Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Norbert B. Ghyselinck is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Norbert B. Ghyselinck.


Immunity | 2008

Retinoic acid enhances Foxp3 induction indirectly by relieving inhibition from CD4+CD44hi Cells.

Jonathan A. Hill; Jason A. Hall; Cheng-Ming Sun; Qi Cai; Norbert B. Ghyselinck; Pierre Chambon; Yasmine Belkaid; Diane Mathis; Christophe Benoist

CD4(+)Foxp3(+) regulatory T (Treg) cells originate primarily from thymic differentiation, but conversion of mature T lymphocytes to Foxp3 positivity can be elicited by several means, including in vitro activation in the presence of TGF-beta. Retinoic acid (RA) increases TGF-beta-induced expression of Foxp3, through unknown molecular mechanisms. We showed here that, rather than enhancing TGF-beta signaling directly in naive CD4(+) T cells, RA negatively regulated an accompanying population of CD4(+) T cells with a CD44(hi) memory and effector phenotype. These memory cells actively inhibited the TGF-beta-induced conversion of naive CD4(+) T cells through the synthesis of a set of cytokines (IL-4, IL-21, IFN-gamma) whose expression was coordinately curtailed by RA. This indirect effect was evident in vivo and required the expression of the RA receptor alpha. Thus, cytokine-producing CD44(hi) cells actively restrain TGF-beta-mediated Foxp3 expression in naive T cells, and this balance can be shifted or fine-tuned by RA.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Retinoic acid induces Sertoli cell paracrine signals for spermatogonia differentiation but cell autonomously drives spermatocyte meiosis

Mathilde Raverdeau; Aurore Gely-Pernot; Betty Féret; Christine Dennefeld; Gérard Benoit; Irwin Davidson; Pierre Chambon; Manuel Mark; Norbert B. Ghyselinck

Direct evidence for a role of endogenous retinoic acid (RA), the active metabolite of vitamin A in the initial differentiation and meiotic entry of spermatogonia, and thus in the initiation of spermatogenesis is still lacking. RA is synthesized by dedicated enzymes, the retinaldehyde dehydrogenases (RALDH), and binds to and activates nuclear RA receptors (RARA, RARB, and RARG) either within the RA-synthesizing cells or in the neighboring cells. In the present study, we have used a combination of somatic genetic ablations and pharmacological approaches in vivo to show that during the first, prepubertal, spermatogenic cycle (i) RALDH-dependent synthesis of RA by Sertoli cells (SC), the supporting cells of the germ cell (GC) lineage, is indispensable to initiate differentiation of A aligned into A1 spermatogonia; (ii) RARA in SC mediates the effects of RA, possibly through activating Mafb expression, a gene whose Drosophila homolog is mandatory to GC differentiation; (iii) RA synthesized by premeiotic spermatocytes cell autonomously induces meiotic initiation through controlling the RAR-dependent expression of Stra8. Furthermore, we show that RA of SC origin is no longer necessary for the subsequent spermatogenic cycles but essential to spermiation. Altogether, our data establish that the effects of RA in vivo on spermatogonia differentiation are indirect, via SC, but direct on meiotic initiation in spermatocytes, supporting thereby the notion that, contrary to the situation in the female, RA is necessary to induce meiosis in the male.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

The STRA6 receptor is essential for retinol-binding protein-induced insulin resistance but not for maintaining vitamin A homeostasis in tissues other than the eye.

Daniel C. Berry; Hugues Jacobs; Gurdeep Marwarha; Aurore Gely-Pernot; Sheila M. O'Byrne; David DeSantis; Muriel Klopfenstein; Betty Féret; Christine Dennefeld; William S. Blaner; Colleen M. Croniger; Manuel Mark; Noa Noy; Norbert B. Ghyselinck

Background: STRA6 transports retinol into cells and activates cell signaling. Results: Ablation of Stra6 does not impair vitamin A homeostasis in tissues other than the eye but protects mice against RBP-induced insulin resistance. Conclusion: One major function of STRA6 is to control cell signaling. Significance: The data point at a new function for vitamin A and its blood carrier RBP. The plasma membrane protein STRA6 is thought to mediate uptake of retinol from its blood carrier retinol-binding protein (RBP) into cells and to function as a surface receptor that, upon binding of holo-RBP, activates a JAK/STAT cascade. It was suggested that STRA6 signaling underlies insulin resistance induced by elevated serum levels of RBP in obese animals. To investigate these activities in vivo, we generated and analyzed Stra6-null mice. We show that the contribution of STRA6 to retinol uptake by tissues in vivo is small and that, with the exception of the eye, ablation of Stra6 has only a modest effect on retinoid homeostasis and does not impair physiological functions that critically depend on retinoic acid in the embryo or in the adult. However, ablation of Stra6 effectively protects mice from RBP-induced suppression of insulin signaling. Thus one biological function of STRA6 in tissues other than the eye appears to be the coupling of circulating holo-RBP levels to cell signaling, in turn regulating key processes such as insulin response.


Developmental Dynamics | 2006

RETINOIDS AND SPERMATOGENESIS: LESSONS FROM MUTANT MICE LACKING THE PLASMA RETINOL BINDING PROTEIN

Norbert B. Ghyselinck; Nadège Vernet; Christine Dennefeld; Norbert Giese; Heinz Nau; Pierre Chambon; Stéphane Viville; Manuel Mark

Using Rbp4‐null mice as models, we have established for the first time the kinetics of the spermatogenetic alterations during vitamin A deficiency (VAD). Our data demonstrate that the VAD‐induced testicular degeneration arises through the normal maturation of germ cells in a context of spermatogonia differentiation arrest. They indicate that retinoic acid (RA) appears dispensable for the transition of premeiotic to meiotic spermatocytes, meiosis, and spermiogenesis. They confirm that RA plays critical roles in controlling spermatogonia differentiation, spermatid adhesion to Sertoli cells, and spermiation, and suggest that the VAD‐induced arrest of spermatogonia differentiation results from simultaneous blocks in RA‐dependent events mediated by RA receptor γ (RARγ) in spermatogonia and by RARα in Sertoli cells. They also provide evidence that expression of major RA‐metabolizing enzymes is increased in mouse Sertoli cells upon VAD and that vitamin A‐deficient A spermatogonia differ from their RA‐sufficient counterparts by the expression of the Stra8 gene. Developmental Dynamics 235:1608–1622, 2006.


Endocrinology | 2012

Spermatogonia Differentiation Requires Retinoic Acid Receptor γ

Aurore Gely-Pernot; Mathilde Raverdeau; Catherine Celebi; Christine Dennefeld; Betty Féret; Muriel Klopfenstein; Shosei Yoshida; Norbert B. Ghyselinck; Manuel Mark

Vitamin A is instrumental to mammalian reproduction. Its metabolite, retinoic acid (RA), acts in a hormone-like manner through binding to and activating three nuclear receptor isotypes, RA receptor (RAR)α (RARA), RARβ, and RARγ (RARG). Here, we show that 1) RARG is expressed by A aligned (A(al)) spermatogonia, as well as during the transition from A(al) to A(1) spermatogonia, which is known to require RA; and 2) ablation of Rarg, either in the whole mouse or specifically in spermatogonia, does not affect meiosis and spermiogenesis but impairs the A(al) to A(1) transition in the course of some of the seminiferous epithelium cycles. Upon ageing, this phenomenon yields seminiferous tubules containing only spermatogonia and Sertoli cells. Altogether, our findings indicate that RARG cell-autonomously transduces, in undifferentiated spermatogonia of adult testes, a RA signal critical for spermatogenesis. During the prepubertal spermatogenic wave, the loss of RARG function can however be compensated by RARA, as indicated by the normal timing of appearance of meiotic cells in Rarg-null testes. Accordingly, RARG- and RARA-selective agonists are both able to stimulate Stra8 expression in wild-type prepubertal testes. Interestingly, inactivation of Rarg does not impair expression of the spermatogonia differentiation markers Kit and Stra8, contrary to vitamin A deficiency. This latter observation supports the notion that the RA-signaling pathway previously shown to operate in Sertoli cells also participates in spermatogonia differentiation.


Current Biology | 2014

FOXL2 is a female sex-determining gene in the goat.

Laurent Boulanger; Maëlle Pannetier; Laurence Gall; Aurélie Allais-Bonnet; Maëva Elzaiat; Daniel Le Bourhis; Nathalie Daniel; Christophe Richard; Corinne Cotinot; Norbert B. Ghyselinck; Eric Pailhoux

The origin of sex reversal in XX goats homozygous for the polled intersex syndrome (PIS) mutation was unclear because of the complexity of the mutation that affects the transcription of both FOXL2 and several long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs). Accumulating evidence suggested that FOXL2 could be the sole gene of the PIS locus responsible for XX sex reversal, the lncRNAs being involved in transcriptional regulation of FOXL2. In this study, using zinc-finger nuclease-directed mutagenesis, we generated several fetuses, of which one XX individual bears biallelic mutations of FOXL2. Our analysis demonstrates that FOXL2 loss of function dissociated from loss of lncRNA expression is sufficient to cause an XX female-to-male sex reversal in the goat model and, as in the mouse model, an agenesis of eyelids. Both developmental defects were reproduced in two newborn animals cloned from the XX FOXL2(-/-) fibroblasts. These results therefore identify FOXL2 as a bona fide female sex-determining gene in the goat. They also highlight a stage-dependent role of FOXL2 in the ovary, different between goats and mice, being important for fetal development in the former but for postnatal maintenance in the latter.


Developmental Biology | 2009

Retinoic acid receptors are required for skeletal growth, matrix homeostasis and growth plate function in postnatal mouse

Julie A. Williams; Naoki Kondo; Takahiro Okabe; Nobuo Takeshita; Diane M. Pilchak; Eiki Koyama; Takanaga Ochiai; Deborah A. Jensen; Maureen A. Kane; Joseph L. Napoli; Motomi Enomoto-Iwamoto; Norbert B. Ghyselinck; Pierre Chambon; Maurizio Pacifici; Masahiro Iwamoto

The retinoic acid receptors alpha, beta and gamma (RARalpha, RARbeta and RARgamma) are nuclear hormone receptors that regulate fundamental processes during embryogenesis, but their roles in skeletal development and growth remain unclear. To study skeletal-specific RAR function, we created conditional mouse mutants deficient in RAR expression in cartilage. We find that mice deficient in RARalpha and RARgamma (or RARbeta and RARgamma) exhibit severe growth retardation obvious by about 3 weeks postnatally. Their growth plates are defective and, importantly, display a major drop in aggrecan expression and content. Mice deficient in RARalpha and RARbeta, however, are virtually normal, suggesting that RARgamma is essential. In good correlation, we find that RARgamma is the most strongly expressed RAR in mouse growth plate and its expression characterizes the proliferative and pre-hypertrophic zones where aggrecan is strongly expressed also. By being avascular, those zones lack endogenous retinoids as indicated by previous RARE reporter mice and our direct biochemical measurements and thus, RARgamma is likely to exert ligand-less repressor function. Indeed, our data indicate that: aggrecan production is enhanced by RARgamma over-expression in chondrocytes under retinoid-free culture conditions; production is further boosted by co-repressor Zac1 or pharmacologic agents that enhance RAR repressor function; and RAR/Zac1 function on aggrecan expression may involve Sox proteins. In sum, our data reveal that RARs, and RARgamma in particular, exert previously unappreciated roles in growth plate function and skeletal growth and regulate aggrecan expression and content. Since aggrecan is critical for growth plate function, its deficiency in RAR-mutant mice is likely to have contributed directly to their growth retardation.


Developmental Cell | 2014

DMRT1 Protects Male Gonadal Cells from Retinoid-Dependent Sexual Transdifferentiation

Anna Minkina; Clinton K. Matson; Robin E. Lindeman; Norbert B. Ghyselinck; Vivian J. Bardwell; David Zarkower

Mammalian sex determination initiates in the fetal gonad with specification of bipotential precursor cells into male Sertoli cells or female granulosa cells. This choice was long presumed to be irreversible, but genetic analysis in the mouse recently revealed that sexual fates must be maintained throughout life. Somatic cells in the testis or ovary, even in adults, can be induced to transdifferentiate to their opposite-sex equivalents by loss of a single transcription factor, DMRT1 in the testis or FOXL2 in the ovary. Here, we investigate what mechanism DMRT1 prevents from triggering transdifferentiation. We find that DMRT1 blocks testicular retinoic acid (RA) signaling from activating genes normally involved in female sex determination and ovarian development and show that inappropriate activation of these genes can drive sexual transdifferentiation. By preventing activation of potential feminizing genes, DMRT1 allows Sertoli cells to participate in RA signaling, which is essential for reproduction, without being sexually reprogrammed.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Modular patterning of structure and function of the striatum by retinoid receptor signaling

Wen Lin Liao; Hsiu Chao Tsai; Hsiao Fang Wang; Josephine Chang; Kuan Ming Lu; Hsiao Lin Wu; Yi Chao Lee; Ting-Fen Tsai; Hiroshi Takahashi; Michael Wagner; Norbert B. Ghyselinck; Pierre Chambon; Fu Chin Liu

Retinoid signaling plays a crucial role in patterning rhombomeres in the hindbrain and motor neurons in the spinal cord during development. A fundamentally interesting question is whether retinoids can pattern functional organization in the forebrain that generates a high order of cognitive behavior. The striatum contains a compartmental structure of striosome (or “patch”) and intervening matrix. How this highly complex mosaic design is patterned by the genetic programs during development remains elusive. We report a developmental mechanism by which retinoid receptor signaling controls compartmental formation in the striatum. We analyzed RARβ−/− mutant mice and found a selective loss of striosomal compartmentalization in the rostral mutant striatum. The loss of RARβ signaling in the mutant mice resulted in reduction of cyclin E2, a cell cycle protein regulating transition from G1 to S phase, and also reduction of the proneural gene Mash1, which led to defective neurogenesis of late-born striosomal cells. Importantly, during striatal neurogenesis, endogenous levels of retinoic acid were spatiotemporally regulated such that transduction of high levels of retinoic acid through RARβ selectively expanded the population of late-born striosomal progenitors, which evolved into a highly elaborate compartment in the rostral striatum. RARβ−/− mutant mice, which lacked such enlarged compartment, displayed complex alternations of dopamine agonist-induced stereotypic motor behavior, including exaggeration of head bobbing movement and reduction of rearing activity. RARβ signaling thus plays a crucial role in setting up striatal compartments that may engage in neural circuits of psychomotor control.


PLOS Genetics | 2012

Testicular Differentiation Occurs in Absence of R-spondin1 and Sox9 in Mouse Sex Reversals

Rowena Lavery; Anne-Amandine Chassot; Eva Pauper; Elodie P. Gregoire; Muriel Klopfenstein; Dirk G. de Rooij; Manuel Mark; Andreas Schedl; Norbert B. Ghyselinck; Marie-Christine Chaboissier

In mammals, male sex determination is governed by SRY-dependent activation of Sox9, whereas female development involves R-spondin1 (RSPO1), an activator of the WNT/beta-catenin signaling pathway. Genetic analyses in mice have demonstrated Sry and Sox9 to be both required and sufficient to induce testicular development. These genes are therefore considered as master regulators of the male pathway. Indeed, female-to-male sex reversal in XX Rspo1 mutant mice correlates with Sox9 expression, suggesting that this transcription factor induces testicular differentiation in pathological conditions. Unexpectedly, here we show that testicular differentiation can occur in XX mutants lacking both Rspo1 and Sox9 (referred to as XX Rspo1KOSox9cKO ), indicating that Sry and Sox9 are dispensable to induce female-to-male sex reversal. Molecular analyses show expression of both Sox8 and Sox10, suggesting that activation of Sox genes other than Sox9 can induce male differentiation in Rspo1KOSox9cKO mice. Moreover, since testis development occurs in XY Rspo1KOSox9cKO mice, our data show that Rspo1 is the main effector for male-to-female sex reversal in XY Sox9cKO mice. Thus, Rspo1 is an essential activator of ovarian development not only in normal situations, but also in sex reversal situations. Taken together these data demonstrate that both male and female sex differentiation is induced by distinct, active, genetic pathways. The dogma that considers female differentiation as a default pathway therefore needs to be definitively revised.

Collaboration


Dive into the Norbert B. Ghyselinck's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Anna Minkina

University of Minnesota

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Cheng-Ming Sun

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Colleen M. Croniger

Case Western Reserve University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Daniel C. Berry

Case Western Reserve University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jason A. Hall

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge