Amélie Goudet
Université Paris-Saclay
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Publication
Featured researches published by Amélie Goudet.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013
Romain Noel; Neetu Gupta; Valérie Pons; Amélie Goudet; Maria Daniela Garcia-Castillo; Aurélien Michau; Jennifer Martinez; David-Alexandre Buisson; Ludger Johannes; Daniel Gillet; Julien Barbier; Jean-Christophe Cintrat
The Retro-2 molecule protects cells against Shiga toxins by specifically blocking retrograde transport from early endosomes to the trans-Golgi network. A SAR study has been carried out to identify more potent compounds. Cyclization and modifications of Retro-2 led to a compound with roughly 100-fold improvement of the EC50 against Shiga toxin cytotoxicity measured in a cell protein synthesis assay. We also demonstrated that only one enantiomer of the dihydroquinazolinone reported herein is bioactive.
Journal of Immunology | 2015
Catherine J. Reynolds; Amélie Goudet; Kemajittra Jenjaroen; Manutsanun Sumonwiriya; Darawan Rinchai; Julie A. Musson; S Overbeek; J Makinde; Kathryn Quigley; J Manji; Natasha Spink; P Yos; Wuthiekanun; Gregory J. Bancroft; John H. Robinson; Ganjana Lertmemongkolchai; Susanna Dunachie; Bernard Maillere; M Holden; Daniel M. Altmann; Rosemary J. Boyton
There is an urgent need for a better understanding of adaptive immunity to Burkholderia pseudomallei, the causative agent of melioidosis that is frequently associated with sepsis or death in patients in Southeast Asia and Northern Australia. The imperative to identify vaccine targets is driven both by the public health agenda in these regions and biological threat concerns. In several intracellular bacterial pathogens, alkyl hydroperoxidase reductases are upregulated as part of the response to host oxidative stress, and they can stimulate strong adaptive immunity. We show that alkyl hydroperoxidase reductase (AhpC) of B. pseudomallei is strongly immunogenic for T cells of ‘humanized’ HLA transgenic mice and seropositive human donors. Some T cell epitopes, such as p6, are able to bind diverse HLA class II heterodimers and stimulate strong T cell immunity in mice and humans. Importantly, patients with acute melioidosis who survive infection show stronger T cell responses to AhpC relative to those who do not. Although the sequence of AhpC is virtually invariant among global B. pseudomallei clinical isolates, a Cambodian isolate varies only in C-terminal truncation of the p6 T cell epitope, raising the possibility of selection by host immunity. This variant peptide is virtually unable to stimulate T cell immunity. For an infection in which there has been debate about centrality of T cell immunity in defense, these observations support a role for T cell immunity to AhpC in disease protection.
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2015
Kathryn Quigley; Catherine J. Reynolds; Amélie Goudet; Eleanor Raynsford; Ruhena Sergeant; A. Quigley; Stefan Worgall; Diana Bilton; Rob Wilson; Michael R. Loebinger; Bernard Maillere; Daniel M. Altmann; Rosemary J. Boyton
RATIONALEnPseudomonas aeruginosa (PA) is an environmental pathogen that commonly infects individuals with cystic fibrosis (CF) and non-CF bronchiectasis, impacting morbidity and mortality. To understand the pathobiology of interactions between the bacterium and host adaptive immunity and to inform rational vaccine design, it is important to understand the adaptive immune correlates of disease.nnnOBJECTIVESnTo characterize T-cell immunity to the PA antigen outer membrane porin F (OprF) by analyzing immunodominant epitopes in relation to infection status.nnnMETHODSnPatients with non-CF bronchiectasis were stratified by frequency of PA isolation. T-cell IFN-γ immunity to OprF and its immunodominant epitopes was characterized. Patterns of human leukocyte antigen (HLA) restriction of immunodominant epitopes were defined using HLA class II transgenic mice. Immunity was characterized with respect to cytokine and chemokine secretion, antibody response, and T-cell activation transcripts.nnnMEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTSnPatients were stratified according to whether PA was never, sometimes (<50%), or frequently (≥50%) isolated from sputum. Patients with frequent PA sputum-positive isolates were more likely to be infected by mucoid PA, and they showed a narrow T-cell epitope response and a relative reduction in Th1 polarizing transcription factors but enhanced immunity with respect to antibody production, innate cytokines, and chemokines.nnnCONCLUSIONSnWe have defined the immunodominant, HLA-restricted T-cell epitopes of OprF. Our observation that chronic infection is associated with a response of narrowed specificity, despite strong innate and antibody immunity, may help to explain susceptibility in these individuals and pave the way for better vaccine design to achieve protective immunity.
