Team Leader :
Jean-Marc LEMAITRE
The global project of the team is to explore basic genetic and epigenetic mechanisms underlying tissue regeneration, a process that takes place from early development through the entire lifetime and decreasing in the elderly. We aim to unravel and to manipulate age-related molecular pathways for efficient somatic cell reprogramming and to apply this knowledge to rejuvenation of cell physiology and improve tissue regeneration in chronic and aged related diseases, which is a major objective of regenerative medicine.
Mutations in genes involved in DNA metabolism or nuclear architecture can cause premature aging syndromes. Moreover, epigenetic modifications are associated to cellular aging and senescence leading to a “chromatin related aging memory” revealed by specific gene expression signature in stem cells, progenitors or differentiated cells. However, we showed recently that altered cellular aging/senescence physiology is reversible using a specific reprogramming strategy, through an induced pluripotent state. This indicate that it should be possible to modulate the aging process by interventions at the level of critical genetically and epigenetically-regulated networks. Although induced Pluripotent Stem Cells (iPSCs) exhibit the main biological features of hESCs, numerous hurdles need to be overcome for therapeutics applications, like accurate genetic diseases modeling or to obtain iPSCs at clinical grade for cell therapy. This includes specific developments to ensure genetic and epigenetic stability, during reprogramming responsible for some of the differences observed between hiPSCs and hESCs, so far demonstrated to generate cellular stress and senescence by themselves.
The project of the team is to explore genetic and epigenetic mechanisms involved in physiological and pathological cellular aging/senescence and its reprogramming. We will integrate different levels of analysis, from DNA sequence to local chromatin organization and to nuclear architecture to evaluate the limits of the cell plasticity in terms of genomic stability and genome organization during aging and rejuvenation from human cells.
Axis 1: To explore the epigenetic control of stem cell reprogramming in senescence/ ageing
Axis 2: To understand the origin and the nature of the DNA lesions occurring in hPSC
Axis 3: Developing human developmental age related disease models using induced pluripotent stem cells reprogramming.
Taking advantage of the expertise of our group on stem cell reprogramming from senescent and centenarian human fibroblasts, the SAFE-iPS platform from the INGESTEM project (directed by Jean-Marc Lemaitre) will offers a complete service to reprogram human cells and provide fully qualified iPSC to the medical and research community.
The team project is organized in different axis harboring specific objectives: