Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Benoît Van Driessche is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Benoît Van Driessche.


PLOS Pathogens | 2015

An In-Depth Comparison of Latency-Reversing Agent Combinations in Various In Vitro and Ex Vivo HIV-1 Latency Models Identified Bryostatin-1+JQ1 and Ingenol-B+JQ1 to Potently Reactivate Viral Gene Expression.

Gilles Darcis; Anna Kula; Sophie Bouchat; Koh Fujinaga; Francis Corazza; Amina Ait-Ammar; Nadège Delacourt; Adeline Mélard; Kabamba Kabeya; Caroline Vanhulle; Benoît Van Driessche; Jean Stéphane Gatot; Thomas Cherrier; Luiz Francisco Pianowski; Lucio Gama; Christian Schwartz; Jorge Vila; Arsène Burny; Nathan Clumeck; Michel Moutschen; Stéphane De Wit; B. Matija Peterlin; Christine Rouzioux; Olivier Rohr; Carine Van Lint

The persistence of latently infected cells in patients under combinatory antiretroviral therapy (cART) is a major hurdle to HIV-1 eradication. Strategies to purge these reservoirs are needed and activation of viral gene expression in latently infected cells is one promising strategy. Bromodomain and Extraterminal (BET) bromodomain inhibitors (BETi) are compounds able to reactivate latent proviruses in a positive transcription elongation factor b (P-TEFb)-dependent manner. In this study, we tested the reactivation potential of protein kinase C (PKC) agonists (prostratin, bryostatin-1 and ingenol-B), which are known to activate NF-κB signaling pathway as well as P-TEFb, used alone or in combination with P-TEFb-releasing agents (HMBA and BETi (JQ1, I-BET, I-BET151)). Using in vitro HIV-1 post-integration latency model cell lines of T-lymphoid and myeloid lineages, we demonstrated that PKC agonists and P-TEFb-releasing agents alone acted as potent latency-reversing agents (LRAs) and that their combinations led to synergistic activation of HIV-1 expression at the viral mRNA and protein levels. Mechanistically, combined treatments led to higher activations of P-TEFb and NF-κB than the corresponding individual drug treatments. Importantly, we observed in ex vivo cultures of CD8+-depleted PBMCs from 35 cART-treated HIV-1+ aviremic patients that the percentage of reactivated cultures following combinatory bryostatin-1+JQ1 treatment was identical to the percentage observed with anti-CD3+anti-CD28 antibodies positive control stimulation. Remarkably, in ex vivo cultures of resting CD4+ T cells isolated from 15 HIV-1+ cART-treated aviremic patients, the combinations bryostatin-1+JQ1 and ingenol-B+JQ1 released infectious viruses to levels similar to that obtained with the positive control stimulation. The potent effects of these two combination treatments were already detected 24 hours post-stimulation. These results constitute the first demonstration of LRA combinations exhibiting such a potent effect and represent a proof-of-concept for the co-administration of two different types of LRAs as a potential strategy to reduce the size of the latent HIV-1 reservoirs.


Cell Reports | 2015

Differential Regulation of NF-κB-Mediated Proviral and Antiviral Host Gene Expression by Primate Lentiviral Nef and Vpu Proteins.

Daniel Sauter; Dominik Hotter; Benoît Van Driessche; Christina M. Stürzel; Silvia F. Kluge; Steffen Wildum; Hangxing Yu; Bernd Baumann; Thomas Wirth; Jean-Christophe Jc Plantier; Marie Leoz; Beatrice H. Hahn; Carine Van Lint; Frank Kirchhoff

SUMMARY NF-κB is essential for effective transcription of primate lentiviral genomes and also activates antiviral host genes. Here, we show that the early protein Nef of most primate lentiviruses enhances NF-κB activation. In contrast, the late protein Vpu of HIV-1 and its simian precursors inhibits activation of NF-κB, even in the presence of Nef. Although this effect of Vpu did not correlate with its ability to interact with β-TrCP, it involved the stabilization of IκB and reduced nuclear translocation of p65. Interestingly, however, Vpu did not affect casein kinase II-mediated phosphorylation of p65. Lack of Vpu was associated with increased NF-κB activation and induction of interferon and interferon-stimulated genes (ISGs) in HIV-1-infected T cells. Thus, HIV-1 and its simian precursors employ Nef to boost NF-κB activation early during the viral life cycle to initiate proviral transcription, while Vpu is used to downmodulate NF-κB-dependent expression of ISGs at later stages.


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

CTIP2 is a negative regulator of P-TEFb.

Thomas Cherrier; Valentin Le Douce; Sebastian Eilebrecht; Raphael Riclet; Céline Marban; Franck Dequiedt; Yannick Goumon; Jean-Christophe Paillart; Mathias Mericskay; Ara Parlakian; Pedro Bausero; Wasim Abbas; Georges Herbein; Siavash K. Kurdistani; Xavier Graña; Benoît Van Driessche; Christian Schwartz; Ermanno Candolfi; Arndt Benecke; Carine Van Lint; Olivier Rohr

The positive transcription elongation factor b (P-TEFb) is involved in physiological and pathological events including inflammation, cancer, AIDS, and cardiac hypertrophy. The balance between its active and inactive form is tightly controlled to ensure cellular integrity. We report that the transcriptional repressor CTIP2 is a major modulator of P-TEFb activity. CTIP2 copurifies and interacts with an inactive P-TEFb complex containing the 7SK snRNA and HEXIM1. CTIP2 associates directly with HEXIM1 and, via the loop 2 of the 7SK snRNA, with P-TEFb. In this nucleoprotein complex, CTIP2 significantly represses the Cdk9 kinase activity of P-TEFb. Accordingly, we show that CTIP2 inhibits large sets of P-TEFb- and 7SK snRNA-sensitive genes. In hearts of hypertrophic cardiomyopathic mice, CTIP2 controls P-TEFb-sensitive pathways involved in the establishment of this pathology. Overexpression of the β-myosin heavy chain protein contributes to the pathological cardiac wall thickening. The inactive P-TEFb complex associates with CTIP2 at the MYH7 gene promoter to repress its activity. Taken together, our results strongly suggest that CTIP2 controls P-TEFb function in physiological and pathological conditions.


Embo Molecular Medicine | 2016

Sequential treatment with 5-aza-2′-deoxycytidine and deacetylase inhibitors reactivates HIV-1

Sophie Bouchat; Nadège Delacourt; Anna Kula; Gilles Darcis; Benoît Van Driessche; Francis Corazza; Jean-Stéphane Gatot; Adeline Mélard; Caroline Vanhulle; Kabamba Kabeya; Marion Pardons; Véronique Avettand-Fenoel; Nathan Clumeck; Stéphane De Wit; Olivier Rohr; Christine Rouzioux; Carine Van Lint

Reactivation of HIV gene expression in latently infected cells together with an efficient cART has been proposed as an adjuvant therapy aimed at eliminating/decreasing the reservoir size. Results from HIV clinical trials using deacetylase inhibitors (HDACIs) question the efficiency of these latency‐reversing agents (LRAs) used alone and underline the need to evaluate other LRAs in combination with HDACIs. Here, we evaluated the therapeutic potential of a demethylating agent (5‐AzadC) in combination with clinically tolerable HDACIs in reactivating HIV‐1 from latency first in vitro and next ex vivo. We showed that a sequential treatment with 5‐AzadC and HDACIs was more effective than the corresponding simultaneous treatment both in vitro and ex vivo. Interestingly, only two of the sequential LRA combinatory treatments tested induced HIV‐1 particle recovery in a higher manner than the drugs alone ex vivo and at concentrations lower than the human tolerable plasmatic concentrations. Taken together, our data reveal the benefit of using combinations of 5‐AzadC with an HDACI and, for the first time, the importance of treatment time schedule for LRA combinations in order to reactivate HIV.


Developmental Biology | 2014

The Prdm13 histone methyltransferase encoding gene is a Ptf1a-Rbpj downstream target that suppresses glutamatergic and promotes GABAergic neuronal fate in the dorsal neural tube.

Julie Hanotel; Nathalie Bessodes; Aurore Thelie; Marie Hedderich; Karine Parain; Benoît Van Driessche; Karina de Oliveira Brandão; Sadia Kricha; Mette C. Jørgensen; Anne Grapin-Botton; Palle Serup; Carine Van Lint; Muriel Perron; Tomas Pieler; Kristine A. Henningfeld; Eric Bellefroid

The basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) transcriptional activator Ptf1a determines inhibitory GABAergic over excitatory glutamatergic neuronal cell fate in progenitors of the vertebrate dorsal spinal cord, cerebellum and retina. In an in situ hybridization expression survey of PR domain containing genes encoding putative chromatin-remodeling zinc finger transcription factors in Xenopus embryos, we identified Prdm13 as a histone methyltransferase belonging to the Ptf1a synexpression group. Gain and loss of Ptf1a function analyses in both frog and mice indicates that Prdm13 is positively regulated by Ptf1a and likely constitutes a direct transcriptional target. We also showed that this regulation requires the formation of the Ptf1a-Rbp-j complex. Prdm13 knockdown in Xenopus embryos and in Ptf1a overexpressing ectodermal explants lead to an upregulation of Tlx3/Hox11L2, which specifies a glutamatergic lineage and a reduction of the GABAergic neuronal marker Pax2. It also leads to an upregulation of Prdm13 transcription, suggesting an autonegative regulation. Conversely, in animal caps, Prdm13 blocks the ability of the bHLH factor Neurog2 to activate Tlx3. Additional gain of function experiments in the chick neural tube confirm that Prdm13 suppresses Tlx3(+)/glutamatergic and induces Pax2(+)/GABAergic neuronal fate. Thus, Prdm13 is a novel crucial component of the Ptf1a regulatory pathway that, by modulating the transcriptional activity of bHLH factors such as Neurog2, controls the balance between GABAergic and glutamatergic neuronal fate in the dorsal and caudal part of the vertebrate neural tube.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

DNA Cytosine Methylation in the Bovine Leukemia Virus Promoter Is Associated with Latency in a Lymphoma-derived B-cell Line POTENTIAL INVOLVEMENT OF DIRECT INHIBITION OF cAMP-RESPONSIVE ELEMENT (CRE)-BINDING PROTEIN/CRE MODULATOR/ACTIVATION TRANSCRIPTION FACTOR BINDING

Valérie Pierard; Allan Guiguen; Laurence Colin; Gaëlle Wijmeersch; Caroline Vanhulle; Benoît Van Driessche; Ann Dekoninck; Jana Blazkova; Christelle Cardona; Makram Merimi; Valérie Vierendeel; Claire Calomme; Thi Lien-Anh Nguyen; Michèle Nuttinck; Jean-Claude Twizere; Richard Kettmann; Daniel Portetelle; Arsène Burny; Ivan Hirsch; Olivier Rohr; Carine Van Lint

Bovine leukemia virus (BLV) proviral latency represents a viral strategy to escape the host immune system and allow tumor development. Besides the previously demonstrated role of histone deacetylation in the epigenetic repression of BLV expression, we showed here that BLV promoter activity was induced by several DNA methylation inhibitors (such as 5-aza-2′-deoxycytidine) and that overexpressed DNMT1 and DNMT3A, but not DNMT3B, down-regulated BLV promoter activity. Importantly, cytosine hypermethylation in the 5′-long terminal repeat (LTR) U3 and R regions was associated with true latency in the lymphoma-derived B-cell line L267 but not with defective latency in YR2 cells. Moreover, the virus-encoded transactivator TaxBLV decreased DNA methyltransferase expression levels, which could explain the lower level of cytosine methylation observed in the L267LTaxSN 5′-LTR compared with the L267 5′-LTR. Interestingly, DNA methylation inhibitors and TaxBLV synergistically activated BLV promoter transcriptional activity in a cAMP-responsive element (CRE)-dependent manner. Mechanistically, methylation at the −154 or −129 CpG position (relative to the transcription start site) impaired in vitro binding of CRE-binding protein (CREB) transcription factors to their respective CRE sites. Methylation at −129 CpG alone was sufficient to decrease BLV promoter-driven reporter gene expression by 2-fold. We demonstrated in vivo the recruitment of CREB/CRE modulator (CREM) and to a lesser extent activating transcription factor-1 (ATF-1) to the hypomethylated CRE region of the YR2 5′-LTR, whereas we detected no CREB/CREM/ATF recruitment to the hypermethylated corresponding region in the L267 cells. Altogether, these findings suggest that site-specific DNA methylation of the BLV promoter represses viral transcription by directly inhibiting transcription factor binding, thereby contributing to true proviral latency.


Current Opinion in Hiv and Aids | 2016

Preclinical shock strategies to reactivate latent HIV-1: an update.

Gilles Darcis; Benoît Van Driessche; Carine Van Lint

Purpose of reviewThe ‘shock and kill’ strategy consists of activating HIV-1 expression to allow latently infected cells to die from viral cytopathic effects or host cytolytic immune effectors. This strategy relies on small molecules, called latency reversing agents, which activate HIV transcription. Recent findingsSeveral mechanisms operating at the transcriptional level are involved in the establishment and maintenance of HIV-1 latency, including the absence of crucial inducible host transcription factors, epigenetic silencing, and the sequestration of the positive transcription elongation factor B. Progresses made toward the understanding of the molecular mechanisms of HIV-1 transcriptional repression have led to the identification of latency reversing agents that activate HIV transcription, such as histone deacetylase inhibitors or protein kinase C agonists. Multiple studies have recently pointed interesting ways to optimize the shock strategy by using combinations of latency reversing agents with an appropriate time schedule. SummaryCombining latency reversing agents appears as one potential strategy for therapy against HIV-1 latency.


AIDS | 2017

Reactivation capacity by latency-reversing agents ex vivo correlates with the size of the HIV-1 reservoir.

Gilles Darcis; Sophie Bouchat; Anna Kula; Benoît Van Driessche; Nadège Delacourt; Caroline Vanhulle; Véronique Avettand-Fenoel; Stéphane De Wit; Olivier Rohr; Christine Rouzioux; Carine Van Lint

Objective: HIV-1 reservoirs are the major hurdle to virus clearance in combination antiretroviral therapy (cART)-treated patients. An approach to eradicating HIV-1 involves reversing latency in cART-treated patients to make latent cells visible to the host immune system. Stimulation of patient cell cultures with latency-reversing agents (LRAs) ex vivo results in heterogeneous responses among HIV-infected patients. Determinants of this heterogeneity are unknown and consequently important to determine. Design and methods: Here, we grouped and retrospectively analyzed the data from our two recent HIV-1 reactivation studies to investigate the role of the HIV-1 reservoir size in the reactivation capacity by LRAs in ex vivo cultures of CD8+-depleted peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) isolated from 54 cART-treated patients and of resting CD4+ T cells isolated from 30 cART-treated patients. Results: Our results established a statistically relevant positive correlation between the HIV-1 reservoir size measured by total cell-associated HIV-1 DNA and the frequency of positive HIV-1 recovery measurements in response to various LRAs in ex vivo cultures of cells isolated from cART-treated HIV+ aviremic patients. HIV-1 reservoir size also correlated with the extracellular HIV-1 RNA median level measured in supernatants of cell cultures following LRA treatments. However, we identified HIV+ patients whose positive measurements frequency and median level of extracellular HIV-1 RNA deviated from linearity relative to their corresponding HIV reservoir size. Conclusion: We demonstrated that the reservoir size is one predictive marker of LRA effectiveness but this parameter alone is not sufficient. The identification of other predictive markers is necessary to predict the success of HIV anti-latency approaches.


Development | 2015

Prdm12 specifies V1 interneurons through cross-repressive interactions with Dbx1 and Nkx6 genes in Xenopus

Aurore Thelie; Simon Desiderio; Julie Hanotel; Ian Quigley; Benoît Van Driessche; Anthony Rodari; Mark D. Borromeo; Sadia Kricha; François Lahaye; Jenifer Croce; Gustavo Cerda-Moya; Jesús Ordoño Fernandez; Barbara Bolle; Katharine E. Lewis; Maike Sander; Alessandra Pierani; Michael Schubert; Jane E. Johnson; Chris Kintner; Tomas Pieler; Carine Van Lint; Kristine A. Henningfeld; Eric Bellefroid; Claude Van Campenhout

V1 interneurons are inhibitory neurons that play an essential role in vertebrate locomotion. The molecular mechanisms underlying their genesis remain, however, largely undefined. Here, we show that the transcription factor Prdm12 is selectively expressed in p1 progenitors of the hindbrain and spinal cord in the frog embryo, and that a similar restricted expression profile is observed in the nerve cord of other vertebrates as well as of the cephalochordate amphioxus. Using frog, chick and mice, we analyzed the regulation of Prdm12 and found that its expression in the caudal neural tube is dependent on retinoic acid and Pax6, and that it is restricted to p1 progenitors, due to the repressive action of Dbx1 and Nkx6-1/2 expressed in the adjacent p0 and p2 domains. Functional studies in the frog, including genome-wide identification of its targets by RNA-seq and ChIP-Seq, reveal that vertebrate Prdm12 proteins act as a general determinant of V1 cell fate, at least in part, by directly repressing Dbx1 and Nkx6 genes. This probably occurs by recruiting the methyltransferase G9a, an activity that is not displayed by the amphioxus Prdm12 protein. Together, these findings indicate that Prdm12 promotes V1 interneurons through cross-repressive interactions with Dbx1 and Nkx6 genes, and suggest that this function might have only been acquired after the split of the vertebrate and cephalochordate lineages. Summary: In vertebrates, V1 interneuron specification requires Prdm12, whose expression depends on Pax6 and retinoic acid and is restricted to the p1 domain by Dbx1 and Nkx6.1/2, themselves repressed by Prdm12.


PLOS Pathogens | 2017

Primate lentiviruses use at least three alternative strategies to suppress NF-κB-mediated immune activation

Dominik Hotter; Teresa Krabbe; Elisabeth Reith; Ali Gawanbacht; Nadia Rahm; Ahidjo Ayouba; Benoît Van Driessche; Carine Van Lint; Martine Peeters; Frank Kirchhoff; Daniel Sauter

Primate lentiviruses have evolved sophisticated strategies to suppress the immune response of their host species. For example, HIV-2 and most simian immunodeficiency viruses (SIVs) use their accessory protein Nef to prevent T cell activation and antiviral gene expression by downmodulating the T cell receptor CD3. This Nef function was lost in HIV-1 and other vpu-encoding viruses suggesting that the acquisition of Vpu-mediated NF-κB inhibition reduced the selection pressure for inhibition of T cell activation by Nef. To obtain further insights into the modulation of NF-κB activity by primate lentiviral accessory factors, we analyzed 32 Vpr proteins from a large panel of divergent primate lentiviruses. We found that those of SIVcol and SIVolc infecting Colobinae monkeys showed the highest efficacy in suppressing NF-κB activation. Vpr-mediated inhibition of NF-κB resulted in decreased IFNβ promoter activity and suppressed type I IFN induction in virally infected primary cells. Interestingly, SIVcol and SIVolc differ from all other primate lentiviruses investigated by the lack of both, a vpu gene and efficient Nef-mediated downmodulation of CD3. Thus, primate lentiviruses have evolved at least three alternative strategies to inhibit NF-κB-dependent immune activation. Functional analyses showed that the inhibitory activity of SIVolc and SIVcol Vprs is independent of DCAF1 and the induction of cell cycle arrest. While both Vprs target the IKK complex or a factor further downstream in the NF-κB signaling cascade, only SIVolc Vpr stabilizes IκBα and inhibits p65 phosphorylation. Notably, only de-novo synthesized but not virion-associated Vpr suppressed the activation of NF-κB, thus enabling NF-κB-dependent initiation of viral gene transcription during early stages of the replication cycle, while minimizing antiviral gene expression at later stages. Our findings highlight the key role of NF-κB in antiviral immunity and demonstrate that primate lentiviruses follow distinct evolutionary paths to modulate NF-κB-dependent expression of viral and antiviral genes.

Collaboration


Dive into the Benoît Van Driessche's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Carine Van Lint

Université libre de Bruxelles

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Caroline Vanhulle

Université libre de Bruxelles

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Olivier Rohr

University of Strasbourg

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nadège Delacourt

Université libre de Bruxelles

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Arsène Burny

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Anna Kula

International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gilles Darcis

Université libre de Bruxelles

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Anthony Rodari

Université libre de Bruxelles

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sophie Bouchat

Université libre de Bruxelles

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge