Leslie Caron
University of Nice Sophia Antipolis
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Publication
Featured researches published by Leslie Caron.
Cell | 2006
Alessandra Moretti; Leslie Caron; Atsushi Nakano; Jason T. Lam; Alexandra Bernshausen; Yinhong Chen; Yibing Qyang; Lei Bu; Mika Sasaki; Silvia Martin-Puig; Yunfu Sun; Sylvia M. Evans; Karl-Ludwig Laugwitz; Kenneth R. Chien
Cardiogenesis requires the generation of endothelial, cardiac, and smooth muscle cells, thought to arise from distinct embryonic precursors. We use genetic fate-mapping studies to document that isl1(+) precursors from the second heart field can generate each of these diverse cardiovascular cell types in vivo. Utilizing embryonic stem (ES) cells, we clonally amplified a cellular hierarchy of isl1(+) cardiovascular progenitors, which resemble the developmental precursors in the embryonic heart. The transcriptional signature of isl1(+)/Nkx2.5(+)/flk1(+) defines a multipotent cardiovascular progenitor, which can give rise to cells of all three lineages. These studies document a developmental paradigm for cardiogenesis, where muscle and endothelial lineage diversification arises from a single cell-level decision of a multipotent isl1(+) cardiovascular progenitor cell (MICP). The discovery of ES cell-derived MICPs suggests a strategy for cardiovascular tissue regeneration via their isolation, renewal, and directed differentiation into specific mature cardiac, pacemaker, smooth muscle, and endothelial cell types.
Nature Biotechnology | 2008
Kenji Osafune; Leslie Caron; Malgorzata Borowiak; Rita J Martinez; Claire S Fitz-Gerald; Yasunori Sato; Chad A. Cowan; Kenneth R. Chien; Douglas A. Melton
The differentiation potential of 17 human embryonic stem (hES) cell lines was compared. Some lines exhibit a marked propensity to differentiate into specific lineages, often with >100-fold differences in lineage-specific gene expression. For example, HUES 8 is best for pancreatic differentiation and HUES 3 for cardiomyocyte generation. These non-trivial differences in developmental potential among hES cell lines point to the importance of screening and deriving lines for lineage-specific differentiation.
Nature | 2009
Lei Bu; Xin Jiang; Silvia Martin-Puig; Leslie Caron; Shenjun Zhu; Ying Shao; Drucilla J. Roberts; Paul L. Huang; Ibrahim J. Domian; Kenneth R. Chien
The generation and expansion of diverse cardiovascular cell lineages is a critical step during human cardiogenesis, with major implications for congenital heart disease. Unravelling the mechanisms for the diversification of human heart cell lineages has been hampered by the lack of genetic tools to purify early cardiac progenitors and define their developmental potential. Recent studies in the mouse embryo have identified a multipotent cardiac progenitor that contributes to all of the major cell types in the murine heart. In contrast to murine development, human cardiogenesis has a much longer onset of heart cell lineage diversification and expansion, suggesting divergent pathways. Here we identify a diverse set of human fetal ISL1+ cardiovascular progenitors that give rise to the cardiomyocyte, smooth muscle and endothelial cell lineages. Using two independent transgenic and gene-targeting approaches in human embryonic stem cell lines, we show that purified ISL1+ primordial progenitors are capable of self-renewal and expansion before differentiation into the three major cell types in the heart. These results lay the foundation for the generation of human model systems for cardiovascular disease and novel approaches for human regenerative cardiovascular medicine.
Cell Stem Cell | 2007
Yibing Qyang; Silvia Martin-Puig; Murali Chiravuri; Shuibing Chen; Huansheng Xu; Lei Bu; Xin Jiang; Lizhu Lin; Anne Granger; Alessandra Moretti; Leslie Caron; Xu Wu; Jonathan M Clarke; Makoto M. Taketo; Karl-Ludwig Laugwitz; Randall T. Moon; Peter J. Gruber; Sylvia M. Evans; Sheng Ding; Kenneth R. Chien
Isl1(+) cardiovascular progenitors and their downstream progeny play a pivotal role in cardiogenesis and lineage diversification of the heart. The mechanisms that control their renewal and differentiation are largely unknown. Herein, we show that the Wnt/beta-catenin pathway is a major component by which cardiac mesenchymal cells modulate the prespecification, renewal, and differentiation of isl1(+) cardiovascular progenitors. This microenvironment can be reconstituted by a Wnt3a-secreting feeder layer with ES cell-derived, embryonic, and postnatal isl1(+) cardiovascular progenitors. In vivo activation of beta-catenin signaling in isl1(+) progenitors of the secondary heart field leads to their massive accumulation, inhibition of differentiation, and outflow tract (OFT) morphogenic defects. In addition, the mitosis rate in OFT myocytes is significantly reduced following beta-catenin deletion in isl1(+) precursors. Agents that manipulate Wnt signals can markedly expand isl1(+) progenitors from human neonatal hearts, a key advance toward the cloning of human isl1(+) heart progenitors.
Development | 2007
Karl-Ludwig Laugwitz; Alessandra Moretti; Leslie Caron; Atsushi Nakano; Kenneth R. Chien
The creation of regenerative stem cell therapies for heart disease requires that we understand the molecular mechanisms that govern the fates and differentiation of the diverse muscle and non-muscle cell lineages of the heart. Recently, different cardiac cell types have been reported to arise from a common, multipotent Islet1 (Isl1)-positive progenitor, suggesting that a clonal model of heart lineage diversification might occur that is analogous to hematopoiesis. The ability to isolate, renew and differentiate Isl1+ precursors from postnatal and embryonic hearts and from embryonic stem cells provides a powerful cell-based system for characterizing the signaling pathways that control cardiovascular progenitor formation, renewal, lineage specification and conversion to specific differentiated progeny.
Biochemical Journal | 2002
Frédéric Bost; Leslie Caron; Irène Marchetti; Christian Dani; Yannick Le Marchand-Brustel; Bernard Binétruy
Mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells are pluripotent cells that differentiate into multiple cell lineages. The commitment of ES cells into the adipocyte lineage is dependent on an early 3-day treatment with all-trans retinoic acid (RA). To characterize the molecular mechanisms underlying this process, we examined the contribution of the extracellular-signal-regulated kinase (ERK) pathway. Treatment of ES cell-derived embryoid bodies with RA resulted in a prolonged activation of the ERK pathway, but not the c-Jun N-terminal kinase, p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase or phosphoinositide 3-kinase pathways. To investigate the role of ERK activation, co-treatment of RA with PD98059, a specific inhibitor of the ERK signalling pathway, prevented both adipocyte formation and expression of the adipogenic markers, adipocyte lipid-binding protein and peroxisome-proliferator-activated receptor gamma. Furthermore, we show that ERK activation is required only during RA treatment. PD98059 does not interfere with the commitment of ES cells into other lineages, such as neurogenesis, myogenesis and cardiomyogenesis. As opposed to the controversial role of the ERK pathway in terminal differentiation, our results clearly demonstrate that this pathway is specifically required at an early stage of adipogenesis, corresponding to the RA-dependent commitment of ES cells.
Stem Cells | 2006
Myriam Aouadi; Frédéric Bost; Leslie Caron; Kathiane Laurent; Yannick Le Marchand Brustel; Bernard Binétruy
Mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells can be differentiated, in vitro into a variety of cell types including cardiac cells and neurons. This process is strictly controlled by the potent morphogen retinoic acid (RA). At a concentration of 10−7 M, RA induces ES cell differentiation into neurons and, conversely, inhibits cardiomyogenesis. We found that p38 mitogen‐activated protein kinase (p38MAPK) activity peaked spontaneously, between day 3 and day 5, during ES cell differentiation and that RA completely inhibited this peak of activity. In contrast to wild‐type cells, which required RA treatment, p38α −1− ES cells differentiated spontaneously into neurons and did not form cardiomyocytes. Moreover, inhibition of the peak of p38MAPK activity by a specific inhibitor, PD169316, committed ES cells into the neuronal lineage and blocked cardiomyogenesis. By genetic and biochemical approaches, we demonstrate that, in two different ES cell lines, the control of p38MAPK activity constitutes an early switch, committing ES cells into either neurogenesis (p38 off) or cardiomyogenesis (p38 on).
Stem Cells | 2007
Bernard Binétruy; Lynn E. Heasley; Frédéric Bost; Leslie Caron; Myriam Aouadi
Embryonic stem (ES) cells can give rise, in vivo, to the ectodermal, endodermal, and mesodermal germ layers and, in vitro, can differentiate into multiple cell lineages, offering broad perspectives in regenerative medicine. Understanding the molecular mechanisms governing ES cell commitment is an essential challenge in this field. The mitogen‐activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathways extracellular signal‐regulated kinase (ERK), c‐Jun amino‐terminal kinase (JNK), and p38MAPK are able to regulate ES commitment from early steps of the process to mature differentiated cells. Whereas the ERK pathway inhibits the self‐renewal of ES cells, upon commitment this pathway is involved in the development of extraembryonic tissues, in early mesoderm differentiation, and in the formation of mature adipocytes; p38MAPK displays a large spectrum of action from neurons to adipocytes, and JNK is involved in both ectoderm and primitive endoderm differentiations. Furthermore, for a given pathway, several of these effects are isoform‐dependent, revealing the complexity of the cellular response to activation of MAPK pathways. Regarding tissue regeneration, the potential outcome of systematic analysis of the function of different MAPKs in different ES cell differentiation programs is discussed.
Oncogene | 2005
Leslie Caron; Frédéric Bost; Matthieu Prot; Paul Hofman; Bernard Binétruy
The high mobility group type A-2 (HMGA2) transcription factor is involved in proliferation and differentiation, mainly during embryogenesis. Its activated form (HMGA2/T) presents oncogenic activities both in vivo and in vitro. However, its precise role during embryogenesis is unknown. We investigated its role during the commitment of mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells by constructing cell lines expressing either wild type (wt) or HMGA2/T forms of the gene. Following differentiation, control and wt HMGA2 ES cells did not display myotubes; whereas HMGA2/T ES cell lines massively formed contractile myotubes. Furthermore, as opposed to control cells, HMGA2/T ES cells highly expressed the muscle myosin heavy chain (MHC) marker. Interestingly, in experimental conditions inhibitory for myogenesis, we observed a strong expression of MyoD and myogenin in HMGA2/T cells. By contrast, commitment into adipocyte, neuron, and cardiomyocyte lineages was not affected. Teratocarcinomas induced by HMGA2/T ES cell lines presented numerous skeletal muscle-differentiated tissues that were not observed in wt HMGA2 or control tumours. Finally, rapamycin, an inhibitor of the mTOR kinase, downregulated endogenous HMGA-2 expression and inhibited myogenesis. This effect was prevented by overexpression of exogenous HMGA-2. Our results reveal a novel function of HMGA-2 in skeletal muscle differentiation.
Development | 2013
Jan Willem Buikema; Ahmed S. Mady; Nikhil Mittal; Ayhan Atmanli; Leslie Caron; Pieter A. Doevendans; Joost P.G. Sluijter; Ibrahim J. Domian
In mammals, cardiac development proceeds from the formation of the linear heart tube, through complex looping and septation, all the while increasing in mass to provide the oxygen delivery demands of embryonic growth. The developing heart must orchestrate regional differences in cardiomyocyte proliferation to control cardiac morphogenesis. During ventricular wall formation, the compact myocardium proliferates more vigorously than the trabecular myocardium, but the mechanisms controlling such regional differences among cardiomyocyte populations are not understood. Control of definitive cardiomyocyte proliferation is of great importance for application to regenerative cell-based therapies. We have used murine and human pluripotent stem cell systems to demonstrate that, during in vitro cellular differentiation, early ventricular cardiac myocytes display a robust proliferative response to β-catenin-mediated signaling and conversely accelerate differentiation in response to inhibition of this pathway. Using gain- and loss-of-function murine genetic models, we show that β-catenin controls ventricular myocyte proliferation during development and the perinatal period. We further demonstrate that the differential activation of the Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway accounts for the observed differences in the proliferation rates of the compact versus the trabecular myocardium during normal cardiac development. Collectively, these results provide a mechanistic explanation for the differences in localized proliferation rates of cardiac myocytes and point to a practical method for the generation of the large numbers of stem cell-derived cardiac myocytes necessary for clinical applications.