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Dive into the research topics where Christelle Ganneau is active.

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Featured researches published by Christelle Ganneau.


Blood | 2010

Glycosidic Tn-based vaccines targeting dermal dendritic cells favor germinal center B-cell development and potent antibody response in the absence of adjuvant

Teresa Freire; Xiaoming Zhang; Edith Dériaud; Christelle Ganneau; Sophie Vichier-Guerre; Elie Azria; Odile Launay; Richard Lo-Man; Sylvie Bay; Claude Leclerc

In vivo targeting of C-type lectin receptors is an effective strategy for increasing antigen uptake and presentation by dendritic cells (DCs). To induce efficient immune response, glycosylated tumor-associated Tn antigens were used to target DCs through binding to macrophage galactose-type lectin (MGL). The capacity of Tn-glycosylated antigens-and the multiple antigenic glycopeptide Tn3 therapeutic candidate vaccine-to target mouse and human MGL(+) DCs are demonstrated, especially regarding dermal DCs. In mice, MGL(+) CD103(-) dermal DCs efficiently captured and processed glycosylated Tn antigen in vivo, inducing a potent major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II-restricted T-cell response. Intradermal immunization with Tn-glycopeptides induced high levels of Th2 cytokines-even in the presence of unmethylated cytosine-phosphate-guanosine-and was associated with increased expansion of the germinal center B-cell population. Therefore, MGL acts as an efficient endocytic antigen receptor on dermal DCs in vivo, able to prime Tn-specific T- and B-cell responses. Moreover, even in the absence of adjuvant, immunization with this glycosidic Tn-based vaccine induced high levels of anti-Tn antibody responses, recognizing human tumor cells. In vivo DC-targeting strategies, based on Tn-MGL interactions, constitute a promising strategy for enhancing antigen presentation and inducing potent antibody response.


ChemMedChem | 2009

Induction of a Melanoma‐Specific Antibody Response by a Monovalent, but not a Divalent, Synthetic GM2 Neoglycopeptide

Sylvie Bay; Sébastien Fort; Lémonia Birikaki; Christelle Ganneau; Eric Samain; Yves-Marie Coïc; Frédéric J. Bonhomme; Edith Dériaud; Claude Leclerc; Richard Lo-Man

Human tumor cell‐specific antibodies were induced in mice after immunization with a synthetic glycopeptide, which is based on the GM2 ganglioside carbohydrate moiety produced on a gram scale in bacteria. Such neoglycopeptides represent a promising cancer vaccine strategy for active immunotherapy targeting carbohydrates.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2008

Cinnamic Acid, an Autoinducer of Its Own Biosynthesis, Is Processed via Hca Enzymes in Photorhabdus luminescens

Sabina Chalabaev; Evelyne Turlin; Sylvie Bay; Christelle Ganneau; Emma Brito-Fravallo; Jean-François Charles; Antoine Danchin; Francis Biville

ABSTRACT Photorhabdus luminescens, an entomopathogenic bacterium and nematode symbiont, has homologues of the Hca and Mhp enzymes. In Escherichia coli, these enzymes catalyze the degradation of the aromatic compounds 3-phenylpropionate (3PP) and cinnamic acid (CA) and allow the use of 3PP as sole carbon source. P. luminescens is not able to use 3PP and CA as sole carbon sources but can degrade them. Hca dioxygenase is involved in this degradation pathway. P. luminescens synthesizes CA from phenylalanine via a phenylalanine ammonia-lyase (PAL) and degrades it via the not-yet-characterized biosynthetic pathway of 3,5-dihydroxy-4-isopropylstilbene (ST) antibiotic. CA induces its own synthesis by enhancing the expression of the stlA gene that codes for PAL. P. luminescens bacteria release endogenous CA into the medium at the end of exponential growth and then consume it. Hca dioxygenase is involved in the consumption of endogenous CA but is not required for ST production. This suggests that CA is consumed via at least two separate pathways in P. luminescens: the biosynthesis of ST and a pathway involving the Hca and Mhp enzymes.


Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy | 2013

Monoclonal antibodies toward different Tn-amino acid backbones display distinct recognition patterns on human cancer cells. Implications for effective immuno-targeting of cancer

Daniel Mazal; Richard Lo-Man; Sylvie Bay; Otto Pritsch; Edith Dériaud; Christelle Ganneau; Andrea Medeiros; Luis Ubillos; Gonzalo Obal; Nora Berois; Mariela Bollati-Fogolín; Claude Leclerc; Eduardo Osinaga

The Tn antigen (GalNAcα-O-Ser/Thr) is a well-established tumor-associated marker which represents a good target for the design of anti-tumor vaccines. Several studies have established that the binding of some anti-Tn antibodies could be affected by the density of Tn determinant or/and by the amino acid residues neighboring O-glycosylation sites. In the present study, using synthetic Tn-based vaccines, we have generated a panel of anti-Tn monoclonal antibodies. Analysis of their binding to various synthetic glycopeptides, modifying the amino acid carrier of the GalNAc(*) (Ser* vs Thr*), showed subtle differences in their fine specificities. We found that the recognition of these glycopeptides by some of these MAbs was strongly affected by the Tn backbone, such as a S*S*S* specific MAb (15G9) which failed to recognize a S*T*T* or a T*T*T* structure. Different binding patterns of these antibodies were also observed in FACS and Western blot analysis using three human cancer cell lines (MCF-7, LS174T and Jurkat). Importantly, an immunohistochemical analysis of human tumors (72 breast cancer and 44 colon cancer) showed the existence of different recognition profiles among the five antibodies evaluated, demonstrating that the aglyconic part of the Tn structure (Ser vs Thr) plays a key role in the anti-Tn specificity for breast and colon cancer detection. This new structural feature of the Tn antigen could be of important clinical value, notably due to the increasing interest of this antigen in anticancer vaccine design as well as for the development of anti-Tn antibodies for in vivo diagnostic and therapeutic strategies.


Journal of Controlled Release | 2016

Camelid single-domain antibodies: A versatile tool for in vivo imaging of extracellular and intracellular brain targets

Tengfei Li; Matthias Vandesquille; Fani Koukouli; Clémence Dudeffant; Ihsen Youssef; Pascal Lenormand; Christelle Ganneau; Uwe Maskos; Christian Czech; Fiona Grueninger; Charles Duyckaerts; Marc Dhenain; Sylvie Bay; Benoît Delatour; Pierre Lafaye

Detection of intracerebral targets with imaging probes is challenging due to the non-permissive nature of blood-brain barrier (BBB). The present work describes two novel single-domain antibodies (VHHs or nanobodies) that specifically recognize extracellular amyloid deposits and intracellular tau neurofibrillary tangles, the two core lesions of Alzheimers disease (AD). Following intravenous administration in transgenic mouse models of AD, in vivo real-time two-photon microscopy showed gradual extravasation of the VHHs across the BBB, diffusion in the parenchyma and labeling of amyloid deposits and neurofibrillary tangles. Our results demonstrate that VHHs can be used as specific BBB-permeable probes for both extracellular and intracellular brain targets and suggest new avenues for therapeutic and diagnostic applications in neurology.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Specific IgG Response against Mycobacterium avium paratuberculosis in Children and Adults with Crohn’s Disease

Julien Verdier; Louis Deroche; Matthieu Allez; Caroline Loy; Franck Biet; Christelle C. Bodier; Sylvie Bay; Christelle Ganneau; Tamara Matysiak-Budnik; Jean Marc Reyrat; Martine Heyman; Nadine Cerf-Bensussan; Frank M. Ruemmele; Sandrine Ménard

Background and Aims Presence of serum antibodies against Mycobacterium avium paratuberculosis (MAP) in Crohn’s Disease (CD) as a disease characteristic remains controversial. In the present work, we assessed antibody reactivity of serum and intestinal fluid against four distinct MAP-antigens, including the recently identified MAP-specific lipopentapeptide (L5P). Methods Immunoglobulin concentrations and specificity against 3 non MAP-specific antigens: glycosyl-transferase-d (GSD), purified protein derivative from MAP (Johnin-PPD), heparin binding haemagglutinin (MAP-HBHA) and one MAP-specific antigen: synthetic L5P were determined by ELISA in gut lavage fluids from adult controls or patients with CD, and in sera of children or adult controls or patients with CD, ulcerative colitis or celiac disease. Results Total IgA and IgG concentrations were increased in sera of children with CD but were decreased in sera of adults with CD, thereof specificity against MAP antigens was assessed by normalizing immunoglobulin concentrations between samples. In CD patients, IgG reactivity was increased against the four MAP antigens, including L5P in gut lavage fluids but it was only increased against L5P in sera. By contrast, anti-L5P IgG were not increased in patients with ulcerative colitis or celiac disease. Conclusions A significant increase in anti-L5P IgG is observed in sera of children and adults with CD but not in patients with other intestinal inflammatory diseases. Anti-L5P antibodies may serve as serological marker for CD.


International Journal of Oncology | 2013

Mucin-like peptides from Echinococcus granulosus induce antitumor activity

Verónica Noya; Sylvie Bay; María Florencia Festari; Enrique P. García; Ernesto Rodríguez; Carolina Chiale; Christelle Ganneau; Françoise Baleux; Soledad Astrada; Mariela Bollati-Fogolín; Eduardo Osinaga; Teresa Freire

There is substantial evidence suggesting that certain parasites can have antitumor properties. We evaluated mucin peptides derived from the helminth Echinococcus granulosus (denominated Egmuc) as potential inducers of antitumor activity. We present data showing that Egmuc peptides were capable of inducing an increase of activated NK cells in the spleen of immunized mice, a fact that was correlated with the capacity of splenocytes to mediate killing of tumor cells. We demonstrated that Egmuc peptides enhance LPS-induced maturation of dendritic cells in vitro by increasing the production of IL-12p40p70 and IL-6 and that Egmuc-treated DCs may activate NK cells, as judged by an increased expression of CD69. This evidence may contribute to the design of tumor vaccines and open new horizons in the use of parasite-derived molecules in the fight against cancer.


Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy | 2016

The fully synthetic MAG-Tn3 therapeutic vaccine containing the tetanus toxoid-derived TT830-844 universal epitope provides anti-tumor immunity

Daphné Laubreton; Sylvie Bay; Christine Sedlik; Cécile Artaud; Christelle Ganneau; Edith Dériaud; Sophie Viel; Anne-Laure Puaux; Sebastian Amigorena; Catherine Gérard; Richard Lo-Man; Claude Leclerc

Malignant transformations are often associated with aberrant glycosylation processes that lead to the expression of new carbohydrate antigens at the surface of tumor cells. Of these carbohydrate antigens, the Tn antigen is particularly highly expressed in many carcinomas, especially in breast carcinoma. We designed MAG-Tn3, a fully synthetic vaccine based on three consecutive Tn moieties that are O-linked to a CD4+ T cell epitope, to induce anti-Tn antibody responses that could be helpful for therapeutic vaccination against cancer. To ensure broad coverage within the human population, the tetanus toxoid-derived peptide TT830-844 was selected as a T-helper epitope because it can bind to various HLA-DRB molecules. We showed that the MAG-Tn3 vaccine, which was formulated with the GSK proprietary immunostimulant AS15 and designed for human cancer therapy, is able to induce an anti-Tn antibody response in mice of various H-2 haplotypes, and this response correlates with the ability to induce a specific T cell response against the TT830-844 peptide. The universality of the TT830-844 peptide was extended to new H-2 and HLA-DRB molecules that were capable of binding this T cell epitope. Finally, the MAG-Tn3 vaccine was able to induce anti-Tn antibody responses in cynomolgus monkeys, which targeted Tn-expressing tumor cells and mediated tumor cell death both in vitro and in vivo. Thus, MAG-Tn3 is a highly promising anticancer vaccine that is currently under evaluation in a phase I clinical trial.


Research in Veterinary Science | 2015

Interferon gamma response to Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis specific lipopentapeptide antigen L5P in cattle.

Sébastien Holbert; Maxime Branger; Armel Souriau; Bérénice Lamoureux; Christelle Ganneau; Gaëlle Richard; Thierry Cochard; Christophe Tholoniat; Sylvie Bay; Nathalie Winter; Jean Louis Moyen; Franck Biet

After Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis (Map) infection the cell-mediated immune (CMI) response indicative of early Th1 activation may be detected using interferon-gamma release assay (IGRA). Currently, the purified protein derivatives (PPDs), i.e., the total extract of mycobacteria antigens are used to recall CMI responses against Map. This study aimed to assess the ability of the chemically synthesized Map specific cell wall lipopentapeptide L5P to induce CMI response in cows infected by Map compared to PPD. L5P and PPD elicited an IFN-γ response in 12 and 35 animals from two Map infected herds respectively, but IFN-γ was not detected in the 13 cows recruited from a non-infected herd. Levels of IFN-γ detected were higher with PPD than with L5P. There was no correlation between the IFN-γ response and the humoral response to Map or faecal culture.


Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry | 2017

Large-scale synthesis and structural analysis of a synthetic glycopeptide dendrimer as an anti-cancer vaccine candidate

Christelle Ganneau; Catherine Simenel; Emeline Emptas; Tiphanie Courtiol; Yves-Marie Coïc; Cécile Artaud; Edith Dériaud; Frédéric J. Bonhomme; Muriel Delepierre; Claude Leclerc; Richard Lo-Man; Sylvie Bay

Herein, we report a new process that enables the gram-scale production of a fully synthetic anti-cancer vaccine for human use. This therapeutic vaccine candidate, named MAG-Tn3, is a high-molecular-weight tetrameric glycopeptide encompassing carbohydrate tumor-associated Tn antigen clusters and peptidic CD4+ T-cell epitopes. The synthetic process involves (i) the stepwise solid-phase assembly of protected amino acids, including the high value-added Tn building blocks with only 1.5 equivalents, (ii) a single isolated intermediate, and (iii) the simultaneous deprotection of 36 hindered protective groups. The resulting MAG-Tn3 was unambiguously characterized using a combination of techniques, including a structural analysis by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. The four peptidic chains are flexible in solution, with a more constrained but extended conformation at the Tn3 antigen motif. Finally, we demonstrate that, when injected into HLA-DR1-expressing transgenic mice, this vaccine induces Tn-specific antibodies that mediate the killing of human Tn-positive tumor cells. These studies led to a clinical batch of the MAG-Tn3, currently investigated in breast cancer patients (phase I clinical trial). The current study demonstrates the feasibility of the multigram-scale synthesis of a highly pure complex glycopeptide, and it opens new avenues for the use of synthetic glycopeptides as drugs in humans.

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Franck Biet

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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