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Dive into the research topics where Luiza Mihaela Ghila is active.

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Featured researches published by Luiza Mihaela Ghila.


Developmental Cell | 2009

Apoptotic Cells Provide an Unexpected Source of Wnt3 Signaling to Drive Hydra Head Regeneration

Simona Chera; Luiza Mihaela Ghila; Kevin Dobretz; Yvan Wenger; Christoph Ruediger Bauer; Wanda Christa Buzgariu; Jean-Claude Martinou; Brigitte Galliot

Decapitated Hydra regenerate their heads via morphallaxis, i.e., without significant contributions made by cell proliferation or interstitial stem cells. Indeed, Hydra depleted of interstitial stem cells regenerate robustly, and Wnt3 from epithelial cells triggers head regeneration. However, we find a different mechanism controlling regeneration after midgastric bisection in animals equipped with both epithelial and interstitial cell lineages. In this context, we see rapid induction of apoptosis and Wnt3 secretion among interstitial cells at the head- (but not foot-) regenerating site. Apoptosis is both necessary and sufficient to induce Wnt3 production and head regeneration, even at ectopic sites. Further, we identify a zone of proliferation beneath the apoptotic zone, reminiscent of proliferative blastemas in regenerating limbs and of compensatory proliferation induced by dying cells in Drosophila imaginal discs. We propose that different types of injuries induce distinct cellular modes of Hydra head regeneration, which nonetheless converge on a central effector, Wnt3.


Nature | 2014

Diabetes recovery by age-dependent conversion of pancreatic δ-cells into insulin producers

Simona Chera; Delphine Baronnier; Luiza Mihaela Ghila; Valentina Cigliola; Jan Jensen; Guoqiang Gu; Kenichiro Furuyama; Fabrizio Thorel; Fiona M. Gribble; Frank Reimann; Pedro Luis Herrera

Total or near-total loss of insulin-producing β-cells occurs in type 1 diabetes. Restoration of insulin production in type 1 diabetes is thus a major medical challenge. We previously observed in mice in which β-cells are completely ablated that the pancreas reconstitutes new insulin-producing cells in the absence of autoimmunity. The process involves the contribution of islet non-β-cells; specifically, glucagon-producing α-cells begin producing insulin by a process of reprogramming (transdifferentiation) without proliferation. Here we show the influence of age on β-cell reconstitution from heterologous islet cells after near-total β-cell loss in mice. We found that senescence does not alter α-cell plasticity: α-cells can reprogram to produce insulin from puberty through to adulthood, and also in aged individuals, even a long time after β-cell loss. In contrast, before puberty there is no detectable α-cell conversion, although β-cell reconstitution after injury is more efficient, always leading to diabetes recovery. This process occurs through a newly discovered mechanism: the spontaneous en masse reprogramming of somatostatin-producing δ-cells. The juveniles display ‘somatostatin-to-insulin’ δ-cell conversion, involving dedifferentiation, proliferation and re-expression of islet developmental regulators. This juvenile adaptability relies, at least in part, upon the combined action of FoxO1 and downstream effectors. Restoration of insulin producing-cells from non-β-cell origins is thus enabled throughout life via δ- or α-cell spontaneous reprogramming. A landscape with multiple intra-islet cell interconversion events is emerging, offering new perspectives for therapy.


Journal of Cell Science | 2006

Silencing of the hydra serine protease inhibitor Kazal1 gene mimics the human SPINK1 pancreatic phenotype.

Simona Chera; Renaud De Rosa; Marijana Miljkovic-Licina; Kevin Dobretz; Luiza Mihaela Ghila; Kostas Kaloulis; Brigitte Galliot

In hydra, the endodermal epithelial cells carry out the digestive function together with the gland cells that produce zymogens and express the evolutionarily conserved gene Kazal1. To assess the hydra Kazal1 function, we silenced gene expression through double-stranded RNA feeding. A progressive Kazal1 silencing affected homeostatic conditions as evidenced by the low budding rate and the induced animal death. Concomitantly, a dramatic disorganization followed by a massive death of gland cells was observed, whereas the cytoplasm of digestive cells became highly vacuolated. The presence of mitochondria and late endosomes within those vacuoles assigned them as autophagosomes. The enhanced Kazal1 expression in regenerating tips was strongly diminished in Kazal1(–) hydra, and the amputation stress led to an immediate disorganization of the gland cells, vacuolization of the digestive cells and death after prolonged silencing. This first cellular phenotype resulting from a gene knock-down in cnidarians suggests that the Kazal1 serine-protease-inhibitor activity is required to prevent excessive autophagy in intact hydra and to exert a cytoprotective function to survive the amputation stress. Interestingly, these functions parallel the pancreatic autophagy phenotype observed upon mutation within the Kazal domain of the SPINK1 and SPINK3 genes in human and mice, respectively.


Development | 2007

Head regeneration in wild-type hydra requires de novo neurogenesis.

Marijana Miljkovic-Licina; Simona Chera; Luiza Mihaela Ghila; Brigitte Galliot

Because head regeneration occurs in nerve-free hydra mutants, neurogenesis was regarded as dispensable for this process. Here, in wild-type hydra, we tested the function of the ParaHox gsx homolog gene, cnox-2, which is a specific marker for bipotent neuronal progenitors, expressed in cycling interstitial cells that give rise to apical neurons and gastric nematoblasts (i.e. sensory mechanoreceptor precursors). cnox-2 RNAi silencing leads to a dramatic downregulation of hyZic, prdl-a, gsc and cnASH, whereas hyCOUP-TF is upregulated. cnox-2 indeed acts as an upstream regulator of the neuronal and nematocyte differentiation pathways, as cnox-2(-) hydra display a drastic reduction in apical neurons and gastric nematoblasts, a disorganized apical nervous system and a decreased body size. During head regeneration, the locally restricted de novo neurogenesis that precedes head formation is cnox-2 dependent: cnox-2 expression is induced in neuronal precursors and differentiating neurons that appear in the regenerating tip; cnox-2 RNAi silencing reduces this de novo neurogenesis and delays head formation. Similarly, the disappearance of cnox-2+ cells in sf-1 mutants also correlates with head regeneration blockade. Hence in wild-type hydra, head regeneration requires the cnox-2 neurogenic function. When neurogenesis is missing, an alternative, slower and less efficient, head developmental program is possibly activated.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2009

Autophagy in Hydra: a response to starvation and stress in early animal evolution.

Simona Chera; Wanda Christa Buzgariu; Luiza Mihaela Ghila; Brigitte Galliot

The Hydra polyp provides a powerful model system to investigate the regulation of cell survival and cell death in homeostasis and regeneration as Hydra survive weeks without feeding and regenerates any missing part after bisection. Induction of autophagy during starvation is the main surviving strategy in Hydra as autophagic vacuoles form in most myoepithelial cells after several days. When the autophagic process is inhibited, animal survival is actually rapidly jeopardized. An appropriate regulation of autophagy is also essential during regeneration as Hydra RNAi knocked-down for the serine protease inhibitor Kazal-type (SPINK) gene Kazal1, exhibit a massive autophagy after amputation that rapidly compromises cell and animal survival. This excessive autophagy phenotype actually mimics that observed in the mammalian pancreas when SPINK genes are mutated, highlighting the paradigmatic value of the Hydra model system for deciphering pathological processes. Interestingly autophagy during starvation predominantly affects ectodermal epithelial cells and lead to cell survival whereas Kazal1(RNAi)-induced autophagy is restricted to endodermal digestive cells that rapidly undergo cell death. This indicates that distinct regulations that remain to be identified, are at work in these two contexts. Cnidarian express orthologs for most components of the autophagy and TOR pathways suggesting evolutionarily-conserved roles during starvation.


Molecular Reproduction and Development | 2010

Cell plasticity in homeostasis and regeneration

Brigitte Galliot; Luiza Mihaela Ghila

Over the past decades, genetic analyses performed in vertebrate and invertebrate organisms deciphered numerous cellular and molecular mechanisms deployed during sexual development and identified genetic circuitries largely shared among bilaterians. In contrast, the functional analysis of the mechanisms that support regenerative processes in species randomly scattered among the animal kingdom, were limited by the lack of genetic tools. Consequently, unifying principles explaining how stress and injury can lead to the reactivation of a complete developmental program with restoration of original shape and function remained beyond reach of understanding. Recent data on cell plasticity suggest that beside the classical developmental approach, the analysis of homeostasis and asexual reproduction in adult organisms provides novel entry points to dissect the regenerative potential of a given species, a given organ or a given tissue. As a clue, both tissue homeostasis and regeneration dynamics rely on the availability of stem cells and/or on the plasticity of differentiated cells to replenish the missing structure. The freshwater Hydra polyp provides us with a unique model system to study the intricate relationships between the mechanisms that regulate the maintenance of homeostasis, even in extreme conditions (starvation and overfeeding) and the reactivation of developmental programs after bisection or during budding. Interestingly head regeneration in Hydra can follow several routes according to the level of amputation, suggesting that indeed the homeostatic background dramatically influences the route taken to bridge injury and regeneration. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 77:837–855, 2010.


Development Growth & Differentiation | 2011

Injury-induced activation of the MAPK/CREB pathway triggers apoptosis-induced compensatory proliferation in hydra head regeneration

Simona Chera; Luiza Mihaela Ghila; Yvan Wenger; Brigitte Galliot

After bisection, Hydra polyps regenerate their head from the lower half thanks to a head‐organizer activity that is rapidly established at the tip. Head regeneration is also highly plastic as both the wild‐type and the epithelial Hydra (that lack the interstitial cell lineage) can regenerate their head. In the wild‐type context, we previously showed that after mid‐gastric bisection, a large subset of the interstitial cells undergo apoptosis, inducing compensatory proliferation of the surrounding progenitors. This asymmetric process is necessary and sufficient to launch head regeneration. The apoptotic cells transiently release Wnt3, which promotes the formation of a proliferative zone by activating the beta‐catenin pathway in the adjacent cycling cells. However the injury‐induced signaling that triggers apoptosis is unknown. We previously reported an asymmetric immediate activation of the mitogen‐activated protein kinase/ribosomal S6 kinase/cAMP response element binding protein (MAPK/RSK/CREB) pathway in head‐regenerating tips after mid‐gastric bisection. We show here that pharmacological inhibition of the MAPK/ERK pathway or RNAi knockdown of the RSK, CREB, CREB binding protein (CBP) genes prevents apoptosis, compensatory proliferation and blocks head regeneration. As the activation of the MAPK pathway upon injury plays an essential role in regenerating bilaterian species, these results suggest that the MAPK‐dependent activation of apoptosis‐induced compensatory proliferation represents an evolutionary‐conserved mechanism to launch a regenerative process.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2008

The evolutionarily conserved gene LNP-1 is required for synaptic vesicle trafficking and synaptic transmission

Luiza Mihaela Ghila; Marie Gomez

The control of vesicle‐mediated transport in nerve cells is of great importance in the function, development and maintenance of synapse. In this paper, we characterize the new Caenorhabditis elegans gene, lnp‐1. The lnp‐1 gene is broadly distributed in many neuronal structures and its localization is dependent of the UNC‐104/kinesin protein. Deletion mutations in lnp‐1 result in increased resistance to aldicarb, an acetylcholinesterase inhibitor, and in locomotor defects. However, sensitivity to levamisole, a nicotinic agonist which, unlike aldicarb, only affects postsynaptic function, was similar to that of wild‐type animals, suggesting a presynaptic function for LNP‐1 in neurotransmission. The mislocalization of presynaptic proteins, such as synaptobrevin‐1 or RAB‐3, in lnp‐1 mutants further supports this hypothesis. In summary, our studies suggest that LNP‐1 plays a role in synaptogenesis by regulating vesicular transport or localization.


Nature Cell Biology | 2018

Pancreatic islet-autonomous insulin and smoothened-mediated signalling modulate identity changes of glucagon + α-cells

Valentina Cigliola; Luiza Mihaela Ghila; Fabrizio Thorel; Léon van Gurp; Delphine Baronnier; Daniel Oropeza; Simone Gupta; Takeshi Miyatsuka; Hideaki Kaneto; Mark A. Magnuson; Anna B. Osipovich; Maike Sander; Christopher E. V. Wright; Melissa K. Thomas; Kenichiro Furuyama; Simona Chera; Pedro Luis Herrera

The mechanisms that restrict regeneration and maintain cell identity following injury are poorly characterized in higher vertebrates. Following β-cell loss, 1–2% of the glucagon-producing α-cells spontaneously engage in insulin production in mice. Here we explore the mechanisms inhibiting α-cell plasticity. We show that adaptive α-cell identity changes are constrained by intra-islet insulin- and Smoothened-mediated signalling, among others. The combination of β-cell loss or insulin-signalling inhibition, with Smoothened inactivation in α- or δ-cells, stimulates insulin production in more α-cells. These findings suggest that the removal of constitutive ‘brake signals’ is crucial to neutralize the refractoriness to adaptive cell-fate changes. It appears that the maintenance of cell identity is an active process mediated by repressive signals, which are released by neighbouring cells and curb an intrinsic trend of differentiated cells to change.Cigliola et al. show that β-cell loss activates insulin production in a small number of α-cells and that insulin and Hedgehog signalling actively maintain and enforce the α-cell fate.


Mechanisms of Development | 2009

19-P010 Head-regeneration through cell death and compensatory proliferation in the Hydra

Luiza Mihaela Ghila; Simona Chera; Brigitte Galliot

cells along the proximodistal (PD) axis concomitantly with remodelling of the pre-existing stump, making the regenerated legs shorter than normal. In contrast, knockdown of the expanded (ex) or Merlin (Mer) transcripts induced over-proliferation of the regenerating cells, making the regenerated legs longer. These results are consistent with those obtained using rdRNAi during intercalary regeneration induced by leg transplantation. Since these findings fit well with the Ds/Ft steepness model for the determination of organ size, we propose the following model for the control of leg regeneration. A Ds/Ft gradient is responsible for sensing positional disparity and driving proliferation of regenerating cells by activation of the Hippo/Warts pathway. The leg size of regenerates is determined by the steepness of the Ds/Ft gradient, such that growth ceases when the slope of the linear gradient falls below a certain threshold value, which may be determined by an Ex/Mer interaction. Our findings provide additional insight into the longstanding question of how the size and shape of an appendage is determined in metazoa.

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