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Dive into the research topics where Jean-François Brunet is active.

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Featured researches published by Jean-François Brunet.


Nature | 1999

The homeobox gene Phox2b is essential for the development of autonomic neural crest derivatives.

Alexandre Pattyn; Xavier Morin; Harold Cremer; Christo Goridis; Jean-François Brunet

The sympathetic, parasympathetic and enteric ganglia are the main components of the peripheral autonomic nervous system, and are all derived from the neural crest. The factors needed for these structures to develop include the transcription factor Mash1 (refs 3,4,5), the glial-derived neurotrophic factor GNDF (refs 6,7,8) and its receptor subunits, and the neuregulin signalling system, each of which is essential for the differentiation and survival of subsets of autonomic neurons. Here we show that all autonomic ganglia fail to form properly and degenerate in mice lacking the homeodomain transcription factor Phox2b, as do the three cranial sensory ganglia that are part of the autonomic reflex circuits. In the anlagen of the enteric nervous system and the sympathetic ganglia, Phox2b is needed for the expression of the GDNF-receptor subunit Ret and for maintaining Mash1 expression. Mutant ganglionic anlagen also fail to switch on the genes that encode two enzymes needed for the biosynthesis of the neurotransmitter noradrenaline, dopamine-β-hydroxylase and tyrosine hydroxylase, demonstrating that Phox2b regulates the noradrenergic phenotype in vertebrates.


Neuron | 1997

Defects in sensory and autonomic ganglia and absence of locus coeruleus in mice deficient for the homeobox gene Phox2a

Xavier Morin; Harold Cremer; Marie Rose Hirsch; Raj P. Kapur; Christo Goridis; Jean-François Brunet

Phox2a is a vertebrate homeodomain protein expressed in subsets of differentiating neurons. Here, we show that it is essential for proper development of the locus coeruleus, a subset of sympathetic and parasympathetic ganglia and the VIIth, IXth, and Xth cranial sensory ganglia. In the sensory ganglia, we have identified two differentiation blocks in Phox2a-/- mice. First, the transient expression of dopamine-beta-hydroxylase in neuroblasts is abolished, providing evidence that Phox2a controls noradrenergic traits in vivo. Second, the expression of the GDNF receptor subunit Ret is dramatically reduced, and there is a massive increase in apoptosis of ganglion cells, which are known to depend on GDNF in vivo. Therefore, Phox2a appears to regulate conventional differentiation traits and the ability of neurons to respond to essential survival factors.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2006

Expression of Phox2b by Brainstem Neurons Involved in Chemosensory Integration in the Adult Rat

Ruth L. Stornetta; Thiago S. Moreira; Ana C. Takakura; Bong Jin Kang; Darryl A. Chang; Gavin H. West; Jean-François Brunet; Daniel K. Mulkey; Douglas A. Bayliss; Patrice G. Guyenet

Central congenital hypoventilation syndrome is caused by mutations of the gene that encodes the transcription factor Phox2b. The syndrome is characterized by a severe form of sleep apnea attributed to greatly compromised central and peripheral chemoreflexes. In this study, we analyze whether Phox2b expression in the brainstem respiratory network is preferentially associated with neurons involved in chemosensory integration in rats. At the very rostral end of the ventral respiratory column (VRC), Phox2b was present in many VGlut2 (vesicular glutamate transporter 2) mRNA-containing neurons. These neurons were functionally identified as the respiratory chemoreceptors of the retrotrapezoid nucleus (RTN). More caudally in the VRC, many fewer neurons expressed Phox2b. These cells were not part of the central respiratory pattern generator (CPG), because they were typically cholinergic visceral motor neurons or catecholaminergic neurons (presumed C1 neurons). Phox2b was not detected in serotonergic neurons, in the A5, A6, and A7 noradrenergic cell groups nor within the main cardiorespiratory centers of the dorsolateral pons. Phox2b was expressed by many solitary tract nucleus (NTS) neurons including those that relay peripheral chemoreceptor information to the RTN. These and previous observations by others suggest that Phox2b is expressed by an uninterrupted chain of neurons involved in the integration of peripheral and central chemoreception (carotid bodies, chemoreceptor afferents, chemoresponsive NTS neurons projecting to VRC, RTN chemoreceptors). The presence of Phox2b in this circuit and its apparent absence from the respiratory CPG could explain why Phox2b mutations disrupt breathing automaticity during sleep without causing major impairment of respiration during waking.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

