Matthieu Gérard
University of Geneva
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Featured researches published by Matthieu Gérard.
Genes & Development | 2013
Emilie Montellier; Faycxal Boussouar; Sophie Rousseaux; Kai Zhang; Thierry Buchou; Francxois Fenaille; Hitoshi Shiota; Alexandra Debernardi; Patrick Héry; Sandrine Curtet; Mahya Jamshidikia; Sophie Barral; Hélène Holota; Aurélie Bergon; Fabrice Lopez; Philippe Guardiola; Karin Pernet; Jean Imbert; Carlo Petosa; Minjia Tan; Yingming Zhao; Matthieu Gérard; Saadi Khochbin
The conversion of male germ cell chromatin to a nucleoprotamine structure is fundamental to the life cycle, yet the underlying molecular details remain obscure. Here we show that an essential step is the genome-wide incorporation of TH2B, a histone H2B variant of hitherto unknown function. Using mouse models in which TH2B is depleted or C-terminally modified, we show that TH2B directs the final transformation of dissociating nucleosomes into protamine-packed structures. Depletion of TH2B induces compensatory mechanisms that permit histone removal by up-regulating H2B and programming nucleosome instability through targeted histone modifications, including lysine crotonylation and arginine methylation. Furthermore, after fertilization, TH2B reassembles onto the male genome during protamine-to-histone exchange. Thus, TH2B is a unique histone variant that plays a key role in the histone-to-protamine packing of the male genome and guides genome-wide chromatin transitions that both precede and follow transmission of the male genome to the egg.
The EMBO Journal | 2012
Jonathan Gaucher; Fayçal Boussouar; Emilie Montellier; Sandrine Curtet; Thierry Buchou; Sarah Bertrand; Patrick Héry; Sylvie Jounier; Arnaud Depaux; Anne-Laure Vitte; Philippe Guardiola; Karin Pernet; Alexandra Debernardi; Fabrice Lopez; Hélène Holota; Jean Imbert; Debra J. Wolgemuth; Matthieu Gérard; Sophie Rousseaux; Saadi Khochbin
Male germ cell differentiation is a highly regulated multistep process initiated by the commitment of progenitor cells into meiosis and characterized by major chromatin reorganizations in haploid spermatids. We report here that a single member of the double bromodomain BET factors, Brdt, is a master regulator of both meiotic divisions and post‐meiotic genome repackaging. Upon its activation at the onset of meiosis, Brdt drives and determines the developmental timing of a testis‐specific gene expression program. In meiotic and post‐meiotic cells, Brdt initiates a genuine histone acetylation‐guided programming of the genome by activating essential genes and repressing a ‘progenitor cells’ gene expression program. At post‐meiotic stages, a global chromatin hyperacetylation gives the signal for Brdts first bromodomain to direct the genome‐wide replacement of histones by transition proteins. Brdt is therefore a unique and essential regulator of male germ cell differentiation, which, by using various domains in a developmentally controlled manner, first drives a specific spermatogenic gene expression program, and later controls the tight packaging of the male genome.
The EMBO Journal | 1997
Jozsef Zakany; Matthieu Gérard; Bertrand Favier; Denis Duboule
A phylogenetically conserved transcriptional enhancer necessary for the activation of Hoxd‐11 was deleted from the HoxD complex of mice by targeted mutagenesis. While genetic and expression analyses demonstrated the role of this regulatory element in the activation of Hoxd‐11 during early somitogenesis, the function of this gene in developing limbs and the urogenital system was not affected, suggesting that Hox transcriptional controls are different in different axial structures. In the trunk of mutant embryos, transcriptional activation of Hoxd‐11 and Hoxd‐10 was severely delayed, but subsequently resumed with appropriate spatial distributions. The resulting caudal transposition of the sacrum indicates that proper vertebral specification requires a precise temporal control of Hox gene expression, in addition to spatial regulation. A slight time delay in expression (transcriptional heterochrony) cannot be compensated for at a later developmental stage, eventually leading to morphological alterations.
The EMBO Journal | 1993
Matthieu Gérard; Denis Duboule; Jozsef Zakany
We have used reporter gene constructs to study the cis regulation of the Hoxd‐11 gene (previously Hox‐4.6) in transgenic mice. We identified a 5 kb regulatory unit, which was able to reproduce important aspects of the initial activation of the gene along the major body axis. The comparison of the nucleotide sequence of this DNA fragment with the corresponding avian genomic region revealed the presence of seven highly homologous stretches of DNA outside the protein coding regions. In particular, the 3′ flanking region contained two such domains that are required to mediate the embryonic activation. A chimeric construct containing the two short homologous regions from the chicken gene could replace the complete murine fragment thus demonstrating that the conserved domains carry the main regulatory elements involved in this activation. The first half of this bipartite regulatory region has enhancer activity when tested with a heterologous promoter, while the second half is required to restrict the enhancer activity to the proper expression domain. These results suggest that stage‐ and tissue‐specific cooperation between regulatory elements is required to control properly the activity of the Hoxd‐11 promoter.
Nature | 2016
Maud de Dieuleveult; Kuangyu Yen; Isabelle Hmitou; Arnaud Depaux; Fayçal Boussouar; Daria Bou Dargham; Sylvie Jounier; Hélène Humbertclaude; Florence Ribierre; Céline Baulard; Nina Farrell; Bongsoo Park; Céline Keime; Lucie Carrière; Soizick Berlivet; Marta Gut; Ivo Gut; Michel Werner; Jean-François Deleuze; Robert Olaso; Jean Christophe Aude; Sophie Chantalat; B. Franklin Pugh; Matthieu Gérard
ATP-dependent chromatin remodellers allow access to DNA for transcription factors and the general transcription machinery, but whether mammalian chromatin remodellers target specific nucleosomes to regulate transcription is unclear. Here we present genome-wide remodeller–nucleosome interaction profiles for the chromatin remodellers Chd1, Chd2, Chd4, Chd6, Chd8, Chd9, Brg1 and Ep400 in mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells. These remodellers bind one or both full nucleosomes that flank micrococcal nuclease (MNase)-defined nucleosome-free promoter regions (NFRs), where they separate divergent transcription. Surprisingly, large CpG-rich NFRs that extend downstream of annotated transcriptional start sites are nevertheless bound by non-nucleosomal or subnucleosomal histone variants (H3.3 and H2A.Z) and marked by H3K4me3 and H3K27ac modifications. RNA polymerase II therefore navigates hundreds of base pairs of altered chromatin in the sense direction before encountering an MNase-resistant nucleosome at the 3′ end of the NFR. Transcriptome analysis after remodeller depletion reveals reciprocal mechanisms of transcriptional regulation by remodellers. Whereas at active genes individual remodellers have either positive or negative roles via altering nucleosome stability, at polycomb-enriched bivalent genes the same remodellers act in an opposite manner. These findings indicate that remodellers target specific nucleosomes at the edge of NFRs, where they regulate ES cell transcriptional programs.
Genome Research | 2011
Sophie Chantalat; Arnaud Depaux; Patrick Héry; Sophie Barral; Jean Yves Thuret; Stefan Dimitrov; Matthieu Gérard
The mammalian genome contains numerous regions known as facultative heterochromatin, which contribute to transcriptional silencing during development and cell differentiation. We have analyzed the pattern of histone modifications associated with facultative heterochromatin within the mouse imprinted Snurf-Snrpn cluster, which is homologous to the human Prader-Willi syndrome genomic region. We show here that the maternally inherited Snurf-Snrpn 3-Mb region, which is silenced by a potent transcription repressive mechanism, is uniformly enriched in histone methylation marks usually found in constitutive heterochromatin, such as H4K20me3, H3K9me3, and H3K79me3. Strikingly, we found that trimethylated histone H3 at lysine 36 (H3K36me3), which was previously identified as a hallmark of actively transcribed regions, is deposited onto the silenced, maternally contributed 3-Mb imprinted region. We show that H3K36me3 deposition within this large heterochromatin domain does not correlate with transcription events, suggesting the existence of an alternative pathway for the deposition of this histone modification. In addition, we demonstrate that H3K36me3 is markedly enriched at the level of pericentromeric heterochromatin in mouse embryonic stem cells and fibroblasts. This result indicates that H3K36me3 is associated with both facultative and constitutive heterochromatin. Our data suggest that H3K36me3 function is not restricted to actively transcribed regions only and may contribute to the composition of heterochromatin, in combination with other histone modifications.
EMBO Reports | 2006
Arnaud Duquet; Anna Polesskaya; Sylvain Cuvellier; Slimane Ait-Si-Ali; Patrick Héry; Linda L. Pritchard; Matthieu Gérard; Annick Harel-Bellan
Acetylation is a post‐translational modification that influences the activity of numerous proteins in vitro. Among them, the myogenic transcription factor MyoD shows an increased transcriptional activity in vitro when acetylated on two lysines (K): lysines 99 and 102. Here, we have investigated the biological relevance of this acetylation in vivo. Using specific antibodies, we show that endogenous MyoD is acetylated on lysines 99 and 102 in myoblasts. Moreover, we show the functional importance of acetylation in live animals by using a mutant of MyoD in which lysines 99 and 102 were replaced by arginines (R). Knock‐in embryos homozygous for the MyoDR99,102 allele expressed slightly reduced levels of MyoD but developed normally. However, the knock‐in homozygous adult mice showed a phenotype that was almost identical to that of MyoD‐knockout animals, including delayed muscle regeneration in vivo and an increased number of myoblasts but with reduced differentiation potential in vitro. Together, these results show the importance of MyoD acetylation for adult myogenesis.
Journal of Molecular Cell Biology | 2016
Yuichi Morozumi; Fayçal Boussouar; Minjia Tan; A. Chaikuad; Mahya Jamshidikia; Gozde Colak; Huang He; Litong Nie; Carlo Petosa; Maud de Dieuleveult; Sandrine Curtet; Anne-Laure Vitte; Clothilde Rabatel; Alexandra Debernardi; François-Loı̈c Cosset; Els Verhoeyen; Anouk Emadali; Norbert Schweifer; Davide Gianni; Marta Gut; Philippe Guardiola; Sophie Rousseaux; Matthieu Gérard; Stefan Knapp; Yingming Zhao; Saadi Khochbin
Although the conserved AAA ATPase and bromodomain factor, ATAD2, has been described as a transcriptional co-activator upregulated in many cancers, its function remains poorly understood. Here, using a combination of ChIP-seq, ChIP-proteomics, and RNA-seq experiments in embryonic stem cells where Atad2 is normally highly expressed, we found that Atad2 is an abundant nucleosome-bound protein present on active genes, associated with chromatin remodelling, DNA replication, and DNA repair factors. A structural analysis of its bromodomain and subsequent investigations demonstrate that histone acetylation guides ATAD2 to chromatin, resulting in an overall increase of chromatin accessibility and histone dynamics, which is required for the proper activity of the highly expressed gene fraction of the genome. While in exponentially growing cells Atad2 appears dispensable for cell growth, in differentiating ES cells Atad2 becomes critical in sustaining specific gene expression programmes, controlling proliferation and differentiation. Altogether, this work defines Atad2 as a facilitator of general chromatin-templated activities such as transcription.
Neurobiology of Aging | 2012
Laurie Galvan; Nad’a Lepejová; Marie-Claude Gaillard; Carole Malgorn; Martine Guillermier; Diane Houitte; Gilles Bonvento; Fanny Petit; Noelle Dufour; Patrick Héry; Matthieu Gérard; Jean-Marc Elalouf; Nicole Déglon; Emmanuel Brouillet; Michel de Chaldée
Genes selectively expressed in the striatum may be involved in the preferential vulnerability of striatal neurons to Huntingtons disease (HD). Here, we investigated whether perturbations of Capucin expression, which is enriched in the striatum and downregulated in Huntingtons disease models, could modify the neurotoxicity induced by the injection of a lentiviral vector encoding a short N-terminal fragment of mutant Huntingtin (mHtt) into the mouse striatum. Neither constitutive Capucin deficiency in knockout mice nor lentiviral vector-mediated Capucin overexpression in the striatum of adult wild type mice significantly modified vulnerability to the mHtt fragment in vivo, suggesting that Capucin has no impact on mHtt toxicity.
BioTechniques | 2007
Soizik Berlivet; Virginie Guiraud; Martin Houlard; Matthieu Gérard
RNA interference (RNAi) is a powerful method to generate loss-of-function phenotypes. Plasmid vectors with RNA polymerase III promoters have been developed to express short hairpin RNAs (shRNAs) in mammalian cells. In order to optimize the efficiency of these vectors in embryonic stem (ES) cells, we have constructed and tested several plasmids, based on the H1 promoter; that direct the expression of shRNAs. The original pSUPER vector was used as a reference in this study. This vector drives the expression of shRNAs from a basic 0.2-kb H1 promoter; which exhibits a variable expression when integrated into the genome of ES cells. We used a 2.5-kb mouse genomic fragment containing the H1 promoter to construct a new H1 shRNA vector pHYPER. A comparison of this vector with the basic 0.2-kb H1 vector showed that pHYPER directs the synthesis of higher amounts of shRNAs. Using epifluorescence and fluorescent-activated cell sorting (FACS) analysis, we demonstrated that pHYPER is 4-fold more active than the 0.2-kb H1-based vector after integration into the genome of mouse ES cells. We provide a new, improved H1 shRNA vector that is optimized for both transient transfection studies and the generation of stable ES cell lines.