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Dive into the research topics where Céline Cougoule is active.

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Featured researches published by Céline Cougoule.


Blood | 2010

Three-dimensional migration of macrophages requires Hck for podosome organization and extracellular matrix proteolysis

Céline Cougoule; Véronique Le Cabec; Renaud Poincloux; Talal Al Saati; Jean-Louis Mege; Guillaume Tabouret; Clifford A. Lowell; Nathalie Laviolette-Malirat; Isabelle Maridonneau-Parini

Tissue infiltration of phagocytes exacerbates several human pathologies including chronic inflammations or cancers. However, the mechanisms involved in macrophage migration through interstitial tissues are poorly understood. We investigated the role of Hck, a Src-family kinase involved in the organization of matrix adhesion and degradation structures called podosomes. In Hck(-/-) mice submitted to peritonitis, we found that macrophages accumulated in interstitial tissues and barely reached the peritoneal cavity. In vitro, 3-dimensional (3D) migration and matrix degradation abilities, 2 protease-dependent properties of bone marrow-derived macrophages (BMDMs), were affected in Hck(-/-) BMDMs. These macrophages formed few and undersized podosome rosettes and, consequently, had reduced matrix proteolysis operating underneath despite normal expression and activity of matrix metalloproteases. Finally, in fibroblasts unable to infiltrate matrix, ectopic expression of Hck provided the gain-of-3D migration function, which correlated positively with formation of podosome rosettes. In conclusion, spatial organization of podosomes as large rosettes, proteolytic degradation of extracellular matrix, and 3D migration appeared to be functionally linked and regulated by Hck in macrophages. Hck, as the first protein combining a phagocyte-limited expression with a role in 3D migration, could be a target for new anti-inflammatory and antitumor molecules.


Traffic | 2005

Activation of the lysosome-associated p61Hck isoform triggers the biogenesis of podosomes.

Céline Cougoule; Sebastien Carreno; Jerôme Castandet; Arnaud Labrousse; Catherine Astarie-Dequeker; Renaud Poincloux; Véronique Le Cabec; Isabelle Maridonneau-Parini

Haematopoietic cell kinase (Hck) is a protein tyrosine kinase of the Src family specifically expressed in phagocytes as two isoforms, p59Hck and p61Hck, present at the plasma membrane and lysosomes, respectively. We report that ectopic expression of a constitutively active mutant of p61Hck (p61Hckca) triggered the de novo formation of actin‐rich rings at the ventral face of the cells that we characterized as bona fide podosome rosettes, structures involved in cell migration. Their formation required the adaptor domains and the kinase activity of p61Hck, the integrity of microfilament and microtubule networks and concerted action of Cdc42, Rac and Rho. Podosome rosette formation was either abolished when p61Hckca was readdressed from lysosomes to the cytosol or triggered when p59Hckca was relocalized to lysosomes. Lysosomal markers were present at podosome rosettes. By stimulating exocytosis of p61Hckca lysosomes with a calcium ionophore, the formation of podosome rosettes was enhanced. Interestingly, we confirm that, in human macrophages, Hck and lysosomal markers were present at podosomes which were spatially reorganized as clusters, a foregoing step to form rosettes, upon expression of p61Hckca. We propose that lysosomes, under the control of p61Hck, are involved in the biogenesis of podosomes, a key phenomenon in the migration of phagocytes.


Journal of Leukocyte Biology | 2005

The human macrophage mannose receptor is not a professional phagocytic receptor

Véronique Le Cabec; Laurent Emorine; Isabelle Toesca; Céline Cougoule; Isabelle Maridonneau-Parini

The macrophage mannose receptor (MR) appears to play an important role in the binding and phagocytosis of several human pathogens, but its phagocytic property and signaling pathways have been poorly defined. The general strategy to explore such topics is to express the protein of interest in nonphagocytic cells, but in the case of MR, there are few reports using the full‐length MR cDNA. When we searched to clone de novo the human MR (hMR) cDNA, problems were encountered, and full‐length hMR cDNA was only obtained after devising a complex cloning strategy. Chinese hamster ovary cells, which have a fully functional phagocytic machinery when expressing professional phagocytic receptors, were stably transfected, and cell clones expressing hMR at quantitatively comparable levels than human macrophages or J774E cells were obtained. They exhibited a functional hMR‐mediated endocytic capacity of a soluble ligand but failed to ingest classical particulate ligands of MR such as zymosan, Mycobacterium kansasii, or trimannoside bovine serum albumin‐coated latex beads. Transient expression of hMR in two human cell lines did not provide a phagocytic capacity either. In conclusion, we show that MR is not a professional phagocytic receptor, as it does not possess the ability to promote particle ingestion in nonphagocytic cells on its own. We propose that MR is a binding receptor, which requires a partner to trigger phagocytosis in some specialized cells such as macrophages. Our new expression vector could represent a useful tool to study the receptor and its partnership further.


European Journal of Cell Biology | 2012

Blood leukocytes and macrophages of various phenotypes have distinct abilities to form podosomes and to migrate in 3D environments

Céline Cougoule; Emeline Van Goethem; Véronique Le Cabec; Fanny Lafouresse; Loïc Dupré; Vikram Mehraj; Jean-Louis Mege; Claire Lastrucci; Isabelle Maridonneau-Parini

Leukocytes migrate through most tissues in the body, a process which takes place in 3D environments. We have previously shown that macrophages use the amoeboid migration mode in porous matrices such as fibrillar collagen I and the mesenchymal mode involving podosomes and matrix proteolysis in dense matrices such as Matrigel. Whether such a plasticity may apply to other leukocytes and to all subsets of macrophages is unknown. Here, we therefore provide a comparative analysis of the in vitro 3D migration modes adopted by primary human leukocytes. Blood-derived monocytes, neutrophils and T lymphocytes were found to use the amoeboid mode in a porous fibrillar collagen I matrix but were unable to infiltrate dense Matrigel and to form podosomes. M2-polarized macrophages and elicited peritoneal macrophages formed podosome rosettes, degraded the ECM and infiltrated both matrices. In contrast, M1 macrophages were motionless in 2D and 3D environments, whilst resident macrophages, devoid of podosomes, were only able to use the amoeboid mode. Thus, we conclude that whereas all leukocytes use the amoeboid mode to migrate through porous matrices, it is only certain macrophages that can adopt the mesenchymal mode that permits migration through dense matrices. Interestingly, the acquisition of mesenchymal migration capacity by macrophages correlates with the presence of podosomes and with their capacity to organize those as rosettes, which appears to be modulated by their differentiation and polarization states. As a perspective, specific control of the mesenchymal migration would be a potential target for therapeutic approaches aiming at decreasing macrophage tissue infiltration.


Journal of Immunology | 2011

The Process of Macrophage Migration Promotes Matrix Metalloproteinase-Independent Invasion by Tumor Cells

Romain Guiet; Emeline Van Goethem; Céline Cougoule; Stéphanie Balor; Annie Valette; Talal Al Saati; Clifford A. Lowell; Véronique Le Cabec; Isabelle Maridonneau-Parini

Tumor-associated macrophages are known to amplify the malignant potential of tumors by secreting a variety of cytokines and proteases involved in tumor cell invasion and metastasis, but how these macrophages infiltrate tumors and whether the macrophage migration process facilitates tumor cell invasion remain poorly documented. To address these questions, we used cell spheroids of breast carcinoma SUM159PT cells as an in vitro model of solid tumors. We found that macrophages used both the mesenchymal mode requiring matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) and the amoeboid migration mode to infiltrate tumor cell spheroids. Whereas individual SUM159PT cells invaded Matrigel using an MMP-dependent mesenchymal mode, when they were grown as spheroids, tumor cells were unable to invade the Matrigel surrounding spheroids. When spheroids were infiltrated or in contact with macrophages, tumor cell invasiveness was restored. It was dependent on the capacity of macrophages to remodel the matrix and migrate in an MMP-independent mesenchymal mode. This effect of macrophages was much reduced when spheroids were infiltrated by Matrigel migration-defective Hck−/− macrophages. In the presence of macrophages, SUM159PT migrated into Matrigel in the proximity of macrophages and switched from an MMP-dependent mesenchymal migration to an amoeboid mode resistant to protease inhibitors.Thus, in addition to the well-described paracrine loop between macrophages and tumor cells, macrophages can also contribute to the invasiveness of tumor cells by remodeling the extracellular matrix and by opening the way to exit the tumor and colonize the surrounding tissues in an MMP-dispensable manner.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002

p59Hck isoform induces F-actin reorganization to form protrusions of the plasma membrane in a Cdc42- and Rac-dependent manner.

Sebastien Carreno; Emmanuelle Caron; Céline Cougoule; Laurent Emorine; Isabelle Maridonneau-Parini

Hck is a protein kinase of the Src family specifically expressed in phagocytes as two isoforms, p59Hck and p61Hck, localized at the plasma membrane and lysosomes, respectively. Their individual involvement in functions ascribed to Hck, phagocytosis, cell migration, and lysosome mobilization, is still unclarified. To investigate the specific role of p59Hck, a constitutively active variant in fusion with green fluorescent protein (p59Hckca) was expressed in HeLa cells. p59Hckca was found at focal adhesion sites and triggered reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton, leading to plasma membrane protrusions where it co-localized with F-actin. Similarly, microinjection of p59Hckca cDNA in J774.A1 macrophages induced membrane protrusions. Whereas kinase activity and membrane association of p59Hck were dispensable for location at focal adhesions, p59Hck-induced membrane protrusions were dependent on kinase activity, plasma membrane association, and Src homology 2 but not Src homology 3 domain and were inhibited by dominant-negative forms of Cdc42 or Rac but not by blocking Rho activity. A dominant negative form of p59Hck inhibited the Cdc42- and Rac-dependent FcγRIIa-mediated phagocytosis. Expression of the Cdc42/Rac-interacting domain of p21-activated kinase in macrophages abolished the p59Hckca-induced morphological changes. Therefore, p59Hck-triggered remodeling of the actin cytoskeleton depends upon the activity of Cdc42 and Rac to promote formation of membrane protrusions necessary for phagocytosis and cell migration.


European Journal of Immunology | 2011

Extracellular proteolysis in macrophage migration: Losing grip for a breakthrough

Christel Vérollet; Guillaume M. Charrière; Arnaud Labrousse; Céline Cougoule; Véronique Le Cabec; Isabelle Maridonneau-Parini

Macrophage tissue infiltration is a hallmark of several pathological situations including cancer, neurodegenerative disorders and chronic inflammation. Hence, deciphering the mechanisms of macrophage migration across a variety of tissues holds great potential for novel anti‐inflammatory therapies. Leukocytes have long been thought to migrate through tissues by using the amoeboid (protease‐independent) migration mode; however, recent evidence indicates that macrophages can use either the amoeboid or the mesenchymal (protease‐dependent) migration mode depending on the environmental constraints. Proteolytic activity is required for several key processes including cell migration. Paradoxically, the role of proteases in macrophage migration has been poorly studied. Here, by focusing on the best characterized extracellular protease families – MMPs, cathepsins and urokinase‐type plasminogen activator – we give an overview of their probable involvement in macrophage migration. These proteases appear to play a role in all of the situations encountered by migrating macrophages, i.e. diapedesis, 2D and 3D migration. Migration of macrophages across tissues seems to proceed through an integrative analysis of numerous environmental clues allowing the cells to adapt their migration mode (amoeboid/mesenchymal) and secrete dedicated proteases to ensure efficient tissue infiltration, as discussed in this review. The role of proteases in macrophage migration is an emerging field of research, which deserves further work to allow a more precise understanding.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Macrophage Mesenchymal Migration Requires Podosome Stabilization by Filamin A

Romain Guiet; Christel Vérollet; Isabelle Lamsoul; Céline Cougoule; Renaud Poincloux; Arnaud Labrousse; David A. Calderwood; Michael Glogauer; Pierre G. Lutz; Isabelle Maridonneau-Parini

Background: Filamin A is an actin-binding and scaffolding protein. Mutations in the filamin A gene cause developmental anomalies in humans. Results: Filamin A is required for podosome stabilization, podosome rosette formation, extracellular matrix degradation, and for three-dimensional mesenchymal migration. Conclusion: New functions are assigned to filamin A. Significance: Identification of actors involved in cell migration is crucial for understanding human developmental disorders. Filamin A (FLNa) is a cross-linker of actin filaments and serves as a scaffold protein mostly involved in the regulation of actin polymerization. It is distributed ubiquitously, and null mutations have strong consequences on embryonic development in humans, with organ defects which suggest deficiencies in cell migration. We have reported previously that macrophages, the archetypal migratory cells, use the protease- and podosome-dependent mesenchymal migration mode in dense three-dimensional environments, whereas they use the protease- and podosome-independent amoeboid mode in more porous matrices. Because FLNa has been shown to localize to podosomes, we hypothesized that the defects seen in patients carrying FLNa mutations could be related to the capacity of certain cell types to form podosomes. Using strategies based on FLNa knock-out, knockdown, and rescue, we show that FLNa (i) is involved in podosome stability and their organization as rosettes and three-dimensional podosomes, (ii) regulates the proteolysis of the matrix mediated by podosomes in macrophages, (iii) is required for podosome rosette formation triggered by Hck, and (iv) is necessary for mesenchymal migration but dispensable for amoeboid migration. These new functions assigned to FLNa, particularly its role in mesenchymal migration, could be directly related to the defects in cell migration described during the embryonic development in FLNa-defective patients.


Cell Research | 2015

Tuberculosis is associated with expansion of a motile, permissive and immunomodulatory CD16(+) monocyte population via the IL-10/STAT3 axis.

Claire Lastrucci; Alan Bénard; Luciana Balboa; Karine Pingris; Shanti Souriant; Renaud Poincloux; Talal Al Saati; Voahangy Rasolofo; Pablo González-Montaner; Sandra Inwentarz; Eduardo Moraña; Ivanela Kondova; Frank A. W. Verreck; María C. Sasiain; Olivier Neyrolles; Isabelle Maridonneau-Parini; Geanncarlo Lugo-Villarino; Céline Cougoule

The human CD14+ monocyte compartment is composed by two subsets based on CD16 expression. We previously reported that this compartment is perturbed in tuberculosis (TB) patients, as reflected by the expansion of CD16+ monocytes along with disease severity. Whether this unbalance is beneficial or detrimental to host defense remains to be elucidated. Here in the context of active TB, we demonstrate that human monocytes are predisposed to differentiate towards an anti-inflammatory (M2-like) macrophage activation program characterized by the CD16+CD163+MerTK+pSTAT3+ phenotype and functional properties such as enhanced protease-dependent motility, pathogen permissivity and immunomodulation. This process is dependent on STAT3 activation, and loss-of-function experiments point towards a detrimental role in host defense against TB. Importantly, we provide a critical correlation between the abundance of the CD16+CD163+MerTK+pSTAT3+ cells and the progression of the disease either at the local level in a non-human primate tuberculous granuloma context, or at the systemic level through the detection of the soluble form of CD163 in human sera. Collectively, this study argues for the pathogenic role of the CD16+CD163+MerTK+pSTAT3+ monocyte-to-macrophage differentiation program and its potential as a target for TB therapy, and promotes the detection of circulating CD163 as a potential biomarker for disease progression and monitoring of treatment efficacy.


Immunology and Cell Biology | 2014

An efficient siRNA-mediated gene silencing in primary human monocytes, dendritic cells and macrophages.

Anthony Troegeler; Claire Lastrucci; Carine Duval; Antoine Tanne; Céline Cougoule; Isabelle Maridonneau-Parini; Olivier Neyrolles; Geanncarlo Lugo-Villarino

Mononuclear phagocytes (MP) comprise monocytes, macrophages (MΦ) and dendritic cells (DC), including their lineage‐committed progenitors, which together have an eminent role in health and disease. Lipid‐based siRNA‐mediated gene inactivation is an established approach to investigate gene function in MP cells. However, although there are few protocols dedicated for siRNA‐mediated gene inactivation in primary human DC and MΦ, there are none available for primary human monocytes. Moreover, there is no available method to perform comparative studies of a siRNA‐mediated gene silencing in primary monocytes and other MP cells. Here, we describe a protocol optimized for the lipid‐based delivery of siRNA to perform gene silencing in primary human blood monocytes, which is applicable to DCs, and differs from the classical route of siRNA delivery into MΦs. Along with this protocol, we provide a comparative analysis of how monocytes, DC and MΦ are efficiently transfected with the target siRNA without affecting cell viability, resulting in strong gene knockdown efficiency, including the simultaneous inactivation of two genes. Moreover, siRNA delivery does not affect classical functions in MP such as differentiation, phagocytosis and migration, demonstrating that this protocol does not induce non‐specific major alterations in these cells. As a proof‐of‐principle, a functional analysis of hematopoietic cell kinase (Hck) shows for the first time that this kinase regulates the protease‐dependent migration mode in human monocytes. Collectively, this protocol enables efficient gene inactivation in primary MP, suggesting a wide spectrum of applications such as siRNA‐based high‐throughput screening, which could ultimately improve our knowledge about MP biology.

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Renaud Poincloux

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Claire Lastrucci

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Véronique Le Cabec

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Geanncarlo Lugo-Villarino

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Olivier Neyrolles

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Arnaud Labrousse

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Christel Vérollet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Carine Duval

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Romain Guiet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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