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Dive into the research topics where Christine Rasetti-Escargueil is active.

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Featured researches published by Christine Rasetti-Escargueil.


Toxicon | 2009

Measurement of botulinum types A, B and E neurotoxicity using the phrenic nerve-hemidiaphragm: Improved precision with in-bred mice

Christine Rasetti-Escargueil; Russell G.A. Jones; Yvonne Liu; Dorothea Sesardic

Botulinum neurotoxins induce a prolonged muscle paralysis by specifically blocking the release of neuronal transmitters from peripheral nerve junctions. The current method for assessing the potency of botulinum toxin and antitoxins is the mouse LD50 assay. The mouse phrenic nerve-diaphragm assay is an in vitro assay that closely mimics in vivo respiratory paralysis. In this study, we have further improved the assay by using gelatin as a non-frothing alternative to albumin and investigated the effects of botulinum toxin serotypes A, B and E on phrenic nerve-hemidiaphragms from out-bred MF1 and in-bred Balb/c mice. Improved reproducibility was found with in-bred mice. Balb/c mice were also found to be much less sensitive to type B toxin perhaps indicating differences in the expression of receptor components. Hemidiaphragm preparations from Balb/c mice were approximately 7 times more sensitive to type A toxin and 7-12 times more sensitive to type E toxin relative to type B toxin. These findings indicate that when fully optimised the mouse nerve-diaphragm preparation can provide a functional in vitro model for accurate and reproducible assessment of toxin activity.


mAbs | 2014

Development of neutralizing scFv-Fc against botulinum neurotoxin A light chain from a macaque immune library

Sebastian Miethe; Christine Rasetti-Escargueil; Yvonne Liu; Siham Chahboun; Thibaut Pelat; Arnaud Avril; André Frenzel; Thomas Schirrmann; Philippe Thullier; Dorothea Sesardic; Michael Hust

Botulinum toxins (BoNTs) are among the most toxic substances on earth, with serotype A toxin being the most toxic substance known. They are responsible for human botulism, a disease characterized by flaccid muscle paralysis that occurs naturally through food poisoning or the colonization of the gastrointestinal tract by BoNT-producing clostridia. BoNT has been classified as a category A agent by the Centers for Disease Control, and it is one of six agents with the highest potential risk of use as bioweapons. Human or human-like neutralizing antibodies are thus required for the development of anti-botulinum toxin drugs to deal with this possibility. In this study, Macaca fascicularis was hyperimmunized with a recombinant light chain of BoNT/A. An immune phage display library was constructed and, after multistep panning, several scFv with nanomolar affinities that inhibited the endopeptidase activity of BoNT/A1 in vitro as scFv-Fc, with a molar ratio (ab binding site:toxin) of up to 1:1, were isolated. The neutralization of BoNT/A-induced paralysis by the SEM120-IID5, SEM120-IIIC1 and SEM120-IIIC4 antibodies was demonstrated in mouse phrenic nerve-hemidiaphragm preparations with the holotoxin. The neutralization observed is the strongest ever measured in the phrenic nerve-hemidiaphragm assay for BoNT/A1 for a monoclonal antibody. Several scFv-Fc inhibiting the endopeptidase activity of botulinum neurotoxin A were isolated. For SEM120-IID5, SEM120-IIIC1, and SEM120-IIIC4, inhibitory effects in vitro and protection against the toxin ex vivo were observed. The human-like nature of these antibodies makes them promising lead candidates for further development of immunotherapeutics for this disease.


Toxicon | 2011

Phrenic nerve-hemidiaphragm as a highly sensitive replacement assay for determination of functional botulinum toxin antibodies.

Christine Rasetti-Escargueil; Yvonne Liu; Peter Rigsby; Russell G.A. Jones; Dorothea Sesardic

Botulinum neurotoxins induce a prolonged muscle paralysis by specifically blocking the release of neuronal transmitters from peripheral nerve junctions. Potency testing of toxin and antitoxin therapies is entirely dependent on mouse lethality bioassay which is associated with extreme suffering of large numbers of animals to ensure high precision. The mouse phrenic nerve-diaphragm assay is an ex vivo assay that closely mimics in vivo respiratory paralysis offering substantial refinement and reduction in the number of animals used. A range of botulinum antitoxin standards, one licenced product and experimental antitoxins were tested for neutralising potency using ex vivo hemidiaphragm assay and compared with in vivo determined activities. Overall, there was an excellent agreement between neutralising activity detected by the two assay systems and for each toxin serotype using only 4-7 replicates for each product (almost perfect concordance for type A antitoxins: ρ = 0.997, and substantial concordance for type B antitoxins: ρ = 0.991 and type E antitoxins: ρ = 0.964, respectively). These findings confirm that the mouse nerve-diaphragm preparation can provide a functional ex vivo replacement assay for specific, sensitive and precise assessment of toxin and antitoxin activity.


mAbs | 2015

Development of human-like scFv-Fc antibodies neutralizing Botulinum toxin serotype B.

Christine Rasetti-Escargueil; Arnaud Avril; Siham Chahboun; Rob Tierney; Nicola Bak; Sebastian Miethe; Christelle Mazuet; Michel R. Popoff; Philippe Thullier; Michael Hust; Thibaut Pelat; Dorothea Sesardic

Botulinum neurotoxins (BoNTs) are responsible for human botulism, a life-threatening disease characterized by flaccid muscle paralysis that occurs naturally by food poisoning or colonization of the gastrointestinal tract by BoNT-producing clostridia. BoNTs have been classified as category A agents by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. To date, 7 subtypes of BoNT/B were identified showing that subtypes B1 (16 strains) and B2 (32 strains) constitute the vast majority of BoNT/B strains. Neutralizing antibodies are required for the development of anti-botulism drugs to deal with the potential risk. In this study, macaques (Macaca fascicularis) were immunized with recombinant light chain (LC) or heavy chain (HC) of BoNT/B2, followed by the construction of 2 hyper-immune phage display libraries. The best single-chain variable fragments (scFvs) isolated from each library were selected according to their affinities and cross reactivity with BoNT/B1 toxin subtype. These scFvs against LC and HC were further analyzed by assessing the inhibition of in vitro endopeptidase activity of BoNT/B1 and B2 and neutralization of BoNT/B1 and B2 toxin-induced paralysis in the mouse ex vivo phrenic nerve assay. The antibodies B2–7 (against HC) and BLC3 (against LC) were produced as scFv-Fc, and, when tested individually, neutralized BoNT/B1 and BoNT/B2 in a mouse ex vivo phrenic nerve assay. Whereas only scFv-Fc BLC3 alone protected mice against BoNT/B2-induced paralysis in vivo, when B2–7 and BLC3 were combined they exhibited potent synergistic protection. The present study provided an opportunity to assess the extent of antibody-mediated neutralization of BoNT/B1 and BoNT/B2 subtypes in ex vivo and in vitro assays, and to confirm the benefit of the synergistic effect of antibodies targeting the 2 distinct functional domains of the toxin in vivo. Notably, the framework regions of the most promising antibodies (B2–7 and BLC3) are close to the human germline sequences, which suggest that they may be well tolerated in potential clinical development.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Development of Human-Like scFv-Fc Neutralizing Botulinum Neurotoxin E

Sebastian Miethe; Christine Rasetti-Escargueil; Arnaud Avril; Yvonne Liu; Siham Chahboun; Hannu Korkeala; Christelle Mazuet; Michel-Robert Popoff; Thibaut Pelat; Philippe Thullier; Dorothea Sesardic; Michael Hust

Background Botulinum neurotoxins (BoNTs) are considered to be the most toxic substances known on earth and are responsible for human botulism, a life-threatening disease characterized by flaccid muscle paralysis that occurs naturally by food-poisoning or colonization of the gastrointestinal tract by BoNT-producing clostridia. BoNTs have been classified as category A agent by the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and are listed among the six agents with the highest risk to be used as bioweapons. Neutralizing antibodies are required for the development of effective anti-botulism therapies to deal with the potential risk of exposure. Results In this study, a macaque (Macaca fascicularis) was immunized with recombinant light chain of BoNT/E3 and an immune phage display library was constructed. After a multi-step panning, several antibody fragments (scFv, single chain fragment variable) with nanomolar affinities were isolated, that inhibited the endopeptidase activity of pure BoNT/E3 in vitro by targeting its light chain. Furthermore, three scFv were confirmed to neutralize BoNT/E3 induced paralysis in an ex vivo mouse phrenic nerve-hemidiaphragm assay. The most effective neutralization (20LD50/mL, BoNT/E3) was observed with scFv ELC18, with a minimum neutralizing concentration at 0.3 nM. Furthermore, ELC18 was highly effective in vivo when administered as an scFv-Fc construct. Complete protection of 1LD50 BoNT/E3 was observed with 1.6 ng/dose in the mouse flaccid paralysis assay. Conclusion These scFv-Fcs antibodies are the first recombinant antibodies neutralizing BoNT/E by targeting its light chain. The human-like nature of the isolated antibodies is predicting a good tolerance for further clinical development.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Development of Germline-Humanized Antibodies Neutralizing Botulinum Neurotoxin A and B.

Sebastian Miethe; Christelle Mazuet; Yvonne Liu; Rob Tierney; Christine Rasetti-Escargueil; Arnaud Avril; André Frenzel; Philippe Thullier; Thibaut Pelat; Rémi Urbain; Alexandre Fontayne; Dorothea Sesardic; Michael Hust; Michel R. Popoff

Botulinum neurotoxins (BoNTs) are counted among the most toxic substances known and are responsible for human botulism, a life-threatening disease characterized by flaccid muscle paralysis that occurs naturally by food poisoning or colonization of the gastrointestinal tract by BoNT-producing clostridia. To date, 7 serologically distinct serotypes of BoNT (serotype A-G) are known. Due to the high toxicity of BoNTs the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) have classified BoNTs as category A agent, including the six biological agents with the highest potential risk of use as bioweapons. Well tolerated antibodies neutralizing BoNTs are required to deal with the potential risk. In a previous work, we described the development of scFv and scFv-Fc (Yumab) from macaque origin (Macaca fascicularis) neutralizing BoNT/A and B by targeting the heavy and light chain of each serotype. In the present study, we humanized the macaque antibodies SEM120-IIIC1 (anti-BoNT/A light chain), A1HC38 (anti-BoNT/A heavy chain), BLC3 (anti-BoNT/B light chain) and B2-7 (anti-BoNT/B heavy chain) by germline-humanization to obtain a better potential immunotolerance in humans. We increased the Germinality Index (GI) of SEM120-IIIC1 to 94.5%, for A1HC38, to 95% for BLC3 and to 94.4% for B2-7. Furthermore, the neutralization efficacies of the germline-humanized antibodies were analyzed in lethal and non-lethal in vivo mouse assays as full IgG. The germline-humanized IgGs hu8SEM120-IIIC1, hu8A1HC38, hu8BLC3 and hu8B2-7 were protective in vivo, when anti-heavy and anti-light chain antibodies were combined. The synergistic effect and high humanness of the selected IgGs makes them promising lead candidates for further clinical development.


Toxins | 2016

Neutralization of Botulinum Neurotoxin Type E by a Humanized Antibody

Yağmur Derman; Katja Selby; Sebastian Miethe; André Frenzel; Yvonne Liu; Christine Rasetti-Escargueil; Arnaud Avril; Thibaut Pelat; Rémi Urbain; Alexandre Fontayne; Philippe Thullier; Dorothea Sesardic; Miia Lindström; Michael Hust; Hannu Korkeala

Botulinum neurotoxins (BoNTs) cause botulism and are the deadliest naturally-occurring substances known to humans. BoNTs have been classified as one of the category A agents by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, indicating their potential use as bioweapons. To counter bio-threat and naturally-occurring botulism cases, well-tolerated antibodies by humans that neutralize BoNTs are relevant. In our previous work, we showed the neutralizing potential of macaque (Macaca fascicularis)-derived scFv-Fc (scFv-Fc ELC18) by in vitro endopeptidase immunoassay and ex vivo mouse phrenic nerve-hemidiaphragm assay by targeting the light chain of the botulinum neurotoxin type E (BoNT/E). In the present study, we germline-humanized scFv-Fc ELC18 into a full IgG hu8ELC18 to increase its immunotolerance by humans. We demonstrated the protection and prophylaxis capacity of hu8ELC18 against BoNT/E in a mouse model. A concentration of 2.5 ng/mouse of hu8ELC18 protected against 5 mouse lethal dose (MLD) in a mouse protection assay and complete neutralization of 1 LD50 of pure BoNT/E toxin was achieved with 8 ng of hu8ELC18 in mouse paralysis assay. Furthermore, hu8ELC18 protected mice from 5 MLD if injected up to 14 days prior to intraperitoneal BoNT/E administration. This newly-developed humanized IgG is expected to have high tolerance in humans.


Toxins | 2017

The European AntibotABE Framework Program and Its Update: Development of Innovative Botulinum Antibodies

Christine Rasetti-Escargueil; Arnaud Avril; Sebastian Miethe; Christelle Mazuet; Yağmur Derman; Katja Selby; Philippe Thullier; Thibaut Pelat; Rémi Urbain; Alexandre Fontayne; Hannu Korkeala; Dorothea Sesardic; Michael Hust; Michel R. Popoff

The goal of the AntiBotABE Program was the development of recombinant antibodies that neutralize botulinum neurotoxins (BoNT) A, B and E. These serotypes are lethal and responsible for most human botulinum cases. To improve therapeutic efficacy, the heavy and light chains (HC and LC) of the three BoNT serotypes were targeted to achieve a synergistic effect (oligoclonal antibodies). For antibody isolation, macaques were immunized with the recombinant and non-toxic BoNT/A, B or E, HC or LC, followed by the generation of immune phage-display libraries. Antibodies were selected from these libraries against the holotoxin and further analyzed in in vitro and ex vivo assays. For each library, the best ex vivo neutralizing antibody fragments were germline-humanized and expressed as immunoglobulin G (IgGs). The IgGs were tested in vivo, in a standardized model of protection, and challenged with toxins obtained from collections of Clostridium strains. Protective antibody combinations against BoNT/A and BoNT/B were evidenced and for BoNT/E, the anti-LC antibody alone was found highly protective. The combination of these five antibodies as an oligoclonal antibody cocktail can be clinically and regulatorily developed while their high “humanness” predicts a high tolerance in humans.


Toxins | 2018

Variability of Botulinum Toxins: Challenges and Opportunities for the Future

Christine Rasetti-Escargueil; Emmanuel Lemichez; Michel Popoff

Botulinum neurotoxins (BoNTs) are the most potent known toxins, and are therefore classified as extremely harmful biological weapons. However, BoNTs are therapeutic drugs that are widely used and have an increasing number of applications. BoNTs show a high diversity and are divided into multiple types and subtypes. Better understanding of the activity at the molecular and clinical levels of the natural BoNT variants as well as the development of BoNT-based chimeric molecules opens the door to novel medical applications such as silencing the sensory neurons at targeted areas and dermal restoration. This short review is focused on BoNTs’ variability and the opportunities or challenges posed for future clinical applications.


BMC Biotechnology | 2015

Isolation of nanomolar scFvs of non-human primate origin, cross-neutralizing botulinum neurotoxins A1 and A2 by targeting their heavy chain

Arnaud Avril; Sebastian Miethe; Michel R. Popoff; Christelle Mazuet; Siham Chahboun; Christine Rasetti-Escargueil; Dorothea Sesardic; Philippe Thullier; Michael Hust; Thibaut Pelat

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Dorothea Sesardic

National Institute for Biological Standards and Control

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Michael Hust

Braunschweig University of Technology

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Philippe Thullier

Braunschweig University of Technology

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Sebastian Miethe

Braunschweig University of Technology

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Yvonne Liu

National Institute for Biological Standards and Control

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André Frenzel

Braunschweig University of Technology

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Rob Tierney

National Institute for Biological Standards and Control

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Russell G.A. Jones

National Institute for Biological Standards and Control

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