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Dive into the research topics where Laurence Pelletier is active.

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Featured researches published by Laurence Pelletier.


Science | 2007

Orchestration of the DNA-Damage Response by the RNF8 Ubiquitin Ligase

Nadine Kolas; J. Ross Chapman; Shinichiro Nakada; Jarkko Ylanko; Richard Chahwan; Frédéric D. Sweeney; Stephanie Panier; Megan Mendez; Jan Wildenhain; Timothy M. Thomson; Laurence Pelletier; Daniel Durocher

Cells respond to DNA double-strand breaks by recruiting factors such as the DNA-damage mediator protein MDC1, the p53-binding protein 1 (53BP1), and the breast cancer susceptibility protein BRCA1 to sites of damaged DNA. Here, we reveal that the ubiquitin ligase RNF8 mediates ubiquitin conjugation and 53BP1 and BRCA1 focal accumulation at sites of DNA lesions. Moreover, we establish that MDC1 recruits RNF8 through phosphodependent interactions between the RNF8 forkhead-associated domain and motifs in MDC1 that are phosphorylated by the DNA-damage activated protein kinase ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM). We also show that depletion of the E2 enzyme UBC13 impairs 53BP1 recruitment to sites of damage, which suggests that it cooperates with RNF8. Finally, we reveal that RNF8 promotes the G2/M DNA damage checkpoint and resistance to ionizing radiation. These results demonstrate how the DNA-damage response is orchestrated by ATM-dependent phosphorylation of MDC1 and RNF8-mediated ubiquitination.


Cell | 2009

The RIDDLE Syndrome Protein Mediates a Ubiquitin-Dependent Signaling Cascade at Sites of DNA Damage

Grant S. Stewart; Stephanie Panier; Kelly Townsend; Abdallah Al-Hakim; Nadine Kolas; Edward S. Miller; Shinichiro Nakada; Jarkko Ylanko; Signe Olivarius; Megan Mendez; Ceri Oldreive; Jan Wildenhain; Andrea Tagliaferro; Laurence Pelletier; Nadine Taubenheim; Anne Durandy; Philip J. Byrd; Tatjana Stankovic; A. Malcolm R. Taylor; Daniel Durocher

The biological response to DNA double-strand breaks acts to preserve genome integrity. Individuals bearing inactivating mutations in components of this response exhibit clinical symptoms that include cellular radiosensitivity, immunodeficiency, and cancer predisposition. The archetype for such disorders is Ataxia-Telangiectasia caused by biallelic mutation in ATM, a central component of the DNA damage response. Here, we report that the ubiquitin ligase RNF168 is mutated in the RIDDLE syndrome, a recently discovered immunodeficiency and radiosensitivity disorder. We show that RNF168 is recruited to sites of DNA damage by binding to ubiquitylated histone H2A. RNF168 acts with UBC13 to amplify the RNF8-dependent histone ubiquitylation by targeting H2A-type histones and by promoting the formation of lysine 63-linked ubiquitin conjugates. These RNF168-dependent chromatin modifications orchestrate the accumulation of 53BP1 and BRCA1 to DNA lesions, and their loss is the likely cause of the cellular and developmental phenotypes associated with RIDDLE syndrome.


Nature Methods | 2008

BAC TransgeneOmics: a high-throughput method for exploration of protein function in mammals

Ina Poser; Mihail Sarov; James R. A. Hutchins; Jean-Karim Hériché; Yusuke Toyoda; Andrei Pozniakovsky; Anja Nitzsche; Björn Hegemann; Alexander W. Bird; Laurence Pelletier; Ralf Kittler; Sujun Hua; Ronald Naumann; Martina Augsburg; Martina M. Sykora; Helmut Hofemeister; Youming Zhang; Kim Nasmyth; Kevin P. White; Steffen Dietzel; Karl Mechtler; Richard Durbin; A. Francis Stewart; Jan-Michael Peters; Frank Buchholz; Anthony A. Hyman

