Saaid Safieddine
Pasteur Institute
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Featured researches published by Saaid Safieddine.
Cell | 2006
Isabelle Roux; Saaid Safieddine; Régis Nouvian; M'hamed Grati; Marie-Christine Simmler; Amel Bahloul; Isabelle Perfettini; Morgane Le Gall; Philippe Rostaing; Ghislaine Hamard; Antoine Triller; Paul Avan; Tobias Moser; Christine Petit
The auditory inner hair cell (IHC) ribbon synapse operates with an exceptional temporal precision and maintains a high level of neurotransmitter release. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying IHC synaptic exocytosis are largely unknown. We studied otoferlin, a predicted C2-domain transmembrane protein, which is defective in a recessive form of human deafness. We show that otoferlin expression in the hair cells correlates with afferent synaptogenesis and find that otoferlin localizes to ribbon-associated synaptic vesicles. Otoferlin binds Ca(2+) and displays Ca(2+)-dependent interactions with the SNARE proteins syntaxin1 and SNAP25. Otoferlin deficient mice (Otof(-/-)) are profoundly deaf. Exocytosis in Otof(-/-) IHCs is almost completely abolished, despite normal ribbon synapse morphogenesis and Ca(2+) current. Thus, otoferlin is essential for a late step of synaptic vesicle exocytosis and may act as the major Ca(2+) sensor triggering membrane fusion at the IHC ribbon synapse.
The EMBO Journal | 2000
Polonca Küssel-Andermann; Aziz El-Amraoui; Saaid Safieddine; Sylvie Nouaille; Isabelle Perfettini; Marc Lecuit; Pascale Cossart; Uwe Wolfrum; Christine Petit
Defects in myosin VIIA are responsible for deafness in the human and mouse. The role of this unconventional myosin in the sensory hair cells of the inner ear is not yet understood. Here we show that the C‐terminal FERM domain of myosin VIIA binds to a novel transmembrane protein, vezatin, which we identified by a yeast two‐hybrid screen. Vezatin is a ubiquitous protein of adherens cell–cell junctions, where it interacts with both myosin VIIA and the cadherin–catenins complex. Its recruitment to adherens junctions implicates the C‐terminal region of α‐catenin. Taken together, these data suggest that myosin VIIA, anchored by vezatin to the cadherin–catenins complex, creates a tension force between adherens junctions and the actin cytoskeleton that is expected to strengthen cell–cell adhesion. In the inner ear sensory hair cells vezatin is, in addition, concentrated at another membrane–membrane interaction site, namely at the fibrillar links interconnecting the bases of adjacent stereocilia. In myosin VIIA‐defective mutants, inactivity of the vezatin–myosin VIIA complex at both sites could account for splaying out of the hair cell stereocilia.
Annual Review of Neuroscience | 2012
Saaid Safieddine; Aziz El-Amraoui; Christine Petit
Cochlear inner hair cells (IHCs), the mammalian auditory sensory cells, encode acoustic signals with high fidelity by Graded variations of their membrane potential trigger rapid and sustained vesicle exocytosis at their ribbon synapses. The kinetics of glutamate release allows proper transfer of sound information to the primary afferent auditory neurons. Understanding the physiological properties and underlying molecular mechanisms of the IHC synaptic machinery, and especially its high temporal acuity, which is pivotal to speech perception, is a central issue of auditory science. During the past decade, substantial progress in high-resolution imaging and electrophysiological recordings, as well as the development of genetic approaches both in humans and in mice, has produced major insights regarding the morphological, physiological, and molecular characteristics of this synapse. Here we review this recent knowledge and discuss how it enlightens the way the IHC ribbon synapse develops and functions.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2010
Maryline Beurg; Nicolas Michalski; Saaid Safieddine; Yohan Bouleau; Ralf Schneggenburger; Edwin R. Chapman; Christine Petit; Didier Dulon
In pre-hearing mice, vesicle exocytosis at cochlear inner hair cell (IHC) ribbon synapses is triggered by spontaneous Ca2+ spikes. At the onset of hearing, IHC exocytosis is then exclusively driven by graded potentials, and is characterized by higher Ca2+ efficiency and improved synchronization of vesicular release. The molecular players involved in this transition are still unknown. Here we addressed the involvement of synaptotagmins and otoferlin as putative Ca2+ sensors in IHC exocytosis during postnatal maturation of the cochlea. Using cell capacitance measurements, we showed that Ca2+-evoked exocytosis in mouse IHCs switches from an otoferlin-independent to an otoferlin-dependent mechanism at postnatal day 4. During this early exocytotic period, several synaptotagmins (Syts), including Syt1, Syt2 and Syt7, were detected in IHCs. The exocytotic response as well as the release of the readily releasable vesicle pool (RRP) was, however, unchanged in newborn mutant mice lacking Syt1, Syt2 or Syt7 (Syt1−/−, Syt2−/− and Syt7−/− mice). We only found a defect in RRP recovery in Syt1−/− mice which was apparent as a strongly reduced response to repetitive stimulations. In post-hearing Syt2−/− and Syt7−/− mutant mice, IHC synaptic exocytosis was unaffected. The transient expression of Syt1 and Syt2, which were no longer detected in IHCs after the onset of hearing, indicates that these two most common Ca2+-sensors in CNS synapses are not involved in mature IHCs. We suggest that otoferlin underlies highly efficient Ca2+-dependent membrane-membrane fusion, a process likely essential to increase the probability and synchrony of vesicle fusion events at the mature IHC ribbon synapse.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000
Polonca Küssel-Andermann; Aziz El-Amraoui; Saaid Safieddine; Jean-Pierre Hardelin; Sylvie Nouaille; Jacques Camonis; Christine Petit
To gain an insight into the cellular function of the unconventional myosin VIIA, we sought proteins interacting with its tail region, using the yeast two-hybrid system. Here we report on one of the five candidate interactors we identified, namely the type Iα regulatory subunit (RIα) of protein kinase A. The interaction of RIα with myosin VIIA tail was demonstrated by coimmunoprecipitation from transfected HEK293 cells. Analysis of deleted constructs in the yeast two-hybrid system showed that the interaction of myosin VIIA with RIα involves the dimerization domain of RIα. In vitrobinding assays identified the C-terminal “4.1, ezrin, radixin, moesin” (FERM)-like domain of myosin VIIA as the interacting domain. In humans and mice, mutations in the myosin VIIAgene underlie hereditary hearing loss, which may or may not be associated with visual deficiency. Immunohistofluorescence revealed that myosin VIIA and RIα are coexpressed in the outer hair cells of the cochlea and rod photoreceptor cells of the retina. Our results strongly suggest that myosin VIIA is a novel protein kinase A-anchoring protein that targets protein kinase A to definite subcellular sites of these sensory cells.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2008
Maryline Beurg; Saaid Safieddine; Isabelle Roux; Yohan Bouleau; Christine Petit; Didier Dulon
Immature cochlear outer hair cells (OHCs) make transient synaptic contacts (ribbon synapses) with type I afferent nerve fibers, but direct evidence of synaptic vesicle exocytosis is still missing. We thus investigated calcium-dependent exocytosis in murine OHCs at postnatal day 2 (P2)–P3, a developmental stage when calcium current maximum amplitude was the highest. By using time-resolved patch-clamp capacitance measurements, we show that voltage step activation of L-type calcium channels triggers fast membrane capacitance increase. Capacitance increase displayed two kinetic components, which are likely to reflect two functionally distinct pools of synaptic vesicles, a readily releasable pool (RRP; τ = 79 ms) and a slowly releasable pool (τ = 870 ms). The RRP size and maximal release rate were estimated at ∼1200 vesicles and ∼15,000 vesicles/s, respectively. In addition, we found a linear relationship between capacitance increase and calcium influx, like in mature inner hair cells (IHCs). These results give strong support to the existence of efficient calcium-dependent neurotransmitter release in immature OHCs. Moreover, we show that immature OHCs, just like immature IHCs, are able to produce regenerative calcium-dependent action potentials that could trigger synaptic exocytosis in vivo. Finally, the evoked membrane capacitance increases were abolished in P2–P3 OHCs from mutant Otof−/− mice defective for otoferlin, despite normal calcium currents. We conclude that otoferlin, the putative major calcium sensor at IHC ribbon synapses, is essential to synaptic exocytosis in immature OHCs too.
Current Topics in Developmental Biology | 2008
Michel Leibovici; Saaid Safieddine; Christine Petit
Hearing impairment is a frequent condition in humans. Identification of the causative genes for the early onset forms of isolated deafness began 15 years ago and has been very fruitful. To date, approximately 50 causative genes have been identified. Yet, limited information regarding the underlying pathogenic mechanisms can be derived from hearing tests in deaf patients. This chapter describes the success of mouse models in the elucidation of some pathophysiological processes in the auditory sensory organ, the cochlea. These models have revealed a variety of defective structures and functions at the origin of deafness genetic forms. This is illustrated by three different examples: (1) the DFNB9 deafness form, a synaptopathy of the cochlear sensory cells where otoferlin is defective; (2) the Usher syndrome, in which deafness is related to abnormal development of the hair bundle, the mechanoreceptive structure of the sensory cells to sound; (3) the DFNB1 deafness form, which is the most common form of inherited deafness in Caucasian populations, mainly caused by connexin-26 defects that alter gap junction communication between nonsensory cochlear cells.
Human Molecular Genetics | 2009
Isabelle Le Roux; Suzanne Hosie; Stuart L. Johnson; Amel Bahloul; Nadège Cayet; Sylvie Nouaille; Corné J. Kros; Christine Petit; Saaid Safieddine
The ribbon synapses of auditory inner hair cells (IHCs) undergo morphological and electrophysiological transitions during cochlear development. Here we report that myosin VI (Myo6), an actin-based motor protein involved in genetic forms of deafness, is necessary for some of these changes to occur. By using post-embedding immunogold electron microscopy, we showed that Myo6 is present at the IHC synaptic active zone. In Snells waltzer mutant mice, which lack Myo6, IHC ionic currents and ribbon synapse maturation proceeded normally until at least post-natal day 6. In adult mutant mice, however, the IHCs displayed immature potassium currents and still fired action potentials, as normally only observed in immature IHCs. In addition, the number of ribbons per IHC was reduced by 30%, and 30% of the remaining ribbons were morphologically immature. Ca2+-dependent exocytosis probed by capacitance measurement was markedly reduced despite normal Ca2+ currents and the large proportion of morphologically mature synapses, which suggests additional defects, such as loose Ca2+-exocytosis coupling or inefficient vesicular supply. Finally, we provide evidence that Myo6 and otoferlin, a putative Ca2+ sensor of synaptic exocytosis also involved in a genetic form of deafness, interact at the IHC ribbon synapse, and we suggest that this interaction is involved in the recycling of synaptic vesicles. Our findings thus uncover essential roles for Myo6 at the IHC ribbon synapse, in addition to that proposed in membrane turnover and anchoring at the apical surface of the hair cells.
eLife | 2017
Nicolas Michalski; Juan D Goutman; Sarah M. Auclair; Jacques Boutet de Monvel; Margot Tertrais; Alice Emptoz; Alexandre Parrin; Sylvie Nouaille; Marc Guillon; Martin Sachse; Danica Ciric; Amel Bahloul; Jean-Pierre Hardelin; Roger Bryan Sutton; P. Avan; Shyam S. Krishnakumar; Didier Dulon; Saaid Safieddine; Christine Petit
Hearing relies on rapid, temporally precise, and sustained neurotransmitter release at the ribbon synapses of sensory cells, the inner hair cells (IHCs). This process requires otoferlin, a six C2-domain, Ca2+-binding transmembrane protein of synaptic vesicles. To decipher the role of otoferlin in the synaptic vesicle cycle, we produced knock-in mice (Otof Ala515,Ala517/Ala515,Ala517) with lower Ca2+-binding affinity of the C2C domain. The IHC ribbon synapse structure, synaptic Ca2+ currents, and otoferlin distribution were unaffected in these mutant mice, but auditory brainstem response wave-I amplitude was reduced. Lower Ca2+ sensitivity and delay of the fast and sustained components of synaptic exocytosis were revealed by membrane capacitance measurement upon modulations of intracellular Ca2+ concentration, by varying Ca2+ influx through voltage-gated Ca2+-channels or Ca2+ uncaging. Otoferlin thus functions as a Ca2+ sensor, setting the rates of primed vesicle fusion with the presynaptic plasma membrane and synaptic vesicle pool replenishment in the IHC active zone.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017
Alice Emptoz; Vincent Michel; Andrea Lelli; Omar Akil; Jacques Boutet de Monvel; Ghizlene Lahlou; Anaïs Meyer; Typhaine Dupont; Sylvie Nouaille; Elody Ey; Filipa França de Barros; Mathieu Beraneck; Didier Dulon; Jean-Pierre Hardelin; Lawrence R. Lustig; Paul Avan; Christine Petit; Saaid Safieddine
Significance Hearing and balance impairments are major concerns and a serious burden for public health, but still lack an effective curative therapy. We assessed inner ear functions in a mouse model of Usher syndrome type 1, a developmental disorder characterized by profound congenital deafness and balance deficit, after local gene therapy. Viral transfer of the wild-type cDNA to the inner ear of the mutant mice shortly after birth resulted in a partial restoration of hearing and a long-lasting, almost complete, removal of the balance defect. The present results provide a basis for future clinical trials in humans. Our understanding of the mechanisms underlying inherited forms of inner ear deficits has considerably improved during the past 20 y, but we are still far from curative treatments. We investigated gene replacement as a strategy for restoring inner ear functions in a mouse model of Usher syndrome type 1G, characterized by congenital profound deafness and balance disorders. These mice lack the scaffold protein sans, which is involved both in the morphogenesis of the stereociliary bundle, the sensory antenna of inner ear hair cells, and in the mechanoelectrical transduction process. We show that a single delivery of the sans cDNA by the adenoassociated virus 8 to the inner ear of newborn mutant mice reestablishes the expression and targeting of the protein to the tips of stereocilia. The therapeutic gene restores the architecture and mechanosensitivity of stereociliary bundles, improves hearing thresholds, and durably rescues these mice from the balance defects. Our results open up new perspectives for efficient gene therapy of cochlear and vestibular disorders by showing that even severe dysmorphogenesis of stereociliary bundles can be corrected.