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Dive into the research topics where Véronique Azuara is active.

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Featured researches published by Véronique Azuara.


Nature Cell Biology | 2006

Chromatin signatures of pluripotent cell lines.

Véronique Azuara; Pascale Perry; Stephan Sauer; Mikhail Spivakov; Helle F. Jørgensen; Rosalind Margaret John; Mina Gouti; Miguel Casanova; Gary Warnes; Matthias Merkenschlager; Amanda G. Fisher

Epigenetic genome modifications are thought to be important for specifying the lineage and developmental stage of cells within a multicellular organism. Here, we show that the epigenetic profile of pluripotent embryonic stem cells (ES) is distinct from that of embryonic carcinoma cells, haematopoietic stem cells (HSC) and their differentiated progeny. Silent, lineage-specific genes replicated earlier in pluripotent cells than in tissue-specific stem cells or differentiated cells and had unexpectedly high levels of acetylated H3K9 and methylated H3K4. Unusually, in ES cells these markers of open chromatin were also combined with H3K27 trimethylation at some non-expressed genes. Thus, pluripotency of ES cells is characterized by a specific epigenetic profile where lineage-specific genes may be accessible but, if so, carry repressive H3K27 trimethylation modifications. H3K27 methylation is functionally important for preventing expression of these genes in ES cells as premature expression occurs in embryonic ectoderm development (Eed)-deficient ES cells. Our data suggest that lineage-specific genes are primed for expression in ES cells but are held in check by opposing chromatin modifications.


Genes & Development | 2009

Senescence impairs successful reprogramming to pluripotent stem cells

Ana Banito; Sheikh Tamir Rashid; Juan Carlos Acosta; Si De Li; Carlos Filipe Pereira; Imbisaat Geti; Sandra Pinho; José C.R. Silva; Véronique Azuara; Martin J. Walsh; Ludovic Vallier; Jesús Gil

Somatic cells can be reprogrammed into induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells by overexpressing combinations of factors such as Oct4, Sox2, Klf4, and c-Myc. Reprogramming is slow and stochastic, suggesting the existence of barriers limiting its efficiency. Here we identify senescence as one such barrier. Expression of the four reprogramming factors triggers senescence by up-regulating p53, p16(INK4a), and p21(CIP1). Induction of DNA damage response and chromatin remodeling of the INK4a/ARF locus are two of the mechanisms behind senescence induction. Crucially, ablation of different senescence effectors improves the efficiency of reprogramming, suggesting novel strategies for maximizing the generation of iPS cells.


Journal of Cell Science | 2006

Neural induction promotes large-scale chromatin reorganisation of the Mash1 locus

Ruth R. E. Williams; Véronique Azuara; Pascale Perry; Stephan Sauer; Maria Dvorkina; Helle F. Jørgensen; Jeffery Roix; Philip G. McQueen; Tom Misteli; Matthias Merkenschlager; Amanda G. Fisher

Determining how genes are epigenetically regulated to ensure their correct spatial and temporal expression during development is key to our understanding of cell lineage commitment. Here we examined epigenetic changes at an important proneural regulator gene Mash1 (Ascl1), as embryonic stem (ES) cells commit to the neural lineage. In ES cells where the Mash1 gene is transcriptionally repressed, the locus replicated late in S phase and was preferentially positioned at the nuclear periphery with other late-replicating genes (Neurod, Sprr2a). This peripheral location was coupled with low levels of histone H3K9 acetylation at the Mash1 promoter and enhanced H3K27 methylation but surprisingly location was not affected by removal of the Ezh2/Eed HMTase complex or several other chromatin-silencing candidates (G9a, SuV39h-1, Dnmt-1, Dnmt-3a and Dnmt-3b). Upon neural induction however, Mash1 transcription was upregulated (>100-fold), switched its time of replication from late to early in S phase and relocated towards the interior of the nucleus. This spatial repositioning was selective for neural commitment because Mash1 was peripheral in ES-derived mesoderm and other non-neural cell types. A bidirectional analysis of replication timing across a 2 Mb region flanking the Mash1 locus showed that chromatin changes were focused at Mash1. These results suggest that Mash1 is regulated by changes in chromatin structure and location and implicate the nuclear periphery as an important environment for maintaining the undifferentiated state of ES cells.


