Curriculum vitae - Alexandre Huber Print E-mail
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Curriculum vitae - Alexandre Huber
Education, Awards & Fellowships
Courses, Presentations & Languages
Specific skills
Publication list
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Contact information

Address

12, rue du Vieux-billard
1205 Genève
Switzerland

Phone nr

+41 (22) 379 34 86

Mobile

+41 (79) 535 06 29

E-mail

Contact me

Birth date

December 21, 1981

Nationality

Swiss

Marital status

Single

Available

From the 1st of July 2010

 

Work experience

2005-present - Graduate studies on cell signaling in budding yeast with Prof. Robbie Loewith

Subject

TOR and SCH9 signaling pathways regulating ribosome biogenesis

Institute

University of Geneva, Department of Molecular Biology, Geneva, CH

Website

http://www.molbio.unige.ch/loewith/

Summary

The Target of Rapamycin Complex 1 (TORC1) is an essential multiprotein complex conserved from yeast to man. Its kinase activity is specifically inhibited by the macrolide antibiotic rapamycin. TORC1 deregulation in man is implicated in various diseases such as cancer, tuberous sclerosis complex and other hamartomatous syndromes.

As the signaling pathways that couple TORC1 to its distal readouts are not well understood, we employed a quantitative, label-free mass spectrometry approach to analyze the rapamycin-sensitive phosphoproteome in yeast. This study identified many novel TORC1 effectors and revealed how this complex plays a central role in eukaryote growth control.

Main tasks

3H-uracil ribosomal RNA metabolic labeling assays

∙ Gene expression assays by quantitative RT-PCR and primer extension assays

∙ Protein-protein interaction assays by co-immunoprecipitation or affinity purification

∙ Quantitative chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assays of various proteins

∙ Protein overexpression and purification from yeast and bacteria

In vitro kinase assays with purified recombinant protein substrates and peptides

∙ Polysome profiles on sucrose gradients and ribosome purification from yeast cells

Collaborations

∙ Prof. Ruedi Aebersold (ETH Zürich, CH) for label-free quantitative phosphoproteomic screens

∙ Prof. Ann L. Beyer (University of Virginia, VA, USA) for Miller chromatin spreads and electron microscopy analyses.

∙ Prof. James R. Broach (Princeton University, NJ, USA) for transcriptome profiling by DNA microarrays

Teaching

Molecular genetics practical courses (Undergraduate lab course, 10 h / year)

Thesis defense

Planned on June 30th 2010

 

 

2005 - 4 month internship in human pathology of the cytoskeleton with Prof. Christine Chaponnier

Subject

HDAC8 as a potential isoform-specific Actin partner.

Institute

University Medical Center, Department of pathology and immunology, Geneva, CH

Website

http://pathology.unige.ch/patim/group-chaponnier.html

Summary

Actin is expressed in mammals as six isoforms showing different tissue expression patterns. Polymerized α-sm-Actin expression is directly correlated to cellular contractility and its ectopic expression is associated to various human pathologies such as hypertrophic scars.

Main tasks

∙ Study of HDAC8 tissue expression in rats and mice and correlation with Actin isoforms localization

∙ Study of HDAC8 localization by immunofluorescence microscopy upon the specific depolymerization of the α-sm-Actin cytoskeleton

In vitro HDAC8-α-sm-Actin interaction assays upon Actin polymerization

 

 

2004-2005 - 6 month internship in oncology with Prof. Nancy Hynes

Subject

The Wnt signaling pathway in breast cancer cells

Institute

Friedrich Miescher Institute, Basel, CH

Website

http://fmi.ch/html/research/research_groups/growth_control/nancy_hynes/nancy_hynes.html

Summary

Wnt proteins are small secreted lipid-modified growth factors implicated in various processes throughout mammalian development and adulthood such as cellular differentiation, tissue patterning. Dysregulation of Wnt signaling was shown to be implicated in a wide range of cancers including breast cancer.

Main tasks

∙ FPLC purification of the Wnt inhibitor sFRP1 from medium of 293T cells overexpressing the protein

∙ Development of luciferase reporter assays of Wnt-induced β-catenin activity in breast cancer cell lines (T47D, HC-11) to control sFRP1 activity

∙ Growth assays in breast cancer cell lines (T47D, HC-11, MCF-7, SkBr3) upon treatment with purified sFRP1

 

 

2003-2004 4 month internship in viral vector biotechnology with Prof. Daniel Kolakofsky

Subject

Construction of human viral vectors for the cystic fibrosis gene (CFTR)

Institute

University Medical Center, Department of Microbiology, Geneva, CH

Summary

The Sendaï paramyxovirus infects epithelial cells of the respiratory tract in humans and rodents but is not pathogenic in human adults. The virus ability to induce high levels of expression of genes recombined in its genome in infected cells suggested that it might be a vector of choice for gene therapy against airway epithelium diseases such as cystic fibrosis.

Main tasks

∙ Insertion of the CFTR gene in the Sendaï virus genome

∙ Reconstitution of active viral particles in BSR-T7/5 cells

∙ Amplification of the virus in fertilized chicken eggs


2003 - 4 month internship in human energetic metabolism with Prof. Jean-Paul Giacobino

Subject

Leptin-mediated regulation of fatty acids metabolism and insulin resistance in mice

Institute

University Medical Center, Department of Medical Biochemistry, Geneva, CH

Summary

Leptin is a small peptide hormone mainly produced by white adipose tissues in mammals. Its production is increased by adiposity and antagonized by fasting. Leptin targets specific neurons in the central nervous systems to control both appetite and energy expenditure. Leptin may also signal directly to peripheral organs such as the liver and muscles to modulate fatty acids metabolism in part by regulating the activity of the Acetyl-CoA carboxylase enzyme.

Main tasks

∙ Glucose uptake assays in in vitro L6 myoblast culture models upon insulin stimulation

∙ Acetyl-CoA carboxylase enzymatic assays in mitochondrial subfractions of skeletal muscles in mice

∙ Analysis of Stearoyl-CoA desaturase 1 (target of Leptin) expression in Leptin-treated mice

2001-2004 - Assistant teacher at De Candolle High School, Geneva

Tasks

∙ Student coaching for applied inorganic/organic chemistry courses

∙ Replacement teacher for theoretical chemistry courses

 


 

Education

2005-present - Graduate studies in Molecular Microbiology

University of Geneva, CH

Under the direction of Prof. Robbie Loewith

2005 - Master of Science in Biochemistry

University of Geneva, CH

2004 - Bachelor of Science in Biochemistry

University of Geneva, CH

2000 - High School degree with Honors

De Candolle High School, Geneva, CH

 

 

Awards

2005 - Syngenta Prize

Awarded to top graduate (Master of Science in Biochemistry)

2000 - Givaudan-Roure Scientific Prize

Awarded to top graduate for Physics and Chemistry (High School degree)


 

Fellowships

2006 - 1 year Fellowship from the Novartis Foundation for Biology and Medicine (#06A20)

Website http://www.stiftungmedbiol.novartis.com/

 


 

Courses

2009 - 2 days course "Patenting in Life Sciences"

Organizer

Swiss Academy of Science

Subject

Patent laws and basic concepts in Switzerland and abroad with emphasis on the case of life sciences

 

2008 - 1 week course "Light Microscopy"

Organizer

NCCR Frontiers in Genetics - Bioimaging platform

Website

http://www.frontiers-in-genetics.org/page.php?id=img-technology_en

Subject

Theoretical and practical course about wide-field and confocal light microscopy techniques

 

Scientific presentations

2009 - Poster at the 24th International Conference on Yeast Genetics & Molecular Biology, Manchester, UK

Title

Label-free quantitative phosphoproteomics reveals that Sch9 is a central coordinator of protein synthesis

2009 - Poster at the "Omics meets cell biology" Keystone meeting, Colorado, USA

Title

Label-free quantitative phosphoproteomics reveals that Sch9 is a central coordinator of protein synthesis

Scholarship

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

2005-2009 - Regular oral presentations in English at the University of Geneva

 

Languages

French

Native speaker

English

Fluent (Regular oral presentations)

German

Intermediate level


 

Specific skills

Yeast specific techniques

∙ Yeast cells genetic engineering by homologous recombination

∙ Robotic handling of yeast deletion and two-hybrid strains collections with the Biomek 3000 system

∙ RNA metabolic labeling with 5,6-3H-uracil

∙ DNA/RNA extraction methods

∙ Native/Denaturing protein extraction methods

Biochemistry

∙ Protein overexpression in bacteria and yeast cells

∙ Fast performance liquid chromatography

∙ Immunoprecipitation and affinity purification techniques (GST, Protein A, His tags) under native conditions

∙ In vitro kinase assays with purified substrates or peptides.

∙ LacZ/luciferase reporter assays

∙ Denaturing protein extraction for optimal conservation of phosphorylation by the TCA-Urea method

∙ Protein phosphorylation analysis by SDS-PAGE migration shift, by Phos-Tag-induced migration shift and by direct staining with fluorescent dyes (ProQ Diamond staining)

∙ Handling of radioactive isotopes: 3H, 14C and 32P.

Biology

∙ Mammalian cells culture and handling (HeLa, 293, T47D, SkBr3, MCF7)

∙ Mammalian cells transfection by the calcium/phosphate method, by lipofection or with the pLNCX retroviral vector system

∙ Viral amplification in fertilized chicken eggs allantoic cavity

∙ Plasmids engineering and mutagenesis

∙ Wide-field and fluorescence microscopy on fixed and live cells (yeast/mammalian cells) and fixed tissues

∙ Confocal fluorescence microscopy on fixed cells (Leica SP2)

∙ Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP)

∙ SYBR green quantitative RT-PCR (Roche LightCycler 480)

Computer sciences

∙ Experience on Windows and Linux-based systems

∙ Visual Basic programming (Standalone applications, Excel development)

∙ PHP 5 - MySQL web development

 


 

Publication list

"Alexandre Huber" on Pubmed

 

TOR signaling and cancer treatment. Huber A, Rubio A & Loewith R. Cancer & chemotherapy reviews. Invited review, in press.

 

Characterization of the rapamycin-sensitive phosphoproteome reveals that Sch9 is a central coordinator of protein synthesis. Huber A, Bodenmiller B, Uotila A, Stahl M, Wanka S, Gerrits B, Aebersold R & Loewith R (2009) Genes Dev 23, 1929-43. (2008 IF: 13.6) link

 

Sch9 is a major target of TORC1 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Urban J, Soulard A, Huber A, Lippman S, Mukhopadhyay D, Deloche O, Wanke V, Anrather D, Ammerer G, Riezman H, Broach JR, De Virgilio C, Hall MN & Loewith R (2007). Mol Cell 26, 663-674. (2007 IF: 13.2) link

 

Autocrine WNT signaling contributes to breast cancer cell proliferation via the canonical WNT pathway and EGFR transactivation. Schlange T, Matsuda Y, Lienhard S, Huber A & Hynes NE (2007). Breast Cancer Res 9, R63. (2007 IF: 4.3) link