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Dive into the research topics where Abdelilah Wakkach is active.

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Featured researches published by Abdelilah Wakkach.


Immunity | 2003

Characterization of dendritic cells that induce tolerance and T regulatory 1 cell differentiation in vivo

Abdelilah Wakkach; Nathalie Fournier; Valérie Brun; Jean-Philippe Breittmayer; Hervé Groux

Active suppression is mediated by a subpopulation of CD4(+) T cells that prevents autoimmunity. However, the mechanisms involved in their differentiation in vivo are currently under intensive research. Here we show that in vitro culture of bone marrow cells in the presence of IL-10 induces the differentiation of a distinct subset of dendritic cells with a specific expression of CD45RB. These CD11c(low)CD45RB(high) DCs are present in the spleen and lymph nodes of normal mice and are significantly enriched in the spleen of IL-10 Tg mice. These natural or in vitro-derived DCs display plasmacytoid morphology and an immature-like phenotype, and secrete high levels of IL-10 after activation. OVA peptide-pulsed CD11c(low)CD45RB(high) DCs specifically induce tolerance through the differentiation of Tr1 cells in vitro and in vivo. Our findings identify a natural DC subset that induces the differentiation of Tr1 cells and suggest their therapeutic use.


Diabetes | 2012

Identification of adipose tissue dendritic cells correlated with obesity-associated insulin-resistance and inducing Th17 responses in mice and patients.

Adeline Bertola; Thomas Ciucci; Déborah Rousseau; Virginie Bourlier; Carine Duffaut; Stéphanie Bonnafous; Claudine Blin-Wakkach; Rodolphe Anty; Antonio Iannelli; Jean Gugenheim; Albert Tran; Anne Bouloumié; Philippe Gual; Abdelilah Wakkach

T-cell regulation in adipose tissue provides a link between inflammation and insulin resistance. Because of alterations in adipose tissue T-cell composition in obesity, we aimed to identify the antigen-presenting cells in adipose tissue of obese mice and patients with insulin resistance. Dendritic cells (DCs) and T cells were studied in mice and in two cohorts of obese patients. In lean mice, only CD11c+ DCs were detected in adipose tissue. Adoptive transfer of naive CD4+ T cells in Rag1−/− mice led to a predominant Th1 response in adipose tissue. In contrast, during obesity DCs (human CD11c+CD1c+ and mouse CD11chighF4/80low) accumulated in adipose tissue. CD11chighF4/80low DCs from obese mice induced Th17 differentiation. In patients, the presence of CD11c+CD1c+ DCs correlated with the BMI and with an elevation in Th17 cells. In addition, these DCs led to ex vivo Th17 differentiation. CD1c gene expression further correlated with homeostatic model assessment-insulin resistance in the subcutaneous adipose tissue of obese patients. We show for the first time the presence and accumulation of specific DCs in adipose tissue in mouse and human obesity. These DCs were functional and could be important regulators of adipose tissue inflammation by regulating the switch toward Th17 cell responses in obesity-associated insulin resistance.


Diabetes | 2009

Elevated Expression of Osteopontin May Be Related to Adipose Tissue Macrophage Accumulation and Liver Steatosis in Morbid Obesity

Adeline Bertola; Vanessa Deveaux; Stéphanie Bonnafous; Déborah Rousseau; Rodolphe Anty; Abdelilah Wakkach; Moncef Dahman; Joan Tordjman; Karine Clément; Siobhán E. McQuaid; Keith N. Frayn; Pierre-Michel Huet; Jean Gugenheim; Yannick Le Marchand-Brustel; Albert Tran; Philippe Gual

OBJECTIVE—Osteopontin (OPN) plays an important role in the development of insulin resistance and liver complications in dietary murine models. We aimed to determine the expression pattern of OPN and its receptor CD44 in obese patients and mice according to insulin resistance and liver steatosis. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—OPN and CD44 expressions were studied in 52 morbidly obese patients and in mice. Cellular studies were performed in HepG2 cells. RESULTS—Hepatic OPN and CD44 expressions were strongly correlated with liver steatosis and insulin resistance in obese patients and mice. This increased OPN expression could be due to the accumulation of triglycerides, since fat loading in HepG2 promotes OPN expression. In contrast, OPN expression in adipose tissue (AT) was enhanced independently of insulin resistance and hepatic steatosis in obese patients. The elevated OPN expression in AT was paralleled with the AT macrophage infiltration, and both phenomena were reversed after weight loss. The circulating OPN level was slightly elevated in obese patients and was not related to liver steatosis. Further, AT did not appear to secrete OPN. In contrast, bariatric surgery–induced weight loss induced a strong increase in circulating OPN. CONCLUSIONS—The modestly elevated circulating OPN levels in morbidly obese patients were not related to liver steatosis and did not appear to result from adipose tissue secretion. In subcutaneous AT, expression of OPN was directly related to macrophage accumulation independently from liver complications. In contrast, hepatic OPN and CD44 expressions were related to insulin resistance and steatosis, suggesting their local implication in the progression of liver injury.


