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Dive into the research topics where Laure Strochlic is active.

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Featured researches published by Laure Strochlic.


Developmental Biology | 2011

Genesis of muscle fiber-type diversity during mouse embryogenesis relies on Six1 and Six4 gene expression

Anne-Françoise Richard; Josiane Demignon; Iori Sakakibara; Julien Pujol; Maryline Favier; Laure Strochlic; Fabien Le Grand; Nicolas Sgarioto; Anthony Guernec; Alain Schmitt; Nicolas Cagnard; Ruijin Huang; Claire Legay; Isabelle Guillet-Deniau; Pascal Maire

Adult skeletal muscles in vertebrates are composed of different types of myofibers endowed with distinct metabolic and contraction speed properties. Genesis of this fiber-type heterogeneity during development remains poorly known, at least in mammals. Six1 and Six4 homeoproteins of the Six/sine oculis family are expressed throughout muscle development in mice, and Six1 protein is enriched in the nuclei of adult fast-twitch myofibers. Furthermore, Six1/Six4 proteins are known to control the early activation of fast-type muscle genes in myocytes present in the mouse somitic myotome. Using double Six1:Six4 mutants (SixdKO) to dissect in vivo the genesis of muscle fiber-type heterogeneity, we analyzed here the phenotype of the dorsal/epaxial muscles remaining in SixdKO. We show by electron microscopy analysis that the absence of these homeoproteins precludes normal sarcomeric organization of the myofiber leading to a dystrophic aspect, and by immunohistochemistry experiments a deficiency in synaptogenesis. Affymetrix transcriptome analysis of the muscles remaining in E18.5 SixdKO identifies a major role for these homeoproteins in the control of genes that are specifically activated in the adult fast/glycolytic myofibers, particularly those controlling Ca(2+) homeostasis. Absence of Six1 and Six4 leads to the development of dorsal myofibers lacking expression of fast-type muscle genes, and mainly expressing a slow-type muscle program. The absence of restriction of the slow-type program during the fetal period in SixdKO back muscles is associated with a decreased HDAC4 protein level, and subcellular relocalization of the transcription repressor Sox6. Six genes thus behave as essential global regulators of muscle gene expression, as well as a central switch to drive the skeletal muscle fast phenotype during fetal development.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Wnt4 Participates in the Formation of Vertebrate Neuromuscular Junction

Laure Strochlic; Julien Falk; Evelyne Goillot; Séverine M. Sigoillot; Francine Bourgeois; Perrine Delers; Jérôme Rouvière; Amanda Swain; Valérie Castellani; Laurent Schaeffer; Claire Legay

Neuromuscular junction (NMJ) formation requires the highly coordinated communication of several reciprocal signaling processes between motoneurons and their muscle targets. Identification of the early, spatially restricted cues in target recognition at the NMJ is still poorly documented, especially in mammals. Wnt signaling is one of the key pathways regulating synaptic connectivity. Here, we report that Wnt4 contributes to the formation of vertebrate NMJ in vivo. Results from a microarray screen and quantitative RT-PCR demonstrate that Wnt4 expression is regulated during muscle cell differentiation in vitro and muscle development in vivo, being highly expressed when the first synaptic contacts are formed and subsequently downregulated. Analysis of the mouse Wnt4−/− NMJ phenotype reveals profound innervation defects including motor axons overgrowing and bypassing AChR aggregates with 30% of AChR clusters being unapposed by nerve terminals. In addition, loss of Wnt4 function results in a 35% decrease of the number of prepatterned AChR clusters while Wnt4 overexpression in cultured myotubes increases the number of AChR clusters demonstrating that Wnt4 directly affects postsynaptic differentiation. In contrast, muscle structure and the localization of several synaptic proteins including acetylcholinesterase, MuSK and rapsyn are not perturbed in the Wnt4 mutant. Finally, we identify MuSK as a Wnt4 receptor. Wnt4 not only interacts with MuSK ectodomain but also mediates MuSK activation. Taken together our data reveal a new role for Wnt4 in mammalian NMJ formation that could be mediated by MuSK, a key receptor in synaptogenesis.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2010

ColQ Controls Postsynaptic Differentiation at the Neuromuscular Junction

Séverine M. Sigoillot; Francine Bourgeois; Monique Lambergeon; Laure Strochlic; Claire Legay

CollagenQ (ColQ) plays an important structural role at vertebrate neuromuscular junctions (NMJs) by anchoring and accumulating acetylcholinesterase (AChE) in the extracellular matrix (ECM). Moreover, ColQ interacts with perlecan/dystroglycan and the muscle-specific receptor tyrosine kinase (MuSK), key molecules in the NMJ formation. MuSK promotes acetylcholine receptor (AChR) clustering in a process mediated by rapsyn, a cytoplasmic protein that stimulates AChR packing in clusters and regulates synaptic gene transcription. Here, we investigated a regulatory role for ColQ by comparing the clustering and expression of synaptic proteins in wild type and ColQ-deficient muscle cells in culture and at NMJ. We show first that AChR clusters are smaller and more densely packed in the absence of ColQ both in vitro and in vivo. Second, we find that like AChRs and rapsyn, MuSK mRNA levels are increased in cultured cells but not in muscles lacking ColQ. However, membrane-bound MuSK is decreased both in vitro and in vivo suggesting that ColQ controls MuSK sorting or stabilization in the muscle membrane. In line with this, our data show that activation of the MuSK signaling pathway is altered in the absence of ColQ leading to (1) perturbation of AChR clustering and/or β-AChR subunit phosphorylation and (2) modifications of AChR mRNA level due to the lack of ColQ-MuSK interaction. Together, our results demonstrate that ColQ, in addition to its structural role, has important regulatory functions at the synapse by controlling AChR clustering and synaptic gene expression through its interaction with MuSK.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2004

14-3-3 γ associates with muscle specific kinase and regulates synaptic gene transcription at vertebrate neuromuscular synapse

Laure Strochlic; Annie Cartaud; Alexandre Méjat; Régis Grailhe; Laurent Schaeffer; Jean-Pierre Changeux; Jean Cartaud

The muscle-specific receptor tyrosine kinase (MuSK) is part of a receptor complex, activated by neural agrin, that orchestrates the differentiation of the neuromuscular junction (NMJ). To gain insight into the function of the MuSK complex, we have developed a proteomic approach to identify new MuSK partners. MS analysis of MuSK crosslink products from postsynaptic membranes of the Torpedo electrocytes identified the adaptor protein 14-3-3 γ. The 14-3-3 γ protein was found localized at the adult rat NMJ. Cotransfection experiments in COS-7 cells showed that MuSK codistributed with the 14-3-3 γ protein at the plasma membrane. Furthermore, 14-3-3 γ was copurified by affinity chromatography with MuSK from transfected COS-7 cells and myotubes. The 14-3-3 γ protein did not colocalize with agrin-elicited acetylcholine receptor (AChR) aggregates in cultured myotubes, suggesting that it is not involved in AChR clustering. Expression of 14-3-3 γ specifically repressed the transcription of several synaptic reporter genes in cultured myotubes. This repression was potentiated by MuSK expression. Moreover, the expression of 14-3-3 γ in muscle fibers in vivo caused both the repression of synaptic genes transcription and morphological perturbations of the NMJ. Our data extend the notion that, apart from its well documented role in AChR clustering, the MuSK complex might also be involved in the regulation of synaptic gene expression at the NMJ.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2015

MuSK frizzled-like domain is critical for mammalian neuromuscular junction formation and maintenance.

Julien Messéant; Alexandre Dobbertin; Emmanuelle Girard; Perrine Delers; Marin Manuel; Francesca Mangione; Alain Schmitt; Dominique Le Denmat; Jordi Molgó; Daniel Zytnicki; Laurent Schaeffer; Claire Legay; Laure Strochlic

The muscle-specific kinase MuSK is one of the key molecules orchestrating neuromuscular junction (NMJ) formation. MuSK interacts with the Wnt morphogens, through its Frizzled-like domain (cysteine-rich domain [CRD]). Dysfunction of MuSK CRD in patients has been recently associated with the onset of myasthenia, common neuromuscular disorders mainly characterized by fatigable muscle weakness. However, the physiological role of Wnt-MuSK interaction in NMJ formation and function remains to be elucidated. Here, we demonstrate that the CRD deletion of MuSK in mice caused profound defects of both muscle prepatterning, the first step of NMJ formation, and synapse differentiation associated with a drastic deficit in AChR clusters and excessive growth of motor axons that bypass AChR clusters. Moreover, adult MuSKΔCRD mice developed signs of congenital myasthenia, including severe NMJs dismantlement, muscle weakness, and fatigability. We also report, for the first time, the beneficial effects of lithium chloride, a reversible inhibitor of the glycogen synthase kinase-3, that rescued NMJ defects in MuSKΔCRD mice and therefore constitutes a novel therapeutic reagent for the treatment of neuromuscular disorders linked to Wnt-MuSK signaling pathway deficiency. Together, our data reveal that MuSK CRD is critical for NMJ formation and plays an unsuspected role in NMJ maintenance in adulthood.


