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Dive into the research topics where Maria Capovilla is active.

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Featured researches published by Maria Capovilla.


Immunity | 2000

Tissue-Specific Inducible Expression of Antimicrobial Peptide Genes in Drosophila Surface Epithelia

Phoebe Tzou; Serge Ohresser; Dominique Ferrandon; Maria Capovilla; Jean-Marc Reichhart; Bruno Lemaitre; Jules A. Hoffmann; Jean-Luc Imler

The production of antimicrobial peptides is an important aspect of host defense in multicellular organisms. In Drosophila, seven antimicrobial peptides with different spectra of activities are synthesized by the fat body during the immune response and secreted into the hemolymph. Using GFP reporter transgenes, we show here that all seven Drosophila antimicrobial peptides can be induced in surface epithelia in a tissue-specific manner. The imd gene plays a critical role in the activation of this local response to infection. In particular, drosomycin expression, which is regulated by the Toll pathway during the systemic response, is regulated by imd in the respiratory tract, thus demonstrating the existence of distinct regulatory mechanisms for local and systemic induction of antimicrobial peptide genes in Drosophila.


Cell | 1994

The DNA binding specificity of ultrabithorax is modulated by cooperative interactions with extradenticle, another homeoprotein

Siu-Kwong Chan; Leah Jaffe; Maria Capovilla; Juan Botas; Richard S. Mann

The Ultrabithorax (Ubx) and Antennapedia (Antp) genes of Drosophila encode homeodomain proteins that have very similar DNA binding specificities in vitro but specify the development of different segmental patterns in vivo. We describe cooperative interactions between Ubx protein and a divergent homeodomain protein, extradenticle (exd), that selectively increases the affinity of Ubx, but not Antp, for a particular DNA target. We also provide evidence that Ubx and exd bind to neighboring sites on this DNA and interact directly to stabilize the DNA-bound form of Ubx. Thus, the ability of different homeotic genes to specify distinct segmental patterns may depend on cooperative interactions with proteins such as exd that selectively modulate their otherwise similar DNA binding specificities.


Nature Immunology | 2002

Drosophila MyD88 is required for the response to fungal and Gram-positive bacterial infections

Servane Tauszig-Delamasure; Hana Bilak; Maria Capovilla; Jules A. Hoffmann; Jean-Luc Imler

We report here the identification and functional characterization of DmMyD88, a gene encoding the Drosophila homolog of mammalian MyD88. DmMyD88 combines a Toll–IL-1R homology (TIR) domain and a death domain. Overexpression of DmMyD88 was sufficient to induce expression of the antifungal peptide Drosomycin, and induction of Drosomycin was markedly reduced in DmMyD88-mutant flies. DmMyD88 interacted with Toll through its TIR domain and required the death domain proteins Tube and Pelle to activate expression of Drs, which encodes Drosomycin. DmMyD88-mutant flies were highly susceptible to infection by fungi and Gram-positive bacteria, but resisted Gram-negative bacterial infection much as did wild-type flies. Phenotypic comparison of DmMyD88-mutant flies and MyD88-deficient mice showed essential differences in the control of Gram-negative infection in insects and mammals.


Cell | 1994

Direct regulation of decapentaplegic by Ultrabithorax and its role in Drosophila midgut morphogenesis

Maria Capovilla; Mary L. Brandt; Juan Botas

Drosophila homeotic genes encode transcription factors thought to control segmental identity by regulating expression of largely unknown target genes. The formation of the second midgut constriction requires the Ultrabithorax (Ubx) and abdominal-A (abd-A) homeotic genes and decapentaplegic (dpp), a gene encoding a member of the TGF beta family of proteins. We identified a 674 bp enhancer of dpp controlling its expression in the second constriction domain of the visceral mesoderm (parasegment 7). Normal enhancer function requires positive regulation by Ubx and negative regulation by abd-A. This enhancer contains UBX- and ABD-A-binding sites defined in vitro. By generating complementary alterations of the binding sites and the binding specificity of UBX, we show that Ubx directly regulates dpp expression. These regulatory interactions are relevant to normal development, because a transgene made with this enhancer driving a dpp transcription unit rescues the second midgut constriction and larval lethality phenotypes of dpps mutations.


Developmental Cell | 2003

The Hexapeptide and Linker Regions of the AbdA Hox Protein Regulate Its Activating and Repressive Functions

Samir Merabet; Zakaria Kambris; Maria Capovilla; Hélène Bérenger; Jacques Pradel; Yacine Graba

The Hox family transcription factors control diversified morphogenesis during development and evolution. They function in concert with Pbc cofactor proteins. Pbc proteins bind the Hox hexapeptide (HX) motif and are thereby thought to confer DNA binding specificity. Here we report that mutation of the AbdA HX motif does not alter its binding site selection but does modify its transregulatory properties in a gene-specific manner in vivo. We also show that a short, evolutionarily conserved motif, PFER, in the homeodomain-HX linker region acts together with the HX to control an AbdA activation/repression switch. Our in vivo data thus reveal functions not previously anticipated from in vitro analyses for the hexapeptide motif in the regulation of Hox activity.


Gene Expression Patterns | 2002

Tissue and stage-specific expression of the Tolls in Drosophila embryos.

Zakaria Kambris; Jules A. Hoffmann; Jean-Luc Imler; Maria Capovilla

The Drosophila transmembrane receptor Toll plays a key role in specifying the dorsoventral axis of the embryo. At later stages of development, it controls the immune response of the fly to fungal and Gram-positive bacterial infections. The Drosophila genome has a total of nine Toll-like genes, including the previously characterized Toll (Toll-1) and 18-wheeler (Toll-2). Here we describe the embryonic expression patterns of the seven Toll-like genes Toll-3 through Toll-9. We find that these genes have distinct expression domains and that their expression is dynamically changing throughout embryonic development. This complex and tissue-specific regulation of Toll-like gene expression strongly suggests a role in embryonic development for most Drosophila Tolls. The evolving picture on the Toll family members in Drosophila contrasts with that of mammalian Toll-like receptors, which are predominantly expressed in immune responsive cells where their activation occurs via microbial structural determinants.


Scientific Reports | 2012

Light- induced electron transfer and ATP synthesis in a carotene synthesizing insect

Jean-Christophe Valmalette; Aviv Dombrovsky; Pierre Brat; Christian Mertz; Maria Capovilla; Alain Robichon

A singular adaptive phenotype of a parthenogenetic insect species (Acyrthosiphon pisum) was selected in cold conditions and is characterized by a remarkable apparition of a greenish colour. The aphid pigments involve carotenoid genes well defined in chloroplasts and cyanobacteria and amazingly present in the aphid genome, likely by lateral transfer during evolution. The abundant carotenoid synthesis in aphids suggests strongly that a major and unknown physiological role is related to these compounds beyond their canonical anti-oxidant properties. We report here that the capture of light energy in living aphids results in the photo induced electron transfer from excited chromophores to acceptor molecules. The redox potentials of molecules involved in this process would be compatible with the reduction of the NAD+ coenzyme. This appears as an archaic photosynthetic system consisting of photo-emitted electrons that are in fine funnelled into the mitochondrial reducing power in order to synthesize ATP molecules.


EMBO Reports | 2003

DmMyD88 controls dorsoventral patterning of the Drosophila embryo.

Zakaria Kambris; Hana Bilak; Rosalba D'Alessandro; Marcia Belvin; Jean-Luc Imler; Maria Capovilla

MyD88 is an adapter protein in the signal transduction pathway mediated by interleukin‐1 (IL‐1) and Toll‐like receptors. A Drosophila homologue of MyD88 (DmMyD88) was recently shown to be required for the Toll‐mediated immune response. In Drosophila, the Toll pathway was originally characterized for its role in the dorsoventral patterning of the embryo. We found that, like Toll, DmMyD88 messenger RNA is maternally supplied to the embryo. Here we report the identification of a new mutant allele of DmMyD88, which generates a protein lacking the carboxy‐terminal extension, normally located downstream of the Toll/IL‐1 receptor domain. Homozygous mutant female flies lay dorsalized embryos that are rescued by expression of a transgenic DmMyD88 complementary DNA. The DmMyD88 mutation blocks the ventralizing activity of a gain‐of‐function Toll mutation. These results show that DmMyD88 encodes an essential component of the Toll pathway in dorsoventral pattern formation.


Fly | 2007

Downstream of homeotic genes: in the heart of Hox function.

Bruno Monier; Florencia Tevy; Laurent Perrin; Maria Capovilla; Michel Sémériva

A functional organ is constituted of diverse cell types. Each one occupies a distinct position and is associated to specific morphological and physiological functions. The identification of the genetic programs controlling these elaborated and highly precise features of organogenesis is crucial to understand how a mature organ works under normal conditions, and how pathologies can develop. Recently, a number of studies have reported a critical role for Hox genes in one example of organogenesis: cardiogenesis in Drosophila. Beyond the interest in understanding the molecular basis of functional cardiogenesis, this system might provide a model for proposing new paradigms of how Hox genes achieve their action throughout development.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Nano-architecture of gustatory chemosensory bristles and trachea in Drosophila wings.

Jean-Christophe Valmalette; Hussein Raad; Nan Qiu; Satoshi Ohara; Maria Capovilla; Alain Robichon

In the Drosophila wing anterior margin, the dendrites of gustatory neurons occupy the interior of thin and long bristles that present tiny pores at their extremities. Many attempts to measure ligand-evoked currents in insect wing gustatory neurons have been unsuccessful for technical reasons. The functions of this gustatory activity therefore remain elusive and controversial. To advance our knowledge on this understudied tissue, we investigated the architecture of the wing chemosensory bristles and wing trachea using Raman spectroscopy and fluorescence microscopy. We hypothesized that the wing gustatory hair, an open-ended capillary tube, and the wing trachea constitute biological systems similar to nano-porous materials. We present evidence that argues in favour of the existence of a layer or a bubble of air beneath the pore inside the gustatory hair. We demonstrate that these hollow hairs and wing tracheal tubes fulfil conditions for which the physics of fluids applied to open-ended capillaries and porous materials are relevant. We also document that the wing gustatory hair and tracheal architectures are capable of trapping volatile molecules from the environment, which might increase the efficiency of their spatial detection by way of wing vibrations or during flight.

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Alain Robichon

University of Nice Sophia Antipolis

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Jean-Luc Imler

University of Strasbourg

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Jules A. Hoffmann

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Zakaria Kambris

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Juan Botas

Baylor College of Medicine

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Christian Mertz

Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement

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Pierre Brat

Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement

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Alain Robichon

University of Nice Sophia Antipolis

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Barbara Bardoni

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Hana Bilak

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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