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Dive into the research topics where Daniel Olive is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniel Olive.


Cancer Research | 2009

Regulatory T Cells Recruited through CCL22/CCR4 Are Selectively Activated in Lymphoid Infiltrates Surrounding Primary Breast Tumors and Lead to an Adverse Clinical Outcome

Michael Gobert; Isabelle Treilleux; Nathalie Bendriss-Vermare; Thomas Bachelot; Sophie Goddard-Léon; Cathy Biota; Anne Claire Doffin; Isabelle Durand; Daniel Olive; Solène Perez; Nicolas Pasqual; Christelle Faure; Isabelle Ray-Coquard; Alain Puisieux; Christophe Caux; Jean-Yves Blay; Christine Menetrier-Caux

Immunohistochemical analysis of FOXP3 in primary breast tumors showed that a high number of tumor-infiltrating regulatory T cells (Ti-Treg) within lymphoid infiltrates surrounding the tumor was predictive of relapse and death, in contrast to those present within the tumor bed. Ex vivo analysis showed that these tumor-infiltrating FOXP3(+) T cells are typical Treg based on their CD4(+)CD25(high)CD127(low)FOXP3(+) phenotype, their anergic state on in vitro stimulation, and their suppressive functions. These Ti-Treg could be selectively recruited through CCR4 as illustrated by (a) selective blood Treg CCR4 expression and migration to CCR4 ligands, (b) CCR4 down-regulation on Ti-Treg, and (c) correlation between Ti-Treg in lymphoid infiltrates and intratumoral CCL22 expression. Importantly, in contrast to other T cells, Ti-Treg are selectively activated locally and proliferate in situ, showing T-cell receptor engagement and suggesting specific recognition of tumor-associated antigens (TAA). Immunohistochemical stainings for ICOS, Ki67, and DC-LAMP show that Ti-Treg were close to mature DC-LAMP(+) dendritic cells (DC) in lymphoid infiltrates but not in tumor bed and were activated and proliferating. Furthermore, proximity between Ti-Treg, CD3(+), and CD8(+) T cells was documented within lymphoid infiltrates. Altogether, these results show that Treg are selectively recruited within lymphoid infiltrates and activated by mature DC likely through TAA presentation, resulting in the prevention of effector T-cell activation, immune escape, and ultimately tumor progression. This study sheds new light on Treg physiology and validates CCR4/CCL22 and ICOS as therapeutic targets in breast tumors, which represent a major health problem.


Cancer Research | 2013

PD-1–Expressing Tumor-Infiltrating T Cells Are a Favorable Prognostic Biomarker in HPV-Associated Head and Neck Cancer

Cécile Badoual; Stéphane Hans; Nathalie Merillon; Cordélia Van Ryswick; Patrice Ravel; Nadine Benhamouda; Emeline Levionnois; Mevyn Nizard; Ali Si-Mohamed; Nicolas Besnier; Alain Gey; Rinat Rotem-Yehudar; Hélène Péré; Thi Tran; Coralie L. Guerin; Anne Chauvat; Estelle Dransart; Cécile Alanio; Sebastien Albert; Beatrix Barry; Federico Sandoval; Françoise Quintin-Colonna; Patrick Bruneval; Wolf H. Fridman; François M. Lemoine; S. Oudard; Ludger Johannes; Daniel Olive; Daniel Brasnu; Eric Tartour

Head and neck cancers positive for human papillomavirus (HPV) have a more favorable clinical outcome than HPV-negative cancers, but it is unknown why this is the case. We hypothesized that prognosis was affected by intrinsic features of HPV-infected tumor cells or differences in host immune response. In this study, we focused on a comparison of regulatory Foxp3(+) T cells and programmed death-1 (PD-1)(+) T cells in the microenvironment of tumors that were positive or negative for HPV, in two groups that were matched for various clinical and biologic parameters. HPV-positive head and neck cancers were more heavily infiltrated by regulatory T cells and PD-1(+) T cells and the levels of PD-1(+) cells were positively correlated with a favorable clinical outcome. In explaining this paradoxical result, we showed that these PD-1(+) T cells expressed activation markers and were functional after blockade of the PD-1-PD-L1 axis in vitro. Approximately 50% of PD-1(+) tumor-infiltrating T cells lacked Tim-3 expression and may indeed represent activated T cells. In mice, administration of a cancer vaccine increased PD-1 on T cells with concomitant tumor regression. In this setting, PD-1 blockade synergized with vaccine in eliciting antitumor efficacy. Our findings prompt a need to revisit the significance of PD-1-infiltrating T cells in cancer, where we suggest that PD-1 detection may reflect a previous immune response against tumors that might be reactivated by PD-1/PD-L1 blockade.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2008

Raft nanodomains contribute to Akt/PKB plasma membrane recruitment and activation

Rémi Lasserre; Xiao-Jun Guo; Fabien Conchonaud; Yannick Hamon; Omar Hawchar; Anne-Marie Bernard; Saı̈di M’Homa Soudja; Pierre-François Lenne; Hervé Rigneault; Daniel Olive; Georges Bismuth; Jacques A. Nunès; Bernard Payrastre; Didier Marguet; Hai-Tao He

Membrane rafts are thought to be sphingolipid- and cholesterol-dependent lateral assemblies involved in diverse cellular functions. Their biological roles and even their existence, however, remain controversial. Using an original fluorescence correlation spectroscopy strategy that recently enabled us to identify nanoscale membrane organizations in live cells, we report here that highly dynamic nanodomains exist in both the outer and inner leaflets of the plasma membrane. Through specific inhibition of biosynthesis, we show that sphingolipids and cholesterol are essential and act in concert for formation of nanodomains, thus corroborating their raft nature. Moreover, we find that nanodomains play a crucial role in triggering the phosphatidylinositol-3 kinase/Akt signaling pathway, by facilitating Akt recruitment and activation upon phosphatidylinositol-3,4,5-triphosphate accumulation in the plasma membrane. Thus, through direct monitoring and controlled alterations of rafts in living cells, we demonstrate that rafts are critically involved in the activation of a signaling axis that is essential for cell physiology.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2011

Human breast cancer cells enhance self tolerance by promoting evasion from NK cell antitumor immunity

Emilie Mamessier; Aude Sylvain; Marie-Laure Thibult; Gilles Houvenaeghel; Jocelyne Jacquemier; Rémy Castellano; Anthony Gonçalves; Pascale Andre; Francois Romagne; Gilles Thibault; Patrice Viens; Daniel Birnbaum; François Bertucci; Alessandro Moretta; Daniel Olive

NK cells are a major component of the antitumor immune response and are involved in controlling tumor progression and metastases in animal models. Here, we show that dysfunction of these cells accompanies human breast tumor progression. We characterized human peripheral blood NK (p-NK) cells and malignant mammary tumor-infiltrating NK (Ti-NK) cells from patients with noninvasive and invasive breast cancers. NK cells isolated from the peripheral blood of healthy donors and normal breast tissue were used as controls. With disease progression, we found that expression of activating NK cell receptors (such as NKp30, NKG2D, DNAM-1, and CD16) decreased while expression of inhibitory receptors (such as NKG2A) increased and that this correlated with decreased NK cell function, most notably cytotoxicity. Importantly, Ti-NK cells had more pronounced impairment of their cytotoxic potential than p-NK cells. We also identified several stroma-derived factors, including TGF-β1, involved in tumor-induced reduction of normal NK cell function. Our data therefore show that breast tumor progression involves NK cell dysfunction and that breast tumors model their environment to evade NK cell antitumor immunity. This highlights the importance of developing future therapies able to restore NK cell cytotoxicity to limit/prevent tumor escape from antitumor immunity.


PLOS Pathogens | 2009

CpG methylation controls reactivation of HIV from latency.

Jana Blazkova; Katerina Trejbalova; Françoise Gondois-Rey; Philippe Halfon; Patrick Philibert; Allan Guiguen; Eric Verdin; Daniel Olive; Carine Van Lint; Jiri Hejnar; Ivan Hirsch

DNA methylation of retroviral promoters and enhancers localized in the provirus 5′ long terminal repeat (LTR) is considered to be a mechanism of transcriptional suppression that allows retroviruses to evade host immune responses and antiretroviral drugs. However, the role of DNA methylation in the control of HIV-1 latency has never been unambiguously demonstrated, in contrast to the apparent importance of transcriptional interference and chromatin structure, and has never been studied in HIV-1-infected patients. Here, we show in an in vitro model of reactivable latency and in a latent reservoir of HIV-1-infected patients that CpG methylation of the HIV-1 5′ LTR is an additional epigenetic restriction mechanism, which controls resistance of latent HIV-1 to reactivation signals and thus determines the stability of the HIV-1 latency. CpG methylation acts as a late event during establishment of HIV-1 latency and is not required for the initial provirus silencing. Indeed, the latent reservoir of some aviremic patients contained high proportions of the non-methylated 5′ LTR. The latency controlled solely by transcriptional interference and by chromatin-dependent mechanisms in the absence of significant promoter DNA methylation tends to be leaky and easily reactivable. In the latent reservoir of HIV-1-infected individuals without detectable plasma viremia, we found HIV-1 promoters and enhancers to be hypermethylated and resistant to reactivation, as opposed to the hypomethylated 5′ LTR in viremic patients. However, even dense methylation of the HIV-1 5′LTR did not confer complete resistance to reactivation of latent HIV-1 with some histone deacetylase inhibitors, protein kinase C agonists, TNF-α, and their combinations with 5-aza-2deoxycytidine: the densely methylated HIV-1 promoter was most efficiently reactivated in virtual absence of T cell activation by suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid. Tight but incomplete control of HIV-1 latency by CpG methylation might have important implications for strategies aimed at eradicating HIV-1 infection.