A human mutation in Phox2b causes lack of CO2 chemosensitivity, fatal central apnea, and specific loss of parafacial neurons

Véronique Dubreuil; Nelina Ramanantsoa; Delphine Trochet; Vanessa Vaubourg; Jeanne Amiel; Jorge Gallego; Jean-François Brunet; Christo Goridis

Breathing is maintained and controlled by a network of neurons in the brainstem that generate respiratory rhythm and provide regulatory input. Central chemoreception, the mechanism for CO2 detection that provides an essential stimulatory input, is thought to involve neurons located near the medullary surface, whose nature is controversial. Good candidates are serotonergic medullary neurons and glutamatergic neurons in the parafacial region. Here, we show that mice bearing a mutation in Phox2b that causes congenital central hypoventilation syndrome in humans breathe irregularly, do not respond to an increase in CO2, and die soon after birth from central apnea. They specifically lack Phox2b-expressing glutamatergic neurons located in the parafacial region, whereas other sites known or supposed to be involved in the control of breathing are anatomically normal. These data provide genetic evidence for the essential role of a specific population of medullary interneurons in driving proper breathing at birth and will be instrumental in understanding the etiopathology of congenital central hypoventilation syndrome.


Current Opinion in Genetics & Development | 2002

Phox2 genes — from patterning to connectivity

Jean-François Brunet; Alexandre Pattyn

In the developing brain, many transcription factors are expressed in complex patterns and dynamics, and drive the differentiation of many classes of neurons. How does the spatio-temporal landscape of transcription factor expression map onto the bewildering variety of neuronal types, and, for each of them, the variety of developmental stages they go through? In other words, what is the logic in the transcriptional control of neuronal differentiation? Here, we review what recent work on the two neuronal-type-specific transcription factors Phox2a and Phox2b has contributed to our understanding of this broad question.


Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience | 2000

Specification of the Central Noradrenergic Phenotype by the Homeobox Gene Phox2b

Alexandre Pattyn; Christo Goridis; Jean-François Brunet

The closely related homeobox genes Phox2a and Phox2b are expressed in all central and peripheral noradrenergic neurons. Our previous results have shown that Phox2a controls the differentiation of the main noradrenergic center of the brain, the locus coeruleus, but leaves unaffected the other noradrenergic centers. Here, we report that Phox2b has a wider and overlapping role, in that it is required for the differentiation of all noradrenergic centers in the brain, including the locus coeruleus. Together with the previously reported lack of dopamine-b-hydroxylase and tyrosine hydroxylase expression in the peripheral nervous system of Phox2b knock-out embryos, our present findings make Phox2b a master regulator of all central and peripheral noradrenergic differentiation. We discuss the nonredundancy of Phox2 genes and their complex partnership with the bHLH transcription factor Mash1, which is also required for the differentiation of most noradrenergic cell types.


Neuron | 1999

Specification of Neurotransmitter Identity by Phox2 Proteins in Neural Crest Stem Cells

Liching Lo; Xavier Morin; Jean-François Brunet; David J. Anderson

We have investigated the specification of noradrenergic neurotransmitter identity in neural crest stem cells (NCSCs). Retroviral expression of both wild-type and dominant-negative forms of the paired homeodomain transcription factor Phox2a indicates a crucial and direct role for this protein (and/or the closely related Phox2b) in the regulation of endogenous tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and dopamine-beta hydroxylase (DBH) gene expression in these cells. In collaboration with cAMP, Phox2a can induce expression of TH but not of DBH or of panneuronal genes. Phox2 proteins are, moreover, necessary for the induction of both TH and DBH by bone morphogenetic protein 2 (BMP2) (which induces Phox2a/b) and forskolin. They are also necessary for neuronal differentiation. These data suggest that Phox2a/b coordinates the specification of neurotransmitter identity and neuronal fate by cooperating environmental signals in sympathetic neuroblasts.


Development | 2004

Essential role of Gata transcription factors in sympathetic neuron development

Konstantina Tsarovina; Alexandre Pattyn; Jutta Stubbusch; Frank Müller; Jacqueline van der Wees; Christoph Schneider; Jean-François Brunet; Hermann Rohrer

Sympathetic neurons are specified during their development from neural crest precursors by a network of crossregulatory transcription factors, which includes Mash1, Phox2b, Hand2 and Phox2a. Here, we have studied the function of Gata2 and Gata3 zinc-finger transcription factors in autonomic neuron development. In the chick, Gata2 but not Gata3 is expressed in developing sympathetic precursor cells. Gata2 expression starts after Mash1, Phox2b, Hand2 and Phox2a expression, but before the onset of the noradrenergic marker genes Th and Dbh, and is maintained throughout development. Gata2 expression is affected in the chick embryo by Bmp gain- and loss-of-function experiments, and by overexpression of Phox2b, Phox2a, Hand2 and Mash1. Together with the lack of Gata2/3 expression in Phox2b knockout mice, these results characterize Gata2 as member of the Bmp-induced cluster of transcription factors. Loss-of-function experiments resulted in a strong reduction in the size of the sympathetic chain and in decreased Th expression. Ectopic expression of Gata2 in chick neural crest precursors elicited the generation of neurons with a non-autonomic, Th-negative phenotype. This implies a function for Gata factors in autonomic neuron differentiation, which, however, depends on co-regulators present in the sympathetic lineage. The present data establish Gata2 and Gata3 in the chick and mouse, respectively, as essential members of the transcription factor network controlling sympathetic neuron development.


Nature Neuroscience | 2004

Ascl1/Mash1 is required for the development of central serotonergic neurons

Alexandre Pattyn; Nicolas Simplicio; J. Hikke van Doorninck; Christo Goridis; François Guillemot; Jean-François Brunet

The transcriptional control of the differentiation of central serotonergic (5-HT) neurons in vertebrates has recently come under scrutiny and has been shown to involve the homeobox genes Nkx2-2 and Lmx1b, the Ets-domain gene Pet1 (also known as Fev) and the zinc-finger gene Gata3. The basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) gene Ascl1 (also known as Mash1) is coexpressed with Nkx2-2 in the neuroepithelial domain of the hindbrain, which gives rise to 5-HT neurons. Here we show in the mouse that Ascl1 is essential for the birth of 5-HT neurons, both as a proneural gene for the production of postmitotic neuronal precursors and as a determinant of the serotonergic phenotype for the parallel activation of Gata3, Lmx1b and Pet1. Thus Ascl1, which is essential for noradrenergic differentiation, is also a determinant of the serotonergic phenotype.


Seminars in Cell Biology | 1992

NCAM: structural diversity, function and regulation of expression.

Christo Goridis; Jean-François Brunet

NCAM is a large family of structurally closely related proteins with cell-cell adhesive properties and a temporo-spatially regulated expression throughout development. This review covers recent work on NCAM with an emphasis on the still open questions of the full extent of structural diversity and the mechanism whereby it arises, the chemistry and functional consequences of the binding event and the intricacies of the developmental regulation of NCAM, all of which have ramifications in its likely role as an effector of morphogenesis.

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Christo Goridis

École Normale Supérieure

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Marie-Rose Hirsch

École Normale Supérieure

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Gilles Fortin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Alexandre Pattyn

French Institute of Health and Medical Research

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Jeanne Amiel

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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