me Lemoine; Morad Roudbaraki; Jean Coll; Hubert Hondermarck; Thierry Dugimont; Jean-Jacques Curgy
Classically, the functional product of coding genes is a protein whose synthesis is directed by an mRNA-template. However, in the last few years several genes yielding an mRNA-like non-coding RNA as a functional product have been identified. In most cases these transcripts are synthesized by the RNA polymerase II, capped, spliced and polyadenylated, like classical mRNA. These latter have non-conserved open reading frames and seem to be untranslated. Consequently, it has been proposed and admitted that these genes act at the RNA level, and are so-called ‘riboregulators’. H19 belongs to this class of gene and its role remains a matter of debate: for some authors it is an oncogene, for others a tumour suppressor. Here, we demonstrate, using a proteomic approach, that an H19 overexpression in human cancerous mammary epithelial cells stably transfected with genomic DNA containing the entire H19 gene is responsible for positively regulating at the post-transcriptional level the thioredoxin, a key protein of the cellular redox metabolism. Interestingly, this protein accumulates in many cancerous tissues, such as breast carcinomas in which we have also demonstrated an overexpression of the H19 gene.
Journal of Virology | 2008
Christophe Le Clorennec; Tan-Sothéa Ouk; Ibtissam Youlyouz-Marfak; Stéphanie Panteix; Catherine-Claude Martin; Julia Rastelli; Eric Adriaenssens; Ursula Zimber-Strobl; Jean Coll; Jean Feuillard; Chantal Jayat-Vignoles
ABSTRACT The Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) oncoprotein latent membrane protein 1 (LMP1) is thought to act as the major transforming protein in various cell types, by rerouting the tumor necrosis factor receptor family signaling pathway. Despite this implication in EBV-associated transformation of cells, LMP1 toxicity is a well-known but poorly studied feature, perhaps because it contradicts its role in transformation. We show that LMP1 physiological levels are very heterogeneous and that the highest levels of LMP1 correlate with Fas overexpression and spontaneous apoptosis in lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCLs). To understand the cytotoxic effect of LMP1 in LCLs, we cloned wild-type LMP1 into a doxycycline double-inducible episomal vector pRT-1, with a truncated version of NGFR as a surrogate marker of inducibility. We found that LMP1 overexpression induced apoptosis in LCL B cells, as shown by annexin V labeling, sub-G1 peak, and poly(ADP ribose) polymerase cleavage. Knocking down Fas expression by small interfering RNA abolished LMP1-induced apoptosis. The absence of detectable levels of Fas ligand mRNA suggested a ligand-independent activation of Fas. LMP1 induced Fas overexpression with its relocalization in lipid raft microdomains of the membrane. Fas immunoprecipitation detected FADD (Fas-associated death domain protein) and caspase 8, suggesting a Fas-dependent formation of the death-inducing signaling complex. Caspases 8, 9, 3, and 7 were activated by LMP1. Caspase 8 activation was associated with BID cleavage and truncated-BID mitochondrial relocalization, consistent with type II apoptosis. Therefore, our results are in agreement with a model where LMP1-dependent NF-κB activation induces Fas overexpression and autoactivation that could overwhelm the antiapoptotic effect of NF-κB, revealing an ambivalent function of LMP1 in cell survival and programmed cell death.
Experimental Cell Research | 1983
Jean Coll; Simon Saule; P. Martin; Marie-Berthe Raes; C. Lagrou; Thomas Graf; Hartmut Beug; I.E. Simon; Dominique Stehelin
The possible role of normal chicken cellular sequences c-erb, c-myb and c-myc, together referred to as c-onc genes and related to the oncogenes of defective avian acute leukemia retroviruses (DLVs), was investigated by determining the accumulation of c-onc RNA in different avian cells an cell lines. Levels of c-myc and in some instances c-myb RNA are elevated in immature hematopoietic cells or cell lines from various lineages but more mature hematopoietic cells, as well as non-hematopoietic cells, contain only low levels. In contrast, the level of c-erb RNA is generally low, but high in a small number of normal bone marrow cells. The results indicate that the cellular homologues of the viral oncogenes are differentially expressed during hematopoiesis. They also indicate that the hypothesis that DLV target cells express their homologous c-onc genes might hold for c-erb, but is not valid in its simple form for c-myc and c-myb.