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Dive into the research topics where Aurélie Durand is active.

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Featured researches published by Aurélie Durand.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Functional intestinal stem cells after Paneth cell ablation induced by the loss of transcription factor Math1 (Atoh1)

Aurélie Durand; Bridgitte Donahue; Grégory Peignon; Franck Letourneur; Nicolas Cagnard; Christian Slomianny; Christine Perret; Noah F. Shroyer; Béatrice Romagnolo

Intestinal epithelium has the capacity to self-renew and generate differentiated cells through the existence of two types of epithelial stem cells: active crypt base columnar cells (CBCs) and quiescent +4 cells. The behaviors of these cells are regulated both by intrinsic programs and by extrinsic signals sent by neighboring cells, which define the niche. It is clear that the β-catenin pathway acts as an essential intrinsic signal for the maintenance and proliferation of CBC, and it was recently proposed that Paneth cells provide a crucial niche by secreting Wingless/Int (Wnt) ligands. Here, we examined the effect of disrupting the intestinal stem cell niche by inducible deletion of the transcription factor Math1 (Atoh1), an essential driver of secretory cell differentiation. We found that complete loss of Paneth cells attributable to Math1 deficiency did not perturb the crypt architecture and allowed the maintenance and proliferation of CBCs. Indeed, Math1-deficient crypt cells tolerated in vivo Paneth cell loss and maintained active β-catenin signaling but could not grow ex vivo without exogenous Wnt, implying that, in vivo, underlying mucosal cells act as potential niche. Upon irradiation, Math1-deficient crypt cells regenerated and CBCs continued cycling. Finally, CBC stem cells deficient in adenomatous polyposis coli (Apc) and Math1 were able to promote intestinal tumorigenesis. We conclude that in vivo, Math1-deficient crypts counteract the absence of Paneth cell-derived Wnts and prevent CBC stem cell exhaustion.


Gut | 2011

Complex interplay between β-catenin signalling and Notch effectors in intestinal tumorigenesis

Grégory Peignon; Aurélie Durand; Wulfran Cacheux; Olivier Ayrault; Benoit Terris; Pierre Laurent-Puig; Noah F. Shroyer; Isabelle Van Seuningen; Tasuku Honjo; Christine Perret; Béatrice Romagnolo

Aims The activation of β-catenin signalling is a key step in intestinal tumorigenesis. Interplay between the β-catenin and Notch pathways during tumorigenesis has been reported, but the mechanisms involved and the role of Notch remain unclear. Methods Notch status was analysed by studying expression of the Notch effector Hes1 and Notch ligands/receptors in human colorectal cancer (CRC) and mouse models of Apc mutation. A genetic approach was used, deleting the Apc and RBP-J or Atoh1 genes in murine intestine. CRC cell lines were used to analyse the control of Hes1 and Atoh1 by β-catenin signalling. Results Notch signalling was found to be activated downstream from β-catenin. It was rapidly induced and maintained throughout tumorigenesis. Hes1 induction was mediated by β-catenin and resulted from both the induction of the Notch ligand/receptor and Notch-independent control of the Hes1 promoter by β-catenin. Surprisingly, the strong phenotype of unrestricted proliferation and impaired differentiation induced by acute Apc deletion in the intestine was not rescued by conditional Notch inactivation. Hyperactivation of β-catenin signalling overrode the forced differention induced by Notch inhibition, through the downregulation of Atoh1, a key secretory determinant factor downstream of Notch. This process involves glycogen synthase kinase 3 β (GSK3β) and proteasome-mediated degradation. The restoration of Atoh1 expression in CRC cell lines displaying β-catenin activation was sufficient to increase goblet cell differentiation, whereas genetic ablation of Atoh1 greatly increased tumour formation in Apc mutant mice. Conclusion Notch signalling is a downstream target of β-catenin hyperactivation in intestinal tumorigenesis. However, its inhibition had no tumour suppressor effect in the context of acute β-catenin activation probably due to the downregulation of Atoh1. This finding calls into question the use of γ-secretase inhibitors for the treatment of CRC and suggests that the restoration of Atoh1 expression in CRC should be considered as a therapeutic approach.


Nature Cell Biology | 2015

Intestinal inhibition of Atg7 prevents tumour initiation through a microbiome-influenced immune response and suppresses tumour growth

Jonathan Lévy; Wulfran Cacheux; Medhi Ait Bara; Antoine L’Hermitte; Patricia Lepage; Marie Fraudeau; Coralie Trentesaux; Julie Lemarchand; Aurélie Durand; Anne-Marie Crain; Carmen Marchiol; Gilles Renault; Florent Dumont; Franck Letourneur; Myriam Delacre; Alain Schmitt; Benoit Terris; Christine Perret; Mathias Chamaillard; Jean-Pierre Couty; Béatrice Romagnolo

Here, we show that autophagy is activated in the intestinal epithelium in murine and human colorectal cancer and that the conditional inactivation of Atg7 in intestinal epithelial cells inhibits the formation of pre-cancerous lesions in Apc+/− mice by enhancing anti-tumour responses. The antibody-mediated depletion of CD8+ T cells showed that these cells are essential for the anti-tumoral responses mediated by the inhibition of autophagy. We show that Atg7 deficiency leads to intestinal dysbiosis and that the microbiota is required for anticancer responses. In addition, Atg7 deficiency resulted in a stress response accompanied by metabolic defects, AMPK activation and p53-mediated cell-cycle arrest in tumour cells but not in normal tissue. This study reveals that the inhibition of autophagy within the epithelium may prevent the development and progression of colorectal cancer in genetically predisposed patients.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Inflammatory monocytes are potent antitumor effectors controlled by regulatory CD4+ T cells

Arnaud Pommier; Alexandra Audemard; Aurélie Durand; Renée Lengagne; Arnaud Delpoux; Bruno Martin; Laetitia Douguet; Armelle Le Campion; Masashi Kato; Marie-Françoise Avril; Cédric Auffray; Bruno Lucas; Armelle Prévost-Blondel

The present study evaluates the impact of immune cell populations on metastatic development in a model of spontaneous melanoma [mice expressing the human RET oncogene under the control of the metallothionein promoter (MT/ret mice)]. In this model, cancer cells disseminate early but remain dormant for several weeks. Then, MT/ret mice develop cutaneous metastases and, finally, distant metastases. A total of 35% of MT/ret mice develop a vitiligo, a skin depigmentation attributable to the lysis of normal melanocytes, associated with a delay in tumor progression. Here, we find that regulatory CD4+ T cells accumulate in the skin, the spleen, and tumor-draining lymph nodes of MT/ret mice not developing vitiligo. Regulatory T-cell depletion and IL-10 neutralization led to increased occurrence of vitiligo that correlated with a decreased incidence of melanoma metastases. In contrast, inflammatory monocytes/dendritic cells accumulate in the skin of MT/ret mice with active vitiligo. Moreover, they inhibit tumor cell proliferation in vitro through a reactive oxygen species-dependent mechanism, and both their depletion and reactive oxygen species neutralization in vivo increased tumor cell dissemination. Altogether, our data suggest that regulatory CD4+ T cells favor tumor progression, in part, by inhibiting recruitment and/or differentiation of inflammatory monocytes in the skin.


Nature Communications | 2013

Highly self-reactive naive CD4 T cells are prone to differentiate into regulatory T cells

Bruno Martin; Cédric Auffray; Arnaud Delpoux; Arnaud Pommier; Aurélie Durand; Céline Charvet; Philippe Yakonowsky; Nelly Bonilla; Alexandra Audemard; Tim Sparwasser; Benoît L. Salomon; Bernard Malissen; Bruno Lucas

Upon activation, naive CD4 T cells differentiate into a variety of T-helper-cell subsets characterized by different cytokine production and functions. Currently, lineage commitment is considered to depend mostly on the environmental context to which naive CD4 T cells are exposed. Here we challenge this model based on the supposed homogeneity of the naive CD4 T-cell compartment. We show that peripheral naive CD4 T cells can be subdivided into two subsets according to Ly-6C expression. Furthermore, the two newly defined subsets (Ly-6C(-) and Ly-6C(+) naive CD4 T cells) are not equal in their intrinsic ability to commit into the induced regulatory T-cell lineage. Finally, phenotypic analysis, imaging and adoptive transfer experiments reveal that Ly-6C expression is modulated by self-recognition, allowing the dichotomization of the naive CD4 T-cell compartment into two cell subsets with distinct self-reactivity. Altogether, our results show that naive CD4 T cells with the highest avidity for self are prone to differentiate into regulatory T cells.


Journal of Immunology | 2015

Adaptive Immune-like γ/δ T Lymphocytes Share Many Common Features with Their α/β T Cell Counterparts

Amélie Lombes; Aurélie Durand; Céline Charvet; Matthieu Rivière; Nelly Bonilla; Cédric Auffray; Bruno Lucas; Bruno Martin

To better apprehend γ/δ T cell biological functions in the periphery, it appears crucial to identify markers highlighting the existence of distinct phenotypic and functional γ/δ T cell subsets. Interestingly, the expression of CD44 and Ly-6C subdivides murine peripheral γ/δ T cells into several subsets, with Ly-6C− CD44hi γ/δ T cells corresponding to the IL-17–producing CD27− γ/δ T cell subset exhibiting innate-like features. By comparing the other subsets to naive and memory CD8+ α/β T cells, in this study, we show that Ly-6C− or + CD44lo and Ly-6C+CD44hi γ/δ T cells greatly resemble, and behave like, their CD8+ α/β T cell counterparts. First, like memory CD8+ α/β T cells, Ly-6C+CD44hi γ/δ T cells are sparse in the thymus but largely increased in proportion in tissues. Second, similarly to naive CD8 α/β T cells, CD44lo γ/δ T cells are poorly cycling in vivo in the steady state, and their proportion declines with age in secondary lymphoid organs. Third, CD44lo γ/δ T cells undergo spontaneous proliferation and convert to a memory-like Ly-6C+CD44hi phenotype in response to lymphopenia. Finally, CD44lo γ/δ T cells have an intrinsic high plasticity as, upon appropriate stimulation, they are capable of differentiating nonetheless into Th17-like and Th1-like cells but also into fully functional Foxp3+ induced regulatory T cell–like γ/δ T cells. Thus, peripheral CD27+ γ/δ T cells, commonly considered as a functionally related T cell compartment, actually share many common features with adaptive α/β T cells, as both lineages include naive-like and memory-like lymphocytes with distinct phenotypic, functional, and homeostatic characteristics.


Journal of Immunology | 2014

TCR-Signaling Events Are Required for Maintaining CD4 Regulatory T Cell Numbers and Suppressive Capacities in the Periphery

Arnaud Delpoux; Philippe Yakonowsky; Aurélie Durand; Céline Charvet; Michael Valente; Arnaud Pommier; Nelly Bonilla; Bruno Martin; Cédric Auffray; Bruno Lucas

CD4 regulatory T cells (Tregs) can be subdivided into two subsets according to Ly-6C expression in the periphery. Phenotypic analysis, imaging, and adoptive-transfer experiments of peripheral Ly-6C− and Ly-6C+ Tregs reveal that the nonexpression of Ly-6C by ∼70% of peripheral Tregs depends on TCR signaling events. Interestingly, Ly-6C− Tregs express higher surface amounts of key immunosuppressive molecules than do Ly-6C+ Tregs and produce constitutively anti-inflammatory cytokines. In line with their phenotype, Ly-6C+ Tregs exhibit poor suppressive capacities in vitro and in vivo. Finally, although Ly-6C− Tregs maintain their numbers with age, Ly-6C+ Tregs gradually disappear. Altogether, our data strongly suggest that both the survival and suppressive functions of peripheral CD4 Tregs rely on their ability to receive strong TCR signals.


Journal of Immunology | 2017

Macrophages Induce Long-Term Trapping of γδ T Cells with Innate-like Properties within Secondary Lymphoid Organs in the Steady State

Alexandra Audemard-Verger; Matthieu Rivière; Aurélie Durand; Elisa Peranzoni; Vincent Guichard; Pauline Hamon; Nelly Bonilla; Thomas Guilbert; Alexandre Boissonnas; Cédric Auffray; Gérard Eberl; Bruno Lucas; Bruno Martin

So far, peripheral T cells have mostly been described to circulate between blood, secondary lymphoid organs (SLOs), and lymph in the steady state. This nomadic existence would allow them to accomplish their surveying task for both foreign Ags and survival signals. Although it is now well established that γδ T cells can be rapidly recruited to inflammatory sites or in certain tumor microenvironments, the trafficking properties of peripheral γδ T cells have been poorly studied in the steady state. In the present study, we highlight the existence of resident γδ T cells in the SLOs of specific pathogen-free mice. Indeed, using several experimental approaches such as the injection of integrin-neutralizing Abs that inhibit the entry of circulating lymphocytes into lymph nodes and long-term parabiosis experiments, we have found that, contrary to Ly-6C−/+CD44lo and Ly-6C+CD44hi γδ T cells, a significant proportion of Ly-6C−CD44hi γδ T cells are trapped for long periods of time within lymph nodes and the spleen in the steady state. Specific in vivo cell depletion strategies have allowed us to demonstrate that macrophages are the main actors involved in this long-term retention of Ly-6C−CD44hi γδ T cells in SLOs.


Nature Communications | 2018

Profiling the lymphoid-resident T cell pool reveals modulation by age and microbiota

Aurélie Durand; Alexandra Audemard-Verger; Vincent Guichard; Raphaël Mattiuz; Arnaud Delpoux; Pauline Hamon; Nelly Bonilla; Matthieu Rivière; Jérôme Delon; Bruno Martin; Cédric Auffray; Alexandre Boissonnas; Bruno Lucas

Despite being implicated in non-lymphoid tissues, non-recirculating T cells may also exist in secondary lymphoid organs (SLO). However, a detailed characterization of this lymphoid-resident T cell pool has not yet been done. Here we show that a substantial proportion of CD4 regulatory (Treg) and memory (Tmem) cells establish long-term residence in the SLOs of specific pathogen-free mice. Of these SLOs, only T cell residence within Peyer’s patches is affected by microbiota. Resident CD4 Treg and CD4 Tmem cells from lymph nodes and non-lymphoid tissues share many phenotypic and functional characteristics. The percentage of resident T cells in SLOs increases considerably with age, with S1PR1 downregulation possibly contributing to this altered homeostasis. Our results thus show that T cell residence is not only a hallmark of non-lymphoid tissues, but can be extended to secondary lymphoid organs.Non-circulating, tissue-resident T cells have been reported for non-lymphoid organs, but their characterization and regulation in secondary lymphoid organs (SLO) are still lacking. Here the authors show that age and microbiota both exert SLO-specific effects for the various tissue-resident T cell subsets.


eLife | 2017

Calcium-mediated shaping of naive CD4 T-cell phenotype and function

Vincent Guichard; Nelly Bonilla; Aurélie Durand; Alexandra Audemard-Verger; Thomas Guilbert; Bruno Martin; Bruno Lucas; Cédric Auffray

Continuous contact with self-major histocompatibility complex ligands is essential for the survival of naive CD4 T cells. We have previously shown that the resulting tonic TCR signaling also influences their fate upon activation by increasing their ability to differentiate into induced/peripheral regulatory T cells. To decipher the molecular mechanisms governing this process, we here focus on the TCR signaling cascade and demonstrate that a rise in intracellular calcium levels is sufficient to modulate the phenotype of mouse naive CD4 T cells and to increase their sensitivity to regulatory T-cell polarization signals, both processes relying on calcineurin activation. Accordingly, in vivo calcineurin inhibition leads the most self-reactive naive CD4 T cells to adopt the phenotype of their less self-reactive cell-counterparts. Collectively, our findings demonstrate that calcium-mediated activation of the calcineurin pathway acts as a rheostat to shape both the phenotype and effector potential of naive CD4 T cells in the steady-state.

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Cédric Auffray

Paris Descartes University

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Nelly Bonilla

Paris Descartes University

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Arnaud Delpoux

University of California

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Matthieu Rivière

Paris Descartes University

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Vincent Guichard

Paris Descartes University

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Arnaud Pommier

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Bruno Martin

French Institute of Health and Medical Research

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