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Dive into the research topics where Cédric Delevoye is active.

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Featured researches published by Cédric Delevoye.


PLOS Pathogens | 2008

SNARE protein mimicry by an intracellular bacterium.

Cédric Delevoye; Michael Nilges; Pierre Dehoux; Fabienne Paumet; Stéphanie Perrinet; Alice Dautry-Varsat; Agathe Subtil

Many intracellular pathogens rely on host cell membrane compartments for their survival. The strategies they have developed to subvert intracellular trafficking are often unknown, and SNARE proteins, which are essential for membrane fusion, are possible targets. The obligate intracellular bacteria Chlamydia replicate within an intracellular vacuole, termed an inclusion. A large family of bacterial proteins is inserted in the inclusion membrane, and the role of these inclusion proteins is mostly unknown. Here we identify SNARE-like motifs in the inclusion protein IncA, which are conserved among most Chlamydia species. We show that IncA can bind directly to several host SNARE proteins. A subset of SNAREs is specifically recruited to the immediate vicinity of the inclusion membrane, and their accumulation is reduced around inclusions that lack IncA, demonstrating that IncA plays a predominant role in SNARE recruitment. However, interaction with the SNARE machinery is probably not restricted to IncA as at least another inclusion protein shows similarities with SNARE motifs and can interact with SNAREs. We modelled IncAs association with host SNAREs. The analysis of intermolecular contacts showed that the IncA SNARE-like motif can make specific interactions with host SNARE motifs similar to those found in a bona fide SNARE complex. Moreover, point mutations in the central layer of IncA SNARE-like motifs resulted in the loss of binding to host SNAREs. Altogether, our data demonstrate for the first time mimicry of the SNARE motif by a bacterium.


Molecular Microbiology | 2005

A directed screen for chlamydial proteins secreted by a type III mechanism identifies a translocated protein and numerous other new candidates.

Agathe Subtil; Cédric Delevoye; María-Eugenia Balañá; Laurence Tastevin; Stéphanie Perrinet; Alice Dautry-Varsat

Chlamydiae are strict intracellular parasites that induce their internalization upon contact with the host cell and grow inside an intracellular compartment called an inclusion. They possess a type III secretion (TTS) apparatus, which allows for the translocation of specific proteins in the host cell cytosol. In particular, chlamydial proteins of the Inc family are secreted to the inclusion membrane by a TTS mechanism; other TTS substrates are mostly unknown. Using a secretion assay based on the recognition of TTS signals in Shigella flexneri, we searched for TTS signals in the proteins of unknown function, conserved between three different chlamydial species, Chlamydia pneumoniae, C. trachomatis and C. caviae. We identified 24 new candidate proteins which did not belong to the Inc family. Four of these proteins were also secreted as full‐length proteins by a TTS mechanism in S. flexneri, indicating that their translocation does not require other chlamydial proteins. One of these proteins was detected in the cytosol of infected cells using specific antibodies, directly demonstrating that it is translocated in the host cell during bacterial proliferation. More generally, this work represents the first directed search for TTS effectors not based on genetic information or sequence similarity. It reveals the abundance of proteins secreted in the host cell by chlamydiae.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2009

AP-1 and KIF13A coordinate endosomal sorting and positioning during melanosome biogenesis

Cédric Delevoye; Ilse Hurbain; Danièle Tenza; Jean-Baptiste Sibarita; Stéphanie Uzan-Gafsou; Hiroshi Ohno; Willie J. C. Geerts; Arie J. Verkleij; Jean Salamero; Michael S. Marks; Graça Raposo

The clathrin adaptor protein AP-1 and the motor KIF13A work together to deliver cargo into maturing melanosomes.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Intracellular bacteria encode inhibitory SNARE-like proteins.

Fabienne Paumet; Jordan Wesolowski; Alejandro Garcia-Diaz; Cédric Delevoye; Nathalie Aulner; Howard A. Shuman; Agathe Subtil

Pathogens use diverse molecular machines to penetrate host cells and manipulate intracellular vesicular trafficking. Viruses employ glycoproteins, functionally and structurally similar to the SNARE proteins, to induce eukaryotic membrane fusion. Intracellular pathogens, on the other hand, need to block fusion of their infectious phagosomes with various endocytic compartments to escape from the degradative pathway. The molecular details concerning the mechanisms underlying this process are lacking. Using both an in vitro liposome fusion assay and a cellular assay, we showed that SNARE-like bacterial proteins block membrane fusion in eukaryotic cells by directly inhibiting SNARE-mediated membrane fusion. More specifically, we showed that IncA and IcmG/DotF, two SNARE-like proteins respectively expressed by Chlamydia and Legionella, inhibit the endocytic SNARE machinery. Furthermore, we identified that the SNARE-like motif present in these bacterial proteins encodes the inhibitory function. This finding suggests that SNARE-like motifs are capable of specifically manipulating membrane fusion in a wide variety of biological environments. Ultimately, this motif may have been selected during evolution because it is an efficient structural motif for modifying eukaryotic membrane fusion and thus contribute to pathogen survival.


Cell Reports | 2014

Recycling Endosome Tubule Morphogenesis from Sorting Endosomes Requires the Kinesin Motor KIF13A

Cédric Delevoye; Stéphanie Miserey-Lenkei; Guillaume Montagnac; Floriane Gilles-Marsens; Perrine Paul-Gilloteaux; Francesca Giordano; François Waharte; Michael S. Marks; Bruno Goud; Graça Raposo

Early endosomes consist of vacuolar sorting and tubular recycling domains that segregate components fated for degradation in lysosomes or reuse by recycling to the plasma membrane or Golgi. The tubular transport intermediates that constitute recycling endosomes function in cell polarity, migration, and cytokinesis. Endosomal tubulation and fission require both actin and intact microtubules, but although factors that stabilize recycling endosomal tubules have been identified, those required for tubule generation from vacuolar sorting endosomes (SEs) remain unknown. We show that the microtubule motor KIF13A associates with recycling endosome tubules and controls their morphogenesis. Interfering with KIF13A function impairs the formation of endosomal tubules from SEs with consequent defects in endosome homeostasis and cargo recycling. Moreover, KIF13A interacts and cooperates with RAB11 to generate endosomal tubules. Our data illustrate how a microtubule motor couples early endosome morphogenesis to its motility and function.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2010

Ang2/Fat-Free Is a Conserved Subunit of the Golgi-associated Retrograde Protein Complex

F. Javier Pérez-Victoria; Christina Schindler; Javier G. Magadán; Gonzalo A. Mardones; Cédric Delevoye; Maryse Romao; Graça Raposo; Juan S. Bonifacino

The protein Ang2 is shown to be a conserved component of the Golgi-associated Retrograde Protein (GARP) complex in higher eukaryotes. Ang2 participates in retrograde transport from endosomes to the TGN, contributing to the maintenance of acid hydrolase sorting, lysosome function and autophagy.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Functional melanocytes derived from human pluripotent stem cells engraft into pluristratified epidermis

Xavier Nissan; Lionel Larribere; Manoubia Saidani; Ilse Hurbain; Cédric Delevoye; Jessica Feteira; Gilles Lemaitre; Marc Peschanski; Christine Baldeschi

Melanocytes are essential for skin homeostasis and protection, and their defects in humans lead to a wide array of diseases that are potentially extremely severe. To date, the analysis of molecular mechanisms and the function of human melanocytes have been limited because of the difficulties in accessing large numbers of cells with the specific phenotypes. This issue can now be addressed via a differentiation protocol that allows melanocytes to be obtained from pluripotent stem cell lines, either induced or of embryonic origin, based on the use of moderate concentrations of a single cytokine, bone morphogenic protein 4. Human melanocytes derived from pluripotent stem cells exhibit all the characteristic features of their adult counterparts. This includes the enzymatic machinery required for the production and functional delivery of melanin to keratinocytes. Melanocytes also integrate appropriately into organotypic epidermis reconstructed in vitro. The availability of human cells committed to the melanocytic lineage in vitro will enable the investigation of those mechanisms that guide the developmental processes and will facilitate analysis of the molecular mechanisms responsible for genetic diseases. Access to an unlimited resource may also prove a vital tool for the treatment of hypopigmentation disorders when donors with matching haplotypes become available in clinically relevant banks of pluripotent stem cell lines.


Nature Communications | 2015

Exosomes released by keratinocytes modulate melanocyte pigmentation

Alessandra Lo Cicero; Cédric Delevoye; Floriane Gilles-Marsens; Damarys Loew; Florent Dingli; Christelle Guéré; Nathalie André; Katell Vié; Guillaume van Niel; Graça Raposo

Cells secrete extracellular vesicles (EVs), exosomes and microvesicles, which transfer proteins, lipids and RNAs to regulate recipient cell functions. Skin pigmentation relies on a tight dialogue between keratinocytes and melanocytes in the epidermis. Here we report that exosomes secreted by keratinocytes enhance melanin synthesis by increasing both the expression and activity of melanosomal proteins. Furthermore, we show that the function of keratinocyte-derived exosomes is phototype-dependent and is modulated by ultraviolet B. In sum, this study uncovers an important physiological function for exosomes in human pigmentation and opens new avenues in our understanding of how pigmentation is regulated by intercellular communication in both healthy and diseased states.


Infection and Immunity | 2010

Production of reactive oxygen species is turned on and rapidly shut down in epithelial cells infected with Chlamydia trachomatis

Gaelle Boncompain; Benoit Schneider; Cédric Delevoye; Odile Kellermann; Alice Dautry-Varsat; Agathe Subtil

ABSTRACT Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are many-faceted compounds involved in cell defense against pathogens, as well as in cell signaling. Their involvement in the response to infection in epithelial cells remains poorly documented. Here, we investigated the production of ROS during infection with Chlamydia trachomatis, a strict intracellular pathogen, in HeLa cells. C. trachomatis induced a transient increase in the ROS level within a few hours, followed by a return to basal level 9 hours after infection. At this time point, the host enzyme dedicated to ROS production, NADPH oxidase, could no longer be activated by external stimuli, such as interleukin-1β. In addition, Rac, a regulatory subunit of the NADPH oxidase complex, was relocated to the membrane of the compartment in which the bacteria develop, the inclusion, while other subunits were not. Altogether, these results indicate that C. trachomatis infection elicits the production of ROS and that the bacteria rapidly target the activity of NADPH oxidase to shut it down. Prevention of ROS production at the onset of the bacterial developmental cycle might delay the host response to infection.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2015

BLOC-2 targets recycling endosomal tubules to melanosomes for cargo delivery

Megan K. Dennis; Adriana R. Mantegazza; Olivia L. Snir; Danièle Tenza; Amanda Acosta-Ruiz; Cédric Delevoye; Richard Zorger; Anand Sitaram; Wilfredo de Jesus-Rojas; Keerthana Ravichandran; John J. Rux; Elena V. Sviderskaya; Dorothy C. Bennett; Graça Raposo; Michael S. Marks; Subba Rao Gangi Setty

Quantitative analyses of melanosome cargo localization and trafficking and of endosomal membrane dynamics in immortalized melanocytes from mouse Hermansky–Pudlak syndrome models show that BLOC-2 functions to specify the delivery of recycling endosomal cargo transport intermediates to maturing melanosomes.

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Danièle Tenza

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Michael S. Marks

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Floriane Gilles-Marsens

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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