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Dive into the research topics where Nicolas Lévy is active.

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Featured researches published by Nicolas Lévy.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2002

Homozygous Defects in LMNA, Encoding Lamin A/C Nuclear-Envelope Proteins, Cause Autosomal Recessive Axonal Neuropathy in Human (Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disorder Type 2) and Mouse

Annachiara De Sandre-Giovannoli; Malika Chaouch; Serguei Kozlov; Jean-Michel Vallat; Meriem Tazir; Nadia Kassouri; Pierre Szepetowski; Tarik Hammadouche; Antoon Vandenberghe; Colin L. Stewart; Djamel Grid; Nicolas Lévy

The Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) disorders comprise a group of clinically and genetically heterogeneous hereditary motor and sensory neuropathies, which are mainly characterized by muscle weakness and wasting, foot deformities, and electrophysiological, as well as histological, changes. A subtype, CMT2, is defined by a slight or absent reduction of nerve-conduction velocities together with the loss of large myelinated fibers and axonal degeneration. CMT2 phenotypes are also characterized by a large genetic heterogeneity, although only two genes---NF-L and KIF1Bbeta---have been identified to date. Homozygosity mapping in inbred Algerian families with autosomal recessive CMT2 (AR-CMT2) provided evidence of linkage to chromosome 1q21.2-q21.3 in two families (Zmax=4.14). All patients shared a common homozygous ancestral haplotype that was suggestive of a founder mutation as the cause of the phenotype. A unique homozygous mutation in LMNA (which encodes lamin A/C, a component of the nuclear envelope) was identified in all affected members and in additional patients with CMT2 from a third, unrelated family. Ultrastructural exploration of sciatic nerves of LMNA null (i.e., -/-) mice was performed and revealed a strong reduction of axon density, axonal enlargement, and the presence of nonmyelinated axons, all of which were highly similar to the phenotypes of human peripheral axonopathies. The finding of site-specific amino acid substitutions in limb-girdle muscular dystrophy type 1B, autosomal dominant Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy, dilated cardiomyopathy type 1A, autosomal dominant partial lipodystrophy, and, now, AR-CMT2 suggests the existence of distinct functional domains in lamin A/C that are essential for the maintenance and integrity of different cell lineages. To our knowledge, this report constitutes the first evidence of the recessive inheritance of a mutation that causes CMT2; additionally, we suggest that mutations in LMNA may also be the cause of the genetically overlapping disorder CMT2B1.


Nature Medicine | 2008

Combined treatment with statins and aminobisphosphonates extends longevity in a mouse model of human premature aging

Ignacio Varela; Sandrine Pereira; Alejandro P. Ugalde; Claire Navarro; María F. Suárez; Pierre Cau; Juan Cadiñanos; Fernando G. Osorio; Nicolas Foray; Juan Cobo; Félix de Carlos; Nicolas Lévy; José M. P. Freije; Carlos López-Otín

Several human progerias, including Hutchinson-Gilford progeria syndrome (HGPS), are caused by the accumulation at the nuclear envelope of farnesylated forms of truncated prelamin A, a protein that is also altered during normal aging. Previous studies in cells from individuals with HGPS have shown that farnesyltransferase inhibitors (FTIs) improve nuclear abnormalities associated with prelamin A accumulation, suggesting that these compounds could represent a therapeutic approach for this devastating progeroid syndrome. We show herein that both prelamin A and its truncated form progerin/LAΔ50 undergo alternative prenylation by geranylgeranyltransferase in the setting of farnesyltransferase inhibition, which could explain the low efficiency of FTIs in ameliorating the phenotypes of progeroid mouse models. We also show that a combination of statins and aminobisphosphonates efficiently inhibits both farnesylation and geranylgeranylation of progerin and prelamin A and markedly improves the aging-like phenotypes of mice deficient in the metalloproteinase Zmpste24, including growth retardation, loss of weight, lipodystrophy, hair loss and bone defects. Likewise, the longevity of these mice is substantially extended. These findings open a new therapeutic approach for human progeroid syndromes associated with nuclear-envelope abnormalities.


Science Translational Medicine | 2011

Splicing-Directed Therapy in a New Mouse Model of Human Accelerated Aging

Fernando G. Osorio; Claire Navarro; Juan Cadiñanos; Isabel C. Lopez-Mejia; Pedro M. Quirós; Catherine Bartoli; José Rivera; Jamal Tazi; Gabriela Guzmán; Ignacio Varela; Danielle Depetris; Félix de Carlos; Juan Cobo; Vicente Andrés; Annachiara De Sandre-Giovannoli; José M. P. Freije; Nicolas Lévy; Carlos López-Otín

Antisense oligonucleotides reverse premature aging and extend life span in mutant mice that mimic aberrant splicing in progeria patients. Countering Careless Cutting Carpenters warn that one should “measure twice, cut once” to avoid unfixable assaults on building materials. Indeed, careless cutting lies at the heart of Hutchinson-Gilford progeria syndrome (HGPS). This premature aging disease is caused by a point mutation in the LMNA gene that activates a cryptic donor splice site in LMNA RNA; aberrant cutting and splicing results in the production of an mRNA that encodes progerin, a truncated form of the lamin A protein that is also produced in small amounts during normal aging. Until now, no model system has recapitulated the pathogenic LMNA splicing that occurs in HGPS patients. Here, Osorio et al. characterize such HGPS mutant mice mimics—called LmnaG609G/G609G mice—and show that antisense oligonucleotide–based therapy reverses various premature aging phenotypes and extends life span. Encoded by the LMNA gene, lamin A is a nuclear envelope protein that is important for nuclear stability, chromatin structure, and regulation of gene expression. Osorio et al. showed that the LmnaG609G/G609G mice produced reduced amounts of intact lamin A, accumulated progerin, displayed the nuclear abnormalities and transcriptional alterations seen in other progeroid models, and sported the key clinical features of human HGPS, such as a shortened life span, reduced size, disrupted metabolism, and enhanced bone and cardiovascular maladies relative to wild-type animals. The authors then used their newly characterized HGPS animal model to test the effects of antisense morpholino oligonucleotides that bound to and blocked the aberrant splice donor site in Lmna RNA. These reagents reduced progerin accumulation and corrected the nuclear abnormalities in both cultured mutant mouse and human HGPS fibroblasts. Furthermore, LmnaG609G/G609G mice that were treated with a combination of two antisense oligonucleotides that blocked aberrant splicing displayed reduced amounts of accumulated progerin, enhanced life expectancy, and a reversal of the phenotypical and molecular alterations associated with HGPS, including the righting of gene expression aberrations and normalization of blood glucose levels. Together, these findings provide preclinical proof of concept for the use of antisense oligonucleotide–based therapies in the treatment of HGPS. Furthermore, because progerin also accumulates during normal aging, the LmnaG609G/G609G mutant mice may be useful for preclinical testing of therapies designed to slow the human aging process and prevent age-related diseases. As the poet Ralph Waldo Emerson noted, “All diseases run into one—old age.” Hutchinson-Gilford progeria syndrome (HGPS) is caused by a point mutation in the LMNA gene that activates a cryptic donor splice site and yields a truncated form of prelamin A called progerin. Small amounts of progerin are also produced during normal aging. Studies with mouse models of HGPS have allowed the recent development of the first therapeutic approaches for this disease. However, none of these earlier works have addressed the aberrant and pathogenic LMNA splicing observed in HGPS patients because of the lack of an appropriate mouse model. Here, we report a genetically modified mouse strain that carries the HGPS mutation. These mice accumulate progerin, present histological and transcriptional alterations characteristic of progeroid models, and phenocopy the main clinical manifestations of human HGPS, including shortened life span and bone and cardiovascular aberrations. Using this animal model, we have developed an antisense morpholino–based therapy that prevents the pathogenic Lmna splicing, markedly reducing the accumulation of progerin and its associated nuclear defects. Treatment of mutant mice with these morpholinos led to a marked amelioration of their progeroid phenotype and substantially extended their life span, supporting the effectiveness of antisense oligonucleotide–based therapies for treating human diseases of accelerated aging.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2004

