Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Nadya Morozova is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Nadya Morozova.


RNA | 2012

Kinetic signatures of microRNA modes of action.

Nadya Morozova; Andrei Zinovyev; Nora Nonne; Linda-Louise Pritchard; Alexander N. Gorban; Annick Harel-Bellan

MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are key regulators of all important biological processes, including development, differentiation, and cancer. Although remarkable progress has been made in deciphering the mechanisms used by miRNAs to regulate translation, many contradictory findings have been published that stimulate active debate in this field. Here we contribute to this discussion in three ways. First, based on a comprehensive analysis of the existing literature, we hypothesize a model in which all proposed mechanisms of microRNA action coexist, and where the apparent mechanism that is detected in a given experiment is determined by the relative values of the intrinsic characteristics of the target mRNAs and associated biological processes. Among several coexisting miRNA mechanisms, the one that will effectively be measurable is that which acts on or changes the sensitive parameters of the translation process. Second, we have created a mathematical model that combines nine known mechanisms of miRNA action and estimated the model parameters from the literature. Third, based on the mathematical modeling, we have developed a computational tool for discriminating among different possible individual mechanisms of miRNA action based on translation kinetics data that can be experimentally measured (kinetic signatures). To confirm the discriminatory power of these kinetic signatures and to test our hypothesis, we have performed several computational experiments with the model in which we simulated the coexistence of several miRNA action mechanisms in the context of variable parameter values of the translation.


Cell Reports | 2012

Prognostic Impact of Vitamin B6 Metabolism in Lung Cancer

Lorenzo Galluzzi; Ilio Vitale; Laura Senovilla; Ken André Olaussen; Guillaume Pinna; Tobias Eisenberg; Aicha Goubar; Isabelle Martins; Judith Michels; Gueorgui Kratassiouk; Didac Carmona-Gutierrez; Marie Scoazec; Erika Vacchelli; Frederic Schlemmer; Oliver Kepp; Shensi Shen; Mireia Niso-Santano; Eugenia Morselli; Alfredo Criollo; Sandy Adjemian; Mohamed Jemaà; Kariman Chaba; Claire Pailleret; Mickaël Michaud; Federico Pietrocola; Nicolas Tajeddine; Thibault de La Motte Rouge; Natalia Araujo; Nadya Morozova; Thomas Robert

Patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) are routinely treated with cytotoxic agents such as cisplatin. Through a genome-wide siRNA-based screen, we identified vitamin B6 metabolism as a central regulator of cisplatin responses in vitro and in vivo. By aggravating a bioenergetic catastrophe that involves the depletion of intracellular glutathione, vitamin B6 exacerbates cisplatin-mediated DNA damage, thus sensitizing a large panel of cancer cell lines to apoptosis. Moreover, vitamin B6 sensitizes cancer cells to apoptosis induction by distinct types of physical and chemical stress, including multiple chemotherapeutics. This effect requires pyridoxal kinase (PDXK), the enzyme that generates the bioactive form of vitamin B6. In line with a general role of vitamin B6 in stress responses, low PDXK expression levels were found to be associated with poor disease outcome in two independent cohorts of patients with NSCLC. These results indicate that PDXK expression levels constitute a biomarker for risk stratification among patients with NSCLC.


BMC Systems Biology | 2010

Dynamical modeling of microRNA action on the protein translation process

Andrei Zinovyev; Nadya Morozova; Nora Nonne; Emmanuel Barillot; Annick Harel-Bellan; Alexander N. Gorban

BackgroundProtein translation is a multistep process which can be represented as a cascade of biochemical reactions (initiation, ribosome assembly, elongation, etc.), the rate of which can be regulated by small non-coding microRNAs through multiple mechanisms. It remains unclear what mechanisms of microRNA action are the most dominant: moreover, many experimental reports deliver controversial messages on what is the concrete mechanism actually observed in the experiment. Nissan and Parker have recently demonstrated that it might be impossible to distinguish alternative biological hypotheses using the steady state data on the rate of protein synthesis. For their analysis they used two simple kinetic models of protein translation.ResultsIn contrary to the study by Nissan and Parker, we show that dynamical data allow discriminating some of the mechanisms of microRNA action. We demonstrate this using the same models as developed by Nissan and Parker for the sake of comparison but the methods developed (asymptotology of biochemical networks) can be used for other models. We formulate a hypothesis that the effect of microRNA action is measurable and observable only if it affects the dominant system (generalization of the limiting step notion for complex networks) of the protein translation machinery. The dominant system can vary in different experimental conditions that can partially explain the existing controversy of some of the experimental data.ConclusionsOur analysis of the transient protein translation dynamics shows that it gives enough information to verify or reject a hypothesis about a particular molecular mechanism of microRNA action on protein translation. For multiscale systems only that action of microRNA is distinguishable which affects the parameters of dominant system (critical parameters), or changes the dominant system itself. Dominant systems generalize and further develop the old and very popular idea of limiting step. Algorithms for identifying dominant systems in multiscale kinetic models are straightforward but not trivial and depend only on the ordering of the model parameters but not on their concrete values. Asymptotic approach to kinetic models allows putting in order diverse experimental observations in complex situations when many alternative hypotheses co-exist.


Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology | 2013

Mathematical Modeling of microRNA–Mediated Mechanisms of Translation Repression

Andrei Zinovyev; Nadya Morozova; Alexander N. Gorban; Annick Harel-Belan

MicroRNAs can affect the protein translation using nine mechanistically different mechanisms, including repression of initiation and degradation of the transcript. There is a hot debate in the current literature about which mechanism and in which situations has a dominant role in living cells. The worst, same experimental systems dealing with the same pairs of mRNA and miRNA can provide ambiguous evidences about which is the actual mechanism of translation repression observed in the experiment. We start with reviewing the current knowledge of various mechanisms of miRNA action and suggest that mathematical modeling can help resolving some of the controversial interpretations. We describe three simple mathematical models of miRNA translation that can be used as tools in interpreting the experimental data on the dynamics of protein synthesis. The most complex model developed by us includes all known mechanisms of miRNA action. It allowed us to study possible dynamical patterns corresponding to different miRNA-mediated mechanisms of translation repression and to suggest concrete recipes on determining the dominant mechanism of miRNA action in the form of kinetic signatures. Using computational experiments and systematizing existing evidences from the literature, we justify a hypothesis about co-existence of distinct miRNA-mediated mechanisms of translation repression. The actually observed mechanism will be that acting on or changing the sensitive parameters of the translation process. The limiting place can vary from one experimental setting to another. This model explains the majority of existing controversies reported.


Acta Biotheoretica | 2015

A Conceptual Model of Morphogenesis and Regeneration

Alen Tosenberger; Nikolai Bessonov; Michael Levin; Natalia Reinberg; Vitaly Volpert; Nadya Morozova

Abstract This paper is devoted to computer modelling of the development and regeneration of multicellular biological structures. Some species (e.g. planaria and salamanders) are able to regenerate parts of their body after amputation damage, but the global rules governing cooperative cell behaviour during morphogenesis are not known. Here, we consider a simplified model organism, which consists of tissues formed around special cells that can be interpreted as stem cells. We assume that stem cells communicate with each other by a set of signals, and that the values of these signals depend on the distance between cells. Thus the signal distribution characterizes location of stem cells. If the signal distribution is changed, then the difference between the initial and the current signal distribution affects the behaviour of stem cells—e.g. as a result of an amputation of a part of tissue the signal distribution changes which stimulates stem cells to migrate to new locations, appropriate for regeneration of the proper pattern. Moreover, as stem cells divide and form tissues around them, they control the form and the size of regenerating tissues. This two-level organization of the model organism, with global regulation of stem cells and local regulation of tissues, allows its reproducible development and regeneration.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Genome-Wide Exploration of miRNA Function in Mammalian Muscle Cell Differentiation

Anna Polesskaya; Cindy Degerny; Guillaume Pinna; Yves Maury; Gueorgui Kratassiouk; Vincent Mouly; Nadya Morozova; Jeremie Kropp; Niels Erik Frandsen; Annick Harel-Bellan

MiRNAs impact on the control of cell fate by regulating gene expression at the post-transcriptional level. Here, using mammalian muscle differentiation as a model and a phenotypic loss-of-function screen, we explored the function of miRNAs at the genome-wide level. We found that the depletion of a high number of miRNAs (63) impacted on differentiation of human muscle precursors, underscoring the importance of this post-transcriptional mechanism of gene regulation. Interestingly, a comparison with miRNA expression profiles revealed that most of the hit miRNAs did not show any significant variations of expression during differentiation. These constitutively expressed miRNAs might be required for basic and/or essential cell function, or else might be regulated at the post-transcriptional level. MiRNA inhibition yielded a variety of phenotypes, reflecting the widespread miRNA involvement in differentiation. Using a functional screen (the STarS - Suppressor Target Screen – approach, i. e. concomitant knockdown of miRNAs and of candidate target proteins), we discovered miRNA protein targets that are previously uncharacterized controllers of muscle-cell terminal differentiation. Our results provide a strategy for functional annotation of the human miRnome.


PLOS ONE | 2015

On a Model of Pattern Regeneration Based on Cell Memory

Nikolai Bessonov; Michael Levin; Nadya Morozova; Natalia Reinberg; Alen Tosenberger; Vitaly Volpert

We present here a new model of the cellular dynamics that enable regeneration of complex biological morphologies. Biological cell structures are considered as an ensemble of mathematical points on the plane. Each cell produces a signal which propagates in space and is received by other cells. The total signal received by each cell forms a signal distribution defined on the cell structure. This distribution characterizes the geometry of the cell structure. If a part of this structure is removed, the remaining cells have two signals. They keep the value of the signal which they had before the amputation (memory), and they receive a new signal produced after the amputation. Regeneration of the cell structure is stimulated by the difference between the old and the new signals. It is stopped when the two signals coincide. The algorithm of regeneration contains certain rules which are essential for its functioning, being the first quantitative model of cellular memory that implements regeneration of complex patterns to a specific target morphology. Correct regeneration depends on the form and the size of the cell structure, as well as on some parameters of regeneration.


Nature Methods | 2017

The inconvenience of data of convenience: Computational research beyond post-mortem analyses

Chloé-Agathe Azencott; Tero Aittokallio; Sushmita Roy; Ankit Agrawal; Emmanuel Barillot; Nikolai Bessonov; Deborah Chasman; Urszula Czerwinska; Alireza Fotuhi Siahpirani; Stephen H. Friend; Anna Goldenberg; Jan S. Greenberg; Manuel B. Huber; Samuel Kaski; Christoph Kurz; Marsha R. Mailick; Michael M. Merzenich; Nadya Morozova; Arezoo Movaghar; Mor Nahum; Torbjörn E. M. Nordling; Thea Norman; R. C. Penner; Krishanu Saha; Asif Salim; Siamak Sorooshyari; Vassili Soumelis; Alit Stark-Inbar; Audra Sterling; Gustavo Stolovitzky

The inconvenience of data of convenience: computational research beyond post-mortem analyses


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2016

Post-transcriptional modulation of interleukin 8 by CNOT6L regulates skeletal muscle differentiation.

Anna Polesskaya; Guillaume Pinna; Yassine Sassi; Marie Vandamme; Anne Bigot; Vincent Mouly; Nadya Morozova; Annick Harel-Bellan; Cindy Degerny

CNOT6L is a deadenylase subunit belonging to the CCR4-NOT complex, a major deadenylase complex in eukaryotes involved at multiple levels in regulation of gene expression. While CNOT6L is expressed in skeletal muscle cells, its specific functions in this tissue are still largely unknown. Our previous work highlighted the functional of CNOT6L in skeletal muscle cell differentiation. To further explore how CNOT6L regulates myogenesis, we used here gene expression analysis to identify CNOT6L mRNA targets in human myoblasts. Among these novel targets, IL-8 (interleukin 8) mRNA was the most upregulated in CNOT6L knock-down (KD) cells. Biochemical approaches and poly (A) tail length assays showed that IL-8 mRNA is a direct target of CNOT6L, and further investigations by loss- and gain-of-function assays pointed out that IL-8 is an important effector of myogenesis. Therefore, we have characterized CNOT6L-IL-8 as a new signaling axis that regulates myogenesis.


arXiv: Other Quantitative Biology | 2015

GEOMETRY OF MORPHOGENESIS

Nadya Morozova; R. C. Penner

We introduce a formalism for the geometry of eukaryotic cells and organisms.Cells are taken to be star-convex with good biological reason. This allows for a convenient description of their extent in space as well as all manner of cell surface gradients. We assume that a spectrum of such cell surface markers determines an epigenetic code for organism shape. The union of cells in space at a moment in time is by definition the organism taken as a metric subspace of Euclidean space, which can be further equipped with an arbitrary measure. Each cell determines a point in space thus assigning a finite configuration of distinct points in space to an organism, and a bundle over this configuration space is introduced with fiber a Hilbert space recording specific epigenetic data. On this bundle, a Lagrangian formulation of morphogenetic dynamics is proposed based on Gromov-Hausdorff distance which at once describes both embryo development and regenerative growth.

Collaboration


Dive into the Nadya Morozova's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Annick Harel-Bellan

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nikolai Bessonov

Russian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Vitaly Volpert

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alen Tosenberger

Université libre de Bruxelles

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Natalia Reinberg

Russian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Guillaume Pinna

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge