Catalogue Search | MBRL
Search Results Heading
Explore the vast range of titles available.
MBRLSearchResults
-
DisciplineDiscipline
-
Is Peer ReviewedIs Peer Reviewed
-
Item TypeItem Type
-
SubjectSubject
-
YearFrom:-To:
-
More FiltersMore FiltersSourceLanguage
Done
Filters
Reset
195
result(s) for
"Mercier, Vincent"
Sort by:
LimeSeg: a coarse-grained lipid membrane simulation for 3D image segmentation
by
Machado, Sarah
,
Mercier, Vincent
,
Chiaruttini, Nicolas
in
3D segmentation
,
Algorithms
,
Bioinformatics
2019
Background
3D segmentation is often a prerequisite for 3D object display and quantitative measurements. Yet existing voxel-based methods do not directly give information on the object surface or topology. As for spatially continuous approaches such as level-set, active contours and meshes, although providing surfaces and concise shape description, they are generally not suitable for multiple object segmentation and/or for objects with an irregular shape, which can hamper their adoption by bioimage analysts.
Results
We developed LimeSeg, a computationally efficient and spatially continuous 3D segmentation method. LimeSeg is easy-to-use and can process many and/or highly convoluted objects. Based on the concept of SURFace ELements (“Surfels”), LimeSeg resembles a highly coarse-grained simulation of a lipid membrane in which a set of particles, analogous to lipid molecules, are attracted to local image maxima. The particles are self-generating and self-destructing thus providing the ability for the membrane to evolve towards the contour of the objects of interest.
The capabilities of LimeSeg: simultaneous segmentation of numerous non overlapping objects, segmentation of highly convoluted objects and robustness for big datasets are demonstrated on experimental use cases (epithelial cells, brain MRI and FIB-SEM dataset of cellular membrane system respectively).
Conclusion
In conclusion, we implemented a new and efficient 3D surface reconstruction plugin adapted for various sources of images, which is deployed in the user-friendly and well-known ImageJ environment.
Journal Article
Passive coupling of membrane tension and cell volume during active response of cells to osmosis
by
Echard, Arnaud
,
Guck, Jochen
,
Roux, Aurélien
in
Actin
,
Actins - metabolism
,
Biological Sciences
2021
During osmotic changes of their environment, cells actively regulate their volume and plasma membrane tension that can passively change through osmosis. How tension and volume are coupled during osmotic adaptation remains unknown, as their quantitative characterization is lacking. Here, we performed dynamic membrane tension and cell volume measurements during osmotic shocks. During the first few seconds following the shock, cell volume varied to equilibrate osmotic pressures inside and outside the cell, and membrane tension dynamically followed these changes. A theoretical model based on the passive, reversible unfolding of the membrane as it detaches from the actin cortex during volume increase quantitatively describes our data. After the initial response, tension and volume recovered from hypoosmotic shocks but not from hyperosmotic shocks. Using a fluorescent membrane tension probe (fluorescent lipid tension reporter [Flipper-TR]), we investigated the coupling between tension and volume during these asymmetric recoveries. Caveolae depletion and pharmacological inhibition of ion transporters and channels, mTORCs, and the cytoskeleton all affected tension and volume responses. Treatments targeting mTORC2 and specific downstream effectors caused identical changes to both tension and volume responses, their coupling remaining the same. This supports that the coupling of tension and volume responses to osmotic shocks is primarily regulated by mTORC2.
Journal Article
Lysosomal retargeting of Myoferlin mitigates membrane stress to enable pancreatic cancer growth
2021
Lysosomes must maintain the integrity of their limiting membrane to ensure efficient fusion with incoming organelles and degradation of substrates within their lumen. Pancreatic cancer cells upregulate lysosomal biogenesis to enhance nutrient recycling and stress resistance, but it is unknown whether dedicated programmes for maintaining the integrity of the lysosome membrane facilitate pancreatic cancer growth. Using proteomic-based organelle profiling, we identify the Ferlin family plasma membrane repair factor Myoferlin as selectively and highly enriched on the membrane of pancreatic cancer lysosomes. Mechanistically, lysosomal localization of Myoferlin is necessary and sufficient for the maintenance of lysosome health and provides an early acting protective system against membrane damage that is independent of the endosomal sorting complex required for transport (ESCRT)-mediated repair network. Myoferlin is upregulated in human pancreatic cancer, predicts poor survival and its ablation severely impairs lysosome function and tumour growth in vivo. Thus, retargeting of plasma membrane repair factors enhances the pro-oncogenic activities of the lysosome.Gupta et al. show that the membrane repair factor Myoferlin protects against membrane damage of pancreatic cancer lysosomes to sustain enhanced lysosomal function and promote tumour growth.
Journal Article
Inclusive Pattern Generation Protocols to Decode Thiol-Mediated Uptake
by
Moreau, Dimitri
,
Coelho, Filipe
,
Saidjalolov, Saidbakhrom
in
Antisense oligonucleotides
,
Breast cancer
,
Cells
2024
Thiol-mediated uptake (TMU) is an intriguing enigma in current chemistry and biology. While the appearance of cell-penetrating activity upon attachment of cascade exchangers (CAXs) has been observed by many and is increasingly being used in practice, the molecular basis of TMU is essentially unknown. The objective of this study was to develop a general protocol to decode the dynamic covalent networks that presumably account for TMU. Uptake inhibition patterns obtained from the removal of exchange partners by either protein knockdown or alternative inhibitors are aligned with original patterns generated by CAX transporters and inhibitors and patterns from alternative functions (here cell motility). These inclusive TMU patterns reveal that the four most significant CAXs known today enter cells along three almost orthogonal pathways. Epidithiodiketopiperazines (ETP) exchange preferably with integrins and protein disulfide isomerases (PDIs), benzopolysulfanes (BPS) with different PDIs, presumably PDIA3, and asparagusic acid (AspA), and antisense oligonucleotide phosphorothioates (OPS) exchange with the transferrin receptor and can be activated by the removal of PDIs with their respective inhibitors. These findings provide a solid basis to understand and use TMU to enable and prevent entry into cells.
Journal Article
SARS-CoV-2 hijacks a cell damage response, which induces transcription of a more efficient Spike S-acyltransferase
by
Carlevaro-Fita, Joana
,
Trono, Didier
,
Bracq, Lucie
in
631/326/596/4130
,
631/326/88
,
631/80/458
2023
SARS-CoV-2 infection requires Spike protein-mediated fusion between the viral and cellular membranes. The fusogenic activity of Spike depends on its post-translational lipid modification by host S-acyltransferases, predominantly ZDHHC20. Previous observations indicate that SARS-CoV-2 infection augments the S-acylation of Spike when compared to mere Spike transfection. Here, we find that SARS-CoV-2 infection triggers a change in the transcriptional start site of the
zdhhc20
gene, both in cells and in an in vivo infection model, resulting in a 67-amino–acid-long N-terminally extended protein with approx. 40 times higher Spike acylating activity, resulting in enhanced fusion of viruses with host cells. Furthermore, we observed the same induced transcriptional change in response to other challenges, such as chemically induced colitis and pore-forming toxins, indicating that SARS-CoV-2 hijacks an existing cell damage response pathway to optimize it fusion glycoprotein.
The fusogenic activity of SARS-CoV-2 Spike depends on its post-translational lipid modification by host S-acyltransferases, predominantly ZDHHC20. Here, Mesquita and Abrami et al. show that SARS-CoV-2 infection and colitis in mice induce a damage response resulting in an altered version of the ZDHHC20 enzyme that is more abundant and significantly more efficient at attaching fatty acids to viral Spike.
Journal Article
ALG-2 interacting protein-X (Alix) is essential for clathrin-independent endocytosis and signaling
2016
The molecular mechanisms and the biological functions of clathrin independent endocytosis (CIE) remain largely elusive. Alix (ALG-2 interacting protein X), has been assigned roles in membrane deformation and fission both in endosomes and at the plasma membrane. Using Alix ko cells, we show for the first time that Alix regulates fluid phase endocytosis and internalization of cargoes entering cells via CIE, but has no apparent effect on clathrin mediated endocytosis or downstream endosomal trafficking. We show that Alix acts with endophilin-A to promote CIE of cholera toxin and to regulate cell migration. We also found that Alix is required for fast endocytosis and downstream signaling of the interleukin-2 receptor giving a first indication that CIE is necessary for activation of at least some surface receptors. In addition to characterizing a new function for Alix, our results highlight Alix ko cells as a unique tool to unravel the biological consequences of CIE.
Journal Article
Decrease in plasma membrane tension triggers PtdIns(4,5)P2 phase separation to inactivate TORC2
2018
The target of rapamycin complex 2 (TORC2) plays a key role in maintaining the homeostasis of plasma membrane (PM) tension. TORC2 activation following increased PM tension involves redistribution of the Slm1 and 2 paralogues from PM invaginations known as eisosomes into membrane compartments containing TORC2. How Slm1/2 relocalization is triggered, and if/how this plays a role in TORC2 inactivation with decreased PM tension, is unknown. Using osmotic shocks and palmitoylcarnitine as orthogonal tools to manipulate PM tension, we demonstrate that decreased PM tension triggers spontaneous, energy-independent reorganization of pre-existing phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate into discrete invaginated membrane domains, which cluster and inactivate TORC2. These results demonstrate that increased and decreased membrane tension are sensed through different mechanisms, highlighting a role for membrane lipid phase separation in mechanotransduction.
Using a small-molecule modulator of TORC2 signalling and a mechanosensitive probe, Riggi et al. reveal that decreased plasma membrane tension induces distinct PIP2-enriched domains that sequester and inactivate TORC2.
Journal Article
Harnessing fluorescent probes to unveil dynamic membrane mechanics
2023
In this Tools of the Trade article, Roffay and Mercier (from the Roux lab) describe the development of fluorescent Flipper probes that allow measurement of membrane mechanics in vivo.
Journal Article
Endosomal membrane tension regulates ESCRT-III-dependent intra-lumenal vesicle formation
2020
The plasma membrane tension strongly affects cell surface processes, such as migration, endocytosis and signalling. However, it is not known whether the membrane tension of organelles regulates their functions, notably intracellular traffic. The endosomal sorting complexes required for transport (ESCRT)-III complex is the major membrane remodelling complex that drives intra-lumenal-vesicle (ILV) formation on endosomal membranes. Here we used a fluorescent membrane-tension probe to show that ESCRT-III subunits are recruited onto endosomal membranes when the membrane tension is reduced. We find that tension-dependent recruitment is associated with ESCRT-III polymerization and membrane deformation in vitro and correlates with increased ILV formation in ESCRT-III-decorated endosomes in vivo. Finally, we find that the endosomal membrane tension decreases when ILV formation is triggered by EGF under physiological conditions. These results indicate that membrane tension is a major regulator of ILV formation and endosome trafficking, leading us to conclude that membrane tension can control organelle functions.Mercier et al. demonstrate a role for endosomal membrane tension in modulating ESCRT-III polymerization, intra-lumenal vesicle formation and endosome trafficking.
Journal Article
Decrease in plasma membrane tension triggers PtdIns(4,5)P 2 phase separation to inactivate TORC2
by
Loewith, Robbie
,
Roux, Aurélien
,
Riggi, Margot
in
Carrier Proteins - genetics
,
Carrier Proteins - metabolism
,
Cell Membrane - drug effects
2018
The target of rapamycin complex 2 (TORC2) plays a key role in maintaining the homeostasis of plasma membrane (PM) tension. TORC2 activation following increased PM tension involves redistribution of the Slm1 and 2 paralogues from PM invaginations known as eisosomes into membrane compartments containing TORC2. How Slm1/2 relocalization is triggered, and if/how this plays a role in TORC2 inactivation with decreased PM tension, is unknown. Using osmotic shocks and palmitoylcarnitine as orthogonal tools to manipulate PM tension, we demonstrate that decreased PM tension triggers spontaneous, energy-independent reorganization of pre-existing phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate into discrete invaginated membrane domains, which cluster and inactivate TORC2. These results demonstrate that increased and decreased membrane tension are sensed through different mechanisms, highlighting a role for membrane lipid phase separation in mechanotransduction.
Journal Article