Pierre-Étienne Jacques
Université de Sherbrooke
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Pierre-Étienne Jacques.
Molecular Cell | 2012
Alain R. Bataille; Célia Jeronimo; Pierre-Étienne Jacques; Louise Laramée; Marie-Ève Fortin; Audrey Forest; Maxime Bergeron; Steven D. Hanes; François Robert
Transcription by RNA polymerase II (RNAPII) is coupled to mRNA processing and chromatin modifications via the C-terminal domain (CTD) of its largest subunit, consisting of multiple repeats of the heptapeptide YSPTSPS. Pioneering studies showed that CTD serines are differentially phosphorylated along genes in a prescribed pattern during the transcription cycle. Genome-wide analyses challenged this idea, suggesting that this cycle is not uniform among different genes. Moreover, the respective role of enzymes responsible for CTD modifications remains controversial. Here, we systematically profiled the location of the RNAPII phosphoisoforms in wild-type cells and mutants for most CTD modifying enzymes. Together with results of in vitro assays, these data reveal a complex interplay between the modifying enzymes, and provide evidence that the CTD cycle is uniform across genes. We also identify Ssu72 as the Ser7 phosphatase and show that proline isomerization is a key regulator of CTD dephosphorylation at the end of genes.
Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2014
Xinyi Lu; Friedrich Sachs; LeeAnn Ramsay; Pierre-Étienne Jacques; Jonathan Göke; Guillaume Bourque; Huck-Hui Ng
Human endogenous retrovirus subfamily H (HERVH) is a class of transposable elements expressed preferentially in human embryonic stem cells (hESCs). Here, we report that the long terminal repeats of HERVH function as enhancers and that HERVH is a nuclear long noncoding RNA required to maintain hESC identity. Furthermore, HERVH is associated with OCT4, coactivators and Mediator subunits. Together, these results uncover a new role of species-specific transposable elements in hESCs.
Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2010
Rachel K. Szilard; Pierre-Étienne Jacques; Louise Laramée; Benjamin Cheng; Sarah Galicia; Alain R. Bataille; ManTek Yeung; Megan Mendez; Maxime Bergeron; François Robert; Daniel Durocher
Phosphorylation of histone H2AX is an early response to DNA damage in eukaryotes. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, DNA damage or replication-fork stalling results in phosphorylation of histone H2A yielding γ-H2A (yeast γ-H2AX) in a Mec1 (ATR)- and Tel1 (ATM)-dependent manner. Here, we describe the genome-wide location analysis of γ-H2A as a strategy to identify loci prone to engaging the Mec1 and Tel1 pathways. Notably, γ-H2A enrichment overlaps with loci prone to replication-fork stalling and is caused by the action of Mec1 and Tel1, indicating that these loci are prone to breakage. Moreover, about half the sites enriched for γ-H2A map to repressed protein-coding genes, and histone deacetylases are necessary for formation of γ-H2A at these loci. Finally, our work indicates that high-resolution mapping of γ-H2AX is a fruitful route to map fragile sites in eukaryotic genomes.
PLOS Genetics | 2010
Simon Drouin; Louise Laramée; Pierre-Étienne Jacques; Audrey Forest; Maxime Bergeron; François Robert
Histone deacetylase Rpd3 is part of two distinct complexes: the large (Rpd3L) and small (Rpd3S) complexes. While Rpd3L targets specific promoters for gene repression, Rpd3S is recruited to ORFs to deacetylate histones in the wake of RNA polymerase II, to prevent cryptic initiation within genes. Methylation of histone H3 at lysine 36 by the Set2 methyltransferase is thought to mediate the recruitment of Rpd3S. Here, we confirm by ChIP–Chip that Rpd3S binds active ORFs. Surprisingly, however, Rpd3S is not recruited to all active genes, and its recruitment is Set2-independent. However, Rpd3S complexes recruited in the absence of H3K36 methylation appear to be inactive. Finally, we present evidence implicating the yeast DSIF complex (Spt4/5) and RNA polymerase II phosphorylation by Kin28 and Ctk1 in the recruitment of Rpd3S to active genes. Taken together, our data support a model where Set2-dependent histone H3 methylation is required for the activation of Rpd3S following its recruitment to the RNA polymerase II C-terminal domain.
PLOS Genetics | 2013
Pierre-Étienne Jacques; Justin Jeyakani; Guillaume Bourque
Although emerging evidence suggests that transposable elements (TEs) have contributed novel regulatory elements to the human genome, their global impact on transcriptional networks remains largely uncharacterized. Here we show that TEs have contributed to the human genome nearly half of its active elements. Using DNase I hypersensitivity data sets from ENCODE in normal, embryonic, and cancer cells, we found that 44% of open chromatin regions were in TEs and that this proportion reached 63% for primate-specific regions. We also showed that distinct subfamilies of endogenous retroviruses (ERVs) contributed significantly more accessible regions than expected by chance, with up to 80% of their instances in open chromatin. Based on these results, we further characterized 2,150 TE subfamily–transcription factor pairs that were bound in vivo or enriched for specific binding motifs, and observed that TEs contributing to open chromatin had higher levels of sequence conservation. We also showed that thousands of ERV–derived sequences were activated in a cell type–specific manner, especially in embryonic and cancer cells, and we demonstrated that this activity was associated with cell type–specific expression of neighboring genes. Taken together, these results demonstrate that TEs, and in particular ERVs, have contributed hundreds of thousands of novel regulatory elements to the primate lineage and reshaped the human transcriptional landscape.
Genes & Development | 2009
Nicolas Gévry; Sara Hardy; Pierre-Étienne Jacques; Liette Laflamme; Amy Svotelis; Francxois Robert; Luc Gaudreau
Incorporation of H2A.Z into the chromatin of inactive promoters has been shown to poise genes for their expression. Here we provide strong evidence that H2A.Z is incorporated into the promoter regions of estrogen receptor (ERalpha) target genes only upon gene induction, and that, in a cyclic pattern. Moreover, members of the human H2A.Z-depositing complex, p400, also follow the same gene recruitment kinetics as H2A.Z. Importantly, cellular depletion of H2A.Z or p400 leads to a severe defect in estrogen signaling, including loss of estrogen-specific cell proliferation. We find that incorporation of H2A.Z within TFF1 promoter chromatin allows nucleosomes to adopt preferential positions along the DNA translational axis. Finally, we provide evidence that H2A.Z is essential to allow estrogen-responsive enhancer function. Taken together, our results provide strong mechanistic insight into how H2A.Z regulates ERalpha-mediated gene expression and provide a novel link between H2A.Z-p400 and ERalpha-dependent gene regulation and enhancer function.
PLOS Genetics | 2009
Sara Hardy; Pierre-Étienne Jacques; Nicolas Gévry; Audrey Forest; Marie-Ève Fortin; Liette Laflamme; Luc Gaudreau; François Robert
A role for variant histone H2A.Z in gene expression is now well established but little is known about the mechanisms by which it operates. Using a combination of ChIP–chip, knockdown and expression profiling experiments, we show that upon gene induction, human H2A.Z associates with gene promoters and helps in recruiting the transcriptional machinery. Surprisingly, we also found that H2A.Z is randomly incorporated in the genome at low levels and that active transcription antagonizes this incorporation in transcribed regions. After cessation of transcription, random H2A.Z quickly reappears on genes, demonstrating that this incorporation utilizes an active mechanism. Within facultative heterochromatin, we observe a hyper accumulation of the variant histone, which might be due to the lack of transcription in these regions. These results show how chromatin structure and transcription can antagonize each other, therefore shaping chromatin and controlling gene expression.
Genome Biology | 2012
Niranjan Nagarajan; Denis Bertrand; Axel M. Hillmer; Zhi Jiang Zang; Fei Yao; Pierre-Étienne Jacques; Audrey S.M. Teo; Ioana Cutcutache; Zhenshui Zhang; Wah Heng Lee; Yee Yen Sia; Song Gao; Pramila Ariyaratne; Andrea Ho; Xing Yi Woo; Lavanya Veeravali; Choon Kiat Ong; Niantao Deng; Kartiki Vasant Desai; Chiea Chuen Khor; Martin L. Hibberd; Atif Shahab; Jaideepraj Rao; Mengchu Wu; Ming Teh; Feng Zhu; Sze Yung Chin; Brendan Pang; Jimmy By So; Guillaume Bourque
BackgroundGastric cancer is the second highest cause of global cancer mortality. To explore the complete repertoire of somatic alterations in gastric cancer, we combined massively parallel short read and DNA paired-end tag sequencing to present the first whole-genome analysis of two gastric adenocarcinomas, one with chromosomal instability and the other with microsatellite instability.ResultsIntegrative analysis and de novo assemblies revealed the architecture of a wild-type KRAS amplification, a common driver event in gastric cancer. We discovered three distinct mutational signatures in gastric cancer - against a genome-wide backdrop of oxidative and microsatellite instability-related mutational signatures, we identified the first exome-specific mutational signature. Further characterization of the impact of these signatures by combining sequencing data from 40 complete gastric cancer exomes and targeted screening of an additional 94 independent gastric tumors uncovered ACVR2A, RPL22 and LMAN1 as recurrently mutated genes in microsatellite instability-positive gastric cancer and PAPPA as a recurrently mutated gene in TP53 wild-type gastric cancer.ConclusionsThese results highlight how whole-genome cancer sequencing can uncover information relevant to tissue-specific carcinogenesis that would otherwise be missed from exome-sequencing data.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2007
Sébastien Rodrigue; Joëlle Brodeur; Pierre-Étienne Jacques; Alain L. Gervais; Ryszard Brzezinski; Luc Gaudreau
Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Mycobacterium bovis are responsible for infections that cause a substantial amount of death, suffering, and loss around the world. Still, relatively little is known about the mechanisms of gene expression in these bacteria. Here, we used genome-wide location assays to identify direct target genes for mycobacterial σ factors. Chromatin immunoprecipitation assays were performed with M. bovis BCG for Myc-tagged proteins expressed using an anhydrotetracycline-inducible promoter, and enriched DNA fragments were hybridized to a microarray representing intergenic regions from the M. tuberculosis H37Rv genome. Several putative target genes were validated by quantitative PCR. The corresponding transcriptional start sites were identified for σF, σC, and σK, and consensus promoter sequences are proposed. Our conclusions were supported by the results of in vitro transcription assays. We also examined the role of each holoenzyme in the expression of σ factor genes. Our results revealed that many σ factors are expressed from autoregulated promoters.
PLOS Genetics | 2012
Heike Wollmann; Sarah Holec; Keith Alden; Neil D. Clarke; Pierre-Étienne Jacques; Frédéric Berger
In animals, replication-coupled histone H3.1 can be distinguished from replication-independent histone H3.3. H3.3 variants are enriched at active genes and their promoters. Furthermore, H3.3 is specifically incorporated upon gene activation. Histone H3 variants evolved independently in plants and animals, and it is unclear whether different replication-independent H3.3 variants developed similar properties in both phyla. We studied Arabidopsis H3 variants in order to find core properties of this class of histones. Here we present genome-wide maps of H3.3 and H3.1 enrichment and the dynamic changes of their profiles upon cell division arrest. We find H3.3 enrichment to positively correlate with gene expression and to be biased towards the transcription termination site. In contrast with H3.1, heterochromatic regions are mostly depleted of H3.3. We report that, in planta, dynamic changes in H3.3 profiles are associated with the extensive remodeling of the transcriptome that occurs during cell differentiation. We propose that H3.3 dynamics are linked to transcription and are involved in resetting covalent histone marks at a genomic scale during plant development. Our study suggests that H3 variants properties likely result from functionally convergent evolution.