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Dive into the research topics where Carl De Trez is active.

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Featured researches published by Carl De Trez.


PLOS Pathogens | 2009

iNOS-producing inflammatory dendritic cells constitute the major infected cell type during the chronic Leishmania major infection phase of C57BL/6 resistant mice.

Carl De Trez; Stefan Magez; Shizuo Akira; Bernhard Ryffel; Yves Carlier; Eric Muraille

Leishmania major parasites reside and multiply in late endosomal compartments of host phagocytic cells. Immune control of Leishmania growth absolutely requires expression of inducible Nitric Oxide Synthase (iNOS/NOS2) and subsequent production of NO. Here, we show that CD11b+ CD11c+ Ly-6C+ MHC-II+ cells are the main iNOS-producing cells in the footpad lesion and in the draining lymph node of Leishmania major-infected C57BL/6 mice. These cells are phenotypically similar to iNOS-producing inflammatory DC (iNOS-DC) observed in the mouse models of Listeria monocytogenes and Brucella melitensis infection. The use of DsRed-expressing parasites demonstrated that these iNOS-producing cells are the major infected population in the lesions and the draining lymph nodes. Analysis of various genetically deficient mouse strains revealed the requirement of CCR2 expression for the recruitment of iNOS-DC in the draining lymph nodes, whereas their activation is strongly dependent on CD40, IL-12, IFN-γ and MyD88 molecules with a partial contribution of TNF-α and TLR9. In contrast, STAT-6 deficiency enhanced iNOS-DC recruitment and activation in susceptible BALB/c mice, demonstrating a key role for IL-4 and IL-13 as negative regulators. Taken together, our results suggest that iNOS-DC represent a major class of Th1-regulated effector cell population and constitute the most frequent infected cell type during chronic Leishmania major infection phase of C57BL/6 resistant mice.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2007

Cytomegalovirus exploits IL-10-mediated immune regulation in the salivary glands.

Ian R. Humphreys; Carl De Trez; April Kinkade; Chris A. Benedict; Michael Croft; Carl F. Ware

The salivary glands represent a major site of cytomegalovirus replication and transmission to other hosts. Despite control of viral infection by strong T cell responses in visceral organs cytomegalovirus replication continues in the salivary glands of mice, suggesting that the virus exploits the mucosal microenvironment. Here, we show that T cell immunity in the salivary glands is limited by the induction of CD4 T cells expressing the regulatory cytokine interleukin (IL)-10. Blockade of IL-10 receptor (IL-10R) with an antagonist antibody dramatically reduced viral load in the salivary glands, but not in the spleen. The mucosa-specific protection afforded by IL-10R blockade was associated with an increased accumulation of CD4 T cells expressing interferon γ, suggesting that IL-10R signaling limits effector T cell differentiation. Consistent with this, an agonist antibody targeting the tumor necrosis factor receptor superfamily member OX40 (TNFRSF4) enhanced effector T cell differentiation and increased the number of interferon γ–producing T cells, thus limiting virus replication in the salivary glands. Collectively, the results indicate that modulating effector T cell differentiation can counteract pathogen exploitation of the mucosa, thus limiting persistent virus replication and transmission.


Journal of Immunology | 2005

TLR4 and Toll-IL-1 Receptor Domain-Containing Adapter-Inducing IFN-β, but Not MyD88, Regulate Escherichia coli-Induced Dendritic Cell Maturation and Apoptosis In Vivo

Carl De Trez; Bernard Pajak; Maryse Brait; Nicolas Glaichenhaus; Jacques Urbain; Muriel Moser; Grégoire Lauvau; Eric Muraille

Dendritic cells (DC) are short-lived, professional APCs that play a central role in the generation of adaptive immune responses. Induction of efficient immune responses is dependent on how long DCs survive in the host. Therefore, the regulation of DC apoptosis in vivo during infection remains an important question that requires further investigation. The impact of Escherichia coli bacteremia on DCs has never been analyzed. We show here that i.v. or i.p. administration of live or heat-killed E. coli in mice induces splenic DC migration, maturation, and apoptosis. We further characterize which TLR and Toll-IL-1R (TIR)-containing adaptor molecules regulate these processes in vivo. In this model, DC maturation is impaired in TLR2−/−, TLR4−/− and TIR domain-containing adapter-inducing IFN-β (TRIF)−/− mice. In contrast, DC apoptosis is reduced only in TLR4−/− and TRIF−/− mice. As expected, DC apoptosis induced by the TLR4 ligand LPS is also abolished in these mice. Injection of the TLR9 ligand CpG-oligodeoxynucleotide (synthetic bacterial DNA) induces DC migration and maturation, but only modest DC apoptosis when compared with LPS and E. coli. Together, these results suggest that E. coli bacteremia directly impacts on DC maturation and survival in vivo through a TLR4-TRIF-dependent signaling pathway.


Journal of Virology | 2013

Interleukin-22 reduces lung inflammation during influenza A virus infection and protects against secondary bacterial infection

Stoyan Ivanov; Joelle Renneson; Josette Fontaine; Adeline Barthelemy; Christophe Paget; Elodie Macho Fernandez; Fany Blanc; Carl De Trez; Laurye Van Maele; Laure Dumoutier; Michel-René Huerre; Gérard Eberl; Mustapha Si-Tahar; P. Gosset; Jean-Christophe Renauld; Jean Claude Sirard; Christelle Faveeuw; François Trottein

ABSTRACT Interleukin-22 (IL-22) has redundant, protective, or pathogenic functions during autoimmune, inflammatory, and infectious diseases. Here, we addressed the potential role of IL-22 in host defense and pathogenesis during lethal and sublethal respiratory H3N2 influenza A virus (IAV) infection. We show that IL-22, as well as factors associated with its production, are expressed in the lung tissue during the early phases of IAV infection. Our data indicate that retinoic acid receptor-related orphan receptor-γt (RORγt)-positive αβ and γδ T cells, as well as innate lymphoid cells, expressed enhanced Il22 transcripts as early as 2 days postinfection. During lethal or sublethal IAV infections, endogenous IL-22 played no role in the control of IAV replication and in the development of the IAV-specific CD8+ T cell response. During lethal infection, where wild-type (WT) mice succumbed to severe pneumonia, the lack of IL-22 did not accelerate or delay IAV-associated pathogenesis and animal death. In stark contrast, during sublethal IAV infection, IL-22-deficient animals had enhanced lung injuries and showed a lower airway epithelial integrity relative to WT littermates. Of importance, the protective effect of endogenous IL-22 in pulmonary damages was associated with a more controlled secondary bacterial infection. Indeed, after challenge with Streptococcus pneumoniae, IAV-experienced Il22 −/− animals were more susceptible than WT controls in terms of survival rate and bacterial burden in the lungs. Together, IL-22 plays no major role during lethal influenza but is beneficial during sublethal H3N2 IAV infection, where it limits lung inflammation and subsequent bacterial superinfections.


Infection and Immunity | 2004

Myd88-Dependent In Vivo Maturation of Splenic Dendritic Cells Induced by Leishmania donovani and Other Leishmania Species

Carl De Trez; Maryse Brait; Oberdan Leo; Tony Aebischer; Fabiola Aguilar Torrentera; Yves Carlier; Eric Muraille

ABSTRACT The usual agent of visceral leishmaniasis in the Old World is Leishmania donovani, which typically produces systemic diseases in humans and mice. L. donovani has developed efficient strategies to infect and persist in macrophages from spleen and liver. Dendritic cells (DC) are sentinels of the immune system. Following recognition of evolutionary conserved microbial products, DC undergo a maturation process and activate antigen-specific naïve T cells. In the present report we provide new insights into how DC detect Leishmania in vivo. We demonstrate that in both C57BL/6 and BALB/c mice, systemic injection of L. donovani induced the migration of splenic DC from marginal zones to T-cell areas. During migration, DC upregulated the expression of major histocompatibility complex II and costimulatory receptors (such as CD40, CD80, and CD86). Leishmania-induced maturation requires live parasites and is not restricted to L. donovani, as L. braziliensis, L. major, and L. mexicana induced a similar process. Using a green fluorescent protein-expressing parasite, we demonstrate that DC undergoing maturation in vivo display no parasite internalization. We also show that L. donovani-induced DC maturation was partially abolished in MyD88-deficient mice. Taken together, our data suggest that Leishmania-induced DC maturation results from direct recognition of Leishmania by DC, and not from DC infection, and that MyD88-dependent receptors are implicated in this process.


Journal of Immunology | 2002

T Cell-Dependent Maturation of Dendritic Cells in Response to Bacterial Superantigens

Eric Muraille; Carl De Trez; Bernard Pajak; Maryse Brait; Jacques Urbain; Oberdan Leo

Dendritic cells (DC) express a set of germline-encoded transmembrane Toll-like receptors that recognize shared microbial products, such as Escherichia coli LPS, termed pathogen-associated molecular patterns. Analysis of the in vivo response to pathogen-associated molecular patterns has uncovered their ability to induce the migration and the maturation of DC, favoring thus the delivery of Ag and costimulatory signals to naive T cells in vivo. Bacterial superantigens constitute a particular class of pathogen-derived molecules known to induce a potent inflammatory response in vivo, secondary to the activation of a large repertoire of T cells. We demonstrate in this work that Staphylococcal superantigens induce migration and maturation of DC populations in vivo. However, in contrast to LPS, superantigens failed to induce DC maturation in RAG or MHC class II-deficient mice, suggesting that T cell activation was a prerequisite for DC maturation. This conclusion was further supported by the finding that T cell activation induced by 1) mitogenic anti-CD3 mAbs, 2) allo-MHC determinants, or 3) nominal Ag in a TCR-transgenic model induces DC maturation in vivo. These studies also revealed that DC that matured in response to T cell mitogens display, comparatively to LPS, a distinctive phenotype characterized by high expression of the MHC class II, CD40, and CD205 markers, but only moderate (CD86) to minimal (CD80) expression of CD28/CTLA4 ligands. This work demonstrates that activation of a sufficient number of naive T cells in vivo constitutes a novel form of immune danger, functionally linked to DC maturation.


PLOS Pathogens | 2012

In situ microscopy analysis reveals local innate immune response developed around Brucella infected cells in resistant and susceptible mice.

Richard Copin; Marie-Alice Vitry; Delphine Hanot Mambres; Arnaud Machelart; Carl De Trez; Jean-Marie Vanderwinden; Stefan Magez; Shizuo Akira; Bernhard Ryffel; Yves Carlier; Jean-Jacques Letesson; Eric Muraille

Brucella are facultative intracellular bacteria that chronically infect humans and animals causing brucellosis. Brucella are able to invade and replicate in a broad range of cell lines in vitro, however the cells supporting bacterial growth in vivo are largely unknown. In order to identify these, we used a Brucella melitensis strain stably expressing mCherry fluorescent protein to determine the phenotype of infected cells in spleen and liver, two major sites of B. melitensis growth in mice. In both tissues, the majority of primary infected cells expressed the F4/80 myeloid marker. The peak of infection correlated with granuloma development. These structures were mainly composed of CD11b+ F4/80+ MHC-II+ cells expressing iNOS/NOS2 enzyme. A fraction of these cells also expressed CD11c marker and appeared similar to inflammatory dendritic cells (DCs). Analysis of genetically deficient mice revealed that differentiation of iNOS+ inflammatory DC, granuloma formation and control of bacterial growth were deeply affected by the absence of MyD88, IL-12p35 and IFN-γ molecules. During chronic phase of infection in susceptible mice, we identified a particular subset of DC expressing both CD11c and CD205, serving as a reservoir for the bacteria. Taken together, our results describe the cellular nature of immune effectors involved during Brucella infection and reveal a previously unappreciated role for DC subsets, both as effectors and reservoir cells, in the pathogenesis of brucellosis.


Journal of Immunology | 2009

The Adaptor Molecule MyD88 Directly Promotes CD8 T Cell Responses to Vaccinia Virus

Yuan Zhao; Carl De Trez; Rachel Flynn; Carl F. Ware; Michael Croft; Shahram Salek-Ardakani

Vaccinia virus (VACV) elicits a robust CD8 T cell response that plays an important role in host resistance. To date, there is little information on the molecules that are essential to generate large pools of VACV-specific effector CD8 T cells. In this study, we show that the adaptor molecule MyD88 is critical for the magnitude of primary CD8 T cell responses to both dominant and subdominant VACV epitopes. MyD88−/− mice exhibit profound reduction in CD8 T cell expansion and antiviral cytokine production. Surprisingly, the defect was not due to impaired APC function, as MyD88−/− dendritic cells matured normally and were able to promote strong CD8 T cell priming following VACV infection. Rather, adoptive transfer experiments demonstrated that intrinsic MyD88-dependent pathways in CD8 T cells were critical. MyD88-deficient CD8 T cells failed to accumulate in wild-type hosts and poor expansion of MyD88-deficient VACV-specific CD8 T cells resulted after virus infection. In contrast, no defect was evident in the absence of TRIF, TLR2, TLR4, TLR9, and IL-1R. Together, our results highlight an important role for MyD88 in initial antiviral CD8 T cell responses and suggest that targeting this pathway may be useful in promoting and sustaining anti-VACV immunity.


Infection and Immunity | 2012

Crucial role of gamma interferon-producing CD4+ Th1 cells but dispensable function of CD8+ T cell, B cell, Th2, and Th17 responses in the control of Brucella melitensis infection in mice.

Marie-Alice Vitry; Carl De Trez; Stanislas Goriely; Laure Dumoutier; Shizuo Akira; Bernhard Ryffel; Yves Carlier; Jean-Jacques Letesson; Eric Muraille

ABSTRACT Brucella spp. are facultative intracellular bacterial pathogens responsible for brucellosis, a worldwide zoonosis that causes abortion in domestic animals and chronic febrile disease associated with serious complications in humans. There is currently no approved vaccine against human brucellosis, and antibiotic therapy is long and costly. Development of a safe protective vaccine requires a better understanding of the roles played by components of adaptive immunity in the control of Brucella infection. The importance of lymphocyte subsets in the control of Brucella growth has been investigated separately by various research groups and remains unclear or controversial. Here, we used a large panel of genetically deficient mice to compare the importance of B cells, transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP-1), and major histocompatibility complex class II-dependent pathways of antigen presentation as well as T helper 1 (Th1), Th2, and Th17-mediated responses on the immune control of Brucella melitensis 16 M infection. We clearly confirmed the key function played by gamma interferon (IFN-γ)-producing Th1 CD4+ T cells in the control of B. melitensis infection, whereas IFN-γ-producing CD8+ T cells or B cell-mediated humoral immunity plays only a modest role in the clearance of bacteria during primary infection. In the presence of a Th1 response, Th2 or Th17 responses do not really develop or play a positive or negative role during the course of B. melitensis infection. On the whole, these results could improve our ability to develop protective vaccines or therapeutic treatments against brucellosis.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2007

SLAT regulates Th1 and Th2 inflammatory responses by controlling Ca2+/NFAT signaling

Stéphane Bécart; Céline Charvet; Ann J. Canonigo Balancio; Carl De Trez; Yoshihiko Tanaka; Wei Duan; Carl F. Ware; Michael Croft; Amnon Altman

SWAP-70-like adapter of T cells (SLAT) is a novel guanine nucleotide exchange factor for Rho GTPases that is upregulated in Th2 cells, but whose physiological function is unclear. We show that SLAT(-/-) mice displayed a developmental defect at one of the earliest stages of thymocyte differentiation, the double-negative 1 (DN1) stage, leading to decreased peripheral T cell numbers. SLAT(-/-) peripheral CD4(+) T cells demonstrated impaired TCR/CD28-induced proliferation and IL-2 production, which was rescued by the addition of exogenous IL-2. Importantly, SLAT(-/-) mice were grossly impaired in their ability to mount not only Th2, but also Th1-mediated lung inflammatory responses, as evidenced by reduced airway neutrophilia and eosinophilia, respectively. Levels of Th1 and Th2 cytokine in the lungs were also markedly reduced, paralleling the reduction in pulmonary inflammation. This defect in mounting Th1/Th2 responses, which was also evident in vitro, was traced to a severe reduction in Ca(2+) mobilization from ER stores, which consequently led to defective TCR/CD28-induced translocation of nuclear factor of activated T cells 1/2 (NFATc1/2). Thus, SLAT is required for thymic DN1 cell expansion, T cell activation, and Th1 and Th2 inflammatory responses.

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Eric Muraille

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Jacques Urbain

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Oberdan Leo

Université libre de Bruxelles

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