The interpretation of genome sequences requires reliable and standardized methods to assess protein function at high throughput. Here we describe a fast and reliable pipeline to study protein function in mammalian cells based on protein tagging in bacterial artificial chromosomes (BACs). The large size of the BAC transgenes ensures the presence of most, if not all, regulatory elements and results in expression that closely matches that of the endogenous gene. We show that BAC transgenes can be rapidly and reliably generated using 96-well-format recombineering. After stable transfection of these transgenes into human tissue culture cells or mouse embryonic stem cells, the localization, protein-protein and/or protein-DNA interactions of the tagged protein are studied using generic, tag-based assays. The same high-throughput approach will be generally applicable to other model systems.NOTE: In the version of this article initially published online, the name of one individual was misspelled in the Acknowledgments. The second sentence of the Acknowledgments paragraph should read, “We thank I. Cheesman for helpful discussions.” The error has been corrected for all versions of the article.


Science | 2010

Systematic Analysis of Human Protein Complexes Identifies Chromosome Segregation Proteins

James R. A. Hutchins; Yusuke Toyoda; Björn Hegemann; Ina Poser; Jean-Karim Hériché; Martina M. Sykora; Martina Augsburg; Otto Hudecz; Bettina A. Buschhorn; Jutta Bulkescher; Christian Conrad; David Comartin; Alexander Schleiffer; Mihail Sarov; Andrei Pozniakovsky; Mikolaj Slabicki; Siegfried Schloissnig; Ines Steinmacher; Marit Leuschner; Andrea Ssykor; Steffen Lawo; Laurence Pelletier; Holger Stark; Kim Nasmyth; Jan Ellenberg; Richard Durbin; Frank Buchholz; Karl Mechtler; Anthony A. Hyman; Jan-Michael Peters

Division Machinery Tagged An international consortium of labs has been testing the feasibility of large-scale screening for insights into the function of mammalian proteins by expressing a tagged version of proteins from bacterial artificial chromosomes harbored in mammalian cells. Depending on the tag used, Hutchins et al. (p. 593, published online 1 April) were able to monitor localization of tagged proteins by microscopy or to isolate interacting proteins and subsequently identify the binding partners by mass spectrometry. Applying the technology to proteins implicated in control of cell division revealed about 100 protein machines required for mitosis. A strategy designed to decipher the function of proteins identified in RNA interference screens reveals new insights into mitosis. Chromosome segregation and cell division are essential, highly ordered processes that depend on numerous protein complexes. Results from recent RNA interference screens indicate that the identity and composition of these protein complexes is incompletely understood. Using gene tagging on bacterial artificial chromosomes, protein localization, and tandem-affinity purification–mass spectrometry, the MitoCheck consortium has analyzed about 100 human protein complexes, many of which had not or had only incompletely been characterized. This work has led to the discovery of previously unknown, evolutionarily conserved subunits of the anaphase-promoting complex and the γ-tubulin ring complex—large complexes that are essential for spindle assembly and chromosome segregation. The approaches we describe here are generally applicable to high-throughput follow-up analyses of phenotypic screens in mammalian cells.


Nature | 2006

Protein phosphatase 2A protects centromeric sister chromatid cohesion during meiosis I

Christian G. Riedel; Vittorio L. Katis; Yuki Katou; Saori Mori; Takehiko Itoh; Wolfgang Helmhart; Marta Galova; Mark Petronczki; Juraj Gregan; Bulent Cetin; Ingrid Mudrak; Egon Ogris; Karl Mechtler; Laurence Pelletier; Frank Buchholz; Katsuhiko Shirahige; Kim Nasmyth

Segregation of homologous maternal and paternal centromeres to opposite poles during meiosis I depends on post-replicative crossing over between homologous non-sister chromatids, which creates chiasmata and therefore bivalent chromosomes. Destruction of sister chromatid cohesion along chromosome arms due to proteolytic cleavage of cohesins Rec8 subunit by separase resolves chiasmata and thereby triggers the first meiotic division. This produces univalent chromosomes, the chromatids of which are held together by centromeric cohesin that has been protected from separase by shugoshin (Sgo1/MEI-S332) proteins. Here we show in both fission and budding yeast that Sgo1 recruits to centromeres a specific form of protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A). Its inactivation causes loss of centromeric cohesin at anaphase I and random segregation of sister centromeres at the second meiotic division. Artificial recruitment of PP2A to chromosome arms prevents Rec8 phosphorylation and hinders resolution of chiasmata. Our data are consistent with the notion that efficient cleavage of Rec8 requires phosphorylation of cohesin and that this is blocked by PP2A at meiosis I centromeres.


Nature | 2004

An endoribonuclease-prepared sIRNA screen in human cells identifies genes essential for cell division

Ralf Kittler; Gabriele Putz; Laurence Pelletier; Ina Poser; Anne-Kristin Heninger; David Drechsel; Steffi Fischer; Irena Konstantinova; Bianca Habermann; Hannes Grabner; Marie-Laure Yaspo; Heinz Himmelbauer; Bernd Korn; Karla M. Neugebauer; Maria Teresa Pisabarro; Frank Buchholz

RNA interference (RNAi) is an evolutionarily conserved defence mechanism whereby genes are specifically silenced through degradation of messenger RNAs; this process is mediated by homologous double-stranded (ds)RNA molecules. In invertebrates, long dsRNAs have been used for genome-wide screens and have provided insights into gene functions. Because long dsRNA triggers a nonspecific interferon response in many vertebrates, short interfering (si)RNA or short hairpin (sh)RNAs must be used for these organisms to ensure specific gene silencing. Here we report the generation of a genome-scale library of endoribonuclease-prepared short interfering (esi)RNAs from a sequence-verified complementary DNA collection representing 15,497 human genes. We used 5,305 esiRNAs from this library to screen for genes required for cell division in HeLa cells. Using a primary high-throughput cell viability screen followed by a secondary high content videomicroscopy assay, we identified 37 genes required for cell division. These include several splicing factors for which knockdown generates mitotic spindle defects. In addition, a putative nuclear-export terminator was found to speed up cell proliferation and mitotic progression after knockdown. Thus, our study uncovers new aspects of cell division and establishes esiRNA as a versatile approach for genomic RNAi screens in mammalian cells.


Science | 2010

Systematic Localization and Purification of Human Protein Complexes Identifies Chromosome Segregation Proteins

James R. A. Hutchins; Yusuke Toyoda; Björn Hegemann; Ina Poser; Jean-Karim Hériché; Martina M. Sykora; Martina Augsburg; Otto Hudecz; Bettina A. Buschhorn; Jutta Bulkescher; Christian Conrad; David Comartin; Alexander Schleiffer; Mihail Sarov; Andrei Pozniakovsky; Mikolaj Slabicki; Siegfried Schloissnig; Ines Steinmacher; Marit Leuschner; Andrea Ssykor; Steffen Lawo; Laurence Pelletier; Holger Stark; Kim Nasmyth; Jan Ellenberg; Richard Durbin; Frank Buchholz; Karl Mechtler; Anthony A. Hyman; Jan-Michael Peters

Division Machinery Tagged An international consortium of labs has been testing the feasibility of large-scale screening for insights into the function of mammalian proteins by expressing a tagged version of proteins from bacterial artificial chromosomes harbored in mammalian cells. Depending on the tag used, Hutchins et al. (p. 593, published online 1 April) were able to monitor localization of tagged proteins by microscopy or to isolate interacting proteins and subsequently identify the binding partners by mass spectrometry. Applying the technology to proteins implicated in control of cell division revealed about 100 protein machines required for mitosis. A strategy designed to decipher the function of proteins identified in RNA interference screens reveals new insights into mitosis. Chromosome segregation and cell division are essential, highly ordered processes that depend on numerous protein complexes. Results from recent RNA interference screens indicate that the identity and composition of these protein complexes is incompletely understood. Using gene tagging on bacterial artificial chromosomes, protein localization, and tandem-affinity purification–mass spectrometry, the MitoCheck consortium has analyzed about 100 human protein complexes, many of which had not or had only incompletely been characterized. This work has led to the discovery of previously unknown, evolutionarily conserved subunits of the anaphase-promoting complex and the γ-tubulin ring complex—large complexes that are essential for spindle assembly and chromosome segregation. The approaches we describe here are generally applicable to high-throughput follow-up analyses of phenotypic screens in mammalian cells.


Nature | 2006

Centriole assembly in Caenorhabditis elegans

Laurence Pelletier; Eileen O'Toole; Anne Schwager; Anthony A. Hyman; Thomas Müller-Reichert

Centrioles are necessary for flagella and cilia formation, cytokinesis, cell-cycle control and centrosome organization/spindle assembly. They duplicate once per cell cycle, but the mechanisms underlying their duplication remain unclear. Here we show using electron tomography of staged C. elegans one-cell embryos that daughter centriole assembly begins with the formation and elongation of a central tube followed by the peripheral assembly of nine singlet microtubules. Tube formation and elongation is dependent on the SAS-5 and SAS-6 proteins, whereas the assembly of singlet microtubules onto the central tube depends on SAS-4. We further show that centriole assembly is triggered by an upstream signal mediated by SPD-2 and ZYG-1. These results define a structural pathway for the assembly of a daughter centriole and should have general relevance for future studies on centriole assembly in other organisms.


Nature Cell Biology | 2007

Genome-scale RNAi profiling of cell division in human tissue culture cells

Ralf Kittler; Laurence Pelletier; Anne Kristine Heninger; Mikolaj Slabicki; Mirko Theis; Lukasz Miroslaw; Ina Poser; Steffen Lawo; Hannes Grabner; Karol Kozak; Jan Wagner; Vineeth Surendranath; Constance Richter; Wayne Bowen; Aimee L. Jackson; Bianca Habermann; Anthony A. Hyman; Frank Buchholz

Cell division is fundamental for all organisms. Here we report a genome-scale RNA-mediated interference screen in HeLa cells designed to identify human genes that are important for cell division. We have used a library of endoribonuclease-prepared short interfering RNAs for gene silencing and have used DNA content analysis to identify genes that induced cell cycle arrest or altered ploidy on silencing. Validation and secondary assays were performed to generate a nine-parameter loss-of-function phenoprint for each of the genes. These phenotypic signatures allowed the assignment of genes to specific functional classes by combining hierarchical clustering, cross-species analysis and proteomic data mining. We highlight the richness of our dataset by ascribing novel functions to genes in mitosis and cytokinesis. In particular, we identify two evolutionarily conserved transcriptional regulatory networks that govern cytokinesis. Our work provides an experimental framework from which the systematic analysis of novel genes necessary for cell division in human cells can begin.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2005

Aurora A phosphorylation of TACC3/maskin is required for centrosome-dependent microtubule assembly in mitosis

Kazuhisa Kinoshita; Tim L. Noetzel; Laurence Pelletier; Karl Mechtler; David Drechsel; Anne Schwager; Michael J. Lee; Jordan W. Raff; Anthony A. Hyman

Centrosomes act as sites of microtubule growth, but little is known about how the number and stability of microtubules emanating from a centrosome are controlled during the cell cycle. We studied the role of the TACC3–XMAP215 complex in this process by using purified proteins and Xenopus laevis egg extracts. We show that TACC3 forms a one-to-one complex with and enhances the microtubule-stabilizing activity of XMAP215 in vitro. TACC3 enhances the number of microtubules emanating from mitotic centrosomes, and its targeting to centrosomes is regulated by Aurora A–dependent phosphorylation. We propose that Aurora A regulation of TACC3 activity defines a centrosome-specific mechanism for regulation of microtubule polymerization in mitosis.

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Frank Buchholz

Dresden University of Technology

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Ralf Kittler

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Brian Raught

Princess Margaret Cancer Centre

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Jan-Michael Peters

Research Institute of Molecular Pathology

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Karl Mechtler

Research Institute of Molecular Pathology

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Björn Hegemann

Research Institute of Molecular Pathology

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