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Dive into the research topics where Julie Chaumeil is active.

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Featured researches published by Julie Chaumeil.


Nature Immunology | 2009

RAG-1 and ATM coordinate monoallelic recombination and nuclear positioning of immunoglobulin loci

Susannah L. Hewitt; Bu Yin; Yanhong Ji; Julie Chaumeil; Katarzyna Marszalek; Jeannette Tenthorey; Giorgia Salvagiotto; Natalie C. Steinel; Laura B. Ramsey; Jacques Ghysdael; Michael A. Farrar; Barry P. Sleckman; David G. Schatz; Meinrad Busslinger; Craig H. Bassing; Jane A. Skok

Coordinated recombination of homologous antigen receptor loci is thought to be important for allelic exclusion. Here we show that homologous immunoglobulin alleles pair in a stage-specific way that mirrors the recombination patterns of these loci. The frequency of homologous immunoglobulin pairing was much lower in the absence of the RAG-1–RAG-2 recombinase and was restored in Rag1−/− developing B cells with a transgene expressing a RAG-1 active-site mutant that supported DNA binding but not cleavage. The introduction of DNA breaks on one immunoglobulin allele induced ATM-dependent repositioning of the other allele to pericentromeric heterochromatin. ATM activated by the cleaved allele acts in trans on the uncleaved allele to prevent biallelic recombination and chromosome breaks or translocations.


Nature | 2011

The RAG2 C terminus suppresses genomic instability and lymphomagenesis.

Ludovic Deriano; Julie Chaumeil; Marc Coussens; Asha S. Multani; YiFan Chou; Alexander V. Alekseyenko; Sandy Chang; Jane A. Skok; David Roth

Misrepair of DNA double-strand breaks produced by the V(D)J recombinase (the RAG1/RAG2 proteins) at immunoglobulin (Ig) and T cell receptor (Tcr) loci has been implicated in pathogenesis of lymphoid malignancies in humans and in mice. Defects in DNA damage response factors such as ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM) protein and combined deficiencies in classical non-homologous end joining and p53 predispose to RAG-initiated genomic rearrangements and lymphomagenesis. Although we showed previously that RAG1/RAG2 shepherd the broken DNA ends to classical non-homologous end joining for proper repair, roles for the RAG proteins in preserving genomic stability remain poorly defined. Here we show that the RAG2 carboxy (C) terminus, although dispensable for recombination, is critical for maintaining genomic stability. Thymocytes from ‘core’ Rag2 homozygotes (Rag2c/c mice) show dramatic disruption of Tcrα/δ locus integrity. Furthermore, all Rag2c/c p53−/− mice, unlike Rag1c/c p53−/− and p53−/− animals, rapidly develop thymic lymphomas bearing complex chromosomal translocations, amplifications and deletions involving the Tcrα/δ and Igh loci. We also find these features in lymphomas from Atm−/− mice. We show that, like ATM-deficiency, core RAG2 severely destabilizes the RAG post-cleavage complex. These results reveal a novel genome guardian role for RAG2 and suggest that similar ‘end release/end persistence’ mechanisms underlie genomic instability and lymphomagenesis in Rag2c/c p53−/− and Atm−/− mice.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Evolution from XIST-Independent to XIST-Controlled X-Chromosome Inactivation: Epigenetic Modifications in Distantly Related Mammals

Julie Chaumeil; Paul D. Waters; Edda Koina; Clément Gilbert; Terence J. Robinson; Jennifer A. Marshall Graves

X chromosome inactivation (XCI) is the transcriptional silencing of one X in female mammals, balancing expression of X genes between females (XX) and males (XY). In placental mammals non-coding XIST RNA triggers silencing of one X (Xi) and recruits a characteristic suite of epigenetic modifications, including the histone mark H3K27me3. In marsupials, where XIST is missing, H3K27me3 association seems to have different degrees of stability, depending on cell-types and species. However, the complete suite of histone marks associated with the Xi and their stability throughout cell cycle remain a mystery, as does the evolution of an ancient mammal XCI system. Our extensive immunofluorescence analysis (using antibodies against specific histone modifications) in nuclei of mammals distantly related to human and mouse, revealed a general absence from the mammalian Xi territory of transcription machinery and histone modifications associated with active chromatin. Specific repressive modifications associated with XCI in human and mouse were also observed in elephant (a distantly related placental mammal), as was accumulation of XIST RNA. However, in two marsupial species the Xi either lacked these modifications (H4K20me1), or they were restricted to specific windows of the cell cycle (H3K27me3, H3K9me2). Surprisingly, the marsupial Xi was stably enriched for modifications associated with constitutive heterochromatin in all eukaryotes (H4K20me3, H3K9me3). We propose that marsupial XCI is comparable to a system that evolved in the common therian (marsupial and placental) ancestor. Silent chromatin of the early inactive X was exapted from neighbouring constitutive heterochromatin and, in early placental evolution, was augmented by the rise of XIST and the stable recruitment of specific histone modifications now classically associated with XCI.


Chromosome Research | 2009

Specific patterns of histone marks accompany X chromosome inactivation in a marsupial

Edda Koina; Julie Chaumeil; Ian K. Greaves; David J. Tremethick; Jennifer A. Marshall Graves

The inactivation of one of the two X chromosomes in female placental mammals represents a remarkable example of epigenetic silencing. X inactivation occurs also in marsupial mammals, but is phenotypically different, being incomplete, tissue-specific and paternal. Paternal X inactivation occurs also in the extraembryonic cells of rodents, suggesting that imprinted X inactivation represents a simpler ancestral mechanism. This evolved into a complex and random process in placental mammals under the control of the XIST gene, involving notably variant and modified histones. Molecular mechanisms of X inactivation in marsupials are poorly known, but occur in the absence of an XIST homologue. We analysed the specific pattern of histone modifications using immunofluorescence on metaphasic chromosomes of a model kangaroo, the tammar wallaby. We found that all active marks are excluded from the inactive X in marsupials, as in placental mammals, so this represents a common feature of X inactivation throughout mammals. However, we were unable to demonstrate the accumulation of inactive histone marks, suggesting some fundamental differences in the molecular mechanism of X inactivation between marsupial and placental mammals. A better understanding of the epigenetic mechanisms underlying X inactivation in marsupials will provide important insights into the evolution of this complex process.


Chromosome Research | 2009

Unravelling the evolutionary origins of X chromosome inactivation in mammals: insights from marsupials and monotremes

Janine E. Deakin; Julie Chaumeil; Timothy A. Hore; Jennifer A. Marshall Graves

Determining the evolutionary origin of X inactivation mechanisms in mammals requires knowledge of features of X inactivation across all three major mammal lineages; monotremes, marsupials and eutherians. In the past, research into X inactivation in marsupials and monotremes lagged far behind the major advances made in understanding the mechanisms of X inactivation in human and mouse. Fragmentary knowledge of the genic content and sequence of marsupial and monotreme X chromosomes has been alleviated by the recent release of genome sequences for two marsupials and one monotreme. This has lead to a number of important findings, among which is the absence of XIST in marsupials and monotremes, and the surprising finding that X-borne genes in platypus are subject to stochastic transcriptional inhibition rather than whole chromosome inactivation. Availability of sequence data, and new techniques for studying expression and chromatin modification, now make rapid advance possible.


Immunological Reviews | 2010

Chromosome dynamics and the regulation of V(D)J recombination

Susannah L. Hewitt; Julie Chaumeil; Jane A. Skok

Summary:  Perhaps no process has provided more insight into the fine manipulation of locus accessibility than antigen receptor rearrangement. V(D)J recombination is carried out by the lymphoid‐specific recombination‐activating (RAG 1 and 2) proteins and the non‐homologous end joining machinery; yet, it occurs only at specific loci (or portions of loci) during specific developmental stages. This spatiotemporal restriction of recombination is achieved through precise alterations in locus accessibility. In this article, we discuss the work of our laboratory in elucidating how nuclear sublocalization, chromosome conformation, and locus interactions contribute to regulating this complex process. We also discuss what is known about how key factors in B‐cell development (such as the ubiquitously expressed helix loop helix protein E2A, the B‐cell specific transcription factors EBF1 and Pax5, and the interleukin‐7 cytokine signaling pathway) exert their effects through changes in nuclear dynamics.


Current Opinion in Immunology | 2012

The role of CTCF in regulating V(D)J recombination.

Julie Chaumeil; Jane A. Skok

V(D)J recombination in B and T cells is required for the generation of receptors with a broad spectrum of specificity to foreign antigen. A total number of three immunoglobulin (Ig) and four T cell receptor (Tcr) loci can be targeted by the recombinase enzyme (RAG1/2) in a defined series of recombination events, which drive the progression of B and T cell development. This process is regulated at multiple levels to ensure lineage specific, ordered rearrangement and allelic exclusion. One key component of this is modulation of chromatin looping and locus contraction, which is important in bringing widely separated gene segments into close contact with each other to enable synapse formation for lineage and stage specific V gene rearrangement [2,3,4(•),5,6(•)]. Recent studies provide new insight into looping and its role in these processes. In this review we focus on the contribution of the 11 zinc finger nuclear protein, CTCF, in mediating loop formation and conformational changes that are important for the regulation of Ig and Tcr rearrangement.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

β-Catenin induces T-cell transformation by promoting genomic instability

Marei Dose; Akinola Olumide Emmanuel; Julie Chaumeil; Jiangwen Zhang; Tianjiao Sun; Kristine Germar; Katayoun Aghajani; Elizabeth M. Davis; Shilpa Keerthivasan; Andrea L. Bredemeyer; Barry P. Sleckman; Steven T. Rosen; Jane A. Skok; Michelle M. Le Beau; Katia Georgopoulos; Fotini Gounari

Significance Understanding molecular mechanisms that underlie genomic instability will remove a major obstacle to effective treatment of cancer. Here we characterize a unique animal model that allows insight into mechanisms of genomic instability leading to oncogenic translocations. We show that thymocyte-specific activation of β-catenin induces genomically unstable lymphomas with Tcra/Myc translocations, reminiscent of human leukemia. Tcf-1, the partner of β-catenin, colocalized throughout the genome with the RAG2 recombinase at DNA sites thought to be vulnerable to illegitimate recombination. Pretransformed thymocytes showed increased DNA damage at the translocating loci and altered DNA repair. These cells survived despite DNA damage. These surprising observations show that activated β-catenin promotes genomic instability and cancer by compromising DNA repair and enhancing cell survival. Deregulated activation of β-catenin in cancer has been correlated with genomic instability. During thymocyte development, β-catenin activates transcription in partnership with T-cell–specific transcription factor 1 (Tcf-1). We previously reported that targeted activation of β-catenin in thymocytes (CAT mice) induces lymphomas that depend on recombination activating gene (RAG) and myelocytomatosis oncogene (Myc) activities. Here we show that these lymphomas have recurring Tcra/Myc translocations that resulted from illegitimate RAG recombination events and resembled oncogenic translocations previously described in human T-ALL. We therefore used the CAT animal model to obtain mechanistic insights into the transformation process. ChIP-seq analysis uncovered a link between Tcf-1 and RAG2 showing that the two proteins shared binding sites marked by trimethylated histone-3 lysine-4 (H3K4me3) throughout the genome, including near the translocation sites. Pretransformed CAT thymocytes had increased DNA damage at the translocating loci and showed altered repair of RAG-induced DNA double strand breaks. These cells were able to survive despite DNA damage because activated β-catenin promoted an antiapoptosis gene expression profile. Thus, activated β-catenin promotes genomic instability that leads to T-cell lymphomas as a consequence of altered double strand break repair and increased survival of thymocytes with damaged DNA.


Immunity | 2011

RUNX Transcription Factor-Mediated Association of Cd4 and Cd8 Enables Coordinate Gene Regulation

Amélie Collins; Susannah L. Hewitt; Julie Chaumeil; MacLean Sellars; Mariann Micsinai; Jeanne Allinne; Fabio Parisi; Elphège P. Nora; Dan J. Bolland; Anne E. Corcoran; Yuval Kluger; Rémy Bosselut; Wilfried Ellmeier; Mark M. W. Chong; Dan R. Littman; Jane A. Skok

Summary T cell fate is associated with mutually exclusive expression of CD4 or CD8 in helper and cytotoxic T cells, respectively. How expression of one locus is temporally coordinated with repression of the other has been a long-standing enigma, though we know RUNX transcription factors activate the Cd8 locus, silence the Cd4 locus, and repress the Zbtb7b locus (encoding the transcription factor ThPOK), which is required for CD4 expression. Here we found that nuclear organization was altered by interplay among members of this transcription factor circuitry: RUNX binding mediated association of Cd4 and Cd8 whereas ThPOK binding kept the loci apart. Moreover, targeted deletions within Cd4 modulated CD8 expression and pericentromeric repositioning of Cd8. Communication between Cd4 and Cd8 thus appears to enable long-range epigenetic regulation to ensure that expression of one excludes the other in mature CD4 or CD8 single-positive (SP) cells.


Nature Communications | 2013

The RAG2 C-terminus and ATM protect genome integrity by controlling antigen receptor gene cleavage

Julie Chaumeil; Mariann Micsinai; Panagiotis Ntziachristos; David Roth; Iannis Aifantis; Yuval Kluger; Ludovic Deriano; Jane A. Skok

Tight control of antigen-receptor gene rearrangement is required to preserve genome integrity and prevent the occurrence of leukemia and lymphoma. Nonetheless, mistakes can happen, leading to the generation of aberrant rearrangements, such as Tcra/d-Igh inter-locus translocations that are a hallmark of ATM deficiency. Current evidence indicates that these translocations arise from the persistence of unrepaired breaks converging at different stages of thymocyte differentiation. Here we show that a defect in feedback control of RAG2 activity gives rise to bi-locus breaks and damage on Tcra/d and Igh in the same T cell at the same developmental stage, which provides a direct mechanism for generating these inter-locus rearrangements. Both the RAG2 C-terminus and ATM prevent bi-locus RAG-mediated cleavage through modulation of 3D conformation (higher order loops) and nuclear organization of the two loci. This limits the number of potential substrates for translocation and provides an important mechanism for protecting genome stability.

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Barry P. Sleckman

Washington University in St. Louis

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