Jean-Philippe Babeu
Université de Sherbrooke
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jean-Philippe Babeu.
American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 2009
Jean-Philippe Babeu; Mathieu Darsigny; Carine R. Lussier; François Boudreau
Hepatocyte nuclear factor 4alpha (HNF4alpha) is a regulator of hepatocyte and pancreatic transcription. Hnf4alpha deletion in the mouse is embryonically lethal with severe defects in visceral endoderm formation. It has been concluded in the past that the role of Hnf4alpha in the developing colon was much less important than in the liver. However, the precise role of Hnf4alpha in the homeostasis of the small intestinal epithelium remains unclear. Our aim was to evaluate the potential of Hnf4alpha to support an intestinal epithelial phenotype. First, Hnf4alpha potential to dictate this phenotype was assessed in nonintestinal cell lines in vitro. Forced expression of Hnf4alpha in fibroblasts showed an induction of features normally restricted to epithelial cells. Combinatory expression of Hnf4alpha with specific transcriptional regulators of the intestine resulted in the induction of intestinal epithelial genes in this context. Second, the importance of Hnf4alpha in maintaining the homeostasis of the intestinal epithelium was investigated in mice. Mice conditionally deficient for intestinal Hnf4alpha developed normally throughout adulthood with an epithelium displaying normal morphological and functional structures with minor alterations. Subtle but statistical differences were observed at the proliferation and the cytodifferentiation levels. Hnf4alpha mutant mice displayed an increase in the number of goblet and enteroendocrine cells compared with controls. Given the fundamental role of this transcription factor in other tissues, these findings dispute the crucial role for this regulator in the maintenance of intestinal epithelial cell function at a period of time that follows cytodifferentiation but may suggest a functional role in instructing cells to become specific to the intestinal epithelium.
World Journal of Gastroenterology | 2014
Jean-Philippe Babeu; François Boudreau
Hepatocyte nuclear factor 4-alpha (HNF4-α) is a nuclear receptor regulating metabolism, cell junctions, differentiation and proliferation in liver and intestinal epithelial cells. Mutations within the HNF4A gene are associated with human diseases such as maturity-onset diabetes of the young. Recently, HNF4A has also been described as a susceptibility gene for ulcerative colitis in genome-wide association studies. In addition, specific HNF4A genetic variants have been identified in pediatric cohorts of Crohns disease. Results obtained from knockout mice supported that HNF4-α can protect the intestinal mucosae against inflammation. However, the exact molecular links behind HNF4-α and inflammatory bowel diseases remains elusive. In this review, we will summarize the current knowledge about the role of HNF4-α and its isoforms in inflammation. Specific nature of HNF4-α P1 and P2 classes of isoforms will be summarized. HNF4-α role as a hepatocyte mediator for cytokines relays during liver inflammation will be integrated based on documented examples of the literature. Conclusions that can be made from these earlier liver studies will serve as a basis to extrapolate correlations and divergences applicable to intestinal inflammation. Finally, potential functional roles for HNF4-α isoforms in protecting the intestinal mucosae from chronic and pathological inflammation will be presented.
Cancer Research | 2010
Mathieu Darsigny; Jean-Philippe Babeu; Ernest G. Seidman; Fernand-Pierre Gendron; Emile Levy; Julie C. Carrier; Nathalie Perreault; François Boudreau
Hepatocyte nuclear factor-4α (Hnf4α) is a transcription factor that controls epithelial cell polarity and morphogenesis. Hnf4α conditional deletion during postnatal development has minor effects on intestinal epithelium integrity but promotes activation of the Wnt/β-catenin pathway without causing tumorigenesis. Here, we show that Hnf4α does not act as a tumor-suppressor gene but is crucial in promoting gut tumorigenesis in mice. Polyp multiplicity in ApcMin mice lacking Hnf4α is suppressed compared with littermate ApcMin controls. Analysis of microarray gene expression profiles from mice lacking Hnf4α in the intestinal epithelium identifies novel functions of this transcription factor in targeting oxidoreductase-related genes involved in the regulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels. This role is supported with the demonstration that HNF4α is functionally involved in the protection against spontaneous and 5-fluorouracil chemotherapy-induced production of ROS in colorectal cancer cell lines. Analysis of a colorectal cancer patient cohort establishes that HNF4α is significantly upregulated compared with adjacent normal epithelial resections. Several genes involved in ROS neutralization are also induced in correlation with HNF4A expression. Altogether, the findings point to the nuclear receptor HNF4α as a potential therapeutic target to eradicate aberrant epithelial cell resistance to ROS production during intestinal tumorigenesis.
Journal of Cell Science | 2018
Jean-Philippe Babeu; Christine Jones; Sameh Geha; Julie C. Carrier; François Boudreau
ABSTRACT HNF4α is a key nuclear receptor for regulating gene expression in the gut. Although both P1 and P2 isoform classes of HNF4α are expressed in colonic epithelium, specific inhibition of P1 isoforms is commonly found in colorectal cancer. Previous studies have suggested that P1 and P2 isoforms might regulate different cellular functions. Despite these advances, it remains unclear whether these isoform classes are functionally divergent in the context of human biology. Here, the consequences of specific inhibition of P1 or P2 isoform expression was measured in a human colorectal cancer cell transcriptome. Results indicate that P1 isoforms were specifically associated with the control of cell metabolism, whereas P2 isoforms globally supported aberrant oncogenic signalization, promoting cancer cell survival and progression. P1 promoter-driven isoform expression was found to be repressed by β-catenin, one of the earliest oncogenic pathways to be activated during colon tumorigenesis. These findings identify a novel cascade by which the expression of P1 isoforms is rapidly shut down in the early stages of colon tumorigenesis, allowing a change in HNF4α-dependent transcriptome, thereby promoting colorectal cancer progression. This article has an associated First Person interview with the first author of the paper. Summary: This study demonstrates that P1 and P2 promoter-driven HNF4α isoforms regulate different biologically relevant transcriptomic signatures in colorectal cancer cells, and are differently regulated from oncogenic β-catenin activation.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Sébastien A. B. Roy; Joannie M. Allaire; Camille Ouellet; Faiza Maloum-Rami; Véronique Pomerleau; Etienne Lemieux; Jean-Philippe Babeu; Jasmin Rousseau; Marilène Paquet; Perrine Garde-Granger; François Boudreau; Nathalie Perreault
Bmps are morphogens involved in various gastric cellular functions. Studies in genetically-modified mice have shown that Bmp disruption in gastric epithelial and stromal cell compartments leads to the development of tumorigenesis. Our studies have demonstrated that abrogation of gastric epithelial Bmp signaling alone was not sufficient to recapitulate the neoplastic features associated with total gastric loss of Bmp signaling. Thus, epithelial Bmp signaling does not appear to be a key player in gastric tumorigenesis initiation. These observations suggest a greater role for stromal Bmp signaling in gastric polyposis initiation. In order to identify the specific roles played by mesenchymal Bmp signaling in gastric homeostasis, we generated a mouse model with abrogation of Bmp signaling exclusively in the gastro-intestinal mesenchyme (Bmpr1aΔMES). We were able to expose an unsuspected role for Bmp loss of signaling in leading normal gastric mesenchyme to adapt into reactive mesenchyme. An increase in the population of activated-fibroblasts, suggesting mesenchymal transdifferentiation, was observed in mutant stomach. Bmpr1aΔMES stomachs exhibited spontaneous benign polyps with presence of both intestinal metaplasia and spasmolytic-polypeptide-expressing metaplasia as early as 90 days postnatal. These results support the novel concept that loss of mesenchymal Bmp signaling cascade acts as a trigger in gastric polyposis initiation.
American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 2008
Carine R. Lussier; Jean-Philippe Babeu; Benoı̂t A. Auclair; Nathalie Perreault; François Boudreau
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2018
Morgane Placet; Guillaume Arguin; Caroline M. Molle; Jean-Philippe Babeu; Christine Jones; Julie C. Carrier; Bernand Robaye; Sameh Geha; François Boudreau; Fernand-Pierre Gendron
Journal of the Canadian Association of Gastroenterology | 2018
Véronique Pomerleau; Jean-Philippe Babeu; François Boudreau; Nathalie Perreault
Archive | 2017
Jean-Philippe Babeu; François Boudreau
Gastroenterology | 2013
Jean-Philippe Babeu; Mathieu Darsigny; Julie Carrier; François Boudreau