Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Timothée Lionnet is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Timothée Lionnet.


Nature Methods | 2011

A transgenic mouse for in vivo detection of endogenous labeled mRNA.

Timothée Lionnet; Kevin Czaplinski; Xavier Darzacq; Yaron Shav-Tal; Amber L. Wells; Jeffrey A. Chao; Hye Yoon Park; Valeria de Turris; Melissa Lopez-Jones; Robert H. Singer

Live-cell single mRNA imaging is a powerful tool but has been restricted in higher eukaryotes to artificial cell lines and reporter genes. We describe an approach that enables live-cell imaging of single endogenous labeled mRNA molecules transcribed in primary mammalian cells and tissue. We generated a knock-in mouse line with an MS2 binding site (MBS) cassette targeted to the 3′ untranslated region of the essential ββ-actin gene. As β-actin–MBS was ubiquitously expressed, we could uniquely address endogenous mRNA regulation in any tissue or cell type. We simultaneously followed transcription from the β-actin alleles in real time and observed transcriptional bursting in response to serum stimulation with precise temporal resolution. We tracked single endogenous labeled mRNA particles being transported in primary hippocampal neurons. The MBS cassette also enabled high-sensitivity fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), allowing detection and localization of single β-actin mRNA molecules in various mouse tissues.


Annual review of biophysics | 2009

Imaging Transcription in Living Cells

Xavier Darzacq; Jie Yao; Daniel R. Larson; Sebastien Z. Causse; Lana Bosanac; Valeria de Turris; Vera Ruda; Timothée Lionnet; Daniel Zenklusen; Benjamin Guglielmi; Robert Tjian; Robert H. Singer

The advent of new technologies for the imaging of living cells has made it possible to determine the properties of transcription, the kinetics of polymerase movement, the association of transcription factors, and the progression of the polymerase on the gene. We report here the current state of the field and the progress necessary to achieve a more complete understanding of the various steps in transcription. Our Consortium is dedicated to developing and implementing the technology to further this understanding.


Current Opinion in Cell Biology | 2011

Modern fluorescent proteins and imaging technologies to study gene expression, nuclear localization, and dynamics

Bin Wu; Kiryl D. Piatkevich; Timothée Lionnet; Robert H. Singer; Vladislav V. Verkhusha

Recent developments in reagent design can address problems in single cells that were not previously approachable. We have attempted to foresee what will become possible, and the sorts of biological problems that become tractable with these novel reagents. We have focused on the novel fluorescent proteins that allow convenient multiplexing, and provide for a time-dependent analysis of events in single cells. Methods for fluorescently labeling specific molecules, including endogenously expressed proteins and mRNA have progressed and are now commonly used in a variety of organisms. Finally, sensitive microscopic methods have become more routine practice. This article emphasizes that the time is right to coordinate these approaches for a new initiative on single cell imaging of biological molecules.


Science | 2015

An RNA biosensor for imaging the first round of translation from single cells to living animals

James M. Halstead; Timothée Lionnet; Johannes H. Wilbertz; Frank Wippich; Anne Ephrussi; Robert H. Singer; Jeffrey A. Chao

Measuring translation in space and time The ribosome translates the information contained within messenger RNAs (mRNAs) into proteins. When and where ribosomes encounter mRNAs can regulate gene expression. Halstead et al. developed an RNA biosensor that allows single molecules of mRNAs that have never been translated to be distinguished from ones that have undergone translation by the ribosome in living cells (see the Perspective by Popp and Maquat). The authors demonstrated the utility of their technique by examining the spatial and temporal regulation of translation in single cells and in Drosophila oocytes during development. Science, this issue p. 1367; see also p. 1316 Engineered reporters visualize the translation of single molecules of messenger RNA in living cells. [Also see Perspective by Popp and Maquat] Analysis of single molecules in living cells has provided quantitative insights into the kinetics of fundamental biological processes; however, the dynamics of messenger RNA (mRNA) translation have yet to be addressed. We have developed a fluorescence microscopy technique that reports on the first translation events of individual mRNA molecules. This allowed us to examine the spatiotemporal regulation of translation during normal growth and stress and during Drosophila oocyte development. We have shown that mRNAs are not translated in the nucleus but translate within minutes after export, that sequestration within P-bodies regulates translation, and that oskar mRNA is not translated until it reaches the posterior pole of the oocyte. This methodology provides a framework for studying initiation of protein synthesis on single mRNAs in living cells.


PLOS Pathogens | 2013

Colocalization of Different Influenza Viral RNA Segments in the Cytoplasm before Viral Budding as Shown by Single-molecule Sensitivity FISH Analysis

Nicholas S. Heaton; Qinshan Gao; Peter Palese; Robert H. Singer; Timothée Lionnet

The Influenza A virus genome consists of eight negative sense, single-stranded RNA segments. Although it has been established that most virus particles contain a single copy of each of the eight viral RNAs, the packaging selection mechanism remains poorly understood. Influenza viral RNAs are synthesized in the nucleus, exported into the cytoplasm and travel to the plasma membrane where viral budding and genome packaging occurs. Due to the difficulties in analyzing associated vRNPs while preserving information about their positions within the cell, it has remained unclear how and where during cellular trafficking the viral RNAs of different segments encounter each other. Using a multicolor single-molecule sensitivity fluorescence in situ hybridization (smFISH) approach, we have quantitatively monitored the colocalization of pairs of influenza viral RNAs in infected cells. We found that upon infection, the viral RNAs from the incoming particles travel together until they reach the nucleus. The viral RNAs were then detected in distinct locations in the nucleus; they are then exported individually and initially remain separated in the cytoplasm. At later time points, the different viral RNA segments gather together in the cytoplasm in a microtubule independent manner. Viral RNAs of different identities colocalize at a high frequency when they are associated with Rab11 positive vesicles, suggesting that Rab11 positive organelles may facilitate the association of different viral RNAs. Using engineered influenza viruses lacking the expression of HA or M2 protein, we showed that these viral proteins are not essential for the colocalization of two different viral RNAs in the cytoplasm. In sum, our smFISH results reveal that the viral RNAs travel together in the cytoplasm before their arrival at the plasma membrane budding sites. This newly characterized step of the genome packaging process demonstrates the precise spatiotemporal regulation of the infection cycle.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2011

Transcription of functionally related constitutive genes is not coordinated

Saumil J. Gandhi; Daniel Zenklusen; Timothée Lionnet; Robert H. Singer

Expression of an individual gene can vary considerably among genetically identical cells because of stochastic fluctuations in transcription. However, proteins comprising essential complexes or pathways have similar abundances and lower variability. It is not known whether coordination in the expression of subunits of essential complexes occurs at the level of transcription, mRNA abundance or protein expression. To directly measure the level of coordination in the expression of genes, we used highly sensitive fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) to count individual mRNAs of functionally related and unrelated genes within single Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells. Our results revealed that transcript levels of temporally induced genes are highly correlated in individual cells. In contrast, transcription of constitutive genes encoding essential subunits of complexes is not coordinated because of stochastic fluctuations. The coordination of these functional complexes therefore must occur post-transcriptionally, and likely post-translationally.


EMBO Reports | 2012

Transcription goes digital

Timothée Lionnet; Robert H. Singer

Transcription is a complex process that integrates the state of the cell and its environment to generate adequate responses for cell fitness and survival. Recent microscopy experiments have been able to monitor transcription from single genes in individual cells. These observations have revealed two striking features: transcriptional activity can vary markedly from one cell to another, and is subject to large changes over time, sometimes within minutes. How the chromatin structure, transcription machinery assembly and signalling networks generate such patterns is still unclear. In this review, we present the techniques used to investigate transcription from single genes, introduce quantitative modelling tools, and discuss transcription mechanisms and their implications for gene expression regulation.


Cell Reports | 2015

Cellular Levels of Signaling Factors Are Sensed by β-actin Alleles to Modulate Transcriptional Pulse Intensity

Alon Kalo; Itamar Kanter; Amit Shraga; Jonathan Sheinberger; Hadar Tzemach; Noa Kinor; Robert H. Singer; Timothée Lionnet; Yaron Shav-Tal

The transcriptional response of β-actin to extra-cellular stimuli is a paradigm for transcription factor complex assembly and regulation. Serum induction leads to a precisely timed pulse of β-actin transcription in the cell population. Actin protein is proposed to be involved in this response, but it is not known whether cellular actin levels affect nuclear β-actin transcription. We perturbed the levels of key signaling factors and examined the effect on the induced transcriptional pulse by following endogenous β-actin alleles in single living cells. Lowering serum response factor (SRF) protein levels leads to loss of pulse integrity, whereas reducing actin protein levels reveals positive feedback regulation, resulting in elevated gene activation and a prolonged transcriptional response. Thus, transcriptional pulse fidelity requires regulated amounts of signaling proteins, and perturbations in factor levels eliminate the physiological response, resulting in either tuning down or exaggeration of the transcriptional pulse.


Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology | 2010

Nuclear physics: quantitative single-cell approaches to nuclear organization and gene expression.

Timothée Lionnet; Bin Wu; David Grunwald; Robert H. Singer; Daniel R. Larson

The internal workings of the nucleus remain a mystery. A list of component parts exists, and in many cases their functional roles are known for events such as transcription, RNA processing, or nuclear export. Some of these components exhibit structural features in the nucleus, regions of concentration or bodies that have given rise to the concept of functional compartmentalization--that there are underlying organizational principles to be described. In contrast, a picture is emerging in which transcription appears to drive the assembly of the functional components required for gene expression, drawing from pools of excess factors. Unifying this seemingly dual nature requires a more rigorous approach, one in which components are tracked in time and space and correlated with onset of specific nuclear functions. In this chapter, we anticipate tools that will address these questions and provide the missing kinetics of nuclear function. These tools are based on analyzing the fluctuations inherent in the weak signals of endogenous nuclear processes and determining values for them. In this way, it will be possible eventually to provide a computational model describing the functional relationships of essential components.


Methods in Enzymology | 2016

TRICK: A Single-Molecule Method for Imaging the First Round of Translation in Living Cells and Animals.

J.M. Halstead; Johannes H. Wilbertz; Frank Wippich; Timothée Lionnet; Anne Ephrussi; Jeffrey A. Chao

The life of an mRNA is dynamic within a cell. The development of quantitative fluorescent microscopy techniques to image single molecules of RNA has allowed many aspects of the mRNA lifecycle to be directly observed in living cells. Recent advances in live-cell multicolor RNA imaging, however, have now made it possible to investigate RNA metabolism in greater detail. In this chapter, we present an overview of the design and implementation of the translating RNA imaging by coat protein knockoff RNA biosensor, which allows untranslated mRNAs to be distinguished from ones that have undergone a round of translation. The methods required for establishing this system in mammalian cell lines and Drosophila melanogaster oocytes are described here, but the principles may be applied to any experimental system.

Collaboration


Dive into the Timothée Lionnet's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Robert H. Singer

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jeffrey A. Chao

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bin Wu

Johns Hopkins University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Daniel R. Larson

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Xavier Darzacq

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Valeria de Turris

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kiryl D. Piatkevich

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Vladislav V. Verkhusha

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hye Yoon Park

Seoul National University

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge