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Dive into the research topics where Catherine Ottone is active.

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Featured researches published by Catherine Ottone.


Journal of Virology | 2005

Inhibition of RIG-I-Dependent Signaling to the Interferon Pathway during Hepatitis C Virus Expression and Restoration of Signaling by IKKε

Adrien Breiman; Nathalie Grandvaux; Rongtuan Lin; Catherine Ottone; Shizuo Akira; Mitsutoshi Yoneyama; Takashi Fujita; John Hiscott; Eliane F. Meurs

ABSTRACT Interferon (IFN) is one important effector of the innate immune response, induced by different viral or bacterial components through Toll-like receptor (TLR)-dependent and -independent mechanisms. As part of its pathogenic strategy, hepatitis C virus (HCV) interferes with the innate immune response and induction of IFN-β via the HCV NS3/4A protease activity which inhibits phosphorylation of IRF-3, a key transcriptional regulator of the IFN response. In the present study, we demonstrate that inhibition by the protease occurs upstream of the noncanonical IKK-related kinases IKKε and TBK-1, which phosphorylate IRF-3, through partial inhibition of the TLR adapter protein TRIF/TICAM1-dependent pathway. Use of TRIF−/− mouse embryo fibroblasts however revealed the presence of a TRIF-independent pathway involved in IFN induction that was also inhibited by NS3/4A. Importantly, we show that NS3/4A can strongly inhibit the ability of the recently described RIG-I protein to activate IFN, suggesting that RIG-I is a key factor in the TRIF-independent, NS3/4A-sensitive pathway. Expression of IFN signaling components including IKKε, TBK-1, TRIF, and wild type or constitutively active forms of RIG-I in the HCV replicon cells resulted in IFN-β promoter transactivation, with IKKε displaying the highest efficiency. Subsequently, overexpression of IKKε resulted in 80% inhibition of both the positive and negative replicative strands of the HCV replicon. The partial restoration of the capacity of the host cell to transcribe IFN-β indicates that IKKε expression is able to bypass the HCV-mediated inhibition and restore the innate antiviral response.


Immunogenetics | 1997

ISOLATION OF A B-CELL-SPECIFIC PROMOTER FOR THE HUMAN CLASS II TRANSACTIVATOR

Ana-Maria Lennon; Catherine Ottone; Gildas Rigaud; Larry L. Deaven; Jon Longmire; Marc Fellous; Rosa Bono

Abstract The class II transactivator (CIITA) is essential for the expression of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II antigens. The tissular patterns of CIITA and MHC class II gene expression are tightly correlated: CIITA mRNA is highly expressed in B cells, and is induced by interferon gamma (IFN-γ) in macrophage and epithelial cell lines. We first isolated two overlapping cosmids encoding human CIITA which, when co-transfected, are able to restore MHC class II expression in a B-lymphoblastoid cell line (B-LCL) defective for CIITA. Subsequently, a 1.8 kilobase (kb) fragment of the CIITA promoter was isolated and sequenced. A motif presenting a strong similarity to an initiator was detected, as well as putative binding sites for Sp1, GATA-2, LyF-1, ets-1, AP1, and MZF1 transcription factors, and two GAS motifs. When introduced in front of a luciferase reporter gene, this promoter is able to direct a high luciferase activity in a human B-LCL. In contrast, luciferase expression was not stimulated after IFN-γ treatment when the construct was transfected in macrophage or in epithelial cell lines. However, an induction of the human CIITA gene was observed in mouse macrophage and fibrosarcoma cell lines, when the cells were transfected with a cosmid containing the human CIITA gene, but lacking the 1.8 kb promoter described above. Taken together, these data suggest the existence of an intragenic promoter driving an IFN-γ-inducible expression of CIITA.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2000

The LE1 Bacteriophage Replicates as a Plasmid within Leptospira biflexa: Construction of an L. biflexa-Escherichia coli Shuttle Vector

Isabelle Saint Girons; Pascale Bourhy; Catherine Ottone; Mathieu Picardeau; David B. Yelton; Roger W. Hendrix; Philippe Glaser; Nyles W. Charon

We have discovered that LE1, one of the plaque-forming phages previously described as lytic for the Leptospira biflexa saprophytic spirochete (I. Saint Girons, D. Margarita, P. Amouriaux, and G. Baranton, Res. Microbiol. 141:1131-1138, 1990), was indeed temperate. LE1 was found to be unusual, as Southern blot analysis indicated that it is one of the few phages to replicate in the prophage state as a circular plasmid. The unavailability of such small endogenous replicons has hindered genetic experimentation in Leptospira. We have developed a shuttle vector with DNA derived from LE1. Random LE1 DNA fragments were cloned into a pGEM 7Zf(+) derivative devoid of most of the bla gene but carrying a kanamycin resistance marker from the gram-positive bacterium Enterococcus (Streptococcus) faecalis. These constructs were transformed into L. biflexa strain Patoc 1 by electroporation, giving rise to kanamycin-resistant transformants. A 2.2-kb fragment from LE1 was responsible for replication of the vector in L. biflexa. However, a larger region including an intact parA gene homologue was necessary for the stability of the shuttle vector. Direct repeats and AT-rich regions characterized the LE1 origin of replication. Our data indicate that the replicon derived from the LE1 leptophage, together with the kanamycin resistance gene, is a promising tool with which to develop the genetics of Leptospira species.


Biopreservation and Biobanking | 2012

Influence of Pre-analytical Variables on VEGF Gene Expression and Circulating Protein Concentrations

Mohsen Azimi-Nezhad; Daniel Lambert; Catherine Ottone; Corinne Perrin; Celine Chapel; Gwenaëlle Gaillard; Michèle Pfister; Christine Masson; Eric Tabone; Fay Betsou; David Meyronet; Marie-Noelle Ungeheuer; Sophie Visvikis Siest

BACKGROUND The extended role of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in human pathophysiology led us to evaluate pre-analytical parameters possibly influencing its levels in peripheral blood and tissues. The effects on VEGF protein levels and mRNA expression were measured after storage delay (blood and tissue), use of different types of anticoagulants (blood), and after different numbers of freeze-thaw cycles (blood). METHODS Blood from healthy donors was sampled simultaneously in ethylene diamine tetraacetic acid (EDTA), acid citrate dextrose (ACD-A), hirudin, and serum separation tubes. For each anticoagulant, VEGF was measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) with different conditions of delay at 4°C before centrifugation (2 h, 4 h, or 48 h) and of different numbers of freeze-thaw cycles (1, 2, and 10). The transcripts coding for the VEGF165 isoform were quantified in peripheral blood mononuclear cells by RT-PCR. Muscle biopsy samples were frozen with delays of 15, 30, or 60 min after surgery. VEGF expression was quantified on immunofluorescence stained slides. RESULTS The period of storage and the number of freeze-thaw cycles correlated with an increase in the levels of circulating VEGF (for each anticoagulant but not for serum) and its expression in PBMCs. VEGF expression measured from muscle biopsy sections was higher with freezing delays, with a peak at 30 and 60 min as compared to 15 min. CONCLUSIONS The most reliable conditions for measuring both circulating VEGF and its gene expression are to reduce time between blood collection and centrifugation, and to avoid multiple freeze-thaw cycles. Serum collection tubes with no additive and no separator were less sensitive to the pre-analytical variations analyzed in this study. Freezing delay had a significant influence on VEGF protein expression in tissue samples.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Dipstick Test for Rapid Diagnosis of Shigella dysenteriae 1 in Bacterial Cultures and Its Potential Use on Stool Samples

Neelam Taneja; Faridabano Nato; Sylvie Dartevelle; Jean Marie Sire; Benoit Garin; Lan Nguyen Thi Phuong; Jean Christophe Shako; F. Bimet; Ingrid Filliol; Jean-Jacques Muyembe; Marie Noëlle Ungeheuer; Catherine Ottone; Philippe J. Sansonetti; Yves Germani

Background We describe a test for rapid detection of S. dysenteriae 1 in bacterial cultures and in stools, at the bedside of patients. Methodology/Principal Findings The test is based on the detection of S. dysenteriae 1 lipopolysaccharide (LPS) using serotype 1-specific monoclonal antibodies coupled to gold particles and displayed on a one-step immunochromatographic dipstick. A concentration as low as 15 ng/ml of LPS was detected in distilled water and in reconstituted stools in 10 minutes. In distilled water and in reconstituted stools, an unequivocal positive reaction was obtained with 1.6×106 CFU/ml and 4.9×106 CFU/ml of S. dysenteriae 1, respectively. Optimal conditions to read the test have been determined to limit the risk of ambiguous results due to appearance of a faint yellow test band in some negative samples. The specificity was 100% when tested with a battery of Shigella and unrelated strains in culture. When tested on 328 clinical samples in India, Vietnam, Senegal and France by laboratory technicians and in Democratic Republic of Congo by a field technician, the specificity (312/316) was 98.7% (95% CI:96.6–99.6%) and the sensitivity (11/12) was 91.7% (95% CI:59.8–99.6%). Stool cultures and the immunochromatographic test showed concordant results in 98.4 % of cases (323/328) in comparative studies. Positive and negative predictive values were 73.3% (95% CI:44.8–91.1%) and 99.7% (95% CI:98–100%). Conclusion The initial findings presented here for a simple dipstick-based test to diagnose S. dysenteriae 1 demonstrates its promising potential to become a powerful tool for case management and epidemiological surveys.


Immunogenetics | 1996

The RAG cell line defines a new complementation group of MHC class II deficiency.

Ana-Maria Lennon; Catherine Ottone; Ad Peijnenburg; Chantal Hamon-Benais; Frédéric Colland; Sam J. P. Gobin; Peter J. van den Elsen; Marc Fellous; Rosa Bono

We previously described RAG, a mouse adenocarcinoma cell line, as deficient for the induction of major histocompatibility (MHC) class II antigens by IFN-γ, but responding normally for MHC class I antigen stimulation and anti-viral protection. We had established that the fusion of RAG with various human cell lines restored the induction of MHC class II antigens, whenever the human chromosome 16 was present in somatic cell hybrids. Here we show that the RAG cell line does not exhibit any induction by IFN-γ ofDMA, DMB, and theinvariant chain (Ii) mRNAs, and that the induction is restored in somatic cell hybrids containing human chromosome 16. In order to define the gene (designatedF16) affected in the RAG cells, we performed a complementation analysis by fusing RAG with previously described human cell lines defective for MHC class II antigen expression (e.g., BLS cell lines), and which belong to five different complementation groups. Our data show that the resulting somatic cell hybrids present an inducible expression of mouse MHC class II antigens, Ii, DMA, and DMB. Therefore, the RAG cell line represents a yet undescribed cellular mutant affected in the expression of MHC class II antigens. In addition, we demonstrate that MHC class II antigens can be constitutively expressed in the RAG cell line when transfected with the cDNA encoding humanCIITA driven by the RSV LTR promoter. Since the complementation analysis assessed that F16 and CIITA are distinct, our data suggest that F16 is required for the expression of CIITA.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Rapid Diagnosis of Diarrhea Caused by Shigella sonnei Using Dipsticks; Comparison of Rectal Swabs, Direct Stool and Stool Culture

Claudia Duran; Faridabano Nato; Sylvie Dartevelle; Lan Nguyen Thi Phuong; Neelam Taneja; Marie Noëlle Ungeheuer; Guillermo Soza; Leslie N. Anderson; Dona Benadof; Agustín Zamorano; Truong Quang Nguyen; Vu H. Nguyen; Catherine Ottone; Evelyne Bégaud; Sapna Pahil; Valeria Prado; Philippe J. Sansonetti; Yves Germani

Background We evaluated a dipstick test for rapid detection of Shigella sonnei on bacterial colonies, directly on stools and from rectal swabs because in actual field situations, most pathologic specimens for diagnosis correspond to stool samples or rectal swabs. Methodology/Principal Findings The test is based on the detection of S. sonnei lipopolysaccharide (LPS) O-side chains using phase I-specific monoclonal antibodies coupled to gold particles, and displayed on a one-step immunochromatographic dipstick. A concentration as low as 5 ng/ml of LPS was detected in distilled water and in reconstituted stools in 6 minutes. This is the optimal time for lecture to avoid errors of interpretation. In distilled water and in reconstituted stools, an unequivocal positive reaction was obtained with 4 x 106 CFU/ml of S. sonnei. The specificity was 100% when tested with a battery of Shigella and different unrelated strains. When tested on 342 rectal swabs in Chile, specificity (281/295) was 95.3% (95% CI: 92.9% - 97.7%) and sensitivity (47/47) was 100%. Stool cultures and the immunochromatographic test showed concordant results in 95.5 % of cases (328/342) in comparative studies. Positive and negative predictive values were 77% (95% CI: 65% - 86.5%) and 100% respectively. When tested on 219 stools in Chile, Vietnam, India and France, specificity (190/198) was 96% (95% CI 92%–98%) and sensitivity (21/21) was 100%. Stool cultures and the immunochromatographic test showed concordant results in 96.3 % of cases (211/219) in comparative studies. Positive and negative predictive values were 72.4% (95% CI 56.1%–88.6%) and 100 %, respectively. Conclusion This one-step dipstick test performed well for diagnosis of S. sonnei both on stools and on rectal swabs. These data confirm a preliminary study done in Chile.


Gene | 1995

TRANSFER OF YEAST ARTIFICIAL CHROMOSOMES INTO MAMMALIAN CELLS AND COMPARATIVE STUDY OF THEIR INTEGRITY

Samuel J.P. Gobin; Maria-Rosa Bono; Catherine Ottone; Ilya Chumakov; Rodney Rothstein; Marc Fellous

Yeast artificial chromosomes (YACs) from the CEPH MegaYAC library (Paris, France) ranging in size from 350 to 1600 kb and mapping to the q22.1 and q22.2 regions of human chromosome 21 were transferred into mammalian cells by spheroplast fusion. The integrity of the YACs from two adjacent parts of the region was compared after retrofitting and stable transfer into mammalian cells. We found that large YACs could easily be manipulated to allow transfer of the YAC material into mammalian cells and that the size of the YAC did not appear to be limiting for fusion. However, we show that there was great variability in the integrity of the YACs from the two regions, which was not related to the size of the YACs. Four YACs in region I from sequence-tagged site (STS) G51E05 up to STS LL103 showed, in general, no loss of material and correct gene transfer into mammalian cells. In contrast, the three YACs in the more centromeric region II (from STS G51B09 up to G51E05) frequently showed a loss of human material during handling, retrofitting and transfer. As a YAC from another library covering region II was also found to be unstable, we propose that the integrity of the YACs is highly dependent on the incorporated human chromosomal DNA.


Immunogenetics | 1998

CIITA B-cell-specific promoter suppression in MHC class II-silenced cell hybrids.

Ana-Maria Lennon; Catherine Ottone; Mario Rosemblatt; Marc Fellous; Maria-Rosa Bono

Abstract In this study, various sets of somatic cell hybrids, generated by the fusion of epithelial cell lines with B-lymphoblastoid cell lines, were analyzed for the expression of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II antigens. We first demonstrate, in human and mouse intraspecies hybrids, the coordinate suppression of MHC class II, Ii (invariant chain) and HLA-DM gene transcription, and the release of the silencing by the addition of interferon gamma. Using interspecies hybrids, the segregation of human chromosomes allowed us to establish that MHC class II extinction is linked to the presence in the hybrids of the chromosomes from the epithelial fusion partner. Moreover, our data provide evidence that the expression pattern of MHC class II mRNA is correlated with that of the class II transactivator (CIITA), suggesting that CIITA is the actual target of the silencing. To gain further insight into the suppression phenomenon we performed luciferase assays which show that silencing affects the activity of the B-cell-specific promoter of CIITA. These results therefore demonstrate that the MHC class II gene silencing in somatic cell hybrids is due to an active suppression of one of the promoters of the CIITA gene, mediated by the epithelial cell fusion partner.


Clinical Immunology | 2017

Standardized whole blood stimulation improves immunomonitoring of induced immune responses in multi-center study

Darragh Duffy; Vincent Rouilly; Cécile Braudeau; Véronique Corbière; Raouf Djebali; Marie-Noelle Ungeheuer; Régis Josien; Samuel T. LaBrie; Olivier Lantz; Delphine Louis; Eva Martínez-Cáceres; Françoise Mascart; Jose G. Ruiz de Morales; Catherine Ottone; Lydia Redjah; Nina Salabert-Le Guen; Alain Savenay; Manfred Schmolz; Antoine Toubert; Matthew L. Albert

Functional immune responses are increasingly important for clinical studies, providing in depth biomarker information to assess immunotherapy or vaccination. Incorporating functional immune assays into routine clinical practice has remained limited due to challenges in standardizing sample preparation. We recently described the use of a whole blood syringe-based system, TruCulture®, which permits point-of-care standardized immune stimulation. Here, we report on a multi-center clinical study in seven FOCIS Centers of Excellence to directly compare TruCulture to conventional PBMC methods. Whole blood and PBMCs from healthy donors were exposed to LPS, anti-CD3 anti-CD28 antibodies, or media alone. 55 protein analytes were analyzed centrally by Luminex multi-analyte profiling in a CLIA-certified laboratory. TruCulture responses showed greater reproducibility and improved the statistical power for monitoring differential immune response activation. The use of TruCulture addresses a major unmet need through a robust and flexible method for immunomonitoring that can be reproducibly applied in multi-center clinical studies. ONE SENTENCE SUMMARY A multi-center study revealed greater reproducibility from whole blood stimulation systems as compared to PBMC stimulation for studying induced immune responses.

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Marc Fellous

Paris Descartes University

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Valentine Brousse

Paris Descartes University

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