Publications by authors named "Maxime Gasnier"

The intestinal epithelium plays a key role in digestion and protection against external pathogens. This tissue presents a high cellular turnover with the epithelium being completely renewed every 5days, driven by intestinal stem cells (ISCs) residing in the crypt bases. To sustain this dynamic renewal of the intestinal epithelium, the maintenance, proliferation, and differentiation of ISCs must be precisely controlled.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

IL-6 has been shown to be required for somatic cell reprogramming into induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). However, how Il6 expression is regulated and whether it plays a role during embryo development remains unknown. Here, we describe that IL-6 is necessary for C/EBPα-enhanced reprogramming of B cells into iPSCs but not for B cell to macrophage transdifferentiation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

To implant in the uterus, the mammalian embryo first specifies two cell lineages: the pluripotent inner cell mass that forms the fetus, and the outer trophectoderm layer that forms the placenta. In many organisms, asymmetrically inherited fate determinants drive lineage specification, but this is not thought to be the case during early mammalian development. Here we show that intermediate filaments assembled by keratins function as asymmetrically inherited fate determinants in the mammalian embryo.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Transformation from morula to blastocyst is a defining event of preimplantation embryo development. During this transition, the embryo must establish a paracellular permeability barrier to enable expansion of the blastocyst cavity. Here, using live imaging of mouse embryos, we reveal an actin-zippering mechanism driving this embryo sealing.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The early mouse embryo offers a phenomenal system to dissect how changes in the mechanisms controlling cell fate are integrated with morphogenetic events at the single-cell level. New technologies based on live imaging have enabled the discovery of dynamic changes in the regulation of single genes, transcription factors, and epigenetic mechanisms directing early cell fate decision in the early embryo. Here, we review recent progress in linking molecular dynamic events occurring at the level of the single cell in vivo, to some of the key morphogenetic changes regulating early mouse development.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

RNA in situ hybridization (ISH) has been widely used in cell and developmental biology research to study gene expression. Classical ISH protocols use colorimetric staining approaches, such as the assay with nitro blue tetrazolium/5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-phosphate (NBT/BCIP), which do not allow the implementation of multiple probe analyses and do not enable investigators to achieve cellular resolution. Here we describe a protocol to determine the presence of target cytoplasmic RNA via cytoplasmic fluorescence ISH (cFISH), an approach that renders possible the visualization of specific RNA strands from the whole tissue down to the cell.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF