Carine Rouanet
Pasteur Institute
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Publication
Featured researches published by Carine Rouanet.
Nature Genetics | 2013
Philip Supply; Michael Marceau; Sophie Mangenot; David Roche; Carine Rouanet; Varun Khanna; Laleh Majlessi; Alexis Criscuolo; Julien Tap; Alexandre Pawlik; Laurence Fiette; Mickael Orgeur; Michel Fabre; Cécile Parmentier; Wafa Frigui; Roxane Simeone; Eva C. Boritsch; Anne-Sophie Debrie; Eve Willery; Danielle Walker; Michael A. Quail; Laurence Ma; Christiane Bouchier; Grégory Salvignol; Fadel Sayes; Alessandro Cascioferro; Torsten Seemann; Valérie Barbe; Camille Locht; Maria-Cristina Gutierrez
Global spread and limited genetic variation are hallmarks of M. tuberculosis, the agent of human tuberculosis. In contrast, Mycobacterium canettii and related tubercle bacilli that also cause human tuberculosis and exhibit unusual smooth colony morphology are restricted to East Africa. Here, we sequenced and analyzed the whole genomes of five representative strains of smooth tubercle bacilli (STB) using Sanger (4–5× coverage), 454/Roche (13–18× coverage) and/or Illumina DNA sequencing (45–105× coverage). We show that STB isolates are highly recombinogenic and evolutionarily early branching, with larger genome sizes, higher rates of genetic variation, fewer molecular scars and distinct CRISPR-Cas systems relative to M. tuberculosis. Despite the differences, all tuberculosis-causing mycobacteria share a highly conserved core genome. Mouse infection experiments showed that STB strains are less persistent and virulent than M. tuberculosis. We conclude that M. tuberculosis emerged from an ancestral STB-like pool of mycobacteria by gain of persistence and virulence mechanisms, and we provide insights into the molecular events involved.
PLOS Pathogens | 2006
Nathalie Mielcarek; Anne Sophie Debrie; Dominique Raze; Julie Bertout; Carine Rouanet; Amena Ben Younes; Colette Creusy; Jacquelyn T. Engle; William E. Goldman; Camille Locht
Pertussis is still among the principal causes of death worldwide, and its incidence is increasing even in countries with high vaccine coverage. Although all age groups are susceptible, it is most severe in infants too young to be protected by currently available vaccines. To induce strong protective immunity in neonates, we have developed BPZE1, a live attenuated Bordetella pertussis strain to be given as a single-dose nasal vaccine in early life. BPZE1 was developed by the genetic inactivation or removal of three major toxins. In mice, BPZE1 was highly attenuated, yet able to colonize the respiratory tract and to induce strong protective immunity after a single nasal administration. Protection against B. pertussis was comparable to that induced by two injections of acellular vaccine (aPV) in adult mice, but was significantly better than two administrations of aPV in infant mice. Moreover, BPZE1 protected against Bordetella parapertussis infection, whereas aPV did not. BPZE1 is thus an attractive vaccine candidate to protect against whooping cough by nasal, needle-free administration early in life, possibly at birth.
Nature Genetics | 2013
Philip Supply; Michael Marceau; Sophie Mangenot; David Roche; Carine Rouanet; Varun Khanna; Laleh Majlessi; Alexis Criscuolo; Julien Tap; Alexandre Pawlik; Laurence Fiette; Mickael Orgeur; Michel Fabre; Cécile Parmentier; Wafa Frigui; Roxane Simeone; Eva C. Boritsch; Anne-Sophie Debrie; Eve Willery; Danielle Walker; Michael A. Quail; Laurence Ma; Christiane Bouchier; Grégory Salvignol; Fadel Sayes; Alessandro Cascioferro; Torsten Seemann; Valérie Barbe; Camille Locht; Maria-Cristina Gutierrez
Global spread and limited genetic variation are hallmarks of M. tuberculosis, the agent of human tuberculosis. In contrast, Mycobacterium canettii and related tubercle bacilli that also cause human tuberculosis and exhibit unusual smooth colony morphology are restricted to East Africa. Here, we sequenced and analyzed the whole genomes of five representative strains of smooth tubercle bacilli (STB) using Sanger (4–5× coverage), 454/Roche (13–18× coverage) and/or Illumina DNA sequencing (45–105× coverage). We show that STB isolates are highly recombinogenic and evolutionarily early branching, with larger genome sizes, higher rates of genetic variation, fewer molecular scars and distinct CRISPR-Cas systems relative to M. tuberculosis. Despite the differences, all tuberculosis-causing mycobacteria share a highly conserved core genome. Mouse infection experiments showed that STB strains are less persistent and virulent than M. tuberculosis. We conclude that M. tuberculosis emerged from an ancestral STB-like pool of mycobacteria by gain of persistence and virulence mechanisms, and we provide insights into the molecular events involved.
Nature Medicine | 2004
Stéphane Temmerman; Kevin Pethe; Marcela Parra; Sylvie Alonso; Carine Rouanet; Thames Pickett; Annie Drowart; Anne Sophie Debrie; Giovanni Delogu; Franco D. Menozzi; Christian Sergheraert; Michael J. Brennan; Françoise Mascart; Camille Locht
Although post-translational modifications of protein antigens may be important componenets of some B cell epitopes, the determinants of T cell immunity are generally nonmodified peptides. Here we show that methylation of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis heparin-binding hemagglutinin (HBHA) by the bacterium is essential for effective T cell immunity to this antigen in infected healthy humans and in mice. Methylated HBHA provides high levels of protection against M. tuberculosis challenge in mice, whereas nonmethylated HBHA does not. Protective immunity induced by methylated HBHA is comparable to that afforded by vaccination with bacille Calmette et Guérin, the only available anti-tuberculosis vaccine. Thus, post-translational modifications of proteins may be crucial for their ability to induce protective T cell-mediated immunity against infectious diseases such as tuberculosis.
Microbes and Infection | 2009
Carine Rouanet; Anne-Sophie Debrie; Sophie Lecher; Camille Locht
Pulmonary tuberculosis remains a major health problem. Effective vaccination strategies are urgently needed. It was previously demonstrated that purified Mycobacterium bovis BCG Heparin Binding Haemagglutinin (HBHA) is able to induce in BALB/c mice protection levels against a Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection that are similar to those offered by BCG. Here we developed a heterologous prime/boost immunisation approach using a combination of BCG and HBHA in order to increase the protective immune response. We show that the time period between BCG priming and HBHA boosting strongly influences the efficacy of the boost. The optimized vaccine protocol consisting of a BCG administration followed 8 months later by boosting with HBHA resulted in an increase in the level of protection of up to 0.7log when compared to BCG alone. These results suggest an immunisation strategy where BCG is administered to neonates and is followed by subcutaneous HBHA boosting in young adults.
Expert Opinion on Biological Therapy | 2007
Camille Locht; Carine Rouanet; Jean-Michel Hougardy; Françoise Mascart
Mycobacterium tuberculosis is one of the most successful human pathogens. It kills every year ∼ 1.5 – 2 million people, and at present a third of the human population is estimated to be infected. Fortunately, only a relatively small proportion of the infected individuals will progress to active disease, and most will maintain a latent infection. Although a latent infection is clinically silent and not contagious, it can reactivate to cause highly contagious pulmonary tuberculosis, the most prevalent form of the disease in adults. Therefore, a thorough understanding of latency and reactivation may help to develop novel control strategies against tuberculosis. The most widely held view is that the mycobacteria are imprisoned in granulomatous structures during latency, where they can survive in a non-replicating, dormant form until reactivation occurs. However, there is no hard data to sustain that the reactivating mycobacteria are indeed those that laid dormant within the granulomas. In this review an alternative model, based on evidence from early studies, as well as recent reports is presented, in which the latent mycobacteria reside outside granulomas, within non-macrophage cell types throughout the infected body. Potential implications for new diagnostic and vaccine design are discussed.
Expert Review of Respiratory Medicine | 2010
Carine Rouanet; Camille Locht
Given that TB still constitutes a tremendous public health problem at the start of the 21st Century, it may come as a surprise that Bacillus Calmette–Guérin (BCG), developed nearly 100 years ago, is today still the only vaccine available against TB. Owing to its limited efficiency in controlling TB, much effort has been deployed to develop new, improved vaccines, with initial preclinical models showing encouraging results. However, since most individuals worldwide have been vaccinated with BCG, new vaccine developments have to be placed in that context. Consequently, several approaches explore the heterologous prime–boost strategy. In this strategy, BCG-primed immunity will be strengthened or prolonged by the administration of antigens present in BCG but formulated in a different manner; either as purified antigens in the presence of appropriate adjuvants, as DNA vaccines or as viral-encoded mycobacterial antigens.
Methods of Molecular Biology | 2010
Rémi Desmet; Eric Diesis; Hervé Drobecq; Carine Rouanet; Karim Chemlal; Anne-Sophie Debrie; Jean-Michel Hougardy; Françoise Mascart; Camille Locht; Oleg Melnyk
Peptide microarrays are useful tools for characterizing the humoral response against methylated antigens. They are usually prepared by printing unmodified and methylated peptides on substrates such as functionalized microscope glass slides. The preferential capture of antibodies by methylated peptides suggests the specific recognition of methylated epitopes. However, unmodified peptide epitopes can be masked due to their interaction with the substrate. The accessibility of unmodified peptides and thus the specificity of the recognition of methylated peptide epitopes can be probed using the in situ methylation procedure described here. Alternately, the in situ methylation of peptide microarrays allows probing the presence of antibodies directed toward methylated epitopes starting from easy-to-make and cost-effective unmodified peptide libraries. In situ methylation was performed using formaldehyde in the presence of sodium cyanoborohydride and nickel chloride. This chemical procedure converts lysine residues into mono- or dimethyl lysines.
Frontiers in Microbiology | 2018
Dominique Raze; Claudie Verwaerde; Gaspard Deloison; Elisabeth Werkmeister; Baptiste Coupin; Marc Loyens; Priscille Brodin; Carine Rouanet; Camille Locht
The heparin-binding hemagglutinin adhesin (HBHA) is an important virulence factor of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. It is a surface-displayed protein that serves as an adhesin for non-phagocytic cells and is involved in extra-pulmonary dissemination of the tubercle bacillus. It is also an important latency antigen useful for the diagnosis of latently M. tuberculosis-infected individuals. Using fluorescence time-lapse microscopy on mycobacteria that produce HBHA-green fluorescent protein chimera, we show here that HBHA can be found at two different locations and dynamically alternates between the mycobacterial surface and the interior of the cell, where it participates in the formation of intracytosolic lipid inclusions (ILI). Compared to HBHA-producing mycobacteria, HBHA-deficient mutants contain significantly lower amounts of ILI when grown in vitro or within macrophages, and the sizes of their ILI are significantly smaller. Lipid-binding assays indicate that HBHA is able to specifically bind to phosphatidylinositol and in particular to 4,5 di-phosphorylated phosphatidylinositol, but not to neutral lipids, the main constituents of ILI. HBHA derivatives lacking the C-terminal methylated, lysine-rich repeat region fail to bind to these lipids and these derivatives also fail to complement the phenotype of HBHA-deficient mutants. These studies indicate that HBHA is a moonlighting protein that serves several functions depending on its location. When surface exposed, HBHA serves as an adhesin, and when intracellularly localized, it participates in the generation of ILI, possibly as a cargo to transport phospholipids from the plasma membrane to the ILI in the process of being formed.
Tuberculosis | 2006
Camille Locht; Jean-Michel Hougardy; Carine Rouanet; Sammy Place; Françoise Mascart