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Dive into the research topics where Alexandre Alcaïs is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexandre Alcaïs.


Nature | 2004

Susceptibility to leprosy is associated with PARK2 and PACRG

Marcelo Távora Mira; Alexandre Alcaïs; Nguyen Van Thuc; Milton Ozório Moraes; Celestino Di Flumeri; Vu Hong Thai; Mai Chi Phuong; Nguyen Thu Huong; Nguyen Ngoc Ba; Pham Xuan Khoa; Euzenir Nunes Sarno; Andrea Alter; Alexandre Montpetit; Maria E. Moraes; J.R. Moraes; Carole Doré; Caroline J. Gallant; Pierre Lepage; Andrei Verner; Esther van de Vosse; Thomas J. Hudson; Laurent Abel; Erwin Schurr

Leprosy is caused by Mycobacterium leprae and affects about 700,000 individuals each year. It has long been thought that leprosy has a strong genetic component, and recently we mapped a leprosy susceptibility locus to chromosome 6 region q25–q26 (ref. 3). Here we investigate this region further by using a systematic association scan of the chromosomal interval most likely to harbour this leprosy susceptibility locus. In 197 Vietnamese families we found a significant association between leprosy and 17 markers located in a block of approx. 80 kilobases overlapping the 5′ regulatory region shared by the Parkinsons disease gene PARK2 and the co-regulated gene PACRG. Possession of as few as two of the 17 risk alleles was highly predictive of leprosy. This was confirmed in a sample of 975 unrelated leprosy cases and controls from Brazil in whom the same alleles were strongly associated with leprosy. Variants in the regulatory region shared by PARK2 and PACRG therefore act as common risk factors for leprosy.


PLOS Genetics | 2009

Evolutionary dynamics of human Toll-like receptors and their different contributions to host defense.

Luis B. Barreiro; Meriem Ben-Ali; Hélène Quach; Guillaume Laval; Etienne Patin; Joseph K. Pickrell; Christiane Bouchier; Magali Tichit; Olivier Neyrolles; Brigitte Gicquel; Judith R. Kidd; Kenneth K. Kidd; Alexandre Alcaïs; Josiane Ragimbeau; Sandra Pellegrini; Laurent Abel; Jean-Laurent Casanova; Lluis Quintana-Murci

Infectious diseases have been paramount among the threats to health and survival throughout human evolutionary history. Natural selection is therefore expected to act strongly on host defense genes, particularly on innate immunity genes whose products mediate the direct interaction between the host and the microbial environment. In insects and mammals, the Toll-like receptors (TLRs) appear to play a major role in initiating innate immune responses against microbes. In humans, however, it has been speculated that the set of TLRs could be redundant for protective immunity. We investigated how natural selection has acted upon human TLRs, as an approach to assess their level of biological redundancy. We sequenced the ten human TLRs in a panel of 158 individuals from various populations worldwide and found that the intracellular TLRs—activated by nucleic acids and particularly specialized in viral recognition—have evolved under strong purifying selection, indicating their essential non-redundant role in host survival. Conversely, the selective constraints on the TLRs expressed on the cell surface—activated by compounds other than nucleic acids—have been much more relaxed, with higher rates of damaging nonsynonymous and stop mutations tolerated, suggesting their higher redundancy. Finally, we tested whether TLRs have experienced spatially-varying selection in human populations and found that the region encompassing TLR10-TLR1-TLR6 has been the target of recent positive selection among non-Africans. Our findings indicate that the different TLRs differ in their immunological redundancy, reflecting their distinct contributions to host defense. The insights gained in this study foster new hypotheses to be tested in clinical and epidemiological genetics of infectious disease.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2005

Tuberculosis in children and adults two distinct genetic diseases

Alexandre Alcaïs; Claire Fieschi; Laurent Abel; Jean-Laurent Casanova

Disseminated disease in children and pulmonary disease in adults constitute two major epidemiological and clinical forms of tuberculosis. Paradoxically, only a small fraction of infected individuals develop clinical tuberculosis, typically one form of the disease or the other. Mendelian and complex genetic predispositions to tuberculosis were reported recently in children and adults, respectively. Here, we argue that tuberculosis and its clinical expression largely reflect the underlying human genetic background.


Nature Genetics | 2005

Gains of glycosylation comprise an unexpectedly large group of pathogenic mutations

Guillaume Vogt; Ariane Chapgier; Kun Yang; Nadia Chuzhanova; Jacqueline Feinberg; Claire Fieschi; Stéphanie Boisson-Dupuis; Alexandre Alcaïs; Jacinta Bustamante; Ludovic de Beaucoudrey; Ibrahim Al-Mohsen; Sami Al-Hajjar; Abdulaziz Al-Ghonaium; Parisa Adimi; Mehdi Mirsaeidi; Soheila Khalilzadeh; Sergio D. Rosenzweig; Oscar De La Galle Martin; Thomas R. Bauer; Jennifer M. Puck; Hans D. Ochs; Dieter Furthner; Carolin Engelhorn; Bernd H. Belohradsky; Davood Mansouri; Steven M. Holland; Robert D. Schreiber; Laurent Abel; David Neil Cooper; Claire Soudais

Mutations involving gains of glycosylation have been considered rare, and the pathogenic role of the new carbohydrate chains has never been formally established. We identified three children with mendelian susceptibility to mycobacterial disease who were homozygous with respect to a missense mutation in IFNGR2 creating a new N-glycosylation site in the IFNγR2 chain. The resulting additional carbohydrate moiety was both necessary and sufficient to abolish the cellular response to IFNγ. We then searched the Human Gene Mutation Database for potential gain-of-N-glycosylation missense mutations; of 10,047 mutations in 577 genes encoding proteins trafficked through the secretory pathway, we identified 142 candidate mutations (∼1.4%) in 77 genes (∼13.3%). Six mutant proteins bore new N-linked carbohydrate moieties. Thus, an unexpectedly high proportion of mutations that cause human genetic disease might lead to the creation of new N-glycosylation sites. Their pathogenic effects may be a direct consequence of the addition of N-linked carbohydrate.


Nature Genetics | 2003

Chromosome 6q25 is linked to susceptibility to leprosy in a Vietnamese population

Marcelo Mira; Alexandre Alcaïs; Nguyen Van Thuc; Vu Hong Thai; Nguyen Thu Huong; Nguyen Ngoc Ba; Andrei Verner; Thomas J. Hudson; Laurent Abel; Erwin Schurr

Leprosy, a chronic infectious disease caused by Mycobacterium leprae, affects an estimated 700,000 persons each year. Clinically, leprosy can be categorized as paucibacillary or multibacillary disease. These clinical forms develop in persons that are intrinsically susceptible to leprosy per se, that is, leprosy independent of its specific clinical manifestation. We report here on a genome-wide search for loci controlling susceptibility to leprosy per se in a panel of 86 families including 205 siblings affected with leprosy from Southern Vietnam. Using model-free linkage analysis, we found significant evidence for a susceptibility gene on chromosome region 6q25 (maximum likelihood binomial (MLB) lod score 4.31; P = 5 × 10−6). We confirmed this by family-based association analysis in an independent panel of 208 Vietnamese leprosy simplex families. Of seven microsatellite markers underlying the linkage peak, alleles of two markers (D6S1035 and D6S305) showed strong evidence for association with leprosy (P = 6.7 × 10−4 and P = 5.9 × 10−5, respectively).


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2009

Human genetics of infectious diseases: between proof of principle and paradigm

Alexandre Alcaïs; Laurent Abel; Jean-Laurent Casanova

The observation that only a fraction of individuals infected by infectious agents develop clinical disease raises fundamental questions about the actual pathogenesis of infectious diseases. Epidemiological and experimental evidence is accumulating to suggest that human genetics plays a major role in this process. As we discuss here, human predisposition to infectious diseases seems to cover a continuous spectrum from monogenic to polygenic inheritance. Although many studies have provided proof of principle that infectious diseases may result from various types of inborn errors of immunity, the genetic determinism of most infectious diseases in most patients remains unclear. However, in the future, studies in human genetics are likely to establish a new paradigm for infectious diseases.


Nature Immunology | 2007

Immunology in natura : clinical, epidemiological and evolutionary genetics of infectious diseases

Lluis Quintana-Murci; Alexandre Alcaïs; Laurent Abel; Jean-Laurent Casanova

The field of human genetics of infectious diseases defines the genes and alleles rendering individuals (clinical genetics) and populations (epidemiological genetics) vulnerable to infection, and studies those selected by previous infections (evolutionary genetics). These disciplines—clinical, epidemiological and evolutionary genetics—delineate the redundant and nonredundant functions of host defense genes for past and present survival in natura—in natural ecosystems governed by natural selection. These disciplines, in other words, assess the ecologically relevant and evolutionarily selected roles of human genes and alleles in protective immunity to diverse and evolving microorganisms. The genetic dissection of human immunity to infection in natura provides unique immunological insight, making it an indispensable complement to experimental immunology in vitro and in vivo in plants and animals.


Nature Genetics | 2007

Stepwise replication identifies a low-producing lymphotoxin-alpha allele as a major risk factor for early-onset leprosy.

Alexandre Alcaïs; Andrea Alter; Guillemette Antoni; Marianna Orlova; Nguyen Van Thuc; Meenakshi Singh; Patrícia R. Vanderborght; Kiran Katoch; Marcelo Távora Mira; Vu Hong Thai; Ngyuen Thu Huong; Nguyen Ngoc Ba; Milton Ozório Moraes; N. K. Mehra; Erwin Schurr; Laurent Abel

Host genetics has an important role in leprosy, and variants in the shared promoter region of PARK2 and PACRG were the first major susceptibility factors identified by positional cloning. Here we report the linkage disequilibrium mapping of the second linkage peak of our previous genome-wide scan, located close to the HLA complex. In both a Vietnamese familial sample and an Indian case-control sample, the low-producing lymphotoxin-α (LTA)+80 A allele was significantly associated with an increase in leprosy risk (P = 0.007 and P = 0.01, respectively). Analysis of an additional case-control sample from Brazil and an additional familial sample from Vietnam showed that the LTA+80 effect was much stronger in young individuals. In the combined sample of 298 Vietnamese familial trios, the odds ratio of leprosy for LTA+80 AA/AC versus CC subjects was 2.11 (P = 0.000024), which increased to 5.63 (P = 0.0000004) in the subsample of 121 trios of affected individuals diagnosed before 16 years of age. In addition to identifying LTA as a major gene associated with early-onset leprosy, our study highlights the critical role of case- and population-specific factors in the dissection of susceptibility variants in complex diseases.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2010

Life-threatening infectious diseases of childhood: single-gene inborn errors of immunity?

Alexandre Alcaïs; Lluis Quintana-Murci; David S. Thaler; Erwin Schurr; Laurent Abel; Jean-Laurent Casanova

The hypothesis that inborn errors of immunity underlie infectious diseases is gaining experimental support. However, the apparent modes of inheritance of predisposition or resistance differ considerably among diseases and among studies. A coherent genetic architecture of infectious diseases is lacking. We suggest here that life‐threatening infectious diseases in childhood, occurring in the course of primary infection, result mostly from individually rare but collectively diverse single‐gene variations of variable clinical penetrance, whereas the genetic component of predisposition to secondary or reactivation infections in adults is more complex. This model is consistent with (i) the high incidence of most infectious diseases in early childhood, followed by a steady decline; (ii) theoretical modeling of the impact of monogenic or polygenic predisposition on the incidence distribution of infectious diseases before reproductive age; (iii) available molecular evidence from both monogenic and complex genetics of infectious diseases in children and adults; (iv) current knowledge of immunity to primary and secondary or latent infections; (v) the state of the art in the clinical genetics of noninfectious pediatric and adult diseases; and (vi) evolutionary data for the genes underlying single‐gene and complex disease risk. With the recent advent of new‐generation deep resequencing, this model of single‐gene variations underlying severe pediatric infectious diseases is experimentally testable.


Journal of Immunology | 2008

Immunological and genetic evidence for a crucial role of IL-10 in cutaneous lesions in humans infected with Leishmania braziliensis.

Adnene Salhi; Virmondes Rodrigues; Ferrucio Santoro; Hélia Dessein; Audrey Romano; Lúcio Roberto Castellano; Mathieu Sertorio; Sima Rafati; Christophe Chevillard; Aluisio Prata; Alexandre Alcaïs; Laurent Argiro; Alain Dessein

In populations exposed to Leishmania braziliensis, certain subjects develop skin ulcers, whereas others are naturally protected against cutaneous leishmaniasis. We have evaluated which cytokines are most crucial in the development of skin lesions. We found that active lesions occur in subjects with polarized Th2 or mixed Th1/Th2 responses, both associated with elevated IL-10 production. IL-10 was strongly associated (p = 0.004, odd ratio (OR) = 6.8, confidence interval = 1.9–25) with lesions, excluding IFN-γ, IL-12, TNF, IL-13, and IL-4 from the regression model. IL-10 was produced by blood monocytes and CD4+CD25+ T lymphocytes (mostly Foxp3+). However, we did not observe any difference between the number of these cells present in the blood of subjects with active lesions and those present in resistant subjects. Genetic analysis of the IL10−819C/T polymorphism, located in the IL10 promoter, showed that the C allele increased the risk of lesions (OR = 2.5 (1.12–5.7), p = 0.003). Functional analysis of these variants showed allele-specific binding of nuclear factors. The IL10-819C/C genotype was associated with higher levels of IL-10 than C/T and T/T genotypes. These observations demonstrate an important role for IL-10 in skin lesions in humans infected with L. braziliensis, and identify circulating monocytes and Tregs as principal sources of IL-10 in these patients.

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Erwin Schurr

McGill University Health Centre

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Aurélie Cobat

Paris Descartes University

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Vu Hong Thai

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Marianna Orlova

McGill University Health Centre

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