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Featured researches published by Denis Clay.


Nature Medicine | 1999

Ligation of the CD44 adhesion molecule reverses blockage of differentiation in human acute myeloid leukemia.

Rachida-Sihem Charrad; YuÉ Li; Bertrand Delpech; Nicole Balitrand; Denis Clay; Claude Jasmin; Christine Chomienne; Florence Smadja-Joffe

Blockage in myeloid differentiation characterizes acute myeloid leukemia (AML); the stage of the blockage defines distinct AML subtypes (AML1/2 to AML5). Differentiation therapy in AML has recently raised interest because the survival of AML3 patients has been greatly improved using the differentiating agent retinoic acid. However, this molecule is ineffective in other AML subtypes. The CD44 surface antigen, on leukemic blasts from most AML patients, is involved in myeloid differentiation. Here, we report that ligation of CD44 with specific anti-CD44 monoclonal antibodies or with hyaluronan, its natural ligand, can reverse myeloid differentiation blockage in AML1/2 to AML5 subtypes. The differentiation of AML blasts was evidenced by the ability to produce oxidative bursts, the expression of lineage antigens and cytological modifications, all specific to normal differentiated myeloid cells. These results indicate new possibilities for the development of CD44-targeted differentiation therapy in the AML1/2 to AML5 subtypes.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998

CD19 Is Linked to the Integrin-associated Tetraspans CD9, CD81, and CD82

György Horváth; Valérie Serru; Denis Clay; Martine Billard; Claude Boucheix; Eric Rubinstein

The CD19-CD21-CD81 complex regulates signal transduction events critical for B lymphocyte development and humoral immunity. CD81, a molecule with 4 transmembrane domains, member of the tetraspan superfamily, is engaged, together with other tetraspans such as CD9, CD53, CD63, and CD82, in multimolecular complexes containing β1 integrins and major histocompatibility complex antigens. Here we demonstrate that two other tetraspans, CD82 and the early B cell marker CD9, are coimmunoprecipitated with CD19 from Brij97 lysates of B cell lines. Moreover, CD9 was coprecipitated from lysates of purified CD10+ early B cells. These associations were confirmed by the cocapping of CD19 with CD9 or CD82. The CD9/CD19 association was disrupted in the presence of digitonin, contrary to the CD81/CD19 association, indicating that CD9 and CD81 interact with CD19 in different ways. The CD9/CD81 association is also disrupted in the presence of digitonin, suggesting that CD9 associates with CD19 only through CD81. To characterize the regions involved in the CD81/CD19 association, two reciprocal CD9/CD81 chimeric molecules were tested for the association with CD19, but none of them could be coprecipitated with CD19 in digitonin, indicating that the domain of CD81 responsible for its association with CD19 is complex. Finally, engagement of CD9 could induce the tyrosine phosphorylation of different proteins, including CD19 itself, suggesting that the CD9/CD19 association is functionally relevant. Thus, a physical and functional link is formed between the CD19-CD21-CD81 complex and the integrin-tetraspan complexes, which is dynamically modulated in the process of B cell differentiation.


Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 2011

Differentiation Therapy: Targeting Human Renal Cancer Stem Cells with Interleukin 15

Sandy Azzi; Stefania Bruno; Julien Giron-Michel; Denis Clay; Aurore Devocelle; Michela Croce; Silvano Ferrini; Salem Chouaib; Aimé Vazquez; Bernard Charpentier; Giovanni Camussi; Bruno Azzarone; Pierre Eid

BACKGROUND Many renal cancer patients experience disease recurrence after immunotherapy or combined treatments due to persistence of cancer stem cells (CSCs). The identification of reliable inducers of CSC differentiation may facilitate the development of efficient strategies for eliminating CSCs. We investigated whether interleukin 15 (IL-15), a regulator of kidney homeostasis, induces the differentiation of CD105-positive (CD105(+)) CSCs from human renal cancers. METHODS CD105(+) CSCs were cultured to preserve their stem cell properties and treated with recombinant human IL-15 (rhIL-15) to evaluate their ability to differentiate, to acquire sensitivity to chemotherapeutic drugs, and to form spheroids in vitro and tumors in vivo. Expression of stem cell and epithelial markers were studied by flow cytometry, immunocytochemistry, and immunoblotting. Identification of a CSC side population fraction and its sensitivity to chemotherapy drugs and expression of ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters and aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) activities were determined by flow cytometry. Spheroid formation was determined in limiting dilution assay. Xenograft tumors were generated in severe combined immunodeficient mice (n = 12-18 mice per group). All statistical tests were two-sided. RESULTS CD105(+) CSCs treated with rhIL-15 at 10 pg/mL differentiated into cells expressing epithelial markers. rhIL-15 induced epithelial differentiation of all CD105(+) CSCs subsets and blocked CSC self-renewal (sphere-forming ability) and their tumorigenic properties in severe combined immunodeficient mice. Vinblastine and paclitaxel induced statistically significant higher levels of apoptosis in rhIL-15-differentiated epithelial cells compared with CD105(+) CSCs (mean percentage of apoptotic cells, vinblastine: 33% vs 16.5%, difference = 16.5%, 95% confidence interval = 12.25% to 20.74%, P = .0025; paclitaxel: 35% vs 11.6%, difference = 23.4%, 95% confidence interval = 22.5% to 24.24%, P = .0015). The higher sensitivity of rhIL-15-differentiated epithelial cells to chemotherapeutic drugs was associated with loss of detoxifying mechanisms such as ALDH and ABC transporter activities. CONCLUSION IL-15 directs the epithelial differentiation of renal CSCs and meets the criteria for a treatment strategy: CSC pool depletion and generation of differentiated nontumorigenic cells that are sensitive to chemotherapeutic agents.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Long-Lasting Inhibitory Effects of Fetal Liver Mesenchymal Stem Cells on T-Lymphocyte Proliferation

Massimo Giuliani; Maud Fleury; Amelia Vernochet; Farah Ketroussi; Denis Clay; Bruno Azzarone; Jean Jacques Lataillade; Antoine Durrbach

Human bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells (BM-MSC) are multipotent progenitor cells that have transient immunomodulatory properties on Natural Killer (NK) cells, Dendritic Cells (DC), and T cells. This study compared the use of MSC isolated from bone marrow and fetal liver (FL-MSC) to determine which displayed the most efficient immunosuppressive effects on T cell activation. Although both types of MSC exhibit similar phenotype profile, FL-MSC displays a much more extended in vitro life-span and immunomodulatory properties. When co-cultured with CD3/CD28-stimulated T cells, both BM-MSC and FL-MSC affected T cell proliferation by inhibiting their entry into the cell cycle, by inducing the down-regulation of phospho-retinoblastoma (pRb), cyclins A and D1, as well as up-regulating p27kip1expression. The T cell inhibition by MSC was not due to the soluble HLA-G5 isoform, but to the surface expression of HLA-G1, as shown by the need of cell-cell contact and by the use of neutralizing anti-HLA-G antibodies. To note, in a HLA-G-mediated fashion, MSC facilitated the expansion of a CD4low/CD8low T subset that had decreased secretion of IFN-γ, and an induced secretion of the immunomodulatory cytokine IL-10. Because of their longer lasting in vitro immunosuppressive properties, mainly mediated by HLA-G, and their more efficient induction of IL-10 production and T cell apoptosis, fetal liver MSC could be considered a new tool for MSC therapy to prevent allograft rejection.


Leukemia & Lymphoma | 1996

CD44 and Hyaluronan Binding by Human Myeloid Cells

Florence Smadja-Joffe; Stéphane Legras; Nicole Girard; YuÉ Li; Bertrand Delpech; Florence Bloget; Kohji Morimoto; Caroline Le Bousse-Kerdiles; Denis Clay; Claude Jasmin; Jean-Pierre Levesque

The CD44 cell surface molecule has been shown to be the principal cell surface receptor for hyaluronan (or hyaluronic acid), a glycosaminoglycan component of marrow extracellular matrix. However, its affinity for hyaluronan is not constitutive, since it depends on the cell type, the stage of differentiation and on activation by external stimuli including certain anti-CD44 antibodies and phorbol esters. Except for a few lymphoid cell lines, hematopoietic cells do not spontaneously bind hyaluronan and initial studies reported that, contrary to lymphocytes, myeloid cells could not be activated to bind hyaluronan. Because CD44 plays an important role in the initial phases of hematopoiesis, as shown by experiments using blocking anti-CD44 monoclonal antibodies, its capacity to mediate adhesion of primitive myeloid cells has been investigated. It was found that CD44 could mediate spontaneous adhesion to hyaluronan of immature myeloid cell lines KG1, KG1a, and TF1, which serve as a model for hematopoietic progenitors. However, despite expressing high amounts of CD44, no more than 15% of bone marrow progenitors could adhere to hyaluronan. Recent experiments have shown that a very important feature of CD44 is its capacity to be rapidly activated by certain antibodies and cytokines (GM-CSF and KL) from a low affinity to a high affinity state for hyaluronan. These data shed light on striking similarities in the functional regulation of CD44 and of the two integrin receptors VLA-4 (a4b1), and VLA-5 (a5b1), which are also expressed on hematopoietic progenitors. The relevance of these data to the regulation of normal hematopoiesis and mobilization of CD34+ progenitors in the view of cell grafting is analyzed. In addition, we show that in idiopathic myelofibrosis, the amount of hyaluronan is markedly increased in the extracellular matrix from the myeloproliferative spleen. Considering that the production of cytokines is enhanced in this disease, we discuss whether CD44-hyaluronan interaction may have a role in the pathophysiology of this myeloproliferative syndrome.


Blood | 2010

The MAPK ERK1 is a negative regulator of the adult steady-state splenic erythropoiesis

Soizic Guihard; Denis Clay; Laurence Cocault; Nathalie Saulnier; Paule Opolon; Michèle Souyri; Gilles Pagès; Jacques Pouysségur; Françoise Porteu; Murielle Gaudry

The mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1 (ERK1) and ERK2 are among the main signal transduction molecules, but little is known about their isoform-specific functions in vivo. We have examined the role of ERK1 in adult hematopoiesis with ERK1(-/-) mice. Loss of ERK1 resulted in an enhanced splenic erythropoiesis, characterized by an accumulation of erythroid progenitors in the spleen, without any effect on the other lineages or on bone marrow erythropoiesis. This result suggests that the ablation of ERK1 induces a splenic stress erythropoiesis phenotype. However, the mice display no anemia. Deletion of ERK1 did not affect erythropoietin (EPO) serum levels or EPO/EPO receptor signaling and was not compensated by ERK2. Splenic stress erythropoiesis response has been shown to require bone morphogenetic protein 4 (BMP4)-dependent signaling in vivo and to rely on the expansion of a resident specialized population of erythroid progenitors, termed stress erythroid burst-forming units (BFU-Es). A great expansion of stress BFU-Es and increased levels of BMP4 mRNA were found in ERK1(-/-) spleens. The ERK1(-/-) phenotype can be transferred by bone marrow cells. These findings show that ERK1 controls a BMP4-dependent step, regulating the steady state of splenic erythropoiesis.


Cancer Research | 2011

FLT3-Mediated p38–MAPK Activation Participates in the Control of Megakaryopoiesis in Primary Myelofibrosis

Christophe Desterke; Chrystèle Bilhou-Nabera; Bernadette Guerton; Christophe Martinaud; Carole Tonetti; Denis Clay; Paola Guglielmelli; Alessandro M. Vannucchi; Dominique Bordessoule; Hans Carl Hasselbalch; Brigitte Dupriez; Nassima Benzoubir; Marie-Françoise Bourgeade; Olivier Pierre-Louis; Vladimir Lazar; William Vainchenker; Annelise Bennaceur-Griscelli; Heinz Gisslinger; Stéphane Giraudier; Marie-Caroline Le Bousse-Kerdilès

Primary myelofibrosis (PMF) is characterized by increased number of hematopoietic progenitors and a dysmegakaryopoiesis which supports the stromal reaction defining this disease. We showed that increased ligand (FL) levels in plasma, hematopoietic progenitors, and stromal cells from PMF patients were associated with upregulation of the cognate Flt3 receptor on megakaryocytic (MK) cells. This connection prompted us to study a functional role for the FL/Flt3 couple in PMF dysmegakaryopoiesis, as a route to reveal insights into pathobiology and therapy in this disease. Analysis of PMF CD34(+) and MK cell transcriptomes revealed deregulation of the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway along with Flt3 expression. In PMF patients, a higher proportion of circulating Flt3(+)CD34(+)CD41(+) cells exhibited an increased MAPK effector phosphorylation independently of Jak2(V617F) mutation. Activation of FL/Flt3 axis in PMF MK cell cultures, in response to FL, induced activation of the p38-MAPK cascade, which is known to be involved in inflammation, also increasing expression of its target genes (NFATC4, p53, AP-1, IL-8). Inhibiting Flt3 or MAPK or especially p38 by chemical, antibody, or silencing strategies restored megakaryopoiesis and reduced phosphorylation of Flt3 and p38 pathway effectors, confirming the involvement of Flt3 in PMF dysmegakaryopoiesis via p38 activation. In addition, in contrast to healthy donors, MK cells derived from PMF CD34(+) cells exhibited an FL-induced migration that could be reversed by p38 inhibition. Taken together, our results implicate the FL/Flt3 ligand-receptor complex in PMF dysmegakaryopoiesis through persistent p38-MAPK activation, with implications for therapeutic prospects to correct altered megakaryopoiesis in an inflammatory context.


Blood | 2010

VE-cadherin expression allows identification of a new class of hematopoietic stem cells within human embryonic liver

Estelle Oberlin; Maud Fleury; Denis Clay; Laurence Petit-Cocault; Jean-Jacques Candelier; Benoît Mennesson; Thierry Jaffredo; Michèle Souyri

Edification of the human hematopoietic system during development is characterized by the production of waves of hematopoietic cells separated in time, formed in distinct embryonic sites (ie, yolk sac, truncal arteries including the aorta, and placenta). The embryonic liver is a major hematopoietic organ wherein hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) expand, and the future, adult-type, hematopoietic cell hierarchy becomes established. We report herein the identification of a new, transient, and rare cell population in the human embryonic liver, which coexpresses VE-cadherin, an endothelial marker, CD45, a pan-hematopoietic marker, and CD34, a common endothelial and hematopoietic marker. This population displays an outstanding self-renewal, proliferation, and differentiation potential, as detected by in vitro and in vivo hematopoietic assays compared with its VE-cadherin negative counterpart. Based on VE-cadherin expression, our data demonstrate the existence of 2 phenotypically and functionally separable populations of multipotent HSCs in the human embryo, the VE-cadherin(+) one being more primitive than the VE-cadherin(-) one, and shed a new light on the hierarchical organization of the embryonic liver HSC compartment.


International Journal of Cancer | 2001

Effects of human fibroblasts from myelometaplasic and non-myelometaplasic hematopoietic tissues on CD34+ stem cells.

Danièle Brouty-Boyé; Diane Briard; Bruno Azzarone; Marie-Caroline Le Bousse-Kerdilès; Denis Clay; Corine Pottin‐Clémenceau; Claude Jasmin

Fibroblasts demonstrate different phenotypes and functions according to the tissue of origin and its physiopathologic state. We previously showed that fibroblasts isolated in culture from myelometaplasic (MM) spleen differed phenotypically from fibroblasts from normal bone marrow (BM). We compared the influence of each type of fibroblasts on the behavior of CD34+ stem cells. Expansion of nucleated cells was observed when blood CD34+ cells were co‐cultured for 3 weeks with MM spleen‐derived fibroblasts in monolayers. Myeloid cell differentiation was also observed as indicated by a decline in CD34+ cells and increases in CD14+, CD15+ and CD41+ cells. This myeloid differentiation was enhanced in the presence of MM spleen compared with normal BM‐derived fibroblasts. Similarly, proliferation and differentiation of BM CD34+ cells was better in the presence of BM rather than MM spleen‐derived fibroblasts. In addition, fibroblasts from MM spleen also induced a differentiation of CD56+ natural killer (NK) cells whereas BM‐derived fibroblasts did not. Overall, the data indicate that cultured fibroblasts from diseased tissue have distinct growth and differentiation regulatory characteristics. They also suggest a role for these cells in hematopoietic disorders.


PLOS ONE | 2012

ERK1 Regulates the Hematopoietic Stem Cell Niches

Nathalie Saulnier; Soizic Guihard; Xavier Holy; Elodie Décembre; Pierre Jurdic; Denis Clay; Vincent Feuillet; Gilles Pagès; Jacques Pouysségur; Françoise Porteu; Murielle Gaudry

The mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPK) ERK1 and ERK2 are among the major signal transduction molecules but little is known about their specific functions in vivo. ERK activity is provided by two isoforms, ERK1 and ERK2, which are ubiquitously expressed and share activators and substrates. However, there are not in vivo studies which have reported a role for ERK1 or ERK2 in HSCs and the bone marrow microenvironment. The present study shows that the ERK1-deficient mice present a mild osteopetrosis phenotype. The lodging and the homing abilities of the ERK1−/− HSC are impaired, suggesting that the ERK1−/−-defective environment may affect the engrafment of HSCs. Serial transplantations demonstrate that ERK1 is involved in the maintenance of an appropriate medullar microenvironment, but that the intrinsic properties of HSCs are not altered by the ERK1−/− defective microenvironment. Deletion of ERK1 impaired in vitro and in vivo osteoclastogenesis while osteoblasts were unaffected. As osteoclasts derive from precursors of the monocyte/macrophage lineage, investigation of the monocytic compartment was performed. In vivo analysis of the myeloid lineage progenitors revealed that the frequency of CMPs increased by approximately 1.3-fold, while the frequency of GMPs significantly decreased by almost 2-fold, compared with the respective WT compartments. The overall mononuclear-phagocyte lineage development was compromised in these mice due to a reduced expression of the M-CSF receptor on myeloid progenitors. These results show that the cellular targets of ERK1 are M-CSFR-responsive cells, upstream to osteoclasts. While ERK1 is well known to be activated by M-CSF, the present results are the first to point out an ERK1-dependent M-CSFR regulation on hematopoietic progenitors. This study reinforces the hypothesis of an active cross-talk between HSCs, their progeny and bone cells in the maintenance of the homeostasis of these compartments.

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Bruno Azzarone

Istituto Giannina Gaslini

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Silvano Ferrini

National Cancer Research Institute

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Heinz Gisslinger

Medical University of Vienna

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