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Dive into the research topics where Natalia Conde e Silva is active.

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Featured researches published by Natalia Conde e Silva.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2006

Structural plasticity of single chromatin fibers revealed by torsional manipulation

Aurélien Bancaud; Natalia Conde e Silva; Maria Barbi; Gaudeline Wagner; Jean-François Allemand; Julien Mozziconacci; Christophe Lavelle; Vincent Croquette; Jean-Marc Victor; Ariel Prunell; Jean-Louis Viovy

Magnetic tweezers were used to study the mechanical response under torsion of single nucleosome arrays reconstituted on tandem repeats of 5S positioning sequences. Regular arrays are extremely resilient and can reversibly accommodate a large amount of supercoiling without much change in length. This behavior is quantitatively described by a molecular model of the chromatin three-dimensional architecture. In this model, we assume the existence of a dynamic equilibrium between three conformations of the nucleosome, corresponding to different crossing statuses of the entry/exit DNAs (positive, null or negative, respectively). Torsional strain displaces that equilibrium, leading to an extensive reorganization of the fibers architecture. The model explains a number of long-standing topological questions regarding DNA in chromatin and may provide the basis to better understand the dynamic binding of chromatin-associated proteins.Note: In the supplementary information initially published online to accompany this article, Supplementary Figure 2 was mistakenly replaced by Supplementary Equation 2. The error has been corrected online.


Molecular Cell | 2007

Nucleosome chiral transition under positive torsional stress in single chromatin fibers

Aurélien Bancaud; Gaudeline Wagner; Natalia Conde e Silva; Christophe Lavelle; Hua Wong; Julien Mozziconacci; Maria Barbi; Andrei Sivolob; Eric Le Cam; Liliane Mouawad; Jean-Louis Viovy; Jean-Marc Victor; Ariel Prunell

Using magnetic tweezers to investigate the mechanical response of single chromatin fibers, we show that fibers submitted to large positive torsion transiently trap positive turns at a rate of one turn per nucleosome. A comparison with the response of fibers of tetrasomes (the [H3-H4](2) tetramer bound with approximately 50 bp of DNA) obtained by depletion of H2A-H2B dimers suggests that the trapping reflects a nucleosome chiral transition to a metastable form built on the previously documented right-handed tetrasome. In view of its low energy, <8 kT, we propose that this transition is physiologically relevant and serves to break the docking of the dimers on the tetramer that in the absence of other factors exerts a strong block against elongation of transcription by the main RNA polymerase.


Molecular Plant | 2010

Histone Acetyltransferase AtGCN5/HAG1 Is a Versatile Regulator of Developmental and Inducible Gene Expression in Arabidopsis

Caroline Servet; Natalia Conde e Silva; Dao-Xiu Zhou

Histone acetylation/deacetylation is a dynamic process and plays an important role in gene regulation. Histone acetylation homeostasis is regulated by antagonist actions of histone acetyltransferases (HAT) and deacetylases (HDAC). Plant genome encodes multiple HATs and HDACs. The Arabidopsis HAT gene AtGCN5/HAG1plays an essential role in many plant development processes, such as meristem function, cell differentiation, leaf and floral organogenesis, and responses to environmental conditions such as light and cold, indicating an important role of this HAT in the regulation of both long-term developmental switches and short-term inducible gene expression. AtGCN5 targets to a large number of promoters and is required for acetylation of several histone H3 lysine residues. Recruitment of AtGCN5 to target promoters is likely to be mediated by direct or indirect interaction with DNA-binding transcription factors and/or by interaction with acetylated histone lysine residues on the targets. Interplay between AtGCN5 and other HAT and HDAC is demonstrated to control specific regulatory pathways. Analysis of the role of AtGCN5 in light-inducible gene expression suggests a function of AtGCN5 in preparing chromatin commitment for priming inducible gene activation in plants.


Biophysical Journal | 2011

Linker Histones Incorporation Maintains Chromatin Fiber Plasticity

Pierre Recouvreux; Christophe Lavelle; Maria Barbi; Natalia Conde e Silva; Eric Le Cam; Jean-Marc Victor; Jean-Louis Viovy

Genomic DNA in eukaryotic cells is organized in supercoiled chromatin fibers, which undergo dynamic changes during such DNA metabolic processes as transcription or replication. Indeed, DNA-translocating enzymes like polymerases produce physical constraints in vivo. We used single-molecule micromanipulation by magnetic tweezers to study the response of chromatin to mechanical constraints in the same range as those encountered in vivo. We had previously shown that under positive torsional constraints, nucleosomes can undergo a reversible chiral transition toward a state of positive topology. We demonstrate here that chromatin fibers comprising linker histones present a torsional plasticity similar to that of naked nucleosome arrays. Chromatosomes can undergo a reversible chiral transition toward a state of positive torsion (reverse chromatosome) without loss of linker histones.


Genetics | 2009

KlAft, the Kluyveromyces lactis Ortholog of Aft1 and Aft2, Mediates Activation of Iron-Responsive Transcription Through the PuCACCC Aft-Type Sequence

Natalia Conde e Silva; Isabelle R. Gonçalves; Marc Lemaire; Emmanuel Lesuisse; Jean-Michel Camadro; Pierre Louis Blaiseau

Iron homeostasis in fungi is regulated at the transcriptional level by two different mechanisms. It is mediated by a conserved GATA-type repressor in most fungi except in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, where it is controlled by the transcription activators Aft1 and Aft2. These activators are encoded by the paralogous genes AFT1 and AFT2, which result from the whole-genome duplication. Here, we explore regulation of iron homeostasis in the yeast Kluyveromyces lactis that diverged from S. cerevisiae before this event. We identify an ortholog of AFT1/AFT2, designated KlAFT, whose deletion leads to the inability to grow under iron limitation. We show with quantitative real-time PCR analysis that KlAft activates the transcription of all homologs of the Aft1-target genes involved in the iron transport at the cell surface in response to iron limitation. However, homologs of Aft2-specific target genes encoding intracellular iron transporters are regulated neither by KlAft nor by iron. Both bioinformatic and DNA binding and transcription analyses demonstrate that KlAft activates iron-responsive gene expression through the PuCACCC Aft-type sequence. Thus, K. lactis is the first documented species with a positive iron-transcriptional control mediated by only one copy of the Aft-type regulator. This indicates that this function was acquired before the whole-genome duplication and was then diversified into two regulators in S. cerevisiae.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2014

Over-expression of histone H3K4 demethylase gene JMJ15 enhances salt tolerance in Arabidopsis.

Yuan Shen; Natalia Conde e Silva; Laure Audonnet; Caroline Servet; Wei Wei; Dao-Xiu Zhou

Histone H3 lysine 4 trimethylation (H3K4me3) has been shown to be involved in stress-responsive gene expression and gene priming in plants. However, the role of H3K4me3 resetting in the processes is not clear. In this work we studied the expression and function of Arabidopsis H3K4 demethylase gene JMJ15. We show that the expression of JMJ15 was relatively low and was limited to a number of tissues during vegetative growth but was higher in young floral organs. Over-expression of the gene in gain-of-function mutants reduced the plant height with accumulation of lignin in stems, while the loss-of-function mutation did not produce any visible phenotype. The gain-of-function mutants showed enhanced salt tolerance, whereas the loss-of-function mutant was more sensitive to salt compared to the wild type. Transcriptomic analysis revealed that over-expression of JMJ15 down-regulated many genes which are preferentially marked by H3K4me3 and H3K4me2. Many of the down-regulated genes encode transcription regulators involved in stress responses. The data suggest that increased JMJ15 levels may regulate the gene expression program that enhances stress tolerance.


PLOS ONE | 2011

The Role of Histone Methylation and H2A.Z Occupancy during Rapid Activation of Ethylene Responsive Genes

Yongfeng Hu; Yuan Shen; Natalia Conde e Silva; Dao-Xiu Zhou

Ethylene signaling pathway leads to rapid gene activation by two hierarchies of transcription factors with EIN3/EIL proteins as primary ones and ERF proteins as secondary ones. The role of chromatin modifications during the rapid gene activation is not known. In this work we studied trimethylated histone H3 lysine 4 (H3K4me3) and lysine 27 (H3K27me3), two opposite histone methylation marks for gene activity, during the induction course of three ethylene-responsive genes (ERF1, AtERF14 and ChiB). We found that the three genes displayed different histone modification profiles before induction. After induction, H3K4me3 was increased in the 5′ region and the gene body of ERF1, while H3K27me3 was decreased in the promoter of AtERF14. But the modification changes were later than the gene activation. Analysis of other rapidly inducible ERF genes confirmed the observation. In addition, histone H2A.Z occupancy on the three genes and the association of the H3K27me3-binding protein LHP1 with AtERF14 and ChiB were not affected by the inductive signal. However, the mutation of genes encoding H2A.Z and LHP1 attenuated and enhanced respectively the induction of target genes and altered H3K4me3. These results indicate that the induction of ethylene-responsive genes does not require immediate modulation of H3K4me3 and H3K27me3 and dissociation of LHP1 and H2A.Z from the targets, and suggest that the chromatin structure of the genes before induction is committed for transcriptional activation and that H3K4me3 is not required for ethylene-responsive gene activation, but may serve as a mark for gene activity.


Genetics | 2014

The Basis for Evolution of DNA-Binding Specificity of the Aft1 Transcription Factor in Yeasts

Isabelle R. Gonçalves; Natalia Conde e Silva; Cesar La Torre Garay; Emmanuel Lesuisse; Jean-Michel Camadro; Pierre Louis Blaiseau

The Saccharomyces cerevisiae Aft1 and Kluyveromyces lactis KlAft are orthologous yeast transcription activators that regulate the expression of the same group of iron-uptake genes but bind to the different DNA sites: TGCACCC for Aft1 and PuCACCC for KlAft. To establish whether the DNA-binding mechanisms of Aft1 and KlAft have diverged during the evolution of the Aft-type transcription factor, we examined the function of a nonconserved region in their DNA-binding domains. A large part of this region is composed of a sequence predicted to be disordered in structure and potentially phosphorylated. We show with deletion mutant analyses that this sequence is essential for the binding of Aft1 to its DNA site and for the iron uptake and growth of S. cerevisiae under iron-limited conditions. We constructed hybrid proteins by exchanging the nonconserved regions of Aft1 and KlAft. We show that the Aft1 region is necessary and sufficient for KlAft to bind efficiently to the Aft1 DNA site in S. cerevisiae and to complement the iron-dependent phenotype of the aft1Δaft2Δ mutant. This demonstrates that the changes in the nonconserved region of the Aft-type DNA-binding domain have led to changes in the DNA-binding specificity and have major consequences for the regulation of iron homeostasis. The combination of bioinformatic and experimental analyses indicates that the sequence TGCACCC is the most probable ancestral Aft-type element. Our findings suggest that the changes in the nonconserved region of the DNA-binding domain are responsible for the evolution of the TGCACCC sequence toward PuCACCC in the K. lactis species.


Plant Journal | 2017

WOX14 promotes bioactive gibberellin synthesis and vascular cell differentiation in Arabidopsis

Erwan Denis; Nadia Kbiri; Viviane Mary; Gaëlle Claisse; Natalia Conde e Silva; Martin Kreis; Yves Deveaux

Procambial and cambial stem cells provide the initial cells that allow the formation of vascular tissues. WOX4 and WOX14 have been shown to act redundantly to promote procambial cell proliferation and differentiation. Gibberellins (GAs), which have an important role in wood formation, also stimulate cambial cell division. Here we show that the loss of WOX14 function phenocopies some traits of GA-deficient mutants that can be complemented by exogenous GA application, whereas WOX14 overexpression stimulates the expression of GA3ox anabolism genes and represses GA2ox catabolism genes, promoting the accumulation of bioactive GA. More importantly, our data clearly indicate that WOX14 but not WOX4 promotes vascular cell differentiation and lignification in inflorescence stems of Arabidopsis.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2007

CENP-A-containing nucleosomes : Easier disassembly versus exclusive centromeric localization

Natalia Conde e Silva; Ben E. Black; Andrei Sivolob; Jan Filipski; Don W. Cleveland; Ariel Prunell

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Ariel Prunell

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jean-Marc Victor

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Dao-Xiu Zhou

Université Paris-Saclay

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Eric Le Cam

Institut Gustave Roussy

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Yuan Shen

University of Paris-Sud

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Andrei Sivolob

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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