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Featured researches published by Olivier Kah.


Biology of Reproduction | 2002

Molecular Characterization of Three Estrogen Receptor Forms in Zebrafish: Binding Characteristics, Transactivation Properties, and Tissue Distributions

Arnaud Menuet; Elisabeth Pellegrini; Isabelle Anglade; Odile Blaise; Vincent Laudet; Olivier Kah; Farzad Pakdel

Abstract There are two estrogen receptor (ER) subtypes in fish, ERα and ERβ, and increasing evidence that the ERβ subtype has more than one form. However, there is little information on the characteristics and functional significance of these ERs in adults and during development. Here, we report the cloning and characterization of three functional ER forms, zfERα, zfERβ1, and zfERβ2, in the zebrafish. The percentages of identity between these receptors suggest the existence of three distinct genes. Each cDNA encoded a protein that specifically bound estradiol with a dissociation constant ranging from 0.4 nM (zfERβ2) to 0.75 nM (zfERα and zfERβ1). In transiently transfected cells, all three forms were able to induce, in a dose-dependent manner, the expression of a reporter gene driven by a consensus estrogen responsive element; zfERβ2 was slightly more sensitive than zfERα and zfERβ1. Tissue distribution pattern, analyzed by reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction, showed that the three zfER mRNAs largely overlap and are predominantly expressed in brain, pituitary, liver, and gonads. In situ hybridization was performed to study in more detail the distribution of the three zfER mRNAs in the brain of adult females. The zfER mRNAs exhibit distinct but partially overlapping patterns of expression in two neuroendocrine regions, the preoptic area and the mediobasal hypothalamus. The characterization of these zfERs provides a new perspective for understanding the mechanisms underlying estradiol actions in a vertebrate species commonly used for developmental studies.


Journal of Neuroendocrinology | 2012

Endocrine disrupters: a review of some sources, effects, and mechanisms of actions on behaviour and neuroendocrine systems.

Cheryl A. Frye; E. Bo; Gemma Calamandrei; Laura Calzà; Francesco Dessì-Fulgheri; Mercedes Fernandez; L. Fusani; Olivier Kah; M. Kajta; Y. Le Page; Heather B. Patisaul; A. Venerosi; A. K. Wojtowicz; Giancarlo Panzica

Some environmental contaminants interact with hormones and may exert adverse consequences as a result of their actions as endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs). Exposure in people is typically a result of contamination of the food chain, inhalation of contaminated house dust or occupational exposure. EDCs include pesticides and herbicides (such as dichlorodiphenyl trichloroethane or its metabolites), methoxychlor, biocides, heat stabilisers and chemical catalysts (such as tributyltin), plastic contaminants (e.g. bisphenol A), pharmaceuticals (i.e. diethylstilbestrol; 17α‐ethinylestradiol) or dietary components (such as phytoestrogens). The goal of this review is to address the sources, effects and actions of EDCs, with an emphasis on topics discussed at the International Congress on Steroids and the Nervous System. EDCs may alter reproductively‐relevant or nonreproductive, sexually‐dimorphic behaviours. In addition, EDCs may have significant effects on neurodevelopmental processes, influencing the morphology of sexually‐dimorphic cerebral circuits. Exposure to EDCs is more dangerous if it occurs during specific ‘critical periods’ of life, such as intrauterine, perinatal, juvenile or puberty periods, when organisms are more sensitive to hormonal disruption, compared to other periods. However, exposure to EDCs in adulthood can also alter physiology. Several EDCs are xenoestrogens, which can alter serum lipid concentrations or metabolism enzymes that are necessary for converting cholesterol to steroid hormones. This can ultimately alter the production of oestradiol and/or other steroids. Finally, many EDCs may have actions via (or independent of) classic actions at cognate steroid receptors. EDCs may have effects through numerous other substrates, such as the aryl hydrocarbon receptor, the peroxisome proliferator‐activated receptor and the retinoid X receptor, signal transduction pathways, calcium influx and/or neurotransmitter receptors. Thus, EDCs, from varied sources, may have organisational effects during development and/or activational effects in adulthood that influence sexually‐dimorphic, reproductively‐relevant processes or other functions, by mimicking, antagonising or altering steroidal actions.


Frontiers in Neuroendocrinology | 2010

Aromatase in the brain of teleost fish: expression, regulation and putative functions.

Nicolas Diotel; Yann Le Page; Karen Mouriec; Sok-Keng Tong; Elisabeth Pellegrini; Colette Vaillant; Isabelle Anglade; François Brion; Farzad Pakdel; Bon-chu Chung; Olivier Kah

Unlike that of mammals, the brain of teleost fish exhibits an intense aromatase activity due to the strong expression of one of two aromatase genes (aromatase A or cyp19a1a and aromatase B or cyp19a1b) that arose from a gene duplication event. In situ hybridization, immunohistochemistry and expression of GFP (green fluorescent protein) in transgenic tg(cyp19a1b-GFP) fish demonstrate that aromatase B is only expressed in radial glial cells (RGC) of adult fish. These cells persist throughout life and act as progenitors in the brain of both developing and adult fish. Although aromatase B-positive radial glial cells are most abundant in the preoptic area and the hypothalamus, they are observed throughout the entire central nervous system and spinal cord. In agreement with the fact that brain aromatase activity is correlated to sex steroid levels, the high expression of cyp19a1b is due to an auto-regulatory loop through which estrogens and aromatizable androgens up-regulate aromatase expression. This mechanism involves estrogen receptor binding on an estrogen response element located on the cyp19a1b promoter. Cell specificity is achieved by a mandatory cooperation between estrogen receptors and unidentified glial factors. Given the emerging roles of estrogens in neurogenesis, the unique feature of the adult fish brain suggests that, in addition to classical functions on brain sexual differentiation and sexual behaviour, aromatase expression in radial glial cells could be part of the mechanisms authorizing the maintenance of a high proliferative activity in the brain of fish.


The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 2005

Expression and estrogen-dependent regulation of the zebrafish brain aromatase gene

Arnaud Menuet; Elisabeth Pellegrini; François Brion; Marie‐Madeleine Gueguen; Isabelle Anglade; Farzad Pakdel; Olivier Kah

Compared with adult mammals, the brain of teleost fish is characterized by an extremely high capacity to aromatize androgens into estrogens, and this metabolic activity results from the expression of a specific brain aromatase (AroB) generated by the cyp19b gene. In this study, we first generated antibodies to zebrafish AroB and used them to map AroB‐positive structures in the brain of adult zebrafish. We show that AroB is exclusively expressed in radial glial cells, mainly in the olfactory bulbs, telencephalon, preoptic area, and hypothalamus. Second, we investigated in vivo and in vitro the mechanisms involved in the estradiol (E2) regulation of the cyp19b gene. By means of whole‐mount hybridization and immunohistochemistry on zebrafish embryos and larvae, we confirmed the E2‐dependent upregulation of the cyp19b gene, and we show that E2 triggers AroB expression in radial glial cells mainly in the preoptic area and mediobasal hypothalamus of 48 hpf (hours post fertilization) and 108 hpf larvae. In addition, an in vitro analysis of 0.5 kb of the promoter region of the cyp19b gene demonstrated that this E2‐dependent regulation involves a direct transcriptional action of estrogen receptors requiring estrogen‐responsive elements. However, the data obtained on different cell lines demonstrate that a glial cell context is necessary for full E2 induction. The correlation between our in vivo and in vitro data suggests that the E2‐dependent upregulation of AroB is favored by a glial cell context. J. Comp. Neurol. 485:304–320, 2005.


The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 2007

Identification of aromatase-positive radial glial cells as progenitor cells in the ventricular layer of the forebrain in zebrafish.

Elisabeth Pellegrini; Karen Mouriec; Isabelle Anglade; Arnaud Menuet; Yann Le Page; Marie-Madeleine Gueguen; Marie-Hélène Marmignon; François Brion; Farzad Pakdel; Olivier Kah

Compared with other vertebrates, the brain of adult teleost fish exhibits two unique features: it exhibits unusually high neurogenic activity and strongly expresses aromatase, a key enzyme that converts aromatizable androgens into estrogens. Until now, these two features, high neurogenic and aromatase activities, have never been related to each other. Recently, it was shown that aromatase is expressed in radial glial cells of the forebrain and not in neurons. Here, we further document that Aromatase B is never detected in cells expressing the markers of postmitotic neurons, Hu and acetylated tubulin. By using a combination of bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) treatment and immunohistochemical techniques, we demonstrate for the first time to our knowledge that aromatase‐positive radial cells actively divide to generate newborn cells in many forebrain regions. Such newborn cells can further divide, as shown by BrdU‐proliferating cell nuclear antigen double staining. We also demonstrate that, over time, newborn cells move away from the ventricles, most likely by migrating along the radial processes. Finally, by using antisera to Hu and acetylated tubulin, we further document that some of the newborn cells derived from radial glia differentiate into neurons. These data provide new evidence for the mechanism of neurogenesis in the brain of adult fish. In addition, given that estrogens are well‐known neurotrophic and neuroprotective factors affecting proliferation, apoptosis, migration, and differentiation, the expression of aromatase in the neural stem cells of the adult strongly demonstrates that the fish brain is an outstanding model for studying the effects of estrogens on adult neurogenesis and brain repair. J. Comp. Neurol. 501:150–167, 2007.


Cell and Tissue Research | 1986

A reinvestigation of the Gn-RH (gonadotrophin-releasing hormone) systems in the goldfish brain using antibodies to salmon Gn-RH

Olivier Kah; Bernard Breton; Joseph G. Dulka; Jésus Nunez-Rodriguez; Richard E. Peter; Anne Corrigan; Jean Rivier; William W. Vale

SummaryThe organization of Gn-RH systems in the brain of teleosts has been investigated previously by immunohistochemistry using antibodies against the mammalian decapeptide which differs from the teleostean factor. Here, we report the distribution of immunoreactive Gn-RH in the brain of goldfish using antibodies against synthetic teleost peptide.Immunoreactive structures are found along a column extending from the rostral olfactory bulbs to the pituitary stalk. Cell bodies are observed within the olfactory nerves and bulbs, along the ventromedial telencephalon, the ventrolateral preoptic area and the latero-basal hypothalamus. Large perikarya are detected in the dorsal midbrain tegmentum, immediately caudal to the posterior commissure. A prominent pathway was traced from the cells located in the olfactory nerves through the medial olfactory tract and along all the perikarya described above to the pituitary stalk. In the pituitary, projections are restricted to the proximal pars distalis. A second immunoreactive pathway ascends more dorsally in the telencephalon and arches to the periventricular regions of the diencephalon. Part of this pathway forms a periventricular network in the dorsal and posterior hypothalamus, whereas other projections continue caudally to the medulla oblongata and the spinal cord. Lesions of the ventral preoptic area demonstrate that most of the fibers detected in the pituitary originate from the preoptic region.


The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 2003

Distribution of aromatase mRNA and protein in the brain and pituitary of female rainbow trout: Comparison with estrogen receptor α

Arnaud Menuet; Isabelle Anglade; Rémy Le Guével; Elisabeth Pellegrini; Farzad Pakdel; Olivier Kah

Recent data indicate that estrogens locally produced in the brain by aromatization of androgens could be important for neurogenesis and brain repair. In this respect, fish are interesting because of the extremely high aromatase activity of their brain. In this study, the rainbow trout brain aromatase was cloned and riboprobes were used to map the distribution of cells expressing the corresponding mRNAs. A very strong hybridization signal was detected in the pituitary and in cells bordering the ventricles in the telencephalon and ventral diencephalon, with the highest expression in the preoptic area and hypothalamus. A weaker signal was detected in the ependymal layer bordering the torus semicircularis and optic tectum. This localization was fully confirmed by immunohistochemistry using antibodies against a teleost aromatase. In addition, this antibody showed that aromatase expression in fact corresponds to radial glial cells because immunoreactive cells had long cytoplasmic processes extending toward the pial surface. Because brain aromatase was shown to be upregulated by estradiol in fish, the distribution of aromatase mRNAs was compared with that of rainbow trout estrogen receptor α (rtERα) on adjacent sections. Although the highest aromatase expression was found in regions expressing rtERα, no obvious coexpression was found, as rtERα was never observed in radial cells. However, reverse transcriptase‐polymerase chain reaction experiments performed on brain cell cultures enriched in glial cells suggest that a weak expression of rtERα in glial cells cannot be excluded. The possible role of the high brain aromatase content in fish could be related to the continuous growth of their central nervous system during adulthood. J. Comp. Neurol. 462:180–193, 2003.


Cell and Tissue Research | 1993

Origin of the pituitary innervation in the goldfish

Isabelle Anglade; Thys Zandbergen; Olivier Kah

Despite the large number of studies devoted to the pituitary of teleosts, the origin of the direct pituitary innervation is still largely unknown. Although such a model is ideal for applying retrograde transport techniques, these methods involve the difficult in vivo injection of tracers into the pituitary and have never been applied. Recently, a lipophilic fluorescent dye (1-1′-dioctadecyl-3,3,3′,3′-tetramethylindocarbocyanin; DiI) has been introduced and shown to have the capacity of being transported by the membranes of paraformaldehydefixed tissues. Microcrystals of DiI were implanted via a ventral approach into the pituitary of goldfish previously fixed by intracardiac perfusion of paraformaldehyde. The goldfish heads were kept immersed in paraformaldehyde for various periods of time (2–6 weeks). The brains were then dissected and cut transversally using a Vibratome. The results demonstrate that hypophysiotrophic areas are essentially restricted to the preoptic region, the mediobasal hypothalamus and the nucleus dorsolateralis thalami. In addition, cell bodies probably containing gonadotrophin releasing-hormone were also retrogradely stained along a pathway that can be traced up to the olfactory bulbs. The results also confirm that cell bodies, located around the ventral aspect of the preoptic recess and probably corresponding to dopaminergic neurons, project to the pituitary. Large neurons have also been observed in the rostral dorsal midbrain tegmentum just caudal to the posterior commissure. Most neurons of the so-called paraventricular organ remain unstained. Finally, a fiber tract originating from an undetermined territory of the posterior brain has been observed. The results are discussed in relation to the possible chemical nature of the hypophysiotropic neurons.


Cell and Tissue Research | 1983

Serotonin in the brain of the goldfish, Carassius auratus

Olivier Kah; Pascal Chambolle

SummaryThe distribution of immunoreactive serotonin (5-HT) was investigated in the brain and pituitary gland of the goldfish with the use of indirect immunofluorescence technique. Immunoreactive cerebrospinal fluid-contacting neurons were found in the nucleus recessus lateralis and in the nucleus recessus posterions of the hypothalamus. Additional immunoreactive neurons were observed ventro-lateral to the posterior commissure in the nucleus dorsolateralis thalami. This group of cell bodies extends posteriorly as far as the rostral midbrain tegmentum. At the level of the isthmus, numerous immunoreactive cell bodies were located medially between the fiber bundles of the fasciculus longitudinalis medialis. Finally, a few isolated immunoreactive cells were observed in the medulla oblongata. In the pituitary gland, immunoreactive fibers and cells were found primarily in the pars distalis. The origin of the numerous fibers of the telencephalon is not clear, however, they may arise from the perikarya located in the raphe region. The general organization of the ascending and descending 5-HT-systems of the teleost brain appears to be similar to that described in mammals.


Endocrinology | 2011

Organization of two independent kisspeptin systems derived from evolutionary-ancient kiss genes in the brain of zebrafish.

Arianna Servili; Yann Le Page; Jérôme Leprince; Alain Caraty; Sebastián Escobar; Ishwar S. Parhar; Jae Yong Seong; Hubert Vaudry; Olivier Kah

Kisspeptins are new actors in the neuroendocrine regulation of reproduction. In vertebrates, the number of kiss genes varies from none to three. Zebrafish have two kiss genes, kiss1 and kiss2, and two kiss receptors (GPR54), kiss1r and kiss2r. To provide detailed information on the organization of the kiss systems in zebrafish, antibodies were raised against the C terminus of zebrafish preproKiss1 and preproKiss2. Immunohistochemistry fully confirmed in situ hybridization data, showing that kiss1-expressing neurons are only located in the habenular nucleus, while kiss2-expressing neurons are found in the dorsal and ventral hypothalamus. Kiss1-expressing cells project only to the interpeduncular and raphe nuclei and strongly expressed the kiss1r receptor. In contrast, kiss2-expressing cells are mostly present in the dorsal and ventral hypothalamus and project widely into the subpallium, the preoptic area, the thalamus, the ventral and caudal hypothalamus, and the mesencephalon. All these regions strongly expressed the kiss2r messengers. Kiss2 fibers profusely innervate the ventral forebrain and notably made close apposition with GnRH3 neurons. Estrogen treatment of juvenile fish with estradiol causes increase in kiss2 and kiss2r expression. In the pituitary gland, no proKiss2- positive fibers were detected, while positive cells were observed in the pars intermedia. In addition to proposing a successful strategy to develop antibodies to kisspeptins, these data indicate that the kiss2 systems of zebrafish are implicated in reproductive events, while the kiss1 gene would play other functions that remain to be established.

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Farzad Pakdel

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Silvia Zanuy

Spanish National Research Council

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Farzad Pakdel

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Manuel Carrillo

Spanish National Research Council

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