Véronique Berteaux-Lecellier
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
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Publication
Featured researches published by Véronique Berteaux-Lecellier.
Cell | 1995
Véronique Berteaux-Lecellier; Marguerite Picard; Catherine Thompson-Coffe; Denise Zickler; Arlette Panvier-Adoutte; Jean-Marc Simonet
The car1 gene of the filamentous fungus Podospora anserina was cloned by complementation of a mutant defective for caryogamy (nuclear fusion), a process required for sexual sporulation. This gene encodes a protein that shows similarity to the mammalian PAF1 protein (Zellweger syndrome). Besides sequence similarity, the two proteins share a transmembrane domain and the same type of zinc finger motif. A combination of molecular, physiological, genetical, and ultrastructural approaches gave evidence that the P. anserina car1 protein is actually a peroxisomal protein. This study shows that peroxisomes are required at a specific stage of sexual development, at least in P. anserina, and that a functional homolog of the PAF1 gene is present in a lower eucaryote.
Traffic | 2008
Leonardo Peraza-Reyes; Denise Zickler; Véronique Berteaux-Lecellier
Peroxisomes are involved in a variety of metabolic pathways and developmental processes. In the filamentous fungus Podospora anserina, absence of different peroxins implicated in peroxisome matrix protein import leads to different developmental defects. Lack of the RING‐finger complex peroxin PEX2 blocks sexual development at the dikaryotic stage, while in absence of both receptors, PEX5 and PEX7, karyogamy and meiosis can proceed and sexual spores are formed. This suggests a complex role for PEX2 that prompted us to study the developmental involvement of the RING‐finger complex. We show that, like PEX2, the two other proteins of the complex, PEX10 and PEX12, are equally implicated in peroxisome biogenesis and that absence of each or all these proteins lead to the same developmental defect. Moreover, we demonstrate that peroxisome localization of PEX2 is not drastically affected in the absence of PEX10 and PEX12 and that the upregulation of these latter RING‐finger peroxins does not compensate for the lack of a second one, suggesting that the three proteins work together in development but independent of their function in peroxisome biogenesis.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Anne Bourdais; Frédérique Bidard; Denise Zickler; Véronique Berteaux-Lecellier; Philippe Silar; Eric Espagne
Catalases are enzymes that play critical roles in protecting cells against the toxic effects of hydrogen peroxide. They are implicated in various physiological and pathological conditions but some of their functions remain unclear. In order to decipher the role(s) of catalases during the life cycle of Podospora anserina, we analyzed the role of the four monofunctional catalases and one bifunctional catalase-peroxidase genes present in its genome. The five genes were deleted and the phenotypes of each single and all multiple mutants were investigated. Intriguingly, although the genes are differently expressed during the life cycle, catalase activity is dispensable during both vegetative growth and sexual reproduction in laboratory conditions. Catalases are also not essential for cellulose or fatty acid assimilation. In contrast, they are strictly required for efficient utilization of more complex biomass like wood shavings by allowing growth in the presence of lignin. The secreted CATB and cytosolic CAT2 are the major catalases implicated in peroxide resistance, while CAT2 is the major player during complex biomass assimilation. Our results suggest that P. anserina produces external H2O2 to assimilate complex biomass and that catalases are necessary to protect the cells during this process. In addition, the phenotypes of strains lacking only one catalase gene suggest that a decrease of catalase activity improves the capacity of the fungus to degrade complex biomass.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Evelyne Coppin; Véronique Berteaux-Lecellier; Frédérique Bidard; Sylvain Brun; Gwenaël Ruprich-Robert; Eric Espagne; Jinane Aït-Benkhali; Anne Goarin; Audrey Nesseir; Sara Planamente; Robert Debuchy; Philippe Silar
Higher fungi, which comprise ascomycetes and basidiomycetes, play major roles in the biosphere. Their evolutionary success may be due to the extended dikaryotic stage of their life cycle, which is the basis for their scientific name: the Dikarya. Dikaryosis is maintained by similar structures, the clamp in basidiomycetes and the crozier in ascomycetes. Homeodomain transcription factors are required for clamp formation in all basidiomycetes studied. We identified all the homeobox genes in the filamentous ascomycete fungus Podospora anserina and constructed deletion mutants for each of these genes and for a number of gene combinations. Croziers developed normally in these mutants, including those with up to six deleted homeogenes. However, some mutants had defects in maturation of the fruiting body, an effect that could be rescued by providing wild-type maternal hyphae. Analysis of mutants deficient in multiple homeogenes revealed interactions between the genes, suggesting that they operate as a complex network. Similar to their role in animals and plants, homeodomain transcription factors in ascomycetes are involved in shaping multicellular structures.
Molecular Microbiology | 2011
Leonardo Peraza-Reyes; Sylvie Arnaise; Denise Zickler; Evelyne Coppin; Robert Debuchy; Véronique Berteaux-Lecellier
Peroxisome biogenesis relies on two known peroxisome matrix protein import pathways that are mediated by the receptors PEX5 and PEX7. These pathways converge at the importomer, a peroxisome‐membrane complex that is required for protein translocation into peroxisomes and consists of docking and RING–finger subcomplexes. In the fungus Podospora anserina, the RING–finger peroxins are crucial for meiocyte formation, while PEX5, PEX7 or the docking peroxin PEX14 are not. Here we show that PEX14 and the PEX14‐related protein PEX14/17 are differentially involved in peroxisome import during development. PEX14/17 activity does not compensate for loss of PEX14 function, and elimination of both proteins has no effect on meiocyte differentiation. In contrast, the docking peroxin PEX13, and the peroxins implicated in peroxisome membrane biogenesis PEX3 and PEX19, are required for meiocyte formation. Remarkably, the PTS2 coreceptor PEX20 is also essential for meiocyte differentiation and this function does not require PEX5 or PEX7. This finding suggests that PEX20 can mediate the import receptor activity of specific peroxisome matrix proteins. Our results suggest a new pathway for peroxisome import, which relies on PEX20 as import receptor and which seems critically required for specific developmental processes, like meiocyte differentiation in P. anserina.
GigaScience | 2014
Neil Davies; Dawn Field; Linda A. Amaral-Zettler; Melody S. Clark; John Deck; Alexei J. Drummond; Daniel P. Faith; Jonathan B. Geller; Jack A. Gilbert; Frank Oliver Glöckner; Penny R. Hirsch; Jo-Ann Leong; Christopher P. Meyer; Matthias Obst; Serge Planes; Chris Scholin; Alfried P. Vogler; Ruth D. Gates; Rob Toonen; Véronique Berteaux-Lecellier; Michèle Barbier; Katherine Barker; Stefan Bertilsson; Mesude Bicak; Matthew J. Bietz; Jason Bobe; Levente Bodrossy; Ángel Borja; Jonathan A. Coddington; Jed A. Fuhrman
The co-authors of this paper hereby state their intention to work together to launch the Genomic Observatories Network (GOs Network) for which this document will serve as its Founding Charter. We define a Genomic Observatory as an ecosystem and/or site subject to long-term scientific research, including (but not limited to) the sustained study of genomic biodiversity from single-celled microbes to multicellular organisms.An international group of 64 scientists first published the call for a global network of Genomic Observatories in January 2012. The vision for such a network was expanded in a subsequent paper and developed over a series of meetings in Bremen (Germany), Shenzhen (China), Moorea (French Polynesia), Oxford (UK), Pacific Grove (California, USA), Washington (DC, USA), and London (UK). While this community-building process continues, here we express our mutual intent to establish the GOs Network formally, and to describe our shared vision for its future. The views expressed here are ours alone as individual scientists, and do not necessarily represent those of the institutions with which we are affiliated.
BMC Research Notes | 2010
Frédérique Bidard; Sandrine Imbeaud; Nancie Reymond; Olivier Lespinet; Philippe Silar; Corinne Clavé; Hervé Delacroix; Véronique Berteaux-Lecellier; Robert Debuchy
BackgroundThe development of new microarray technologies makes custom long oligonucleotide arrays affordable for many experimental applications, notably gene expression analyses. Reliable results depend on probe design quality and selection. Probe design strategy should cope with the limited accuracy of de novo gene prediction programs, and annotation up-dating. We present a novel in silico procedure which addresses these issues and includes experimental screening, as an empirical approach is the best strategy to identify optimal probes in the in silico outcome.FindingsWe used four criteria for in silico probe selection: cross-hybridization, hairpin stability, probe location relative to coding sequence end and intron position. This latter criterion is critical when exon-intron gene structure predictions for intron-rich genes are inaccurate. For each coding sequence (CDS), we selected a sub-set of four probes. These probes were included in a test microarray, which was used to evaluate the hybridization behavior of each probe. The best probe for each CDS was selected according to three experimental criteria: signal-to-noise ratio, signal reproducibility, and representative signal intensities. This procedure was applied for the development of a gene expression Agilent platform for the filamentous fungus Podospora anserina and the selection of a single 60-mer probe for each of the 10,556 P. anserina CDS.ConclusionsA reliable gene expression microarray version based on the Agilent 44K platform was developed with four spot replicates of each probe to increase statistical significance of analysis.
Frontiers in Physiology | 2013
Leonardo Peraza-Reyes; Véronique Berteaux-Lecellier
Peroxisomes are versatile and dynamic organelles that are essential for the development of most eukaryotic organisms. In fungi, many developmental processes, such as sexual development, require the activity of peroxisomes. Sexual reproduction in fungi involves the formation of meiotic-derived sexual spores, often takes place inside multicellular fruiting bodies and requires precise coordination between the differentiation of multiple cell types and the progression of karyogamy and meiosis. Different peroxisomal functions contribute to the orchestration of this complex developmental process. Peroxisomes are required to sustain the formation of fruiting bodies and the maturation and germination of sexual spores. They facilitate the mobilization of reserve compounds via fatty acid β-oxidation and the glyoxylate cycle, allowing the generation of energy and biosynthetic precursors. Additionally, peroxisomes are implicated in the progression of meiotic development. During meiotic development in Podospora anserina, there is a precise modulation of peroxisome assembly and dynamics. This modulation includes changes in peroxisome size, number and localization, and involves a differential activity of the protein-machinery that drives the import of proteins into peroxisomes. Furthermore, karyogamy, entry into meiosis and sorting of meiotic-derived nuclei into sexual spores all require the activity of peroxisomes. These processes rely on different peroxisomal functions and likely depend on different pathways for peroxisome assembly. Indeed, emerging studies support the existence of distinct import channels for peroxisomal proteins that contribute to different developmental stages.
Fungal Genetics and Biology | 2009
Stéphanie Boisnard; Eric Espagne; Denise Zickler; Anne Bourdais; Anne-Laure Riquet; Véronique Berteaux-Lecellier
ATP-binding cassette transporters are ubiquitous proteins that facilitate transport of diverse substances across a membrane. However, their exact role remains poorly understood. In order to test their function in a fungus life cycle, we deleted the two Podospora anserina peroxisomal ABC transporter pABC1 and pABC2 genes as well as the three genes involved in peroxisomal (fox2) and mitochondrial (scdA and echA) beta-oxidation. Analysis of the single and double mutants shows that fatty acid beta-oxidation occurs in both organelles. Furthermore, the peroxisomal and mitochondrial fatty acid beta-oxidation pathways are both dispensable for vegetative and sexual development. They are, however, differently required for ascospore pigmentation and germination, this latter defect being restored in a DeltapABC1 and DeltapABC2 background. We report also that lack of peroxisomal ABC transporters does not prevent peroxisomal long-chain fatty acid oxidation, suggesting the existence of another pathway for their import into peroxisomes. Finally, we show that some aspects of fatty acid degradation are clearly fungus species specific.
Ecology and Evolution | 2016
Héloïse Rouzé; Gael Lecellier; Denis Saulnier; Véronique Berteaux-Lecellier
Abstract Coral disease outbreaks have increased over the last three decades, but their causal agents remain mostly unclear (e.g., bacteria, viruses, fungi, protists). This study details a 14‐month‐long survey of coral colonies in which observations of the development of disease was observed in nearly half of the sampled colonies. A bimonthly qPCR method was used to quantitatively and qualitatively evaluate Symbiodinium assemblages of tagged colonies, and to detect the presence of Vibrio spp. Firstly, our data showed that predisposition to disease development in general, and, more specifically, infection by Vibrio spp. in Acropora cytherea depended on which clades of Symbiodinium were harbored. In both cases, harboring clade D rather than A was beneficial to the coral host. Secondly, the detection of Vibrio spp. in only colonies that developed disease strongly suggests opportunistic traits of the bacteria. Finally, even if sporadic cases of switching and probably shuffling were observed, this long‐term survey does not suggest specific‐clade recruitment in response to stressors. Altogether, our results demonstrate that the fitness of the coral holobiont depends on its initial consortium of Symbiodinium, which is distinct among colonies, rather than a temporary adaptation achieved through acquiring different Symbiodinium clades.