Séverine Chambeyron
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
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Publication
Featured researches published by Séverine Chambeyron.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008
Séverine Chambeyron; Anna Popkova; Geneviève Payen-Groschêne; Christine Brun; Dorsaf Laouini; Alain Pélisson; Alain Bucheton
Germline silencing of transposable elements is essential for the maintenance of genome integrity. Recent results indicate that this repression is largely achieved through a RNA silencing pathway that involves Piwi-interacting RNAs (piRNAs). However the repressive mechanisms are not well understood. To address this question, we used the possibility to disrupt the repression of the Drosophila I element retrotransposon by hybrid dysgenesis. We show here that the repression of the functional I elements that are located in euchromatin requires proteins of the piRNA pathway, and that the amount of ovarian I element piRNAs correlates with the strength of the repression in the female germline. Antisense RNAs, which are likely used to produce antisense piRNAs, are transcribed by heterochromatic defective I elements, but efficient production of these antisense small RNAs requires the presence in the genome of euchromatic functional I elements. Finally, we demonstrate that the piRNA-induced silencing of the functional I elements is at least partially posttranscriptional. In a repressive background, these elements are still transcribed, but some of their sense transcripts are kept in nurse cell nuclear foci together with those of the Doc retrotransposon. In the absence of I element piRNAs, either in dysgenic females or in mutants of the piRNA silencing pathway, sense I element transcripts are transported toward the oocyte where retrotransposition occurs. Our results indicate that piRNAs are involved in a posttranscriptional gene-silencing mechanism resulting in RNA nuclear accumulation.
Genome Research | 2012
Thomas Grentzinger; Claudia Armenise; Christine Brun; Bruno Mugat; Vincent Serrano; Alain Pélisson; Séverine Chambeyron
The maintenance of genome integrity is an essential trait to the successful transmission of genetic information. In animal germ cells, piRNAs guide PIWI proteins to silence transposable elements (TEs) in order to maintain genome integrity. In insects, most TE silencing in the germline is achieved by secondary piRNAs that are produced by a feed-forward loop (the ping-pong cycle), which requires the piRNA-directed cleavage of two types of RNAs: mRNAs of functional euchromatic TEs and heterochromatic transcripts that contain defective TE sequences. The first cleavage that initiates such an amplification loop remains poorly understood. Taking advantage of the existence of strains that are devoid of functional copies of the LINE-like I-element, we report here that in such Drosophila ovaries, the initiation of a ping-pong cycle is exclusively achieved by secondary I-element piRNAs that are produced in the ovary and deposited in the embryonic germline. This unusual secondary piRNA biogenesis, detected in the absence of functional I-element copies, results from the processing of sense and antisense transcripts of several different defective I-element. Once acquired, for instance after ancestor aging, this capacity to produce heterochromatic-only secondary piRNAs is partially transmitted through generations via maternal piRNAs. Furthermore, such piRNAs acting as ping-pong initiators in a chromatin-independent manner confer to the progeny a high capacity to repress the I-element mobility. Our study explains, at the molecular level, the basis for epigenetic memory of maternal immunity that protects females from hybrid dysgenesis caused by transposition of paternally inherited functional I-element.
Cell Reports | 2015
Bridlin Barckmann; Stéphanie Pierson; Jérémy Dufourt; Catherine Papin; Claudia Armenise; Fillip Port; Thomas Grentzinger; Séverine Chambeyron; Grégory Baronian; Jean-Pierre Desvignes; Tomaz Curk; Martine Simonelig
Summary The Piwi-interacting RNA (piRNA) pathway plays an essential role in the repression of transposons in the germline. Other functions of piRNAs such as post-transcriptional regulation of mRNAs are now emerging. Here, we perform iCLIP with the PIWI protein Aubergine (Aub) and identify hundreds of maternal mRNAs interacting with Aub in the early Drosophila embryo. Gene expression profiling reveals that a proportion of these mRNAs undergo Aub-dependent destabilization during the maternal-to-zygotic transition. Strikingly, Aub-dependent unstable mRNAs encode germ cell determinants. iCLIP with an Aub mutant that is unable to bind piRNAs confirms piRNA-dependent binding of Aub to mRNAs. Base pairing between piRNAs and mRNAs can induce mRNA cleavage and decay that are essential for embryonic development. These results suggest general regulation of maternal mRNAs by Aub and piRNAs, which plays a key developmental role in the embryo through decay and localization of mRNAs encoding germ cell determinants.