Journal of Immunology | 2005

Effects of cytokines on acetylcholine receptor expression: implications for myasthenia gravis.

Sandrine Poëa-Guyon; Premkumar Christadoss; Rozen Le Panse; Thierry Guyon; Marc H. De Baets; Abdelilah Wakkach; Jocelyne Bidault; Socrates J. Tzartos; Sonia Berrih-Aknin

Myasthenia gravis is an autoimmune disease associated with thymic pathologies, including hyperplasia. In this study, we investigated the processes that may lead to thymic overexpression of the triggering Ag, the acetylcholine receptor (AChR). Using microarray technology, we found that IFN-regulated genes are more highly expressed in these pathological thymic tissues compared with age- and sex-matched normal thymus controls. Therefore, we investigated whether proinflammatory cytokines could locally modify AChR expression in myoid and thymic epithelial cells. We found that AChR transcripts are up-regulated by IFN-γ, and even more so by IFN-γ and TNF-α, as assessed by real-time RT-PCR, with the α-AChR subunit being the most sensitive to this regulation. The expression of AChR protein was increased at the cytoplasmic level in thymic epithelial cells and at the membrane in myoid cells. To examine whether IFN-γ could influence AChR expression in vivo, we analyzed AChR transcripts in IFN-γ gene knock-out mice, and found a significant decrease in AChR transcript levels in the thymus but not in the muscle, compared with wild-type mice. However, up-regulation of AChR protein expression was found in the muscles of animals with myasthenic symptoms treated with TNF-α. Altogether, these results indicate that proinflammatory cytokines influence the expression of AChR in vitro and in vivo. Because proinflammatory cytokine activity is evidenced in the thymus of myasthenia gravis patients, it could influence AChR expression and thereby contribute to the initiation of the autoimmune anti-AChR response.


Blood | 2008

Bone marrow microenvironment controls the in vivo differentiation of murine dendritic cells into osteoclasts

Abdelilah Wakkach; Anna Mansour; Romain Dacquin; Emmanuel Coste; Pierre Jurdic; Georges F. Carle; Claudine Blin-Wakkach

Finding that activated T cells control osteoclast (OCL) differentiation has revealed the importance of the interactions between immune and bone cells. Dendritic cells (DCs) are responsible for T-cell activation and share common precursors with OCLs. Here we show that DCs participate in bone resorption more directly than simply through T-cell activation. We show that, among the splenic DC subsets, the conventional DCs have the higher osteoclastogenic potential in vitro. We demonstrate that conventional DCs differentiate into functional OCLs in vivo when injected into osteopetrotic oc/oc mice defective in OCL resorptive function. Moreover, this differentiation involves the presence of activated CD4(+) T cells controlling a high RANK-L expression by bone marrow stromal cells. Our results open new insights in the differentiation of OCLs and DCs and offer new basis for analyzing the relations between bone and immune systems.


Cell Research | 2011

Osteoclast activity modulates B-cell development in the bone marrow

Anna Mansour; Adrienne Anginot; Stéphane J. C. Mancini; Claudine Schiff; Georges F. Carle; Abdelilah Wakkach; Claudine Blin-Wakkach

B-cell development is dependent on the interactions between B-cell precursors and bone marrow stromal cells, but the role of osteoclasts (OCLs) in this process remains unknown. B lymphocytopenia is a characteristic of osteopetrosis, suggesting a modulation of B lymphopoiesis by OCL activity. To address this question, we first rescued OCL function in osteopetrotic oc/oc mice by dendritic cell transfer, leading to a restoration of both bone phenotype and B-cell development. To further explore the link between OCL activity and B lymphopoiesis, we induced osteopetrosis in normal mice by injections of zoledronic acid (ZA), an inhibitor of bone resorption. B-cell number decreased specifically in the bone marrow of ZA-treated mice. ZA did not directly affect B-cell differentiation, proliferation and apoptosis, but induced a decrease in the expression of CXCL12 and IL-7 by stromal cells, associated with reduced osteoblastic engagement. Equivalent low osteoblastic engagement in oc/oc mice confirmed that it resulted from the reduced OCL activity rather than from a direct effect of ZA on osteoblasts. These dramatic alterations of the bone microenvironment were disadvantageous for B lymphopoiesis, leading to retention of B-cell progenitors outside of their bone marrow niches in the ZA-induced osteopetrotic model. Altogether, our data revealed that OCLs modulate B-cell development in the bone marrow by controlling the bone microenvironment and the fate of osteoblasts. They provide novel basis for the regulation of the retention of B cells in their niche by OCL activity.


Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2004

Characterization of a Novel Bipotent Hematopoietic Progenitor Population in Normal and Osteopetrotic Mice

Claudine Blin-Wakkach; Abdelilah Wakkach; Nathalie Rochet; Georges F. Carle

Several reports indicate that osteoclasts and B‐lymphocytes share a common progenitor. This study focuses on the characterization of this bipotent progenitor from the bone marrow of the osteopetrotic oc/oc mouse, where the bipotent progenitor population is amplified, and of normal mice.


Gut | 2015

Bone marrow Th17 TNFα cells induce osteoclast differentiation, and link bone destruction to IBD

Thomas Ciucci; Lidia Ibáñez; Agathe Boucoiran; Eléonore Birgy-Barelli; Jérôme Pène; Grazia Abou-Ezzi; Nadia Arab; Matthieu Rouleau; Xavier Hébuterne; Hans Yssel; Claudine Blin-Wakkach; Abdelilah Wakkach

Objective Under both physiological and pathological conditions, bone volume is determined by the rate of bone formation by osteoblasts and bone resorption by osteoclasts. Excessive bone loss is a common complication of human IBD whose mechanisms are not yet completely understood. Despite the role of activated CD4+ T cells in inflammatory bone loss, the nature of the T cell subsets involved in this process in vivo remains unknown. The aim of the present study was to identify the CD4+ T cell subsets involved in the process of osteoclastogenesis in vivo, as well as their mechanism of action. Design CD4+ T cells were studied in IL10−/− mice and Rag1−/− mice adoptively transferred with naive CD4+CD45RBhigh T cells, representing two well-characterised animal models of IBD and in patients with Crohns disease. They were phenotypically and functionally characterised by flow cytometric and gene expression analysis, as well as in in vitro cocultures with osteoclast precursors. Results In mice, we identified bone marrow (BM) CD4+ T cells producing interleukin (IL)-17 and tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-α as an osteoclastogenic T cell subset referred to as Th17 TNF-α+ cells. During chronic inflammation, these cells migrate to the BM where they survive in an IL-7-dependent manner and where they promote the recruitment of inflammatory monocytes, the main osteoclast progenitors. A population equivalent to the Th17 TNF-α+ cells was also detected in patients with Crohns disease. Conclusions Our results highlight the osteoclastogenic function of the Th17 TNF-α+ cells that contribute to bone loss in vivo in IBD.


Journal of Immunology | 2010

Inflammatory Blood Monocytes Contribute to Tumor Development and Represent a Privileged Target To Improve Host Immunosurveillance

Séverine Augier; Thomas Ciucci; Carmelo Luci; Georges F. Carle; Claudine Blin-Wakkach; Abdelilah Wakkach

Progressing tumors in humans and mice are frequently infiltrated by a highly heterogeneous population of inflammatory myeloid cells that contribute to tumor growth. Among these cells, inflammatory Gr-1+ monocytes display a high developmental plasticity in response to specific microenvironmental signals, leading to diverse immune functions. These observations raise the question of the immune mechanisms by which inflammatory monocytes may contribute to tumor development. In this study, we found that adoptive transfer of normal inflammatory Gr-1+ monocytes in tumor-bearing mice promotes tumor growth. In this tumoral environment, these monocytes can differentiate into tolerogenic dendritic cells (DCs) that produce IL-10 and potently induce regulatory T cell responses in vivo. Moreover, diverting the differentiation of Gr-1+ monocytes into tolerogenic DCs by forced expression of IL-10 soluble receptor and IL-3 in tumor cells improves host immunosurveillance by reducing the regulatory T cell frequency and by inducing immunogenic DCs in the tumor. As a consequence, tumor growth is strongly reduced. Our findings indicate that Gr-1+ monocytes represent a valuable target for innovative immunotherapeutic strategies against cancer.


Journal of Immunology | 2008

Characterization of IL-10-Secreting T Cells Derived from Regulatory CD4+CD25+ Cells by the TIRC7 Surface Marker

Abdelilah Wakkach; Séverine Augier; Jean-Philippe Breittmayer; Claudine Blin-Wakkach; Georges F. Carle

Natural CD25+CD4+ regulatory T cells (Treg) are essential for self-tolerance and for the control of T cell-mediated immune pathologies. However, the identification of Tregs in an ongoing immune response or in inflamed tissues remains elusive. Our experiments indicate that TIRC7, T cell immune response cDNA 7, a novel membrane molecule involved in the regulation of T lymphocyte activation, identifies two Treg subsets (CD25lowTIRC7+ and CD25highTIRC7−) that are characterized by the expression of Foxp3 and a suppressive activity in vitro and in vivo. We also showed that the CD25lowTIRC7+ subset represents IL-10-secreting Tregs in steady state, which is accumulated intratumorally in a tumor-bearing mice model. Blockade of the effect of IL-10 reversed the suppression imposed by the CD25lowTIRC7+ subset. Interestingly, these IL-10-secreting cells derived from the CD25highTIRC7− subset, both in vitro and in vivo, in response to tumoral Ags. Our present results strongly support the notion that, in the pool of natural Tregs, some cells can recognize foreign Ags and that this recognition is an essential step in their expansion and suppressive activity in vivo.

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Claudine Blin-Wakkach

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Georges F. Carle

University of Nice Sophia Antipolis

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Anna Mansour

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Lidia Ibáñez

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Matthieu Rouleau

University of Nice Sophia Antipolis

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Thomas Ciucci

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Nourhène Belaïd

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jean Gugenheim

University of Nice Sophia Antipolis

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Matthieu Rouleau

University of Nice Sophia Antipolis

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