Immunology | 2014
Catherine J. Reynolds; Claire Jones; Christoph J. Blohmke; Thomas C. Darton; Amélie Goudet; Ruhena Sergeant; Bernard Maillere; Andrew J. Pollard; Daniel M. Altmann; Rosemary J. Boyton
Detailed characterization of the protective T‐cell response in salmonellosis is a pressing unmet need in light of the global burden of human Salmonella infections and the likely contribution of CD4 T cells to immunity against this intracellular infection. In previous studies screening patient sera against antigen arrays, SseB was noteworthy as a serodominant target of adaptive immunity, inducing significantly raised antibody responses in HIV‐seronegative compared with seropositive patients. SseB is a secreted protein, part of the Espa superfamily, localized to the bacterial surface and forming part of the translocon of the type III secretion system (T3SS) encoded by Salmonella pathogenicity island 2. We demonstrate here that SseB is also a target of CD4 T‐cell immunity, generating a substantial response after experimental infection in human volunteers, with around 0·1% of the peripheral repertoire responding to it. HLA‐DR/peptide binding studies indicate that this protein encompasses a number of peptides with ability to bind to several different HLA‐DR alleles. Of these, peptide 11 (p11) was shown in priming of both HLA‐DR1 and HLA‐DR4 transgenic mice to contain an immunodominant CD4 epitope. Analysis of responses in human donors showed immunity focused on p11 and another epitope in peptide 2. The high frequency of SseB‐reactive CD4 T cells and the broad applicability to diverse HLA genotypes coupled with previous observations of serodominance and protective vaccination in mouse challenge experiments, make SseB a plausible candidate for next‐generation Salmonella vaccines.
Archive | 2015
Kathryn Quigley; Catherine J. Reynolds; Amélie Goudet; Eleanor Raynsford; Ruhena Sergeant; A Quigley; S Worgall; D Bilton; R Wilson; Loebinger; Bernard Maillere; Daniel M. Altmann; Rosemary J. Boyton
RATIONALEnPseudomonas aeruginosa (PA) is an environmental pathogen that commonly infects individuals with cystic fibrosis (CF) and non-CF bronchiectasis, impacting morbidity and mortality. To understand the pathobiology of interactions between the bacterium and host adaptive immunity and to inform rational vaccine design, it is important to understand the adaptive immune correlates of disease.nnnOBJECTIVESnTo characterize T-cell immunity to the PA antigen outer membrane porin F (OprF) by analyzing immunodominant epitopes in relation to infection status.nnnMETHODSnPatients with non-CF bronchiectasis were stratified by frequency of PA isolation. T-cell IFN-γ immunity to OprF and its immunodominant epitopes was characterized. Patterns of human leukocyte antigen (HLA) restriction of immunodominant epitopes were defined using HLA class II transgenic mice. Immunity was characterized with respect to cytokine and chemokine secretion, antibody response, and T-cell activation transcripts.nnnMEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTSnPatients were stratified according to whether PA was never, sometimes (<50%), or frequently (≥50%) isolated from sputum. Patients with frequent PA sputum-positive isolates were more likely to be infected by mucoid PA, and they showed a narrow T-cell epitope response and a relative reduction in Th1 polarizing transcription factors but enhanced immunity with respect to antibody production, innate cytokines, and chemokines.nnnCONCLUSIONSnWe have defined the immunodominant, HLA-restricted T-cell epitopes of OprF. Our observation that chronic infection is associated with a response of narrowed specificity, despite strong innate and antibody immunity, may help to explain susceptibility in these individuals and pave the way for better vaccine design to achieve protective immunity.
Frontiers in Immunology | 2017
Moustafa Hamze; Sylvain Meunier; Anette Karle; Abdelaziz Gdoura; Amélie Goudet; Natacha Szely; Marc Pallardy; Franck Carbonnel; Sebastian Spindeldreher; Xavier Mariette; Corinne Miceli-Richard; Bernard Maillère
The chimeric antibodies anti-CD20 rituximab (Rtx) and anti-TNFα infliximab (Ifx) induce antidrug antibodies (ADAs) in many patients with inflammatory diseases. Because of the key role of CD4 T lymphocytes in the initiation of antibody responses, we localized the CD4 T cell epitopes of Rtx and Ifx. With the perspective to anticipate immunogenicity of therapeutic antibodies, identification of the CD4 T cell epitopes was performed using cells collected in healthy donors. Nine T cell epitopes were identified in the variable chains of both antibodies by deriving CD4 T cell lines raised against either Rtx or Ifx. The T cell epitopes often exhibited a good affinity for human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-DR molecules and were part of the peptides identified by MHC-associated peptide proteomics assay from HLA-DR molecules of dendritic cells (DCs) loaded with the antibodies. Two-third of the T cell epitopes identified from the healthy donors stimulated peripheral blood mononuclear cells from patients having developed ADAs against Rtx or Ifx and promoted the secretion of a diversity of cytokines. These data emphasize the predictive value of evaluating the T cell repertoire of healthy donors and the composition of peptides bound to HLA-DR of DCs to anticipate and prevent immunogenicity of therapeutic antibodies.
Chemico-Biological Interactions | 2017
Neetu Gupta; Romain Noel; Amélie Goudet; Karen Hinsinger; Aurélien Michau; Valérie Pons; Hajer Abdelkafi; Thomas Secher; Ayaka Shima; Olena Shtanko; Yasuteru Sakurai; Sandrine Cojean; Sébastien Pomel; Vanessa Liévin-Le Moal; Véronique Leignel; Jo-Ana Herweg; Annette Fischer; Ludger Johannes; Kate Harrison; Philippa M. Beard; Pascal Clayette; Roger Le Grand; Jonathan O. Rayner; Thomas Rudel; Joël Vacus; Philippe M. Loiseau; Robert A. Davey; Eric Oswald; Jean-Christophe Cintrat; Julien Barbier
Medical countermeasures to treat biothreat agent infections require broad-spectrum therapeutics that do not induce agent resistance. A cell-based high-throughput screen (HTS) against ricin toxin combined with hit optimization allowed selection of a family of compounds that meet these requirements. The hit compound Retro-2 and its derivatives have been demonstrated to be safe inxa0vivo in mice even at high doses. Moreover, Retro-2 is an inhibitor of retrograde transport that affects syntaxin-5-dependent toxins and pathogens. As a consequence, it has a broad-spectrum activity that has been demonstrated both inxa0vitro and inxa0vivo against ricin, Shiga toxin-producing O104:H4 entero-hemorrhagic E.xa0coli and Leishmania sp. and inxa0vitro against Ebola, Marburg and poxviruses and Chlamydiales. An effect is anticipated on other toxins or pathogens that use retrograde trafficking and syntaxin-5. Since Retro-2 targets cell components of the host and not directly the pathogen, no selection of resistant pathogens is expected. These lead compounds need now to be developed as drugs for human use.
PLOS ONE | 2016
Anne Araye; Amélie Goudet; Julien Barbier; Sylvain Pichard; Bruno Baron; Patrick England; Javier Pérez; Sophie Zinn-Justin; Alexandre Chenal; Daniel Gillet
Botulinum neurotoxin A (BoNT/A) is composed of three domains: a catalytic domain (LC), a translocation domain (HN) and a receptor-binding domain (HC). Like most bacterial toxins BoNT/A is an amphitropic protein, produced in a soluble form that is able to interact, penetrate and/or cross a membrane to achieve its toxic function. During intoxication BoNT/A is internalized by the cell by receptor-mediated endocytosis. Then, LC crosses the membrane of the endocytic compartment and reaches the cytosol. This translocation is initiated by the low pH found in this compartment. It has been suggested that LC passes in an unfolded state through a transmembrane passage formed by HN. We report here that acidification induces no major conformational change in either secondary or tertiary structures of LC and HN of BoNT/A in solution. GdnHCl-induced denaturation experiments showed that the stability of LC and HN increases as pH drops, and that HN further stabilizes LC. Unexpectedly we found that LC has a high propensity to interact with and permeabilize anionic lipid bilayers upon acidification without the help of HN. This property is downplayed when LC is linked to HN. HN thus acts as a chaperone for LC by enhancing its stability but also as a moderator of the membrane interaction of LC.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Yu Wu; Valérie Pons; Amélie Goudet; Laetitia Panigai; Annette Fischer; Jo-Ana Herweg; Sabrina Kali; Robert A. Davey; Jérôme Laporte; Céline Bouclier; Rahima Yousfi; Céline Aubenque; Goulven Merer; Emilie Gobbo; Roman Lopez; Cynthia Gillet; Sandrine Cojean; Michel R. Popoff; Pascal Clayette; Roger Le Grand; Claire Boulogne; Noël Tordo; Emmanuel Lemichez; Philippe M. Loiseau; Thomas Rudel; Didier Sauvaire; Jean-Christophe Cintrat; Daniel Gillet; Julien Barbier
Intracellular pathogenic microorganisms and toxins exploit host cell mechanisms to enter, exert their deleterious effects as well as hijack host nutrition for their development. A potential approach to treat multiple pathogen infections and that should not induce drug resistance is the use of small molecules that target host components. We identified the compound 1-adamantyl (5-bromo-2-methoxybenzyl) amine (ABMA) from a cell-based high throughput screening for its capacity to protect human cells and mice against ricin toxin without toxicity. This compound efficiently protects cells against various toxins and pathogens including viruses, intracellular bacteria and parasite. ABMA provokes Rab7-positive late endosomal compartment accumulation in mammalian cells without affecting other organelles (early endosomes, lysosomes, the Golgi apparatus, the endoplasmic reticulum or the nucleus). As the mechanism of action of ABMA is restricted to host-endosomal compartments, it reduces cell infection by pathogens that depend on this pathway to invade cells. ABMA may represent a novel class of broad-spectrum compounds with therapeutic potential against diverse severe infectious diseases.
Toxicon | 2018
Livia Tepshi; Neetu Gupta; Romain Noel; Amélie Goudet; Karen Hinsinger; Aurélien Michau; Valérie Pons; Hajer Abdelkafi; Thomas Secher; Ayaka Shima; Olena Shtanko; Yasuteru Sakurai; Sandrine Cojean; Sébastien Pomel; Vanessa Liévin-Le Moal; Véronique Leignel; Jo-Ana Herweg; Annette Fischer; Ludger Johannes; Kate Harrison; Philippa M. Beard; Thomas Rudel; Joël Vacus; Philippe M. Loiseau; Robert A. Davey; Eric Oswald; Jean-Christophe Cintrat; Julien Barbier; Daniel Gillet