EMBO Reports | 2013
Abdou Akkouche; Thomas Grentzinger; Marie Fablet; Claudia Armenise; Nelly Burlet; Virginie Braman; Séverine Chambeyron; Cristina Vieira
Transposable elements (TEs), whose propagation can result in severe damage to the host genome, are silenced in the animal gonad by Piwi‐interacting RNAs (piRNAs). piRNAs produced in the ovaries are deposited in the embryonic germline and initiate TE repression in the germline progeny. Whether the maternally transmitted piRNAs play a role in the silencing of somatic TEs is however unknown. Here we show that maternally transmitted piRNAs from the tirant retrotransposon in Drosophila are required for the somatic silencing of the TE and correlate with an increase in histone H3K9 trimethylation an active tirant copy.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Hélène Lopez-Maestre; Elias A.G. Carnelossi; Vincent Lacroix; Nelly Burlet; Bruno Mugat; Séverine Chambeyron; Claudia Marcia Aparecida Carareto; Cristina Vieira
Crosses between close species can lead to genomic disorders, often considered to be the cause of hybrid incompatibility, one of the initial steps in the speciation process. How these incompatibilities are established and what are their causes remain unclear. To understand the initiation of hybrid incompatibility, we performed reciprocal crosses between two species of Drosophila (D. mojavensis and D. arizonae) that diverged less than 1 Mya. We performed a genome-wide transcriptomic analysis on ovaries from parental lines and on hybrids from reciprocal crosses. Using an innovative procedure of co-assembling transcriptomes, we show that parental lines differ in the expression of their genes and transposable elements. Reciprocal hybrids presented specific gene categories and few transposable element families misexpressed relative to the parental lines. Because TEs are mainly silenced by piwi-interacting RNAs (piRNAs), we hypothesize that in hybrids the deregulation of specific TE families is due to the absence of such small RNAs. Small RNA sequencing confirmed our hypothesis and we therefore propose that TEs can indeed be major players of genome differentiation and be implicated in the first steps of genomic incompatibilities through small RNA regulation.
Methods of Molecular Biology | 2014
Thomas Grentzinger; Séverine Chambeyron
The recent development of High Throughput Sequencing technology has boosted the study of small regulatory RNA populations. A critical step prior to cloning and sequencing is purification of small RNA populations. Here, we report the optimization of an anion-exchange chromatography procedure in order to purify small regulatory RNAs bound on proteins. We developed this procedure to make it less time-consuming since our improved method no longer requires specific equipment and can easily be performed at the bench. We believe that our procedure will increase the robustness and accuracy of small RNA libraries in the future.
Methods | 2014
Thomas Grentzinger; Claudia Armenise; Alain Pélisson; Christine Brun; Bruno Mugat; Séverine Chambeyron
The discovery of the small regulatory RNAs has changed our vision of cellular regulations. Indeed, when loaded on Argonaute proteins they form ribonucleoprotein complexes (RNPs) that target complementary sequences to achieve widespread silencing mechanisms conserved in most eukaryotes. The recent development of deep sequencing approaches highly contributed to their detection. Small RNA isolation from cells and/or tissues remains a crucial stage to generate robust and relevant sequencing data. In 2006, a novel strategy based on anion-exchange chromatography has been proposed as an alternative to the standard size-isolation purification procedure. Using bioinformatic comparative analysis, we here demonstrate that anion-exchange chromatographic RNP purification prior to small RNA extraction unbiasedly enriches datasets in bona fide reads (small regulatory RNA sequences) and depletes endogenous contaminants (ribosomal RNAs and degradation RNA products). The resulting increase in sequencing depth provides a major benefit to study rare populations. We then developed a fast and basic manual procedure to purify such small non-coding RNAs using anion-exchange chromatography at the bench. We validated the efficiency of this new method and used this strategy to purify small RNAs from various tissues and organisms. We moreover determined that our manual purification increases the output of the previously described anion-exchange chromatography procedure.
Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 2002
Stéphanie Robin; Séverine Chambeyron; Christine Brun; Alain Bucheton; Isabelle Busseau
Abstract. I factors are non-LTR retrotransposons of Drosophila melanogaster that transpose at high frequency in the germline of females resulting from appropriate crosses, allowing in vivo studies of the retrotransposition process. Reverse transcription of a full-length RNA intermediate is thought to occur at the site of integration, using a 3′ hydroxyl group generated by endonucleolytic cleavage of the genomic DNA to prime synthesis of the first cDNA strand. This target-primed reverse transcription (TPRT) process is mediated by endonuclease and reverse transcriptase activities encoded by the element. We have designed a molecularly tagged, endonuclease-defective I element that can be mobilised with high efficiency by constructs that express the product of the I factor ORF2 in trans. This indicates that the endonuclease activity required for retrotransposition of the I factor can be provided in trans. Using this system, we show that the endonuclease domain of the R1Bm retrotransposon from Bombyx mori cannot functionally replace that of the I factor.
Retrovirology | 2009
Christine Brun; Séverine Chambeyron; Alain Pélisson; Vincent Serrano; Alain Bucheton
Retroviruses propagate also in invertebrates. The Drosophila genome contains many proviruses belonging to several families of endogenous retroviruses. These proviruses are usually repressed, but the mechanisms involved in their repression have been a mystery for a long time. Gypsy is a Drosophila endogenous retrovirus that is also infectious. Therefore it can propagate both horizontally as infectious retroviruses and vertically as endogenous retroviruses. It can transpose as well as retrotransposons. One of the principal ways of propagation of gypsy involves infection of the female germline by particles produced by somatic cells of the ovaries. This process is normally repressed by the host locus flamenco (flam). Restrictive flam alleles repress gypsy in these somatic cells. We have shown that the repression correlates with the amount of complementary 24-29 nucleotide long piRNAs (Piwi interacting RNAs). These small RNAs are responsible for the control of transposable elements. The silencing mechanisms associated with them are different from the mechanisms associated with siRNAs and miRNAs and have still to be elucidated. The amount of gypsy piRNAs is determined by the flam locus in a provirus copy number-independent manner and their production is triggered by pericentromeric defective proviruses located in the locus. flam also controls other retroelements. The flam region is very rich in defective copies of retrotransposons and endogenous retroviruses, including gypsy. Our results indicate that the piRNA silencing pathway may be considered as a sort of immunity system using the defective proviruses (or transposable elements) located in heterochromatin as a repertory directing the silencing machinery toward the transcripts of the corresponding functional retroviruses (or transposable elements).
Nucleic Acids Research | 2018
Bridlin Barckmann; Marianne El-Barouk; Alain Pélisson; Bruno Mugat; Blaise Li; Celine Franckhauser; Anna-Sophie Fiston Lavier; Marie Mirouze; Marie Fablet; Séverine Chambeyron
Abstract Transposable elements (TEs) are parasitic DNA sequences that threaten genome integrity by replicative transposition in host gonads. The Piwi-interacting RNAs (piRNAs) pathway is assumed to maintain Drosophila genome homeostasis by downregulating transcriptional and post-transcriptional TE expression in the ovary. However, the bursts of transposition that are expected to follow transposome derepression after piRNA pathway impairment have not yet been reported. Here, we show, at a genome-wide level, that piRNA loss in the ovarian somatic cells boosts several families of the endogenous retroviral subclass of TEs, at various steps of their replication cycle, from somatic transcription to germinal genome invasion. For some of these TEs, the derepression caused by the loss of piRNAs is backed up by another small RNA pathway (siRNAs) operating in somatic tissues at the post transcriptional level. Derepressed transposition during 70 successive generations of piRNA loss exponentially increases the genomic copy number by up to 10-fold.