Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Jean-Luc Villeval is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Jean-Luc Villeval.


Blood | 2008

JAK2 stimulates homologous recombination and genetic instability: potential implication in the heterogeneity of myeloproliferative disorders.

Isabelle Plo; Mayuka Nakatake; Laurent Malivert; Jean-Pierre de Villartay; Stéphane Giraudier; Jean-Luc Villeval; Lisa Wiesmüller; William Vainchenker

The JAK2(V617F) mutation is frequently observed in classical myeloproliferative disorders, and disease progression is associated with a biallelic acquisition of the mutation occurring by mitotic recombination. In this study, we examined whether JAK2 activation could lead to increased homologous recombination (HR) and genetic instability. In a Ba/F3 cell line expressing the erythropoietin (EPO) receptor, mutant JAK2(V617F) and, to a lesser extent, wild-type (wt) JAK2 induced an increase in HR activity in the presence of EPO without modifying nonhomologous end-joining efficiency. Moreover, a marked augmentation in HR activity was found in CD34(+)-derived cells isolated from patients with polycythemia vera or primitive myelofibrosis compared with control samples. This increase was associated with a spontaneous RAD51 foci formation. As a result, sister chromatid exchange was 50% augmented in JAK2(V617F) Ba/F3 cells compared with JAK2wt cells. Moreover, JAK2 activation increased centrosome and ploidy abnormalities. Finally, in JAK2(V617F) Ba/F3 cells, we found a 100-fold and 10-fold increase in mutagenesis at the HPRT and Na/K ATPase loci, respectively. Together, this work highlights a new molecular mechanism for HR regulation mediated by JAK2 and more efficiently by JAK2(V617F). Our study might provide some keys to understand how a single mutation can give rise to different pathologies.


Blood | 2010

Myeloproliferative neoplasm induced by constitutive expression of JAK2V617F in knock-in mice.

Caroline Marty; Catherine Lacout; Antoine Martin; Salma Hasan; Sylvie Jacquot; Marie-Christine Birling; William Vainchenker; Jean-Luc Villeval

The Jak2(V617F) mutation is found in most classical BCR/ABL-negative myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPNs). Usually, heterozygosity of the mutation is associated with essential thrombocythemia (ET) and homozygosity with polycythemia vera (PV). Retrovirally transduced or transgenic animal models have shown that the mutation is sufficient for MPN development but that the level of expression is crucial for MPN phenotypes. Therefore we investigated the effect of an endogenous heterozygous expression of Jak2(V617F) in knock-in (KI) mice. These animals displayed constitutive JAK2 activation and autonomous erythroid progenitor cell growth. Mice suffered from marked polycythemia, granulocytosis and thrombocytosis. Spleens and marrows displayed myeloid trilineage hyperplasia. Most animals survived to develop advanced fibrosis in these organs at around 9 months of age. In conclusion, constitutive heterozygous expression of JAK2(V617F) in mice is not embryo-lethal but results in severe PV-like disease with secondary myelofibrosis and not in ET-like disease as expected from patient study.


Blood | 2008

Activating mutations in human acute megakaryoblastic leukemia

Sébastien Malinge; Véronique Della-Valle; Didier Pisani; Stefan N. Constantinescu; Christelle Perez; Jean-Luc Villeval; Dirk Reinhardt; Judith Landman-Parker; Lucienne Michaux; Nicole Dastugue; André Baruchel; William Vainchenker; Jean-Pierre Bourquin; Virginie Penard-Lacronique; Olivier Bernard

Oncogenic activation of tyrosine kinase signaling pathway is recurrent in human leukemia. To gain insight into the oncogenic process leading to acute megakaryoblastic leukemia (AMKL), we performed sequence analyses of a subset of oncogenes known to be activated in human myeloid and myeloproliferative disorders. In a series of human AMKL samples from both Down syndrome and non-Down syndrome patients, mutations were identified within KIT, FLT3, JAK2, JAK3, and MPL genes, with a higher frequency in DS than in non-DS patients. The novel mutations were analyzed using BaF3 cells, showing that JAK3 mutations were activating mutations. Finally, we report a novel constitutively active MPL mutant, MPLT487A, observed in a non-Down syndrome childhood AMKL that induces a myeloproliferative disease in mouse bone marrow transplantation assay.


Blood | 2016

Calreticulin mutants in mice induce an MPL-dependent thrombocytosis with frequent progression to myelofibrosis.

Caroline Marty; Christian Pecquet; Harini Nivarthi; Mira Elkhoury; Ilyas Chachoua; Micheline Tulliez; Jean-Luc Villeval; Hana Raslova; Robert Kralovics; Stefan N. Constantinescu; Isabelle Plo; William Vainchenker

Frameshift mutations in the calreticulin (CALR) gene are seen in about 30% of essential thrombocythemia and myelofibrosis patients. To address the contribution of the CALR mutants to the pathogenesis of myeloproliferative neoplasms, we engrafted lethally irradiated recipient mice with bone marrow cells transduced with retroviruses expressing these mutants. In contrast to wild-type CALR, CALRdel52 (type I) and, to a lesser extent, CALRins5 (type II) induced thrombocytosis due to a megakaryocyte (MK) hyperplasia. Disease was transplantable into secondary recipients. After 6 months, CALRdel52-, in contrast to rare CALRins5-, transduced mice developed a myelofibrosis associated with a splenomegaly and a marked osteosclerosis. Monitoring of virus-transduced populations indicated that CALRdel52 leads to expansion at earlier stages of hematopoiesis than CALRins5. However, both mutants still specifically amplified the MK lineage and platelet production. Moreover, a mutant deleted of the entire exon 9 (CALRdelex9) did not induce a disease, suggesting that the oncogenic property of CALR mutants was related to the new C-terminus peptide. To understand how the CALR mutants target the MK lineage, we used a cell-line model and demonstrated that the CALR mutants, but not CALRdelex9, specifically activate the thrombopoietin (TPO) receptor (MPL) to induce constitutive activation of Janus kinase 2 and signal transducer and activator of transcription 5/3/1. We confirmed in c-mpl- and tpo-deficient mice that expression of Mpl, but not of Tpo, was essential for the CALR mutants to induce thrombocytosis in vivo, although Tpo contributes to disease penetrance. Thus, CALR mutants are sufficient to induce thrombocytosis through MPL activation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Aegyptin, a Novel Mosquito Salivary Gland Protein, Specifically Binds to Collagen and Prevents Its Interaction with Platelet Glycoprotein VI, Integrin α2β1, and von Willebrand Factor

Eric Calvo; Fuyuki Tokumasu; Osvaldo Marinotti; Jean-Luc Villeval; José M. C. Ribeiro; Ivo M. B. Francischetti

Blood-sucking arthropods have evolved a number of inhibitors of platelet aggregation and blood coagulation. In this study we have molecularly and functionally characterized aegyptin, a member of the family of 30-kDa salivary allergens from Aedes aegypti, whose function remained elusive thus far. Aegyptin displays a unique sequence characterized by glycine, glutamic acid, and aspartic acid repeats and was shown to specifically block collagen-induced human platelet aggregation and granule secretion. Plasmon resonance experiments demonstrate that aegyptin binds to collagen types I–V (Kd ≈ 1 nm) but does not interact with vitronectin, fibronectin, laminin, fibrinogen, and von Willebrand factor (vWf). In addition, aegyptin attenuates platelet adhesion to soluble or fibrillar collagen. Furthermore, aegyptin inhibits vWf interaction with collagen type III under static conditions and completely blocks platelet adhesion to collagen under flow conditions at high shear rates. Notably, aegyptin prevents collagen but not convulxin binding to recombinant glycoprotein VI. These findings suggest that aegyptin recognizes specific binding sites for glycoprotein VI, integrin α2β1, and vWf, thereby preventing collagen interaction with its three major ligands. Aegyptin is a novel tool to study collagen-platelet interaction and a prototype for development of molecules with antithrombotic properties.


Blood | 2013

JAK2V617F expression in mice amplifies early hematopoietic cells and gives them a competitive advantage that is hampered by IFNα

Salma Hasan; Catherine Lacout; Caroline Marty; Marie Cuingnet; Eric Solary; William Vainchenker; Jean-Luc Villeval

The acquired gain-of-function V617F mutation in the Janus Kinase 2 (JAK2(V617F)) is the main mutation involved in BCR/ABL-negative myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPNs), but its effect on hematopoietic stem cells as a driver of disease emergence has been questioned. Therefore, we reinvestigated the role of endogenous expression of JAK2(V617F) on early steps of hematopoiesis as well as the effect of interferon-α (IFNα), which may target the JAK2(V617F) clone in humans by using knock-in mice with conditional expression of JAK2(V617F) in hematopoietic cells. These mice develop a MPN mimicking polycythemia vera with large amplification of myeloid mature and precursor cells, displaying erythroid endogenous growth and progressing to myelofibrosis. Interestingly, early hematopoietic compartments [Lin-, LSK, and SLAM (LSK/CD48-/CD150+)] increased with the age. Competitive repopulation assays demonstrated disease appearance and progressive overgrowth of myeloid, Lin-, LSK, and SLAM cells, but not lymphocytes, from a low number of engrafted JAK2(V617F) SLAM cells. Finally, IFNα treatment prevented disease development by specifically inhibiting JAK2(V617F) cells at an early stage of differentiation and eradicating disease-initiating cells. This study shows that JAK2(V617F) in mice amplifies not only late but also early hematopoietic cells, giving them a proliferative advantage through high cell cycling and low apoptosis that may sustain MPN emergence but is lost upon IFNα treatment.


Leukemia | 2004

Membrane-bound Delta-4 Notch ligand reduces the proliferative activity of primitive human hematopoietic CD34+CD38low cells while maintaining their LTC-IC potential

Lauret E; Catelain C; Titeux M; Poirault S; Dando Js; Dorsch M; Jean-Luc Villeval; Groseil A; William Vainchenker; Sainteny F; Bennaceur-Griscelli A

To examine the role of the Notch ligand Delta-4 on hematopoietic stem cells, human CD34+CD38low cord blood cells were cocultured on S17 cells transduced with transmembrane Delta-4 (mbD4/S17) or an empty vector (C/S17). By the end of a 3-week culture, mbD4/S17 induced a 25-fold reduction in nucleated cell production, as compared to C/S17, by maintaining a higher proportion of cells in G0/G1 phase. A specific retention of a high proportion of CD34+ cells throughout the culture was observed with mbD4/S17, contrary to C/S17. Although mbD4/S17 promoted expansion of cells with the phenotype of committed lymphoid precursors (CD34+CD7+CD45RA+), these cells still retained their myeloid differentiation potential. mbD4/S17 maintained a higher LTC-IC frequency in output CD34+ cells, compared to C/S17, as in the subsets of cells having completed the same number of divisions on mbD4/S17. A Delta4-Fc protein (extracellular part of human Delta4 fused to Fc human IgG1 portion), immobilized on plastic, also reduced cell production and retained the LTC-IC potential. Transplantation of cells grown on mbD4/S17 into NOD/SCID mice showed no significant enhancement of the long-term repopulating ability. Thus, Delta4 appears to inhibit hematopoietic stem cell proliferation, in association with the maintenance of short-term lymphoid and myeloid repopulation capacity.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1991

Autocrine stimulation by erythropoietin and autonomous growth of human erythroid leukemic cells in vitro.

Mt Mitjavila; J P Le Couedic; Nicole Casadevall; S Navarro; Jean-Luc Villeval; A Dubart; William Vainchenker

Autonomous colony formation is a frequent event in erythroleukemia. In 13 cases of early erythroid leukemias, we investigated whether erythropoietin (Epo) autocrine stimulation was responsible for the growth factor autonomy. Epo transcripts were detected by Northern blotting in cells from one patient. These cells also expressed an Epo receptor (1,000 receptors per cell) with a 420-pM affinity and Epo was detected in the supernatant of cultured cells. In 8 of the 13 cases, Epo transcripts were revealed by the polymerase chain reaction ranging from 0.5 to 500 copies per cell. In situ hybridization proved that these Epo transcripts were present in the blast cells. No Epo gene abnormalities were detected by Southern blotting. In two cases, leukemic cells were grown in the presence of Epo-neutralizing antibodies or Epo antisense oligomers. In one case, the antibody significantly reduced autonomous growth. In contrast, the antibody had no effect in the second case in which blast cells transcribed the Epo gene at a low level. However, Epo antisense oligomers partially inhibited autonomous growth. This inhibition was reversed by addition of exogenous Epo. Overall, these results suggest that an extracellular or intracellular autocrine Epo stimulation occurs in some cases of erythroid malignancies.


Experimental Cell Research | 1983

Erythroid properties of K562 cells: Effect of hemin, butyrate and TPA induction☆

Jean-Luc Villeval; Pier Giuseppe Pelicci; A. Tabilio; Monique Titeux; Annie Henri; F. Houesche; P. Thomopoulos; William Vainchenker; M. Garbaz; H. Rochant; Breton-Gorius J; P.A.W. Edwards; Ugo Testa

Two sublines of the human leukemia cell line K562 including the original cell line and three clones have been investigated for their erythroid features. All of them produce embryonic and fetal hemoglobins, glycophorin A, spectrin and true acetylcholinesterase, but to a varying extent among the cell lines. The Hb and glycophorin contents were correlated in the different K562 cell lines, whereas acetylcholinesterase was independently expressed from these two other erythroid markers. Hb accumulation is enhanced by exposure of the cells to 100 microM hemin without a significant modification of the expression of the other erythroid markers. Butyrate greatly increased the activity of acetylcholinesterase, slightly enhanced the production of hemoglobin, but did not modify the expression of glycophorin and spectrin. 12-O-tetradecanoyl-phorbol-13-acetate (TPA) induced an almost complete disappearance of glycophorin, reduced the synthesis of Hb by K562 cells and also abolished the action of hemin on Hb accumulation. Therefore, all the different K562 cell lines exhibit clear erythroid features including acetylcholinesterase. Butyrate or hemin did not induce terminal differentiation of K562 cells, whereas TPA significantly diminished the erythroid phenotype.


Experimental Hematology | 2003

Expression of osteoprotegerin mRNA and protein in murine megakaryocytes.

Hedia Chagraoui; Siham Sabri; Claude Capron; Jean-Luc Villeval; William Vainchenker; Françoise Wendling

OBJECTIVE Osteoprotegerin (OPG) is a soluble member of the tumor necrosis factor receptor superfamily critically involved in the regulation of bone resorption. Within the bone microenvironment, OPG is abundantly produced by osteoblast/stromal cells, and its expression is regulated by transforming growth factor-beta(1) (TGF-beta(1)). However, OPG expression and regulation in primary hematopoietic cells have not been fully investigated. MATERIALS AND METHODS Opg mRNA was studied in murine hematopoietic cells by semiquantitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. The OPG protein was identified by immunofluorescence labeling and secretion was assessed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. RESULTS Opg transcripts were detected in platelets, megakaryocytes (MK), monocytes, and B lymphocytes, but not in erythroblasts, neutrophils, and T lymphocytes. Mature MK and proplatelets exhibited strong immunostaining for OPG outside the storage alpha-granules, and secretion was detected in the conditioned medium. To analyze whether opg transcription in MK was influenced by TGF-beta(1), the opg/GpIIb mRNA ratio was compared in cultured MK derived from TGF-beta(1) null mutants and wild-type littermates without or after the addition of bioactive TGF-beta(1). No difference was seen, indicating that opg expression in MK was not modulated by TGF-beta(1). However, mRNA levels were increased when thrombopoietin was present in the culture medium, suggesting that MK maturation was correlated with enhanced opg expression. CONCLUSIONS With these results we document for the first time that murine MK and platelets express OPG. This suggests a novel role for MK in bone homeostasis, in addition to its role in vascular homeostasis.

Collaboration


Dive into the Jean-Luc Villeval's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Françoise Wendling

French Institute of Health and Medical Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ugo Testa

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Stefan N. Constantinescu

Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge