H

Hélène Baribault

Amgen (United States)

ORCID: 0000-0001-9672-1205

Publishes on Skin and Cellular Biology Research, Wnt/β-catenin signaling in development and cancer, Liver Disease Diagnosis and Treatment. 87 papers and 8.8k citations.

87Publications
8.8kTotal Citations

Is this you? Claim your profile.

Add your photo, update your bio, and get notified when your ranking changes.

Top publicationsby citations

Targeted Disruption of Decorin Leads to Abnormal Collagen Fibril Morphology and Skin Fragility
Keith G. Danielson, Hélène Baribault, David Holmes et al.|The Journal of Cell Biology|1997
Cited by 1.4kOpen Access

Decorin is a member of the expanding group of widely distributed small leucine-rich proteoglycans that are expected to play important functions in tissue assembly. We report that mice harboring a targeted disruption of the decorin gene are viable but have fragile skin with markedly reduced tensile strength. Ultrastructural analysis revealed abnormal collagen morphology in skin and tendon, with coarser and irregular fiber outlines. Quantitative scanning transmission EM of individual collagen fibrils showed abrupt increases and decreases in mass along their axes. thereby accounting for the irregular outlines and size variability observed in cross-sections. The data indicate uncontrolled lateral fusion of collagen fibrils in the decorindeficient mice and provide an explanation for the reduced tensile strength of the skin. These findings demonstrate a fundamental role for decorin in regulating collagen fiber formation in vivo.

Vinculin knockout results in heart and brain defects during embryonic development
Cited by 529

The vinculin gene codes for a cytoskeletal protein, found in focal adhesion plaques and in cell-cell adherens junctions. Vinculin was inactivated by homologous recombination using a targeting vector in embryonic stem (ES) cells. The heterozygous ES cells were introduced into mice by established procedures to produce heterozygous animals that were normal and fertile. No homozygous vinculin-/- embryos were born and analyses during the gestational period showed that the vinculin null embryos were small and abnormal from day E8 but some survived until E10. The most prominent defect was lack of midline fusion of the rostral neural tube, producing a cranial bilobular appearance and attenuation of cranial and spinal nerve development. Heart development was curtailed at E9.5, with severely reduced and akinetic myocardial and endocardial structures. Mutant embryos were 30-40% smaller, somites and limbs were retarded and ectodermal tissues were sparse and fragile. Fibroblasts (MEF) isolated from mutant embryos were shown to have reduced adhesion to fibronectin, vitronectin, laminin and collagen compared to wild-type levels. In addition, migration rates over these substrata were two-fold higher and the level of focal adhesion kinase (FAK) activity was three-fold higher. We conclude that vinculin is necessary for normal embryonic development, probably because of its role in the regulation of cell adhesion and locomotion, cell behaviors essential for normal embryonic morphogenesis, although specific roles in neural and cardiac development cannot be ruled out.

Activation of G Protein-Coupled Receptor 43 in Adipocytes Leads to Inhibition of Lipolysis and Suppression of Plasma Free Fatty Acids
Hongfei Ge, Xiaofan Li, Jennifer Weiszmann et al.|Endocrinology|2008
Cited by 468Open Access

G protein-coupled receptor 43 (GPR43) has been identified as a receptor for short-chain fatty acids that include acetate and propionate. A potential involvement of GPR43 in immune and inflammatory response has been previously suggested because its expression is highly enriched in immune cells. GPR43 is also expressed in a number of other tissues including adipocytes; however, the functional consequences of GPR43 activation in these other tissues are not clear. In this report, we focus on the potential functions of GPR43 in adipocytes. We show that adipocytes treated with GPR43 natural ligands, acetate and propionate, exhibit a reduction in lipolytic activity. This inhibition of lipolysis is the result of GPR43 activation, because this effect is abolished in adipocytes isolated from GPR43 knockout animals. In a mouse in vivo model, we show that the activation of GPR43 by acetate results in the reduction in plasma free fatty acid levels without inducing the flushing side effect that has been observed by the activation of nicotinic acid receptor, GPR109A. These results suggest a potential role for GPR43 in regulating plasma lipid profiles and perhaps aspects of metabolic syndrome.