Sequence family variant loss from the AZFc interval of the human Y chromosome, but not gene copy loss, is strongly associated with male infertility

N Machev; Noémie Saut; Guy Longepied; Philippe Terriou; André Navarro; Nicolas Lévy; Marie-Roberte Guichaoua; Catherine Metzler-Guillemain; P. Collignon; Am Frances; J Belougne; E Clemente; Jacques Chiaroni; Christophe Chevillard; C Durand; A Ducourneau; N Pech; K Mcelreavey; Mg Mattei; Mj Mitchell

Background: Complete deletion of the complete AZFc interval of the Y chromosome is the most common known genetic cause of human male infertility. Two partial AZFc deletions (gr/gr and b1/b3) that remove some copies of all AZFc genes have recently been identified in infertile and fertile populations, and an association study indicates that the resulting gene dose reduction represents a risk factor for spermatogenic failure. Methods: To determine the incidence of various partial AZFc deletions and their effect on fertility, we combined quantitative and qualitative analyses of the AZFc interval at the DAZ and CDY1 loci in 300 infertile men and 399 control men. Results: We detected 34 partial AZFc deletions (32 gr/gr deletions), arising from at least 19 independent deletion events, and found gr/gr deletion in 6% of infertile and 3.5% of control men (p>0.05). Our data provide evidence for two large AZFc inversion polymorphisms, and for relative hot and cold spots of unequal crossing over within the blocks of homology that mediate gr/gr deletion. Using SFVs (sequence family variants), we discriminate DAZ1/2, DAZ3/4, CDY1a (proximal), and CDY1b (distal) and define four types of DAZ-CDY1 gr/gr deletion. Conclusions: The only deletion type to show an association with infertility was DAZ3/4-CDY1a (p = 0.042), suggesting that most gr/gr deletions are neutral variants. We see a stronger association, however, between loss of the CDY1a SFV and infertility (p = 0.002). Thus, loss of this SFV through deletion or gene conversion could be a major risk factor for male infertility.


Aging Cell | 2007

Primary laminopathy fibroblasts display altered genome organization and apoptosis.

Karen J. Meaburn; Erik Cabuy; Gisèle Bonne; Nicolas Lévy; Glenn E. Morris; Giuseppe Novelli; Ian R. Kill; Joanna M. Bridger

A number of diseases associated with specific tissue degeneration and premature aging have mutations in the nuclear envelope proteins A‐type lamins or emerin. Those diseases with A‐type lamin mutation are inclusively termed laminopathies. Due to various hypothetical roles of nuclear envelope proteins in genome function we investigated whether alterations to normal genomic behaviour are apparent in cells with mutations in A‐type lamins and emerin. Even though the distributions of these proteins in proliferating laminopathy fibroblasts appear normal, there is abnormal nuclear positioning of both chromosome 18 and 13 territories, from the nuclear periphery to the interior. This genomic organization mimics that found in normal nonproliferating quiescent or senescent cells. This finding is supported by distributions of modified pRb in the laminopathy cells. All laminopathy cell lines tested and an X‐linked Emery–Dreifuss muscular dystrophy cell line also demonstrate increased incidences of apoptosis. The most extreme cases of apoptosis occur in cells derived from diseases with mutations in the tail region of the LMNA gene, such as Dunningan‐type familial partial lipodystrophy and mandibuloacral dysplasia, and this correlates with a significant level of micronucleation in these cells.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2011

Exome sequencing and functional analysis identifies BANF1 mutation as the cause of a hereditary progeroid syndrome.

Xose S. Puente; Víctor Quesada; Fernando G. Osorio; Rubén Cabanillas; Juan Cadiñanos; Julia M. Fraile; Gonzalo R. Ordóñez; Diana A. Puente; Ana Gutiérrez-Fernández; Miriam Fanjul-Fernández; Nicolas Lévy; José M. P. Freije; Carlos López-Otín

Accelerated aging syndromes represent a valuable source of information about the molecular mechanisms involved in normal aging. Here, we describe a progeroid syndrome that partially phenocopies Hutchinson-Gilford progeria syndrome (HGPS) but also exhibits distinctive features, including the absence of cardiovascular deficiencies characteristic of HGPS, the lack of mutations in LMNA and ZMPSTE24, and a relatively long lifespan of affected individuals. Exome sequencing and molecular analysis in two unrelated families allowed us to identify a homozygous mutation in BANF1 (c.34G>A [p.Ala12Thr]), encoding barrier-to-autointegration factor 1 (BAF), as the molecular abnormality responsible for this Mendelian disorder. Functional analysis showed that fibroblasts from both patients have a dramatic reduction in BAF protein levels, indicating that the p.Ala12Thr mutation impairs protein stability. Furthermore, progeroid fibroblasts display profound abnormalities in the nuclear lamina, including blebs and abnormal distribution of emerin, an interaction partner of BAF. These nuclear abnormalities are rescued by ectopic expression of wild-type BANF1, providing evidence for the causal role of this mutation. These data demonstrate the utility of exome sequencing for identifying the cause of rare Mendelian disorders and underscore the importance of nuclear envelope alterations in human aging.


Brain | 2009

Genes for hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathies: a genotype–phenotype correlation

Annelies Rotthier; Jonathan Baets; Els De Vriendt; An Jacobs; Michaela Auer-Grumbach; Nicolas Lévy; Nathalie Bonello-Palot; Sara Sebnem Kilic; Joachim Weis; Andres Nascimento; Marielle Swinkels; Moyo C. Kruyt; Albena Jordanova; Vincent Timmerman

Hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathies (HSAN) are clinically and genetically heterogeneous disorders characterized by axonal atrophy and degeneration, exclusively or predominantly affecting the sensory and autonomic neurons. So far, disease-associated mutations have been identified in seven genes: two genes for autosomal dominant (SPTLC1 and RAB7) and five genes for autosomal recessive forms of HSAN (WNK1/HSN2, NTRK1, NGFB, CCT5 and IKBKAP). We performed a systematic mutation screening of the coding sequences of six of these genes on a cohort of 100 familial and isolated patients diagnosed with HSAN. In addition, we screened the functional candidate gene NGFR (p75/NTR) encoding the nerve growth factor receptor. We identified disease-causing mutations in SPTLC1, RAB7, WNK1/HSN2 and NTRK1 in 19 patients, of which three mutations have not previously been reported. The phenotypes associated with mutations in NTRK1 and WNK1/HSN2 typically consisted of congenital insensitivity to pain and anhidrosis, and early-onset ulcero-mutilating sensory neuropathy, respectively. RAB7 mutations were only found in patients with a Charcot-Marie-Tooth type 2B (CMT2B) phenotype, an axonal sensory-motor neuropathy with pronounced ulcero-mutilations. In SPTLC1, we detected a novel mutation (S331F) corresponding to a previously unknown severe and early-onset HSAN phenotype. No mutations were found in NGFB, CCT5 and NGFR. Overall disease-associated mutations were found in 19% of the studied patient group, suggesting that additional genes are associated with HSAN. Our genotype–phenotype correlation study broadens the spectrum of HSAN and provides additional insights for molecular and clinical diagnosis.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2007

Mutations in FGD4 encoding the Rho GDP/GTP exchange factor FRABIN cause autosomal recessive Charcot-Marie-Tooth type 4H.

Valérie Delague; Arnaud Jacquier; Tarik Hamadouche; Yannick Poitelon; Cécile Baudot; Irène Boccaccio; Eliane Chouery; Malika Chaouch; Nora Kassouri; Rosette Jabbour; Djamel Grid; André Mégarbané; Georg Haase; Nicolas Lévy

Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) disorders are a clinically and genetically heterogeneous group of hereditary motor and sensory neuropathies characterized by muscle weakness and wasting, foot and hand deformities, and electrophysiological changes. The CMT4H subtype is an autosomal recessive demyelinating form of CMT that was recently mapped to a 15.8-Mb region at chromosome 12p11.21-q13.11, in two consanguineous families of Mediterranean origin, by homozygosity mapping. We report here the identification of mutations in FGD4, encoding FGD4 or FRABIN (FGD1-related F-actin binding protein), in both families. FRABIN is a GDP/GTP nucleotide exchange factor (GEF), specific to Cdc42, a member of the Rho family of small guanosine triphosphate (GTP)-binding proteins (Rho GTPases). Rho GTPases play a key role in regulating signal-transduction pathways in eukaryotes. In particular, they have a pivotal role in mediating actin cytoskeleton changes during cell migration, morphogenesis, polarization, and division. Consistent with these reported functions, expression of truncated FRABIN mutants in rat primary motoneurons and rat Schwann cells induced significantly fewer microspikes than expression of wild-type FRABIN. To our knowledge, this is the first report of mutations in a Rho GEF protein being involved in CMT.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 1999

The critical region of overlap defining the AZFa male infertility interval of proximal Yq contains three transcribed sequences

Carole A. Sargent; Catherine A. Boucher; Stefan Kirsch; Graeme M. Brown; Birgit Weiss; Anita Trundley; Paul S. Burgoyne; Neomie Saut; Christine Durand; Nicolas Lévy; Philippe Terriou; Timothy B. Hargreave; Howard J. Cooke; Michael J. Mitchell; Gudrun Rappold; Nabeel A. Affara

The position of deletion breakpoints in a series of fourAZFa male infertility patients has been refined using new markers derived from BAC clone DNA sequence covering the AZFa male infertility interval. The proximal half of the AZFa interval is occupied by pseudogene sequences with homology to Xp22. The distal half contains an anonymous expressed sequence tag (named AZFaT1) found transcribed in brain, testis, and skeletal muscle and theDFFRY and DBYgenes. All the patients have AZFaT1 andDFFRY deleted in their entirety and three patients additionally have DBY deleted. The three patients with AZFaT1, DFFRY, andDBY deleted show a severe Sertoli cell only syndrome type I phenotype, whereas the patient that has retainedDBY shows a milder oligozoospermic phenotype. The expression of DBY in a cell line from this latter patient is unaltered; this shows that it is the loss of genes lying within the deletion that is responsible for the observed oligozoospermia. RT-PCR analysis of mouse testis RNA from normal and XXSxra mice (devoid of germ cells) has shown that Dby is expressed primarily in somatic cells and that the level of expression is unaltered during germ cell differentiation. This contrasts withDffry where no transcripts are detectable in XXSxra mouse testis and expression occurs specifically in testis mRNA in a germ cell dependent fashion.


Cell Reports | 2012

Unique Preservation of Neural Cells in Hutchinson- Gilford Progeria Syndrome Is Due to the Expression of the Neural-Specific miR-9 MicroRNA

Xavier Nissan; Sophie Blondel; Claire Navarro; Yves Maury; Cécile Denis; Mathilde Girard; Cécile Martinat; Annachiara De Sandre-Giovannoli; Nicolas Lévy; Marc Peschanski

One puzzling observation in patients affected with Hutchinson-Gilford progeria syndrome (HGPS), who overall exhibit systemic and dramatic premature aging, is the absence of any conspicuous cognitive impairment. Recent studies based on induced pluripotent stem cells derived from HGPS patient cells have revealed a lack of expression in neural derivatives of lamin A, a major isoform of LMNA that is initially produced as a precursor called prelamin A. In HGPS, defective maturation of a mutated prelamin A induces the accumulation of toxic progerin in patient cells. Here, we show that a microRNA, miR-9, negatively controls lamin A and progerin expression in neural cells. This may bear major functional correlates, as alleviation of nuclear blebbing is observed in nonneural cells after miR-9 overexpression. Our results support the hypothesis, recently proposed from analyses in mice, that protection of neural cells from progerin accumulation in HGPS is due to the physiologically restricted expression of miR-9 to that cell lineage.

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Pierre Cau

Aix-Marseille University

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Martin Krahn

French Institute of Health and Medical Research

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Marc Bartoli

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jean Pouget

Aix-Marseille University

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Patrice Roll

Aix-Marseille University

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