Blood | 2012

Key implication of CD277/butyrophilin-3 (BTN3A) in cellular stress sensing by a major human γδ T-cell subset.

Christelle Harly; Yves Guillaume; Steven Nedellec; Cassie-Marie Peigné; Hannu Mönkkönen; Jukka Mönkkönen; Jianqiang Li; Jürgen Kuball; Erin J. Adams; Sonia Netzer; Julie Déchanet-Merville; Alexandra Léger; Thomas Herrmann; Richard Breathnach; Daniel Olive; Marc Bonneville; Emmanuel Scotet

Human peripheral Vγ9Vδ2 T cells are activated by phosphorylated metabolites (phosphoagonists [PAg]) of the mammalian mevalonate or the microbial desoxyxylulose-phosphate pathways accumulated by infected or metabolically distressed cells. The underlying mechanisms are unknown. We show that treatment of nonsusceptible target cells with antibody 20.1 against CD277, a member of the extended B7 superfamily related to butyrophilin, mimics PAg-induced Vγ9Vδ2 T-cell activation and that the Vγ9Vδ2 T-cell receptor is implicated in this effect. Vγ9Vδ2 T-cell activation can be abrogated by exposing susceptible cells (tumor and mycobacteria-infected cells, or aminobisphosphonate-treated cells with up-regulated PAg levels) to antibody 103.2 against CD277. CD277 knockdown and domain-shuffling approaches confirm the key implication of the CD277 isoform BTN3A1 in PAg sensing by Vγ9Vδ2 T cells. Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) experiments support a causal link between intracellular PAg accumulation, decreased BTN3A1 membrane mobility, and ensuing Vγ9Vδ2 T-cell activation. This study demonstrates a novel role played by B7-like molecules in human γδ T-cell antigenic activation and paves the way for new strategies to improve the efficiency of immunotherapies using Vγ9Vδ2 T cells.


Immunology Today | 1996

PI 3-kinase: a pivotal pathway in T-cell activation?

Stephen G. Ward; Carl H. June; Daniel Olive

Abstract Coupling and/or activation of phosphoinusitide 3-kinase (PI 3-kinase) commonly occurs following the triggering of T-cell surface molecules postulated to modulate early events in T-cell activation (e.g. CD28). Recent studies have revealed important add conflicting data as to the role of PI 3-kinase in T-cell costinualation following CD28 ligation. Here. Stephen Ward and colleagues integrate the available data and propose a role for PI 3-kinase in T-cell activation and costimulation.


Cancer Research | 2012

CD8+ T cells specific for tumor antigens can be rendered dysfunctional by the tumor microenvironment through upregulation of the inhibitory receptors BTLA and PD-1

Julien Fourcade; Zhaojun Sun; Ornella Pagliano; Philippe Guillaume; Immanuel F. Luescher; Cindy Sander; John M. Kirkwood; Daniel Olive; Vijay K. Kuchroo; Hassane M. Zarour

Cytotoxic T cells that are present in tumors and capable of recognizing tumor epitopes are nevertheless generally impotent in eliciting tumor rejection. Thus, identifying the immune escape mechanisms responsible for inducing tumor-specific CD8(+) T-cell dysfunction may reveal effective strategies for immune therapy. The inhibitory receptors PD-1 and Tim-3 are known to negatively regulate CD8(+) T-cell responses directed against the well-characterized tumor antigen NY-ESO-1. Here, we report that the upregulation of the inhibitory molecule BTLA also plays a critical role in restricting NY-ESO-1-specific CD8(+) T-cell expansion and function in melanoma. BTLA-expressing PD-1(+)Tim-3(-) CD8(+) T cells represented the largest subset of NY-ESO-1-specific CD8(+) T cells in patients with melanoma. These cells were partially dysfunctional, producing less IFN-γ than BTLA(-) T cells but more IFN-γ, TNF, and interleukin-2 than the highly dysfunctional subset expressing all three receptors. Expression of BTLA did not increase with higher T-cell dysfunction or upon cognate antigen stimulation, as it does with PD-1, suggesting that BTLA upregulation occurs independently of functional exhaustion driven by high antigen load. Added with PD-1 and Tim-3 blockades, BTLA blockade enhanced the expansion, proliferation, and cytokine production of NY-ESO-1-specific CD8(+) T cells. Collectively, our findings indicate that targeting BTLA along with the PD-1 and Tim-3 pathways is critical to reverse an important mechanism of immune escape in patients with advanced melanoma.


Journal of Immunology | 2003

IFN-α Skews Monocyte Differentiation into Toll-Like Receptor 7-Expressing Dendritic Cells with Potent Functional Activities

Mohamad Mohty; Alexandra Vialle-Castellano; Jacques A. Nunès; Daniel Isnardon; Daniel Olive; Béatrice Gaugler

IFN-α is an important cytokine for the generation of a protective T cell-mediated immune response to viruses. In this study, we asked whether IFN-α can regulate the functional properties of dendritic cells (DCs). We show that monocytes cultured in the presence of GM-CSF and IFN-α can differentiate into DCs (IFN-α-derived DCs (IFN-DCs)). When compared with DCs generated in the presence of GM-CSF and IL-4 (IL-4-derived DCs), IFN-DCs exhibited a typical DC morphology and expressed, in addition to DC markers CD1a and blood DC Ag 4, a similar level of costimulatory and class II MHC molecules, but a significantly higher level of MHC class I molecules. After maturation with CD40 ligand, IFN-DCs up-regulated costimulatory, class I and II MHC molecules and expressed mature DC markers such as CD83 and DC-lysosome-associated membrane protein. IFN-DCs were endowed with potent functional activities. IFN-DCs secreted large amounts of the inflammatory cytokines IL-6, IL-10, TNF-α, IL-1β, and IL-18, and promoted a Th1 response that was independent of IL-12p70 and IL-18, but substantially inhibited by IFN-α neutralization. Furthermore, immature IFN-DCs induced a potent autologous Ag-specific immune response, as evaluated by IFN-γ secretion and expansion of CD8+ T cells specific for CMV. Also, IFN-DCs expressed a large number of Toll-like receptors (TLRs), including acquisition of TLR7, which is classically found on the natural type I IFN-producing plasmacytoid DCs. Like plasmacytoid DCs, IFN-DCs could secrete IFN-α following viral stimulation or TLR7-specific stimulation. Taken together, these results illustrate the critical role of IFN-α at the early steps of immune response to pathogens or in autoimmune diseases.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2010

BTLA mediates inhibition of human tumor-specific CD8+ T cells that can be partially reversed by vaccination

Laurent Derré; Jean-Paul Rivals; Camilla Jandus; Sonia Pastor; Donata Rimoldi; Pedro Romero; Olivier Michielin; Daniel Olive; Daniel E. Speiser

The function of antigen-specific CD8+ T cells, which may protect against both infectious and malignant diseases, can be impaired by ligation of their inhibitory receptors, which include CTL-associated protein 4 (CTLA-4) and programmed cell death 1 (PD-1). Recently, B and T lymphocyte attenuator (BTLA) was identified as a novel inhibitory receptor with structural and functional similarities to CTLA-4 and PD-1. BTLA triggering leads to decreased antimicrobial and autoimmune T cell responses in mice, but its functions in humans are largely unknown. Here we have demonstrated that as human viral antigen-specific CD8+ T cells differentiated from naive to effector cells, their surface expression of BTLA was gradually downregulated. In marked contrast, human melanoma tumor antigen-specific effector CD8+ T cells persistently expressed high levels of BTLA in vivo and remained susceptible to functional inhibition by its ligand herpes virus entry mediator (HVEM). Such persistence of BTLA expression was also found in tumor antigen-specific CD8+ T cells from melanoma patients with spontaneous antitumor immune responses and after conventional peptide vaccination. Remarkably, addition of CpG oligodeoxynucleotides to the vaccine formulation led to progressive downregulation of BTLA in vivo and consequent resistance to BTLA-HVEM-mediated inhibition. Thus, BTLA activation inhibits the function of human CD8+ cancer-specific T cells, and appropriate immunotherapy may partially overcome this inhibition.

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Didier Blaise

Aix-Marseille University

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Yves Collette

Aix-Marseille University

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Norbert Vey

Aix-Marseille University

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Luc Xerri

Aix-Marseille University

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Patrice Viens

Aix-Marseille University

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Reda Bouabdallah

French Institute of Health and Medical Research

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Cyril Fauriat

French Institute of Health and Medical Research

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