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Dive into the research topics where Philip Avner is active.

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Featured researches published by Philip Avner.


Nature Reviews Genetics | 2001

X-CHROMOSOME INACTIVATION: COUNTING, CHOICE AND INITIATION

Philip Avner; Edith Heard

In many sexually dimorphic species, a mechanism is required to ensure equivalent levels of gene expression from the sex chromosomes. In mammals, such dosage compensation is achieved by X-chromosome inactivation, a process that presents a unique medley of biological puzzles: how to silence one but not the other X chromosome in the same nucleus; how to count the number of Xs and keep only one active; how to choose which X chromosome is inactivated; and how to establish this silent state rapidly and efficiently during early development. The key to most of these puzzles lies in a unique locus, the X-inactivation centre and a remarkable RNA — Xist — that it encodes.


Nature Reviews Genetics | 2003

The nature and identification of quantitative trait loci: a community’s view

Oduola Abiola; Joe M. Angel; Philip Avner; Alexander A. Bachmanov; John K. Belknap; Beth Bennett; Elizabeth P. Blankenhorn; David A. Blizard; Valerie J. Bolivar; Gudrun A. Brockmann; Kari J. Buck; Jean François Bureau; William L. Casley; Elissa J. Chesler; James M. Cheverud; Gary A. Churchill; Melloni N. Cook; John C. Crabbe; Wim E. Crusio; Ariel Darvasi; Gerald de Haan; Peter Demant; R. W. Doerge; Rosemary W. Elliott; Charles R. Farber; Lorraine Flaherty; Jonathan Flint; Howard K. Gershenfeld; J. P. Gibson; Jing Gu

This white paper by eighty members of the Complex Trait Consortium presents a communitys view on the approaches and statistical analyses that are needed for the identification of genetic loci that determine quantitative traits. Quantitative trait loci (QTLs) can be identified in several ways, but is there a definitive test of whether a candidate locus actually corresponds to a specific QTL?


Science | 2006

The Xist RNA Gene Evolved in Eutherians by Pseudogenization of a Protein-Coding Gene

Laurent Duret; Corinne Chureau; Sylvie Samain; Jean Weissenbach; Philip Avner

The Xist noncoding RNA is the key initiator of the process of X chromosome inactivation in eutherian mammals, but its precise function and origin remain unknown. Although Xist is well conserved among eutherians, until now, no homolog has been identified in other mammals. We show here that Xist evolved, at least partly, from a protein-coding gene and that the loss of protein-coding function of the proto-Xist coincides with the four flanking protein genes becoming pseudogenes. This event occurred after the divergence between eutherians and marsupials, which suggests that mechanisms of dosage compensation have evolved independently in both lineages.


Nature | 2010

Molecular coupling of Tsix regulation and pluripotency

Pablo Navarro; Andrew Oldfield; Julie Legoupi; Nicola Festuccia; Agnès Dubois; Mikael Attia; Jon Schoorlemmer; Claire Rougeulle; Ian Chambers; Philip Avner

The reprogramming of X-chromosome inactivation during the acquisition of pluripotency in vivo and in vitro is accompanied by the repression of Xist, the trigger of X-inactivation, and the upregulation of its antisense counterpart Tsix. We have shown that key factors supporting pluripotency—Nanog, Oct4 and Sox2—bind within Xist intron 1 in undifferentiated embryonic stem cells (ESC) to repress Xist transcription. However, the relationship between transcription factors of the pluripotency network and Tsix regulation has remained unclear. Here we show that Tsix upregulation in embryonic stem cells depends on the recruitment of the pluripotent marker Rex1, and of the reprogramming-associated factors Klf4 and c-Myc, by the DXPas34 minisatellite associated with the Tsix promoter. Upon deletion of DXPas34, binding of the three factors is abrogated and the transcriptional machinery is no longer efficiently recruited to the Tsix promoter. Additional analyses including knockdown experiments further demonstrate that Rex1 is critically important for efficient transcription elongation of Tsix. Hence, distinct embryonic-stem-cell-specific complexes couple X-inactivation reprogramming and pluripotency, with Nanog, Oct4 and Sox2 repressing Xist to facilitate the reactivation of the inactive X, and Klf4, c-Myc and Rex1 activating Tsix to remodel Xist chromatin and ensure random X-inactivation upon differentiation. The holistic pattern of Xist/Tsix regulation by pluripotent factors that we have identified suggests a general direct governance of complex epigenetic processes by the machinery dedicated to pluripotency.


Development | 2005

Imprinted X-inactivation in extra-embryonic endoderm cell lines from mouse blastocysts

Tilo Kunath; Danielle Arnaud; Gary D. Uy; Ikuhiro Okamoto; Corinne Chureau; Yojiro Yamanaka; Edith Heard; Richard L. Gardner; Philip Avner; Janet Rossant

The extra-embryonic endoderm lineage plays a major role in the nutritive support of the embryo and is required for several inductive events, such as anterior patterning and blood island formation. Blastocyst-derived embryonic stem (ES) and trophoblast stem (TS) cell lines provide good models with which to study the development of the epiblast and trophoblast lineages, respectively. We describe the derivation and characterization of cell lines that are representative of the third lineage of the blastocyst – extra-embryonic endoderm. Extra-embryonic endoderm (XEN) cell lines can be reproducibly derived from mouse blastocysts and passaged without any evidence of senescence. XEN cells express markers typical of extra-embryonic endoderm derivatives, but not those of the epiblast or trophoblast. Chimeras generated by injection of XEN cells into blastocysts showed exclusive contribution to extra-embryonic endoderm cell types. We used female XEN cells to investigate the mechanism of X chromosome inactivation in this lineage. We observed paternally imprinted X-inactivation, consistent with observations in vivo. Based on gene expression analysis, chimera studies and imprinted X-inactivation, XEN cell lines are representative of extra-embryonic endoderm and provide a new cell culture model of an early mammalian lineage.


Cell | 2010

LINE-1 activity in facultative heterochromatin formation during X chromosome inactivation.

Jennifer C. Chow; Constance Ciaudo; Melissa Fazzari; Nathan Mise; Nicolas Servant; Jacob L. Glass; Matthew Attreed; Philip Avner; Anton Wutz; Emmanuel Barillot; John M. Greally; Olivier Voinnet; Edith Heard

During X chromosome inactivation (XCI), Xist RNA coats and silences one of the two X chromosomes in female cells. Little is known about how XCI spreads across the chromosome, although LINE-1 elements have been proposed to play a role. Here we show that LINEs participate in creating a silent nuclear compartment into which genes become recruited. A subset of young LINE-1 elements, however, is expressed during XCI, rather than being silenced. We demonstrate that such LINE expression requires the specific heterochromatic state induced by Xist. These LINEs often lie within escape-prone regions of the X chromosome, but close to genes that are subject to XCI, and are associated with putative endo-siRNAs. LINEs may thus facilitate XCI at different levels, with silent LINEs participating in assembly of a heterochromatic nuclear compartment induced by Xist, and active LINEs participating in local propagation of XCI into regions that would otherwise be prone to escape.


Science | 2008

Molecular Coupling of Xist Regulation and Pluripotency

Pablo Navarro; Ian Chambers; Violetta Karwacki-Neisius; Corinne Chureau; Céline Morey; Claire Rougeulle; Philip Avner

During mouse embryogenesis, reversion of imprinted X chromosome inactivation in the pluripotent inner cell mass of the female blastocyst is initiated by the repression of Xist from the paternal X chromosome. Here we report that key factors supporting pluripotency—Nanog, Oct3/4, and Sox2—bind within Xist intron 1 in undifferentiated embryonic stem (ES) cells. Whereas Nanog null ES cells display a reversible and moderate up-regulation of Xist in the absence of any apparent modification of Oct3/4 and Sox2 binding, the drastic release of all three factors from Xist intron 1 triggers rapid ectopic accumulation of Xist RNA. We conclude that the three main genetic factors underlying pluripotency cooperate to repress Xist and thus couple X inactivation reprogramming to the control of pluripotency during embryogenesis.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2004

Differential Histone H3 Lys-9 and Lys-27 Methylation Profiles on the X Chromosome

Claire Rougeulle; Julie Chaumeil; Kavitha Sarma; C. David Allis; Danny Reinberg; Philip Avner; Edith Heard

ABSTRACT Histone H3 tail modifications are among the earliest chromatin changes in the X-chromosome inactivation process. In this study we investigated the relative profiles of two important repressive marks on the X chromosome: methylation of H3 lysine 9 (K9) and 27 (K27). We found that both H3K9 dimethylation and K27 trimethylation characterize the inactive X in somatic cells and that their relative kinetics of enrichment on the X chromosome as it undergoes inactivation are similar. However, dynamic changes of H3K9 and H3K27 methylation on the inactivating X chromosome compared to the rest of the genome are distinct, suggesting that these two modifications play complementary and perhaps nonredundant roles in the establishment and/or maintenance of X inactivation. Furthermore, we show that a hotspot of H3K9 dimethylation 5′ to Xist also displays high levels of H3 tri-meK27. However, analysis of this region in G9a mutant embryonic stem cells shows that these two methyl marks are dependent on different histone methyltransferases.


PLOS Biology | 2010

2-D Structure of the A Region of Xist RNA and Its Implication for PRC2 Association

Sylvain Maenner; Magali Blaud; Laetitia Fouillen; Anne Savoye; Virginie Marchand; Agnès Dubois; Sarah Sanglier-Cianférani; Alain Van Dorsselaer; Philippe Clerc; Philip Avner; Athanase Visvikis; Christiane Branlant

Structural analyses provide new insights into the folding of the A region of the Xist RNA, which plays a crucial role in X chromosome inactivation, and its mechanism of protein recruitment.


Nature | 2005

Evidence for de novo imprinted X-chromosome inactivation independent of meiotic inactivation in mice

Ikuhiro Okamoto; Danielle Arnaud; Patricia Le Baccon; Arie P. Otte; Christine M. Disteche; Philip Avner; Edith Heard

In mammals, one of the two X chromosomes is inactivated in females to enable dosage compensation for X-linked gene products. In rodents and marsupials, only the X chromosome of paternal origin (Xp) is silenced during early embryogenesis. This could be due to a carry-over effect of the X chromosomes passage through the male germ line, where it becomes transiently silenced together with the Y chromosome, during meiotic sex chromosome inactivation (MSCI). Here we show that XIST (X inactive specific transcript) transgenes, located on autosomes, do not undergo MSCI in the male germ line of mice and yet can induce imprinted cis-inactivation when paternally inherited, with identical kinetics to the Xp chromosome. This suggests that MSCI is not necessary for imprinted X-chromosome inactivation in mice. We also show that the Xp is transcribed, like autosomes, at zygotic gene activation rather than being ‘pre-inactivated’. We propose that expression of the paternal Xist gene at zygotic gene activation is sufficient to trigger cis-inactivation of the X chromosome, or of an autosome carrying a Xist transgene.

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Edith Heard

PSL Research University

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Christian Boitard

Paris Descartes University

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