Development | 2017

Wnt proteins contribute to neuromuscular junction formation through distinct signaling pathways

Julien Messéant; Jérôme Ezan; Perrine Delers; Konstantin Glebov; Carmen Marchiol; Franck Lager; Gilles Renault; Fadel Tissir; Mireille Montcouquiol; Nathalie Sans; Claire Legay; Laure Strochlic

Understanding the developmental steps that shape formation of the neuromuscular junction (NMJ) connecting motoneurons to skeletal muscle fibers is crucial. Wnt morphogens are key players in the formation of this specialized peripheral synapse, but their individual and collaborative functions and downstream pathways remain poorly understood at the NMJ. Here, we demonstrate through Wnt4 and Wnt11 gain-of-function studies in cell culture or in mice that Wnts enhance acetylcholine receptor (AChR) clustering and motor axon outgrowth. By contrast, loss of Wnt11 or Wnt-dependent signaling in vivo decreases AChR clustering and motor nerve terminal branching. Both Wnt4 and Wnt11 stimulate AChR mRNA levels and AChR clustering downstream of activation of the β-catenin pathway. Strikingly, Wnt4 and Wnt11 co-immunoprecipitate with Vangl2, a core component of the planar cell polarity (PCP) pathway, which accumulates at embryonic NMJs. Moreover, mice bearing a Vangl2 loss-of-function mutation (loop-tail) exhibit fewer AChR clusters and overgrowth of motor axons bypassing AChR clusters. Together, our results provide genetic and biochemical evidence that Wnt4 and Wnt11 cooperatively contribute to mammalian NMJ formation through activation of both the canonical and Vangl2-dependent core PCP pathways. Summary: Wnt4 and Wnt11 cooperatively contribute to NMJ formation in mice through activation of both the canonical and Vangl2-dependent core planar cell polarity pathways.


Mechanisms of Development | 2009

21-P028 ColQ, a specific collagen controls postsynaptic differentiation at the neuromuscular junction

Séverine M. Sigoillot; Francine Bourgeois; Monique Lambergeon; Laure Strochlic; Claire Legay

functions. However, the mechanisms of GABAergic neurogenesis in the midbrain are not well understood. Previously, it has been shown that Ascl1 is required for development of GABAergic neurons in the midbrain. Here we have characterized in more detail the role of Ascl1 in the development of distinct subpopulations of midbrain GABAergic neurons. In Ascl1-null mutants GABAergic neurons are completely absent in the dorsal part of the midbrain. Ventrally part of the cells differentiate but the amount of GABAergic neurons is reduced.Tracing back to the origin of these defects we show that Ascl1 is regulating differently both GABAergic neurogenesis and neuronal subtype specification in distinct subpopulations of the ventral midbrain. We are currently conducting additional studies to further specify the ventral GABAergic populations that are affected in the Ascl1 mutants and to examine the downstream differentiation factors involved in the GABAergic neurogenesis.Results towards understanding the molecular and developmental mechanisms regulated by Ascl1 will be presented.


BioEssays | 2005

The synaptic muscle‐specific kinase (MuSK) complex: New partners, new functions

Laure Strochlic; Annie Cartaud; Jean Cartaud


M S-medecine Sciences | 2010

Nedd4/PTEN : un couple très branché !

Laure Strochlic


Current Opinion in Physiology | 2018

Regulation of mammalian neuromuscular junction formation and maintenance by Wnt signaling

Myriam Boëx; Julien Messéant; Stéphanie Bauché; Bertrand Fontaine; Claire Legay; Laure Strochlic

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Claire Legay

Paris Descartes University

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Perrine Delers

Paris Descartes University

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Laurent Schaeffer

École normale supérieure de Lyon

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Jean Cartaud

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Alexandre Méjat

École normale supérieure de Lyon

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