Publications by authors named "Florine Verny"

Gut bacteria influence brain functions and metabolism. We investigated whether this influence can be mediated by direct sensing of bacterial cell wall components by brain neurons. In mice, we found that bacterial peptidoglycan plays a major role in mediating gut-brain communication via the Nod2 receptor.

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Optimizing reproductive fitness in mammalians requires behavioral adaptations during pregnancy. Maternal preparatory nesting is an essential behavior for the survival of the upcoming litter. Brain-wide immediate early gene mapping in mice evoked by nesting sequences revealed that phases of nest construction strongly activate peptidergic neurons of the Edinger-Westphal nucleus in pregnant mice.

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The cerebral vasculature is a dense network of arteries, capillaries, and veins. Quantifying variations of the vascular organization across individuals, brain regions, or disease models is challenging. We used immunolabeling and tissue clearing to image the vascular network of adult mouse brains and developed a pipeline to segment terabyte-sized multichannel images from light sheet microscopy, enabling the construction, analysis, and visualization of vascular graphs composed of over 100 million vessel segments.

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Myoclonic-atonic epilepsy (MAE) is thought to have a genetic etiology. Mutations in CHD2, SLC2A1 and SLC6A1 genes have been reported in few patients showing often intellectual disability prior to MAE onset. We aimed to explore putative causal genetic factors in MAE.

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Autosomal recessive primary microcephaly is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by congenitally reduced head circumference by at least two standard deviations (SD) below the mean for age and gender. It is associated with nonprogressive mental retardation of variable degree, minimal neurological deficit with no evidence of architectural anomalies of the brain. So far, 12 genetic loci (MCPH1-12) and corresponding genes have been identified.

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Megalencephaly is a congenital condition characterized by severe overdeveloped brain size. This phenotype is often caused by mutations affecting the RTK/PI3K/mTOR (receptor tyrosine kinase-phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase-AKT) signaling and its downstream pathway of mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR). Here, using a whole-exome sequencing in a Moroccan consanguineous family, we show that a novel autosomal-recessive neurological condition characterized by megalencephaly, thick corpus callosum and severe intellectual disability is caused by a homozygous nonsense variant in the HERC1 gene.

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