Leticia Peris
French Institute of Health and Medical Research
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Publication
Featured researches published by Leticia Peris.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2006
Leticia Peris; Manuel Théry; Julien Fauré; Yasmina Saoudi; Laurence Lafanechère; John K. Chilton; Phillip R. Gordon-Weeks; Niels Galjart; Michel Bornens; Linda Wordeman; Juergen Wehland; Annie Andrieux; Didier Job
Tubulin-tyrosine ligase (TTL), the enzyme that catalyzes the addition of a C-terminal tyrosine residue to α-tubulin in the tubulin tyrosination cycle, is involved in tumor progression and has a vital role in neuronal organization. We show that in mammalian fibroblasts, cytoplasmic linker protein (CLIP) 170 and other microtubule plus-end tracking proteins comprising a cytoskeleton-associated protein glycine-rich (CAP-Gly) microtubule binding domain such as CLIP-115 and p150 Glued, localize to the ends of tyrosinated microtubules but not to the ends of detyrosinated microtubules. In vitro, the head domains of CLIP-170 and of p150 Glued bind more efficiently to tyrosinated microtubules than to detyrosinated polymers. In TTL-null fibroblasts, tubulin detyrosination and CAP-Gly protein mislocalization correlate with defects in both spindle positioning during mitosis and cell morphology during interphase. These results indicate that tubulin tyrosination regulates microtubule interactions with CAP-Gly microtubule plus-end tracking proteins and provide explanations for the involvement of TTL in tumor progression and in neuronal organization.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2005
Christian Erck; Leticia Peris; Annie Andrieux; Claire Meissirel; Achim D. Gruber; Muriel Vernet; Annie Schweitzer; Yasmina Saoudi; Hervé Pointu; Christophe Bosc; Paul Antoine Salin; Didier Job; Juergen Wehland
Tubulin is subject to a special cycle of detyrosination/tyrosination in which the C-terminal tyrosine of α-tubulin is cyclically removed by a carboxypeptidase and readded by a tubulin-tyrosine-ligase (TTL). This tyrosination cycle is conserved in evolution, yet its physiological importance is unknown. Here, we find that TTL suppression in mice causes perinatal death. A minor pool of tyrosinated (Tyr-)tubulin persists in TTL null tissues, being present mainly in dividing TTL null cells where it originates from tubulin synthesis, but it is lacking in postmitotic TTL null cells such as neurons, which is apparently deleterious because early death in TTL null mice is, at least in part, accounted for by a disorganization of neuronal networks, including a disruption of the cortico-thalamic loop. Correlatively, cultured TTL null neurons display morphogenetic anomalies including an accelerated and erratic time course of neurite outgrowth and a premature axonal differentiation. These anomalies may involve a mislocalization of CLIP170, which we find lacking in neurite extensions and growth cones of TTL null neurons. Our results demonstrate a vital role of TTL for neuronal organization and suggest a requirement of Tyr-tubulin for proper control of neurite extensions.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2009
Leticia Peris; Michael Wagenbach; Laurence Lafanechère; Jacques Brocard; Ayana T. Moore; Frank Kozielski; Didier Job; Linda Wordeman; Annie Andrieux
In cells, stable microtubules (MTs) are covalently modified by a carboxypeptidase, which removes the C-terminal Tyr residue of α-tubulin. The significance of this selective detyrosination of MTs is not understood. In this study, we report that tubulin detyrosination in fibroblasts inhibits MT disassembly. This inhibition is relieved by overexpression of the depolymerizing motor mitotic centromere-associated kinesin (MCAK). Conversely, suppression of MCAK expression prevents disassembly of normal tyrosinated MTs in fibroblasts. Detyrosination of MTs suppresses the activity of MCAK in vitro, apparently as the result of a decreased affinity of the adenosine diphosphate (ADP)–inorganic phosphate- and ADP-bound forms of MCAK for the MT lattice. Detyrosination also impairs MT disassembly in neurons and inhibits the activity of the neuronal depolymerizing motor KIF2A in vitro. These results indicate that MT depolymerizing motors are directly inhibited by the detyrosination of tubulin, resulting in the stabilization of cellular MTs. Detyrosination of transiently stabilized MTs may give rise to persistent subpopulations of disassembly-resistant polymers to sustain subcellular cytoskeletal differentiation.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2005
Ayana T. Moore; Kathleen E. Rankin; George von Dassow; Leticia Peris; Michael Wagenbach; Yulia Ovechkina; Annie Andrieux; Didier Job; Linda Wordeman
MCAK is a member of the kinesin-13 family of microtubule (MT)-depolymerizing kinesins. We show that the potent MT depolymerizer MCAK tracks (treadmills) with the tips of polymerizing MTs in living cells. Tip tracking of MCAK is inhibited by phosphorylation and is dependent on the extreme COOH-terminal tail of MCAK. Tip tracking is not essential for MCAKs MT-depolymerizing activity. We propose that tip tracking is a mechanism by which MCAK is preferentially localized to regions of the cell that modulate the plus ends of MTs.
Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 2005
Odile Valiron; Leticia Peris; G. L. J. A. Rikken; Annie Schweitzer; Yasmina Saoudi; Chantal Rémy; Didier Job
To evaluate whether static high magnetic fields (HMFs), in the range of 10–17 T, affect the cytoskeleton and cell organization in different types of mammalian cells, including fibroblasts, epithelial cells, and differentiating neurons.
Disease Models & Mechanisms | 2013
Coralie Fassier; Anne Tarrade; Leticia Peris; Sabrina Courageot; Philippe Mailly; Cécile Dalard; Stéphanie Delga; Natacha Roblot; Julien Lefèvre; Didier Job; Jamilé Hazan; Patrick A. Curmi; Judith Melki
SUMMARY Mutations in SPG4, encoding the microtubule-severing protein spastin, are responsible for the most frequent form of hereditary spastic paraplegia (HSP), a heterogeneous group of genetic diseases characterized by degeneration of the corticospinal tracts. We previously reported that mice harboring a deletion in Spg4, generating a premature stop codon, develop progressive axonal degeneration characterized by focal axonal swellings associated with impaired axonal transport. To further characterize the molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying this mutant phenotype, we have assessed microtubule dynamics and axonal transport in primary cultures of cortical neurons from spastin-mutant mice. We show an early and marked impairment of microtubule dynamics all along the axons of spastin-deficient cortical neurons, which is likely to be responsible for the occurrence of axonal swellings and cargo stalling. Our analysis also reveals that a modulation of microtubule dynamics by microtubule-targeting drugs rescues the mutant phenotype of cortical neurons. Together, these results contribute to a better understanding of the pathogenesis of SPG4-linked HSP and ascertain the influence of microtubule-targeted drugs on the early axonal phenotype in a mouse model of the disease.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006
Julie Baratier; Leticia Peris; Jacques Brocard; Sylvie Gory-Fauré; Fabrice Dufour; Christophe Bosc; Anne Fourest-Lieuvin; Laurent Blanchoin; Paul Antoine Salin; Didier Job; Annie Andrieux
STOP proteins are microtubule-associated, calmodulinregulated proteins responsible for the high degree of stabilization displayed by neuronal microtubules. STOP suppression in mice induces synaptic defects affecting both short and long term synaptic plasticity in hippocampal neurons. Interestingly, STOP has been identified as a component of synaptic structures in neurons, despite the absence of microtubules in nerve terminals, indicating the existence of mechanisms able to induce a translocation of STOP from microtubules to synaptic compartments. Here we have tested STOP phosphorylation as a candidate mechanism for STOP relocalization. We show that, both in vitro and in vivo, STOP is phosphorylated by the multifunctional enzyme calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII), which is a key enzyme for synaptic plasticity. This phosphorylation occurs on at least two independent sites. Phosphorylated forms of STOP do not bind microtubules in vitro and do not co-localize with microtubules in cultured differentiating neurons. Instead, phosphorylated STOP co-localizes with actin assemblies along neurites or at branching points. Correlatively, we find that STOP binds to actin in vitro. Finally, in differentiated neurons, phosphorylated STOP co-localizes with clusters of synaptic proteins, whereas unphosphorylated STOP does not. Thus, STOP phosphorylation by CaMKII may promote STOP translocation from microtubules to synaptic compartments where it may interact with actin, which could be important for STOP function in synaptic plasticity.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006
Sylvie Gory-Fauré; Vanessa Windscheid; Christophe Bosc; Leticia Peris; Dominique Proietto; Ronald Franck; Eric Denarier; Didier Job; Annie Andrieux
Neuronal microtubules are stabilized by two calmodulin-regulated microtubule-associated proteins, E-STOP and N-STOP, which when suppressed in mice induce severe synaptic and behavioral deficits. Here we show that mature neurons also contain a 21-kDa STOP-like protein, SL21, which shares calmodulin-binding and microtubule-stabilizing homology domains with STOP proteins. Accordingly, in different biochemical or cellular assays, SL21 has calmodulin binding and microtubule stabilizing activity. However, in cultured hippocampal neurons, SL21 antibodies principally stain the somatic Golgi and punctate Golgi material in neurites. In cycling cells, transfected SL21 decorates microtubules when expressed at high levels but is otherwise principally visible at the Golgi. The Golgi targeting of SL21 depends on the presence of cysteine residues located within the SL21 N-terminal domain, suggesting that Golgi targeting may require SL21 palmitoylation. Accordingly we find that SL21 is palmitoylated in vivo. N-STOP and E-STOP, which contain the Golgi targeting sequences present in SL21, also display distinct Golgi staining when expressed at low level in cycling cells. Thus neuronal proteins of the STOP family have the capacity to associate with Golgi material, which could be important for STOP synaptic functions.
Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2016
Sacnicte Ramirez-Rios; Eric Denarier; Elea Prezel; Angélique Vinit; Virginie Stoppin-Mellet; François Devred; Pascale Barbier; Vincent Peyrot; Carmen Laura Sayas; Jesús Avila; Leticia Peris; Annie Andrieux; Laurence Serre; Anne Fourest-Lieuvin; Isabelle Arnal
Tau antagonizes tracking of end-binding proteins (EBs) at microtubule ends, a process requiring the C-terminal part of EBs and the microtubule-binding sites of tau. The inhibiting activity of tau on EB properties is regulated by tau phosphorylation. The interplay between EBs and tau proteins results in modulation of microtubule dynamics.
European Journal of Neuroscience | 2006
Alexandre Bouron; Sylvie Boisseau; Michel De Waard; Leticia Peris
In the embryonic brain, post‐mitotic cortical neurons migrate from their place of origin to their final location. Various external factors such as hormones, neurotransmitters or peptides regulate their migration. To date, however, only a few studies have investigated the effects of these external factors on the electrical properties of the newly formed embryonic cortical neurons. The aim of the present study was to determine whether glutamate and brain‐derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), known to regulate neuronal cell migration, could modulate currents through voltage‐gated calcium channels (ICa) in cortical neurons isolated from embryonic day 13 (E13) mouse foetuses. Whole cell recordings of ICa showed that E13 cortical cells kept 1 day in vitro expressed functional low‐ and high‐voltage activated (LVA and HVA) Ca2+ channels of T‐, L‐ and N‐types. A 1‐day glutamate treatment non‐specifically inhibited LVA and HVA ICa whereas BDNF down‐regulated HVA with N‐type ICa being more depressed than L‐type ICa. The glutamate‐induced ICa inhibition was mimicked by NMDA. BDNF exerted its action by recruiting trkB receptors and SKF‐96365‐sensitive channels. BAPTA prevented the glutamate‐ and the BDNF‐dependent inhibition of Ica, indicating a Ca2+‐dependent mechanism of action. It is proposed that an influx of Ca2+ through NMDA receptors depresses the expression of LVA and HVA Ca2+ channels whereas a Ca2+ influx through SKF‐96365‐sensitive TRPC (transient receptor potential protein of C subtype) channels preferentially inhibits the expression of HVA Ca2+ channels. Glutamate and BDNF appear as potent modulators of the electrical properties of early post‐mitotic neurons. By down‐regulating ICa they could exert a neuroprotective action on embryonic cortical neurons.