Nathalie Detry
University of Liège
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Featured researches published by Nathalie Detry.
Developmental Biology | 2012
Isabelle Manfroid; Aurélie Ghaye; François Naye; Nathalie Detry; Sarah Palm; Luyuan Pan; Taylur P. Ma; Wei Huang; Meritxell Rovira; Joseph Martial; Michael J. Parsons; Cecilia B. Moens; Marianne Voz; Bernard Peers
Recent zebrafish studies have shown that the late appearing pancreatic endocrine cells are derived from pancreatic ducts but the regulatory factors involved are still largely unknown. Here, we show that the zebrafish sox9b gene is expressed in pancreatic ducts where it labels the pancreatic Notch-responsive cells previously shown to be progenitors. Inactivation of sox9b disturbs duct formation and impairs regeneration of beta cells from these ducts in larvae. sox9b expression in the midtrunk endoderm appears at the junction of the hepatic and ventral pancreatic buds and, by the end of embryogenesis, labels the hepatopancreatic ductal system as well as the intrapancreatic and intrahepatic ducts. Ductal morphogenesis and differentiation are specifically disrupted in sox9b mutants, with the dysmorphic hepatopancreatic ducts containing misdifferentiated hepatocyte-like and pancreatic-like cells. We also show that maintenance of sox9b expression in the extrapancreatic and intrapancreatic ducts requires FGF and Notch activity, respectively, both pathways known to prevent excessive endocrine differentiation in these ducts. Furthermore, beta cell recovery after specific ablation is severely compromised in sox9b mutant larvae. Our data position sox9b as a key player in the generation of secondary endocrine cells deriving from pancreatic ducts in zebrafish.
Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2012
François Naye; Marianne Voz; Nathalie Detry; Matthias Hammerschmidt; Bernard Peers; Isabelle Manfroid
In vertebrates, pancreas and liver arise from bipotential progenitors located in the endoderm. At early stages, BMP and FGF are known to promote liver fate at the expense of pancreas. At later stages, bmp2a, fgf10, and fgf24 are essential for ventral pancreas specification, whereas they have an opposite effect on liver development.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010
Vincianne Verbruggen; Olivier Ek; Daphne Georlette; François M Delporte; Virginie Von Berg; Nathalie Detry; Frédéric Biemar; Pedro Coutinho; Joseph Martial; Marianne Voz; Isabelle Manfroid; Bernard Peers
Pax6 is a well conserved transcription factor that contains two DNA-binding domains, a paired domain and a homeodomain, and plays a key role in the development of eye, brain, and pancreas in vertebrates. The recent identification of the zebrafish sunrise mutant, harboring a mutation in the pax6b homeobox and presenting eye abnormalities but no obvious pancreatic defects, raised a question about the role of pax6b in zebrafish pancreas. We show here that pax6b does play an essential role in pancreatic endocrine cell differentiation, as revealed by the phenotype of a novel zebrafish pax6b null mutant and of embryos injected with pax6b morpholinos. Pax6b-depleted embryos have almost no β cells, a strongly reduced number of δ cells, and a significant increase of ϵ cells. Through the use of various morpholinos targeting intron-exon junctions, pax6b RNA splicing was perturbed at several sites, leading either to retention of intronic sequences or to deletion of exonic sequences in the pax6b transcript. By this strategy, we show that deletion of the Pax6b homeodomain in zebrafish embryos does not disturb pancreas development, whereas lens formation is strongly affected. These data thus provide the explanation for the lack of pancreatic defects in the sunrise pax6b mutants. In addition, partial reduction of Pax6b function in zebrafish embryos performed by injection of small amounts of pax6b morpholinos caused a clear rise in α cell number and in glucagon expression, emphasizing the importance of the fine tuning of the Pax6b level to its biological activity.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Frédéric Bouché; Maria D'Aloia; Pierre Tocquin; Guillaume Lobet; Nathalie Detry; Claire Périlleux
Molecular data concerning the involvement of roots in the genetic pathways regulating floral transition are lacking. In this study, we performed global analyses of the root transcriptome in Arabidopsis in order to identify flowering time genes that are expressed in the roots and genes that are differentially expressed in the roots during the induction of flowering. Data mining of public microarray experiments uncovered that about 200 genes whose mutations are reported to alter flowering time are expressed in the roots (i.e. were detected in more than 50% of the microarrays). However, only a few flowering integrator genes passed the analysis cutoff. Comparison of root transcriptome in short days and during synchronized induction of flowering by a single 22-h long day revealed that 595 genes were differentially expressed. Enrichment analyses of differentially expressed genes in root tissues, gene ontology categories, and cis-regulatory elements converged towards sugar signaling. We concluded that roots are integrated in systemic signaling, whereby carbon supply coordinates growth at the whole plant level during the induction of flowering. This coordination could involve the root circadian clock and cytokinin biosynthesis as a feed forward loop towards the shoot.
Plant Signaling & Behavior | 2015
Frédéric Bouché; Nathalie Detry; Claire Périlleux
Vernalization establishes a memory of winter that must be maintained for weeks or months in order to promote flowering the following spring. The stability of the vernalized state varies among plant species and depends on the duration of cold exposure. In Arabidopsis thaliana, winter leads to epigenetic silencing of the floral repressor gene FLOWERING LOCUS C (FLC) and the duration of cold is measured through the dynamics of chromatin modifications during and after cold. The growing conditions encountered post-vernalization are thus critical for the maintenance of the vernalized state. We reported that high temperature leads to devernalization and, consistently, to FLC reactivation in Arabidopsis seedlings. Here we show that the repressive epigenetic mark H3K27me3 decreases at the FLC locus when vernalized seedlings are grown at 30°C, unless they were first exposed to a stabilizing period at 20°C. Ambient temperature thus controls the epigenetic memory of winter.
Planta | 2002
Annie Jacqmard; Nathalie Detry; Walter Dewitte; Harry Van Onckelen; Georges Bernier
Plant Journal | 2013
Claire Périlleux; Alexandra Pieltain; Guillaume Jacquemin; Frédéric Bouché; Nathalie Detry; Maria D'Aloia; Laura Thiry; Pierre Aljochim; Martin Delansnay; Anne-Sophie Mathieu; Stanley Lutts; Pierre Tocquin
Physiologia Plantarum | 2006
Pierre Tocquin; Sandra Ormenese; Alexandra Pieltain; Nathalie Detry; Georges Bernier; Claire Périlleux
Archive | 2017
Beata Orman-Ligeza; Nathalie Detry; Pierre Tocquin; Claire Périlleux
Scientific Reports | 2016
Frédéric Bouché; Nathalie Detry; Maria D'Aloia; Claire Périlleux; Pierre Tocquin; Guillaume Lobet