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Dive into the research topics where Marie-France Gardahaut is active.

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Featured researches published by Marie-France Gardahaut.


Mechanisms of Development | 1996

Innervation regulates myosin heavy chain isoform expression in developing skeletal muscle fibers

Bruno Lefeuvre; Fe´lix Crossin; Josiane Fontaine-Pe´rus; Everett Bandman; Marie-France Gardahaut

The influence of innervation on primary and secondary myogenesis and its relation to fiber type diversity were investigated in two specific wing muscles of quail embryo, the posterior (PLD) and anterior latissimus dorsi (ALD). In the adult, these muscles are composed almost exclusively of pure populations of fast and slow fibers, respectively. When slow ALD and fast PLD muscles developed in ovo in an aneurogenic environment induced after neural tube ablation, the cardiac ventricular myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoform was not expressed. The adult slow MHC isoform, SM2, appeared by embryonic day 7 (ED 7) in normal innervated slow ALD but was not expressed in denervated muscle. Analysis of in vitro differentiation of myoblasts from fast PLD and slow ALD muscles isolated from ED 7 control and neuralectomized quail embryos showed no fundamental differences in the pattern of MHC isoform expression. Newly differentiated fibers accumulated cardiac ventricular, embryonic fast, slow SM1 and SM3 MHC isoforms. Nevertheless, the expression of slow SM2 isoform in myotubes formed from slow ALD myoblasts only occurred when myoblasts were cultured in the presence of embryonic spinal cord. Our studies demonstrate that the neural tube influences primary as well as secondary myotube differentiation in avian forelimb and facilitates the expression of different MHC, particularly slow SM2 MHC gene expression in slow myoblasts.


Stem Cell Research | 2011

Fetal muscle contains different CD34+ cell subsets that distinctly differentiate into adipogenic, angiogenic and myogenic lineages

Tanaelle Dupas; Thierry Rouaud; Karl Rouger; Blandine Lieubeau; Chrystelle Cario-Toumaniantz; Josiane Fontaine-Pérus; Marie-France Gardahaut; Gwenola Auda-Boucher

We have previously demonstrated that CD34(+) cells isolated from fetal mouse muscles are an interesting source of myogenic progenitors. In the present work, we pinpoint the tissue location of these CD34(+) cells using cell surface and phenotype markers. In order to identify the myogenic population, we next purified different CD34(+) subsets, determined their expression of relevant lineage-related genes, and analyzed their differentiation capacities in vitro and in vivo. The CD34(+) population comprised a CD31(+)/CD45(-) cell subset exhibiting endothelial characteristics and only capable of forming microvessels in vivo. The CD34(+)/CD31(-)/CD45(-)/Sca1(+) subpopulation, which is restricted to the muscle epimysium, displayed adipogenic differentiation both in vitro and in vivo. CD34(+)/CD31(-)/CD45(-)/Sca1(-) cells, localized in the muscle interstitium, transcribed myogenic genes, but did not display the characteristics of adult satellite cells. These cells were distinct from pericytes and fibroblasts. They were myogenic in vitro, and efficiently contributed to skeletal muscle regeneration in vivo, although their myogenic potential was lower than that of the unfractionated CD34(+) cell population. Our results indicate that angiogenic and adipogenic cells grafted with myogenic cells enhance their contribution to myogenic regeneration, highlighting the fundamental role of the microenvironment on the fate of transplanted cells.


Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry | 2003

Developmental Behavior of Embryonic Myogenic Progenitors Transplanted into Adult Muscle as Revealed by Desmin LacZ Recombinant Gene

Gwenola Auda-Boucher; Thierry Rouaud; Josiane Fontaine-Pérus; Fabien Le Grand; Marie-France Gardahaut

We studied the behavior of myogenic progenitors from donor desmin+/– LacZ embryos after implantation into tibialis anterior muscle of 2-month-old mouse hosts. Myogenic progenitors were collected from 10-day post-coital mouse embryo somite dermomyotomes (DMs), forelimb buds (LBs), and trunks. The replacement of desmin by the LacZ coding sequence allowed specific monitoring of β-galactosidase expression in donor myogenic cells. Immunostaining for myosin heavy chain and laminin expression was performed together with acetylcholine receptor histochemistry on sections of implanted muscle. Myogenic progenitors generated from DM, LB, and trunk were able to proliferate and adopt a myogenic pathway after transplantation into adult mouse muscle. Although their development appeared to be limited for DM and LB cell transplantation, the differentiation of myogenic progenitors occurred readily with trunk cell injection, suggesting that cell types associated with DM cells were involved in long-term myofiber differentiation (21 day). When neural tube/notochord (NTN) or sclerotomal (S) cells were co-transplanted with DM cells, myogenic nuclei were produced, indicating that both NTN and S are required for the differentiation of DMs grafted into adult muscle. These data are consistent with the differentiation of neural tissues and bone from NTN and S, respectively, and with the development of anatomic relations among all in vivo-differentiated tissues. These results suggest that embryonic trunk cells can be used to repair different types of injured tissues (especially skeletal muscle) under appropriate environmental conditions.


Mechanisms of Development | 1995

Neural tube can induce fast myosin heavy chain isoform expression during embryonic development

Gwenola Auda-Boucher; Franck Merly; Marie-France Gardahaut; Josiane Fontaine-Pérus

We investigated the role of the neural tube in muscle cell differentiation in developing somitic myotome of chick embryo, particularly through fast myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoform expression. An embryonic fast MHC labeled with EB165 mAb was expressed in somitic cells from stage 15 of Hamburger and Hamilton (H.H.) (24 somites). Moreover, a distinct early embryonic fast MHC was expressed only from stage 15 of H.H. to stage 36 (E10). Like neonatal MHC, this isoform was labeled with 2E9 mAb but differed in its immunopeptide mapping. Expression of EB165-labeled embryonic fast MHC occurred in somitic myotomes deprived of neural tube influence by in ovo ablation as well as in somite explants cultured alone in vitro. Conversely, ablation of the neural tube prevented somitic expression of MHC labeled with 2E9 mAb. The neural tube induced in vitro expression of this MHC in explants of somites which failed to express it when cultured alone. These results indicate that signals emanating from the neural tube are required for the expression of early embryonic fast MHC isoform in developing somitic myotome.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Complement C3 of the innate immune system secreted by muscle adipogenic cells promotes myogenic differentiation

Thierry Rouaud; Nader Siami; Tanaelle Dupas; Pascal Gervier; Marie-France Gardahaut; Gwenola Auda-Boucher; Christophe Thiriet

Myogenic differentiation results in different cell type cooperation, but the molecules involved in the myogenic cell activation remain elusive. Here, we show that muscle-resident pre-adipocytes promote myogenic differentiation through the secretion of factors. Using proteomic and transcriptomic analyses, we identified that proliferative adipogenic lineage cells produce and secrete a key factor of the innate immune system, the complement C3. Cell culture experiments revealed that C3 promotes the differentiation of myogenic progenitors following internalisation of the immune molecule. These data demonstrate that the third component of the complement system, which is a pivotal factor in the immune response to pathogens, is also involved in the differentiation of myogenic progenitor cells.


Experimental Cell Research | 2004

Endothelial cells within embryonic skeletal muscles: a potential source of myogenic progenitors.

Fabien Le Grand; Gwenola Auda-Boucher; Dmitri O. Levitsky; Thierry Rouaud; Josiane Fontaine-Pérus; Marie-France Gardahaut


Differentiation | 1988

Developmental changes in myosin isoforms from slow and fast latissimus dorsi muscles in the chicken

Marie-France Gardahaut; Thierry Rouaud; Didier Renaud; Georges Le Douarin


Experimental Cell Research | 2007

Fetal muscle-derived cells can repair dystrophic muscles in mdx mice

Gwenola Auda-Boucher; Thierry Rouaud; Aude Lafoux; Dmitri O. Levitsky; Corinne Huchet-Cadiou; Marie Feron; Laetitia Guevel; Sophie Talon; Josiane Fontaine-Pérus; Marie-France Gardahaut


Muscle & Nerve | 1989

Role of nerve and tension in maturation of posthatching slow‐tonic muscle in chicken

Marie-France Gardahaut; Thierry Rouaud; Didier Renaud; Ahmad Khaskiye; Georges Le Douarin


Biologie Aujourd'hui | 2003

Implication de l’environnement tissulaire dans la cardiomyogenèse

Marie-France Gardahaut; Gwenola Auda-Boucher; Josiane Fontaine-Pérus

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Gwenola Auda-Boucher

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Josiane Fontaine-Pérus

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Thierry Rouaud

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Dmitri O. Levitsky

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Fabien Le Grand

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Georges Le Douarin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Tanaelle Dupas

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Aude Lafoux

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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