Nature Immunology | 2001

Nonequivalent nuclear location of immunoglobulin alleles in B lymphocytes

Jane A. Skok; Karen E. Brown; Véronique Azuara; Marie-Laure Caparros; Jonathan Baxter; Katalin Takacs; Niall Dillon; David Gray; Robert P. Perry; Matthias Merkenschlager; Amanda G. Fisher

Individual B lymphocytes normally express immunoglobulin (Ig) proteins derived from single Ig heavy chain (H) and light chain (L) alleles. Allelic exclusion ensures monoallelic expression of Ig genes by each B cell to maintain single receptor specificity. Here we provide evidence that at later stages of B cell development, additional mechanisms may contribute to prioritizing expression of single IgH and IgL alleles. Fluorescent in situ hybridization analysis of primary splenic B cells isolated from normal and genetically manipulated mice showed that endogenous IgH, κ and λ alleles localized to different subnuclear environments after activation and had differential expression patterns. However, this differential recruitment and expression of Ig alleles was not typically seen among transformed B cell lines. These data raise the possibility that epigenetic factors help maintain the monoallelic expression of Ig.


Cell Stem Cell | 2012

MicroRNA Regulation of Cbx7 Mediates a Switch of Polycomb Orthologs during ESC Differentiation

Ana O'Loghlen; Ana M. Muñoz-Cabello; Alexandre Gaspar-Maia; Hsan-Au Wu; Ana Banito; Natalia Kunowska; Tomas Racek; Helen Pemberton; Patrizia Beolchi; Fabrice Lavial; Osamu Masui; Michiel Vermeulen; Thomas Carroll; Johannes Graumann; Edith Heard; Niall Dillon; Véronique Azuara; Ambrosius P. Snijders; Gordon Peters; Emily Bernstein; Jesús Gil

Summary The Polycomb Group (PcG) of chromatin modifiers regulates pluripotency and differentiation. Mammalian genomes encode multiple homologs of the Polycomb repressive complex 1 (PRC1) components, including five orthologs of the Drosophila Polycomb protein (Cbx2, Cbx4, Cbx6, Cbx7, and Cbx8). We have identified Cbx7 as the primary Polycomb ortholog of PRC1 complexes in embryonic stem cells (ESCs). The expression of Cbx7 is downregulated during ESC differentiation, preceding the upregulation of Cbx2, Cbx4, and Cbx8, which are directly repressed by Cbx7. Ectopic expression of Cbx7 inhibits differentiation and X chromosome inactivation and enhances ESC self-renewal. Conversely, Cbx7 knockdown induces differentiation and derepresses lineage-specific markers. In a functional screen, we identified the miR-125 and miR-181 families as regulators of Cbx7 that are induced during ESC differentiation. Ectopic expression of these miRNAs accelerates ESC differentiation via regulation of Cbx7. These observations establish a critical role for Cbx7 and its regulatory miRNAs in determining pluripotency.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Role of DNA Methylation in Stable Gene Repression

Laura Lande-Diner; Jianmin Zhang; Ittai Ben-Porath; Ninette Amariglio; Ilana Keshet; Merav Hecht; Véronique Azuara; Amanda G. Fisher; Gideon Rechavi; Howard Cedar

A large fraction of the animal genome is maintained in a transcriptionally repressed state throughout development. By generating viable Dnmt1-/- mouse cells we have been able to study the effect of DNA methylation on both gene expression and chromatin structure. Our results confirm that the underlying methylation pattern has a profound effect on histone acetylation and is the major effector of me-H3(K4) in the animal genome. We demonstrate that many methylated genes are subject to additional repression mechanisms that also impact on histone acetylation, and the data suggest that late replication timing may play an important role in this process.


Cell Cycle | 2004

A Dynamic Switch in the Replication Timing of Key Regulator Genes in Embryonic Stem Cells upon Neural Induction

Pascale Perry; Stephan Sauer; Nathalie Billon; William D. Richardson; Mikhail Spivakov; Gary Warnes; Frederick J. Livesey; Matthias Merkenschlager; Amanda G. Fisher; Véronique Azuara

Mammalian embryonic stem (ES) cells can either self-renew or generate progenitor cells that have a more restricted developmental potential. This provides an important model system to ask how pluripotency, cell commitment and differentiation are regulated at the level of chromatin-based changes that distinguish stem cells from their differentiated progeny. Here we show that the differentiation of ES cells to neural progenitors results in dynamic changes in the epigenetic status of multiple genes that encode transcription factors critical for early embryonic development or lineage specification (22 of 43). In particular, we demonstrate that DNA replication at a subset of neural-associated genes including Pax3, Pax6, Irx3, Nkx2.9, and Mash1 is advanced upon neural induction, consistent with increased locus accessibility. Conversely, many ES-associated genes including Oct4, Nanog, Utf1, Foxd3, Cripto and Rex1 that replicate early in ES cells switch their replication timing to later in S-phase in response to differentiation. Detailed analysis of the Rex1 locus reveals that delayed replication extends to a 2.8Mb region surrounding the gene and is associated with substantial reductions in the level of histone H3K9 and H4 acetylation at the promoter. These results show that loss of pluripotency (and lineage choice) is associated with extensive and predictable changes in the replication timing of key regulator genes.


Nature Cell Biology | 2003

Heritable gene silencing in lymphocytes delays chromatid resolution without affecting the timing of DNA replication.

Véronique Azuara; Karen E. Brown; Ruth R. E. Williams; Natasha Webb; Niall Dillon; Richard Festenstein; Veronica J. Buckle; Matthias Merkenschlager; Amanda G. Fisher

Temporal control of DNA replication has been implicated in epigenetic regulation of gene expression on the basis of observations that certain tissue-specific genes replicate earlier in expressing than non-expressing cells. Here, we show evidence that several leukocyte-specific genes replicate early in lymphocytes regardless of their transcription and also in fibroblasts, where these genes are never normally expressed. Instead, the heritable silencing of some genes (Rag-1, TdT, CD8α and λ5) and their spatial recruitment to heterochromatin domains within the nucleus of lymphocytes resulted in a markedly delayed resolution of sister chromatids into doublet signals discernable by 3D fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). Integration of transgenes within heterochromatin (in cis) did, however, confer late replication and this was reversed after variegated transgene expression. These findings emphasise that chromosomal location is important for defining the replication timing of genes and show that retarded sister-chromatid resolution is a novel feature of inactive chromatin.


Development | 2010

Ring1B and Suv39h1 delineate distinct chromatin states at bivalent genes during early mouse lineage commitment

Olivia Alder; Fabrice Lavial; Anne Helness; Emily Brookes; Sandra Pinho; Anil Chandrashekran; Philippe Arnaud; Ana Pombo; Laura P. O'Neill; Véronique Azuara

Pluripotent cells develop within the inner cell mass of blastocysts, a mosaic of cells surrounded by an extra-embryonic layer, the trophectoderm. We show that a set of somatic lineage regulators (including Hox, Gata and Sox factors) that carry bivalent chromatin enriched in H3K27me3 and H3K4me2 are selectively targeted by Suv39h1-mediated H3K9me3 and de novo DNA methylation in extra-embryonic versus embryonic (pluripotent) lineages, as assessed both in blastocyst-derived stem cells and in vivo. This stably repressed state is linked with a loss of gene priming for transcription through the exclusion of PRC1 (Ring1B) and RNA polymerase II complexes at bivalent, lineage-inappropriate genes upon trophoblast lineage commitment. Collectively, our results suggest a mutually exclusive role for Ring1B and Suv39h1 in regulating distinct chromatin states at key developmental genes and propose a novel mechanism by which lineage specification can be reinforced during early development.


Genome Biology | 2007

The impact of chromatin modifiers on the timing of locus replication in mouse embryonic stem cells

Helle F. Jørgensen; Véronique Azuara; Shannon Amoils; Mikhail Spivakov; Anna Terry; Tatyana B. Nesterova; Bradley S. Cobb; Bernard Ramsahoye; Matthias Merkenschlager; Amanda G. Fisher

BackgroundThe time of locus replication during S-phase is tightly regulated and correlates with chromatin state. Embryonic stem (ES) cells have an unusual chromatin profile where many developmental regulator genes that are not yet expressed are marked by both active and repressive histone modifications. This poised or bivalent state is also characterized by locus replication in early S-phase in ES cells, while replication timing is delayed in cells with restricted developmental options.ResultsHere we used a panel of mutant mouse ES cell lines lacking important chromatin modifiers to dissect the relationship between chromatin structure and replication timing. We show that temporal control of satellite DNA replication is sensitive to loss of a variety of chromatin modifiers, including Mll, Eed, Dnmt1, Suv39h1/h2 and Dicer. The replication times of many single copy loci, including a 5 Mb contiguous region surrounding the Rex1 gene, were retained in chromatin modifier mutant ES cells, although a subset of loci were affected.ConclusionThis analysis demonstrates the importance of chromatin modifiers for maintaining correct replication of satellite sequences in pluripotent ES cells and highlights the sensitivity of some single copy loci to the influence of chromatin modifiers. Abundant histone acetylation is shown to correlate well with early replication. Surprisingly, loss of DNA methylation or histone methylation was tolerated by many loci, suggesting that these modifications may be less influential for the timing of euchromatin replication.

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Jesús Gil

Imperial College London

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Niall Dillon

Imperial College London

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Ana Banito

Imperial College London

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