Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Catherine Corbel is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Catherine Corbel.


Immunological Reviews | 1996

Evidence for a Thymus-Dependent Form of Tolerance that is Not Based on Elimination or Anergy of Reactive T cells

Nicole M. Le Douarin; Catherine Corbel; Antonio Bandeira; Véronique Thomas-Vaslin; Yves Modigliani; Antonio Coutinho; Josselyne Salaün

The avian embryo has provided an appropriate model to study the ontogeny of the primary lymphoid organs, thymus and bursa of Fabricius. By using the quail-chick marker system the embryonic origin of the highly intricate cell components which form these organs could be traced back to the initial endodermal, mesodermal and ectodermal germ layers. The timing and dynamics of the incoming and outcoming flows of hemopoietic cells which characterize their lymphopoietic activity could be revealed in both quail and chick embryos. This knowledge served as a basis for an investigation on the role of the epithelial component of the thymus (derived from the pharyngeal endoderm) on tolerance to tissue graft and, by extension, tolerance to self. When this work was undertaken, the prevailing view was that exposure of the developing immune system to foreign antigens in the embryo allows them to be assimilated to self components in the mature animal. In fact, this was found to be true for allogeneic grafts between MHC-distinct chickens, of certain tissues, such as for instance wing tissues. However, in heterospecific transplantations, i.e. when a limb bud was grafted from quail to chick embryos, the chick host acutely rejected the foreign limb soon after birth. In contrast, grafts of the quail thymic epithelial (TE) rudiment resulted in the development of a chimeric thymus in which the foreign epithelial component was not only tolerated but able to induce full tolerance of the grafted wing from the same donor. By monitoring the amount of quail TE implanted we showed in addition that only part of the peripheral T-cell population had to differentiate in the context of the quail epithelial cells to induce tolerance to quail tissues. This pointed to the generation in the thymus of regulatory T cells, coexisting with specific anti-quail reactive T cells, but able to inhibit them from reacting against the quail wing antigenic determinants. A mammalian model was then devised to further study this mechanism of tolerance that we have qualified as dominant by opposition to the current model based on either clonal elimination or anergy which can be considered as recessive or passive. Nude mice of MHC type A were grafted with TE of E10 type B embryos. They became reconstituted for T-cell function but tolerant for B skin allografts. Spleen cells from such tolerant animals injected to naive A nude mice reconstituted T cell function in the recipient and transferred the tolerance to B skin grafts. Reducing the number of donor cells resulted in the segregation of the two phenomena. For low numbers the recipients were restored but not tolerant, thus showing the coexistence in the tolerant donor of anti-B reactive T cells together with regulatory cells able to abolish their reactivity against B determinants. Other experiments demonstrated that TE-induced tolerance does not rely on clonal deletion or anergy. This was shown on systems where elimination of cells directed toward superantigens was screened. It turned out that tolerance to skin grafts and superantigen T-cell deletion are unrelated phenomena. These observations strongly suggest that tolerance to self results at least in part from the interplay between cells potentially harmful for self component and others which exert a strong control on their reactivity. The latter cell type depends upon interactions of thymocytes with the endodermal component of the thymus.


Science | 1987

Tolerance induced by thymic epithelial grafts in birds

H. Ohki; Claude Martin; Catherine Corbel; M Coltey; Nm Le Douarin


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1992

BEN, a surface glycoprotein of the immunoglobulin superfamily, is expressed in a variety of developing systems.

Olivier Pourquié; Catherine Corbel; J P Le Caer; Jean Rossier; N.M. Le Douarin


Development | 1998

Avian VEGF-C: cloning, embryonic expression pattern and stimulation of the differentiation of VEGFR2-expressing endothelial cell precursors

Anne Eichmann; Catherine Corbel; T. Jaffredo; Christiane Bréant; Vladimir Joukov; Vijay Kumar; Kari Alitalo; N.M. Le Douarin


Developmental Biology | 2002

αIIb Integrin Expression during Development of the Murine Hemopoietic System

Catherine Corbel; Josselyne Salaün


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1996

BEN/SC1/DM-GRASP, a homophilic adhesion molecule, is required for in vitro myeloid colony formation by avian hemopoietic progenitors

Catherine Corbel; Olivier Pourquié; F Cormier; Pierre Vaigot; N.M. Le Douarin


International Immunology | 1990

Evidence for peripheral mechanisms inducing tissue tolerance during ontogeny

Catherine Corbel; Claude Martin; Hiroko Ohki; M Coltey; Ivo Hlozanek; Nicole M. Le Douarin


International Immunology | 1989

Thymic epithelium tolerizes chickens to embryonic grafts of quail bursa of Fabricius

M Belo; Catherine Corbel; Claude Martin; Nicole M. Le Douarin


Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology | 1989

Induction of Tolerance by Embryonic Thymic Epithelial Grafts in Birds and Mammals

N.M. Le Douarin; Catherine Corbel; Claude Martin; M Coltey; Josselyne Salaün


Journal of Immunology | 1985

A novel method to bursectomize avian embryos and obtain quail----chick bursal chimeras. I. Immunocytochemical analysis of such chimeras by using species-specific monoclonal antibodies.

M Belo; Claude Martin; Catherine Corbel; N M Le Douarin

Collaboration


Dive into the Catherine Corbel's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M Belo

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M Coltey

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Josselyne Salaün

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Olivier Pourquié

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Josselyne Salaün

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge