Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Pierre Calvel is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Pierre Calvel.


Molecular Endocrinology | 2013

An Essential Role for Insulin and IGF1 Receptors in Regulating Sertoli Cell Proliferation, Testis Size, and FSH Action in Mice

Jean-Luc Pitetti; Pierre Calvel; Céline Zimmermann; Marilena D. Papaioannou; Florence Aubry; Christopher R. Cederroth; Françoise Urner; Betty Fumel; Michel Crausaz; Mylène Docquier; Pedro Luis Herrera; François P. Pralong; Marc Germond; Florian Guillou; Bernard Jégou; Serge Nef

Testis size and sperm production are directly correlated to the total number of adult Sertoli cells (SCs). Although the establishment of an adequate number of SCs is crucial for future male fertility, the identification and characterization of the factors regulating SC survival, proliferation, and maturation remain incomplete. To investigate whether the IGF system is required for germ cell (GC) and SC development and function, we inactivated the insulin receptor (Insr), the IGF1 receptor (Igf1r), or both receptors specifically in the GC lineage or in SCs. Whereas ablation of insulin/IGF signaling appears dispensable for GCs and spermatogenesis, adult testes of mice lacking both Insr and Igf1r in SCs (SC-Insr;Igf1r) displayed a 75% reduction in testis size and daily sperm production as a result of a reduced proliferation rate of immature SCs during the late fetal and early neonatal testicular period. In addition, in vivo analyses revealed that FSH requires the insulin/IGF signaling pathway to mediate its proliferative effects on immature SCs. Collectively, these results emphasize the essential role played by growth factors of the insulin family in regulating the final number of SCs, testis size, and daily sperm output. They also indicate that the insulin/IGF signaling pathway is required for FSH-mediated SC proliferation.


PLOS Genetics | 2013

Insulin and IGF1 receptors are essential for XX and XY gonadal differentiation and adrenal development in mice.

Jean-Luc Pitetti; Pierre Calvel; Yannick Romero; Vy Truong; Marilena D. Papaioannou; Olivier Schaad; Mylène Docquier; Pedro Luis Herrera; Dagmar Wilhelm; Serge Nef

Mouse sex determination provides an attractive model to study how regulatory genetic networks and signaling pathways control cell specification and cell fate decisions. This study characterizes in detail the essential role played by the insulin receptor (INSR) and the IGF type I receptor (IGF1R) in adrenogenital development and primary sex determination. Constitutive ablation of insulin/IGF signaling pathway led to reduced proliferation rate of somatic progenitor cells in both XX and XY gonads prior to sex determination together with the downregulation of hundreds of genes associated with the adrenal, testicular, and ovarian genetic programs. These findings indicate that prior to sex determination somatic progenitors in Insr;Igf1r mutant gonads are not lineage primed and thus incapable of upregulating/repressing the male and female genetic programs required for cell fate restriction. In consequence, embryos lacking functional insulin/IGF signaling exhibit (i) complete agenesis of the adrenal cortex, (ii) embryonic XY gonadal sex reversal, with a delay of Sry upregulation and the subsequent failure of the testicular genetic program, and (iii) a delay in ovarian differentiation so that Insr;Igf1r mutant gonads, irrespective of genetic sex, remained in an extended undifferentiated state, before the ovarian differentiation program ultimately is initiated at around E16.5.


PLOS Genetics | 2014

Loss of Function Mutation in the Palmitoyl-Transferase HHAT Leads to Syndromic 46,XY Disorder of Sex Development by Impeding Hedgehog Protein Palmitoylation and Signaling

Patrick Callier; Pierre Calvel; Armine Matevossian; Periklis Makrythanasis; Pascal Bernard; Hiroshi Kurosaka; Anne Vannier; Christel Thauvin-Robinet; Christelle Borel; Séverine Mazaud-Guittot; Antoine Rolland; Christèle Desdoits-Lethimonier; Michel Guipponi; Céline Zimmermann; Isabelle Stévant; Françoise Kühne; Federico Santoni; Sandy Lambert; Frédéric Huet; Francine Mugneret; Jadwiga Jaruzelska; Laurence Faivre; Dagmar Wilhelm; Bernard Jégou; Paul A. Trainor; Marilyn D. Resh; Serge Nef

The Hedgehog (Hh) family of secreted proteins act as morphogens to control embryonic patterning and development in a variety of organ systems. Post-translational covalent attachment of cholesterol and palmitate to Hh proteins are critical for multimerization and long range signaling potency. However, the biological impact of lipid modifications on Hh ligand distribution and signal reception in humans remains unclear. In the present study, we report a unique case of autosomal recessive syndromic 46,XY Disorder of Sex Development (DSD) with testicular dysgenesis and chondrodysplasia resulting from a homozygous G287V missense mutation in the hedgehog acyl-transferase (HHAT) gene. This mutation occurred in the conserved membrane bound O-acyltransferase (MBOAT) domain and experimentally disrupted the ability of HHAT to palmitoylate Hh proteins such as DHH and SHH. Consistent with the patient phenotype, HHAT was found to be expressed in the somatic cells of both XX and XY gonads at the time of sex determination, and Hhat loss of function in mice recapitulates most of the testicular, skeletal, neuronal and growth defects observed in humans. In the developing testis, HHAT is not required for Sertoli cell commitment but plays a role in proper testis cord formation and the differentiation of fetal Leydig cells. Altogether, these results shed new light on the mechanisms of action of Hh proteins. Furthermore, they provide the first clinical evidence of the essential role played by lipid modification of Hh proteins in human testicular organogenesis and embryonic development.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B | 2010

Testicular postgenomics: targeting the regulation of spermatogenesis

Pierre Calvel; Antoine Rolland; Bernard Jégou; Charles Pineau

Sperm are, arguably, the most differentiated cells produced within the body of any given species. This is owing to the fact that spermatogenesis is an intricate and highly specialized process evolved to suit the individual particularities of each sexual species. Despite a vast diversity in method, the aim of spermatogenesis is always the same, the idealized transmission of genetic patrimony. Towards this goal certain requirements must always be met, such as a relative twofold reduction in ploidy, repackaging of the chromatin for transport and specialized enhancements for cell motility, recognition and fusion. In the past 20 years, the study of molecular networks coordinating male germ cell development, particularly in mammals, has become more and more facilitated thanks to large-scale analyses of genome expression. Such postgenomic endeavors have generated landscapes of data for both fundamental and clinical reproductive biology. Continuous, large-scale integration analyses of these datasets are undertaken which provide access to very precise information on a myriad of biomolecules. This review presents commonly used transcriptomic and proteomic workflows applied to various testicular germ cell studies. We will also provide a general overview of the technical possibilities available to reproductive genomic biologists, noting the advantages and drawbacks of each technique.


Molecular Endocrinology | 2015

Research Resource: The Dynamic Transcriptional Profile of Sertoli Cells During the Progression of Spermatogenesis

Céline Zimmermann; Isabelle Stévant; Christelle Borel; Jean-Luc Pitetti; Pierre Calvel; Henrik Kaessmann; Bernard Jégou; Frédéric Chalmel; Serge Nef

Sertoli cells (SCs), the only somatic cells within seminiferous tubules, associate intimately with developing germ cells. They not only provide physical and nutritional support but also secrete factors essential to the complex developmental processes of germ cell proliferation and differentiation. The SC transcriptome must therefore adapt rapidly during the different stages of spermatogenesis. We report comprehensive genome-wide expression profiles of pure populations of SCs isolated at 5 distinct stages of the first wave of mouse spermatogenesis, using RNA sequencing technology. We were able to reconstruct about 13 901 high-confidence, nonredundant coding and noncoding transcripts, characterized by complex alternative splicing patterns with more than 45% comprising novel isoforms of known genes. Interestingly, roughly one-fifth (2939) of these genes exhibited a dynamic expression profile reflecting the evolving role of SCs during the progression of spermatogenesis, with stage-specific expression of genes involved in biological processes such as cell cycle regulation, metabolism and energy production, retinoic acid synthesis, and blood-testis barrier biogenesis. Finally, regulatory network analysis identified the transcription factors endothelial PAS domain-containing protein 1 (EPAS1/Hif2α), aryl hydrocarbon receptor nuclear translocator (ARNT/Hif1β), and signal transducer and activator of transcription 1 (STAT1) as potential master regulators driving the SC transcriptional program. Our results highlight the plastic transcriptional landscape of SCs during the progression of spermatogenesis and provide valuable resources to better understand SC function and spermatogenesis and its related disorders, such as male infertility.


Sexual Development | 2012

The Glucocorticoid-Induced Leucine Zipper (GILZ) Is Essential for Spermatogonial Survival and Spermatogenesis

Yannick Romero; Mavunza Livia Vuandaba; P Suarez; Corinne Grey; Pierre Calvel; D Pearce; B. de Massy; E Hummler; Serge Nef

Spermatogenesis relies on the precise regulation of the self-renewal and differentiation of spermatogonia to provide a continuous supply of differentiating germ cells. The understanding of the cellular pathways regulating this equilibrium remains unfortunately incomplete. This investigation aimed to elucidate the testicular and ovarian functions of the glucocorticoid-induced leucine zipper protein (GILZ) encoded by the X-linked Tsc22d3 (Gilz) gene. We found that GILZ is specifically expressed in the cytoplasm of proliferating spermatogonia and preleptotene spermatocytes. While Gilz mutant female mice were fully fertile, constitutive or male germ cell-specific ablation of Gilz led to sterility due to a complete absence of post-meiotic germ cells and mature spermatozoa. Alterations were observed as early as postnatal day 5 during the first spermatogenic wave and included extensive apoptosis at the spermatogonial level and meiotic arrest in the mid-late zygotene stage. Overall, these data emphasize the essential role played by GILZ in mediating spermatogonial survival and spermatogenesis.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2009

CLPH, a novel casein kinase 2-phosphorylated disordered protein, is specifically associated with postmeiotic germ cells in rat spermatogenesis.

Pierre Calvel; Kervarrec C; Régis Lavigne; Vallet-Erdtmann; Guerrois M; Antoine Rolland; Chalmel F; Bernard Jégou; Charles Pineau

In a recent proteomic study of rat spermatogenesis, we identified CLPH (for Casein-Like PHosphoprotein), a new testis-specific protein expressed exclusively in postmeiotic germ cells. In situ hybridization showed that the CLPH transcript was mainly present in round spermatids, whereas the protein was specifically detected by immunohistochemistry in elongated spermatids and in residual bodies. Electron microscopy showed the protein to be mostly cytoplasmic, but also frequently associated with the mitochondrial inner membrane during the last steps of spermatid differentiation. The Clph gene was found to be present solely in mammalian genomes, in a chromosomal region syntenic to the mammalian cluster of secretory calcium-binding phosphoprotein (SCPP) genes. CLPH has several distinctive properties in common with SCPPs: calcium overlay experiments showed that CLPH was a calcium-binding protein, whereas trypsin digestion assay, circular dichroism and fluorescence experiments demonstrated its intrinsically disordered structure. We also showed that CLPH was phosphorylated in vitro and in vivo by casein kinase 2, an enzyme critical for spermatid elongation. Given the specific and strong production of CLPH during rat spermiogenesis, together with the particular biochemical properties of this protein, we suggest that CLPH is involved in the extremely complex structural rearrangements occurring in haploid germ cells during spermiogenesis.


Sexual Development | 2015

A Case of Wiedemann-Steiner Syndrome Associated with a 46,XY Disorder of Sexual Development and Gonadal Dysgenesis

Pierre Calvel; Kamila Kusz-Zamelczyk; Periklis Makrythanasis; Damian Mikolaj Janecki; Christelle Borel; Anne Vannier; Frédérique Béna; Stefania Gimelli; Piotr Fichna; Serge Nef; Jadwiga Jaruzelska

We report the case of a female patient suffering from a 46,XY disorder of sexual development (DSD) with complete gonadal dysgenesis and Wiedemann-Steiner Syndrome (WDSTS). The coexistence of these 2 conditions has not yet been reported. Using whole exome sequencing and comparative genome hybridization array, we identified a de novo MLL/KMT2A gene nonsense mutation which explains the WDSTS phenotype. In addition, we discovered novel genetic variants, which could explain the testicular dysgenesis observed in the patient, a maternally inherited 167-kb duplication of DAAM2 and MOCS1 genes and a de novo LRRC33/NRROS gene mutation. These genes, some of which are expressed during mouse gonadal development, could be considered as potentially new candidate genes for DSD.


PLOS Genetics | 2017

Bovine and murine models highlight novel roles for SLC25A46 in mitochondrial dynamics and metabolism, with implications for human and animal health

Amandine Duchesne; Anne Vaiman; Johan Castille; Christian Beauvallet; Pauline Gaignard; Sandrine Floriot; Sabrina Rodriguez; Marthe Vilotte; Laurent Boulanger; Bruno Passet; Olivier Albaric; François Guillaume; Abdelhak Boukadiri; Laurence Richard; Maud Bertaud; Edouard Timsit; Raphaël Guatteo; Florence Jaffrézic; Pierre Calvel; Louise Helary; Rachid Mahla; Diane Esquerre; Christine Péchoux; Sophie Liuu; Jean-Michel Vallat; Didier Boichard; Abdelhamid Slama; Jean-Luc Vilotte; Edmund Kunji

Neuropathies are neurodegenerative diseases affecting humans and other mammals. Many genetic causes have been identified so far, including mutations of genes encoding proteins involved in mitochondrial dynamics. Recently, the “Turning calves syndrome”, a novel sensorimotor polyneuropathy was described in the French Rouge-des-Prés cattle breed. In the present study, we determined that this hereditary disease resulted from a single nucleotide substitution in SLC25A46, a gene encoding a protein of the mitochondrial carrier family. This mutation caused an apparent damaging amino-acid substitution. To better understand the function of this protein, we knocked out the Slc25a46 gene in a mouse model. This alteration affected not only the nervous system but also altered general metabolism, resulting in premature mortality. Based on optic microscopy examination, electron microscopy and on biochemical, metabolic and proteomic analyses, we showed that the Slc25a46 disruption caused a fusion/fission imbalance and an abnormal mitochondrial architecture that disturbed mitochondrial metabolism. These data extended the range of phenotypes associated with Slc25a46 dysfunction. Moreover, this Slc25a46 knock-out mouse model should be useful to further elucidate the role of SLC25A46 in mitochondrial dynamics.


The FASEB Journal | 2018

Insulin and IGF1 receptors are essential for the development and steroidogenic function of adult Leydig cells

Yasmine Neirijnck; Pierre Calvel; Karen Kilcoyne; Françoise Kühne; Isabelle Stévant; Richard J. Griffeth; Jean-Luc Pitetti; Silvana A. Andric; Meng-Chun Hu; François P. Pralong; Lee B. Smith; Serge Nef

The insulin family of growth factors (insulin, IGF1, and IGF2) are critical in sex determination, adrenal differentiation, and testicular function. Notably, the IGF system has been reported to mediate the proliferation of steroidogenic cells. However, the precise role and contribution of the membrane receptors mediating those effects, namely, insülin receptor (INSR) and type‐I insülin‐like growth factor receptor (IGF1R), have not, to oür knowledge, been investigated. We show here that specific deletion of both Insr and Igf1r in steroidogenic cells in mice leads to severe alterations of adrenocortical and testicular development. Double‐mutant mice display drastic size reduction of both adrenocortex and testes, with impaired corticosterone, testosterone, and sperm production. Detailed developmental analysis of the testes revealed that fetal Leydig cell (LC) function is normal, but there is a failure of adult LC maturation and steroidogenic function associated with accumulation of progenitor LCs (PLCs). Cell‐lineage tracing revealed PLC enrichment is secondary to Insr and Igf1r deletion in differentiated adult LCs, suggesting a feedback mechanism between cells at different steps of differentiation. Taken together, these data reveal the cell‐autonomous and nonautonomous roles of the IGF system for proper development and maintenance of steroidogenic lineages.—Neirijnck, Y., Calvel, P., Kilcoyne, K. R., Kühne, F., Stevant, I., Griffeth, R. J., Pitetti, J.‐L., Andric, S. A., Hü, M.‐C., Pralong, F., Smith, L. B., Nef, S. Insulin and IGF1 receptors are essential for the development and steroidogenic function of adült Leydig cells. FASEB J. 32, 3321–3335 (2018). www.fasebj.org

Collaboration


Dive into the Pierre Calvel's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge