Antoine Tesniere
Institut Gustave Roussy
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Publication
Featured researches published by Antoine Tesniere.
Nature Medicine | 2007
Lionel Apetoh; François Ghiringhelli; Antoine Tesniere; Michel Obeid; Carla Ortiz; Alfredo Criollo; Grégoire Mignot; M. Chiara Maiuri; Evelyn Ullrich; Patrick Saulnier; Huan Yang; Sebastian Amigorena; Bernard Ryffel; Franck J. Barrat; Paul Saftig; Francis Lévi; Rosette Lidereau; Catherine Noguès; Jean-Paul Mira; Agnès Chompret; Virginie Joulin; Françoise Clavel-Chapelon; Jean Bourhis; Fabrice Andre; Suzette Delaloge; Thomas Tursz; Guido Kroemer; Laurence Zitvogel
Conventional cancer treatments rely on radiotherapy and chemotherapy. Such treatments supposedly mediate their effects via the direct elimination of tumor cells. Here we show that the success of some protocols for anticancer therapy depends on innate and adaptive antitumor immune responses. We describe in both mice and humans a previously unrecognized pathway for the activation of tumor antigen–specific T-cell immunity that involves secretion of the high-mobility-group box 1 (HMGB1) alarmin protein by dying tumor cells and the action of HMGB1 on Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) expressed by dendritic cells (DCs). During chemotherapy or radiotherapy, DCs require signaling through TLR4 and its adaptor MyD88 for efficient processing and cross-presentation of antigen from dying tumor cells. Patients with breast cancer who carry a TLR4 loss-of-function allele relapse more quickly after radiotherapy and chemotherapy than those carrying the normal TLR4 allele. These results delineate a clinically relevant immunoadjuvant pathway triggered by tumor cell death.
Nature Medicine | 2007
Michel Obeid; Antoine Tesniere; François Ghiringhelli; Gian Maria Fimia; Lionel Apetoh; Jean Luc Perfettini; Maria Castedo; Grégoire Mignot; Theoharis Panaretakis; Noelia Casares; Didier Métivier; Nathanael Larochette; Peter van Endert; Fabiola Ciccosanti; Mauro Piacentini; Laurence Zitvogel; Guido Kroemer
Anthracyclin-treated tumor cells are particularly effective in eliciting an anticancer immune response, whereas other DNA-damaging agents such as etoposide and mitomycin C do not induce immunogenic cell death. Here we show that anthracyclins induce the rapid, preapoptotic translocation of calreticulin (CRT) to the cell surface. Blockade or knockdown of CRT suppressed the phagocytosis of anthracyclin-treated tumor cells by dendritic cells and abolished their immunogenicity in mice. The anthracyclin-induced CRT translocation was mimicked by inhibition of the protein phosphatase 1/GADD34 complex. Administration of recombinant CRT or inhibitors of protein phosphatase 1/GADD34 restored the immunogenicity of cell death elicited by etoposide and mitomycin C, and enhanced their antitumor effects in vivo. These data identify CRT as a key feature determining anticancer immune responses and delineate a possible strategy for immunogenic chemotherapy.
Nature Reviews Immunology | 2006
Laurence Zitvogel; Antoine Tesniere; Guido Kroemer
Numerous innate and adaptive immune effector cells and molecules participate in the recognition and destruction of cancer cells, a process that is known as cancer immunosurveillance. But cancer cells avoid such immunosurveillance through the outgrowth of poorly immunogenic tumour-cell variants (immunoselection) and through subversion of the immune system (immunosubversion). At the early stages of carcinogenesis, cell-intrinsic barriers to tumour development seem to be associated with stimulation of an active antitumour immune response, whereas overt tumour development seems to correlate with changes in the immunogenic properties of tumour cells. The permanent success of treatments for cancer might depend on using immunogenic chemotherapy to re-establish antitumour immune responses.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2005
Noelia Casares; Marie O. Pequignot; Antoine Tesniere; François Ghiringhelli; Stephan Roux; Nathalie Chaput; Elise Schmitt; Ahmed Hamai; Sandra Hervas-Stubbs; Michel Obeid; Frédéric Coutant; Didier Métivier; Evelyne Pichard; Pierre Aucouturier; Gérard Pierron; Carmen Garrido; Laurence Zitvogel; Guido Kroemer
Systemic anticancer chemotherapy is immunosuppressive and mostly induces nonimmunogenic tumor cell death. Here, we show that even in the absence of any adjuvant, tumor cells dying in response to anthracyclins can elicit an effective antitumor immune response that suppresses the growth of inoculated tumors or leads to the regression of established neoplasia. Although both antracyclins and mitomycin C induced apoptosis with caspase activation, only anthracyclin-induced immunogenic cell death was immunogenic. Caspase inhibition by Z-VAD-fmk or transfection with the baculovirus inhibitor p35 did not inhibit doxorubicin (DX)-induced cell death, yet suppressed the immunogenicity of dying tumor cells in several rodent models of neoplasia. Depletion of dendritic cells (DCs) or CD8+T cells abolished the immune response against DX-treated apoptotic tumor cells in vivo. Caspase inhibition suppressed the capacity of DX-killed cells to be phagocytosed by DCs, yet had no effect on their capacity to elicit DC maturation. Freshly excised tumors became immunogenic upon DX treatment in vitro, and intratumoral inoculation of DX could trigger the regression of established tumors in immunocompetent mice. These results delineate a procedure for the generation of cancer vaccines and the stimulation of anti-neoplastic immune responses in vivo.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2008
Laurence Zitvogel; Lionel Apetoh; François Ghiringhelli; Fabrice Andre; Antoine Tesniere; Guido Kroemer
Although the impact of tumor immunology on the clinical management of most cancers is still negligible, there is increasing evidence that anticancer immune responses may contribute to the control of cancer after conventional chemotherapy. Thus, radiotherapy and some chemotherapeutic agents, in particular anthracyclines, can induce specific immune responses that result either in immunogenic cancer cell death or in immunostimulatory side effects. This anticancer immune response then helps to eliminate residual cancer cells (those that fail to be killed by chemotherapy) or maintains micrometastases in a stage of dormancy. Based on these premises, in this Review we address the question, How may it be possible to ameliorate conventional therapies by stimulating the anticancer immune response? Moreover, we discuss the rationale of clinical trials to evaluate and eventually increase the contribution of antitumor immune responses to the therapeutic management of neoplasia.
Oncogene | 2010
Antoine Tesniere; Frederic Schlemmer; V. Boige; Oliver Kepp; Isabelle Martins; François Ghiringhelli; Laetitia Aymeric; M. Michaud; Lionel Apetoh; L. Barault; J. Mendiboure; J.-P. Pignon; V. Jooste; P. van Endert; M. Ducreux; Laurence Zitvogel; F. Piard; Guido Kroemer
Both the pre-apoptotic exposure of calreticulin (CRT) and the post-apoptotic release of high-mobility group box 1 protein (HMGB1) are required for immunogenic cell death elicited by anthracyclins. Here, we show that both oxaliplatin (OXP) and cisplatin (CDDP) were equally efficient in triggering HMGB1 release. However, OXP, but not CDDP, stimulates pre-apoptotic CRT exposure in a series of murine and human colon cancer cell lines. Subcutaneous injection of OXP-treated colorectal cancer (CRC), CT26, cells induced an anticancer immune response that was reduced by short interfering RNA-mediated depletion of CRT or HMGB1. In contrast, CDDP-treated CT26 cells failed to induce anticancer immunity, unless recombinant CRT protein was absorbed into the cells. CT26 tumors implanted in immunocompetent mice responded to OXP treatment in vivo, and this therapeutic response was lost when CRT exposure by CT26 cells was inhibited or when CT26 cells were implanted in immunodeficient mice. The knockout of toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4), the receptor for HMGB1, also resulted in a deficient immune response against OXP-treated CT26 cells. In patients with advanced (stage IV, Duke D) CRC, who received an OXP-based chemotherapeutic regimen, the loss-of-function allele of TLR4 (Asp299Gly in linkage disequilibrium with Thr399Ile, reducing its affinity for HMGB1) was as prevalent as in the general population. However, patients carrying the TLR4 loss-of-function allele exhibited reduced progression-free and overall survival, as compared with patients carrying the normal TLR4 allele. In conclusion, OXP induces immunogenic death of CRC cells, and this effect determines its therapeutic efficacy in CRC patients.
The EMBO Journal | 2009
Theocharis Panaretakis; Oliver Kepp; Ulf Brockmeier; Antoine Tesniere; Ann-Charlotte Björklund; Daniel C. Chapman; Michael Durchschlag; Nicholas Joza; Gérard Pierron; Peter van Endert; Junying Yuan; Laurence Zitvogel; Frank Madeo; David B. Williams; Guido Kroemer
Dying tumour cells can elicit a potent anticancer immune response by exposing the calreticulin (CRT)/ERp57 complex on the cell surface before the cells manifest any signs of apoptosis. Here, we enumerate elements of the pathway that mediates pre‐apoptotic CRT/ERp57 exposure in response to several immunogenic anticancer agents. Early activation of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER)‐sessile kinase PERK leads to phosphorylation of the translation initiation factor eIF2α, followed by partial activation of caspase‐8 (but not caspase‐3), caspase‐8‐mediated cleavage of the ER protein BAP31 and conformational activation of Bax and Bak. Finally, a pool of CRT that has transited the Golgi apparatus is secreted by SNARE‐dependent exocytosis. Knock‐in mutation of eIF2α (to make it non‐phosphorylatable) or BAP31 (to render it uncleavable), depletion of PERK, caspase‐8, BAP31, Bax, Bak or SNAREs abolished CRT/ERp57 exposure induced by anthracyclines, oxaliplatin and ultraviolet C light. Depletion of PERK, caspase‐8 or SNAREs had no effect on cell death induced by anthracyclines, yet abolished the immunogenicity of cell death, which could be restored by absorbing recombinant CRT to the cell surface.
Immunological Reviews | 2007
Lionel Apetoh; François Ghiringhelli; Antoine Tesniere; Alfredo Criollo; Carla Ortiz; Rosette Lidereau; Christophe Mariette; Nathalie Chaput; Jean-Paul Mira; Suzette Delaloge; Fabrice Andre; Thomas Tursz; Guido Kroemer; Laurence Zitvogel
Summary: For the last four decades, the treatment of cancer has relied on four treatment modalities, namely surgery, radiotherapy, cytotoxic chemotherapy, and hormonotherapy. Most of these therapies are believed to directly attack and eradicate tumor cells. The emerging concept that cancer is not just a disease of a tissue or an organ but also a host disease relies on evidence of tumor‐induced immunosuppression and polymorphisms in genes involved in host protection against tumors. This theory is now gaining new impetus, based on our recent data showing that optimal therapeutic effects require the immunoadjuvant effect of tumor cell death induced by cytotoxic anticancer agents. Here, we show that the release of the high mobility group box 1 protein (HMGB1) by dying tumor cells is mandatory to license host dendritic cells (DCs) to process and present tumor antigens. HMGB1 interacts with Toll‐like receptor 4 (TLR4) on DCs, which are selectively involved in the cross‐priming of anti‐tumor T lymphocytes in vivo. A TLR4 polymorphism that affects the binding of HMGB1 to TLR4 predicts early relapse after anthracycline‐based chemotherapy in breast cancer patients. This knowledge may be clinically exploited to predict the immunogenicity and hence the efficacy of chemotherapeutic regimens.
Cell Death & Differentiation | 2008
Antoine Tesniere; Theocharis Panaretakis; Oliver Kepp; Lionel Apetoh; François Ghiringhelli; Laurence Zitvogel; Guido Kroemer
Apoptotic cell death is initiated by a morphologically homogenous entity that was considered to be non-immunogenic and non-inflammatory in nature. However, recent advances suggest that apoptosis, under certain circumstances, can be immunogenic. In particular, some characteristics of the plasma membrane, acquired at preapoptotic stage, can cause immune effectors to recognize and attack preapoptotic tumor cells. The signals that mediate the immunogenicity of tumor cells involve elements of the DNA damage response (such as ataxia telangiectasia mutated and p53 activation), elements of the endoplasmic reticulum stress response (such as eukaryotic initiation factor 2α phosphorylation), as well as elements of the apoptotic response (such as caspase activation). Depending on the signal-transduction pathway, tumor cells responding to chemotherapy or radiotherapy can express ‘danger’ and ‘eat me’ signals on the cell surface (such as NKG2D ligands, heat-shock proteins and calreticulin) or can secrete/release immunostimulatory factors (such as cytokines and high-mobility group box 1) to stimulate innate immune effectors. Likewise, the precise sequence of such events influences the ‘decision’ of the immune system to mount a cognate response or not. We therefore anticipate that the comprehension of the mechanisms governing the immunogenicity of cell death will have a profound impact on the design of anticancer therapies.
Cell Death & Differentiation | 2007
Michel Obeid; Theocharis Panaretakis; Nick Joza; Roberta Tufi; Antoine Tesniere; P. van Endert; Laurence Zitvogel; Guido Kroemer
Calreticulin exposure is required for the immunogenicity of γ -irradiation and UVC light-induced apoptosis