Philippe Carbon
French Institute of Health and Medical Research
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Featured researches published by Philippe Carbon.
Nucleic Acids Research | 1990
Alain Krol; Eric Westhof; Montserrat Bach; Reinhard Lührmann; Jean-Pierre Ebel; Philippe Carbon
The solution structure of human U1 snRNA was investigated by using base-specific chemical probes (dimethylsulfate, carbodiimide, diethylpyrocarbonate) and RNase V1. Chemical reagents were employed under various conditions of salt and temperature and allowed information at the Watson-Crick base-pairing positions to be obtained for 66% of the U1 snRNA bases. Double-stranded or stacked regions were examined with RNase V1. The dat gained from these experiments extend and support the previous 2D model for U1snRNA. However, to elucidate some aspects of the solution data that could not be accounted for by the secondary structure model, the information gathered from structure probing was used to provide the experimental basis required to construct and to test a tertiary structure model by computer graphics modeling. As a result, U1 snRNA is shown to adopt an asymmetrical X-shape that is formed by two helical domains, each one being generated by coaxial stacking of helices at the U1 snRNA cruciform. Chemical reactivities and model building show that a few nucleotides, previously proposed to be unpaired, can form A.G and U.U non Watson-Crick base-pairs, notably in stem-loop B. The structural model we propose for regions G12 to A124 integrates stereochemical constraints and is based both on solution structure data and sequence comparisons between U1 snRNAs.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006
Evelyne Myslinski; Marie-Aline Gérard; Alain Krol; Philippe Carbon
Staf was originally identified as the transcriptional activator of Xenopus tRNASec and small nuclear (sn) RNA-type genes. Recently, transcription of seven human (h) protein coding genes was reported to be activated by the human ortholog hStaf/ZNF143. Here we have used a combined in silico and biochemical approach to identify 1175 conserved hStaf/ZNF143-binding sites (SBS) distributed in 938 promoters of four mammalian genomes. The SBS shows a significant positional preference and occurs mostly within 200 bp upstream of the transcription start site. Chromatin immunoprecipitation assays with 295 of the promoters established that 90% contain bona fide SBS. By extrapolating the values of this mapping to the full sizes of the mammalian genomes, we can infer the existence of at least 2500 SBS distributed in 2000 promoters. This unexpected large number strongly suggests that SBS constitutes one of the most widespread transcription factor-binding sites in mammalian promoters. Furthermore, we demonstrated that the presence of the SBS alone is sufficient to direct expression of a luciferase reporter gene, suggesting that hStaf/ZNF143 can recruit per se the transcription machinery.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2011
Yannick-Noël Anno; Evelyne Myslinski; Richard Patryk Ngondo-Mbongo; Alain Krol; Olivier Poch; Odile Lecompte; Philippe Carbon
In the human genome, ∼10% of the genes are arranged head to head so that their transcription start sites reside within <1 kbp on opposite strands. In this configuration, a bidirectional promoter generally drives expression of the two genes. How bidirectional expression is performed from these particular promoters constitutes a puzzling question. Here, by a combination of in silico and biochemical approaches, we demonstrate that hStaf/ZNF143 is involved in controlling expression from a subset of divergent gene pairs. The binding sites for hStaf/ZNF143 (SBS) are overrepresented in bidirectional versus unidirectional promoters. Chromatin immunoprecipitation assays with a significant set of bidirectional promoters containing putative SBS revealed that 93% of them are associated with hStaf/ZNF143. Expression of dual reporter genes directed by bidirectional promoters are dependent on the SBS integrity and requires hStaf/ZNF143. Furthermore, in some cases, functional SBS are located in bidirectional promoters of gene pairs encoding a noncoding RNA and a protein gene. Remarkably, hStaf/ZNF143 per se exhibits an inherently bidirectional transcription activity, and together our data provide the demonstration that hStaf/ZNF143 is indeed a transcription factor controlling the expression of divergent protein–protein and protein–non-coding RNA gene pairs.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2010
Marie-Aline Gérard; Evelyne Myslinski; Natassia Chylak; Stéphanie Baudrey; Alain Krol; Philippe Carbon
The C/D box scaRNA2 is predicted to guide specific 2′-O-methylation of U2 snRNA. In contrast to other SCARNA genes, SCARNA2 appears to be independently transcribed. By transient expression of SCARNA2-reporter gene constructs, we have demonstrated that this gene is transcribed by RNA polymerase II and that the promoter elements responsible for its transcription are contained within a 161 bp region upstream of the transcription start site. In mammals, we have identified four cross species conserved promoter elements, a TATA motif, an hStaf/ZNF143 binding site and two novel elements that are required for full promoter activity. Binding of the human hStaf/ZNF143 transcription factor to its target sequence is required for promoter activity, suggesting that hStaf/ZNF143 is a fundamental regulator of the SCARNA2 gene. We also showed that RNA polymerase II continues transcription past the 3′-end of the mature RNA, irrespective of the identity of the Pol II promoter. The 3′-end processing and accumulation are governed by the sole information contained in the scaRNA2 encoding region, the maturation occurring via a particular pathway incompatible with that of mRNA or snRNA production.
Methods in Enzymology | 1989
Alain Krol; Philippe Carbon
Nucleic Acids Research | 1987
Alain Krol; Philippe Carbon; Jean-Pierre Ebel; Bernd Appel
RNA | 2002
Christine Allmang; Philippe Carbon; Alain Krol
Current Protein & Peptide Science | 2002
Alain Lescure; Delphine Fagegaltier; Philippe Carbon; Alain Krol
Nucleic Acids Research | 1993
Evelyne Myslinski; Catherine Schuster; Janine Huet; André Sentenac; Alain Krol; Philippe Carbon
Journal of Health Science | 2000
Alain Lescure; Daniel Gautheret; Delphine Fagegaltier; Philippe Carbon; Alain Krol