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Dive into the research topics where Emmanuel L. Gautier is active.

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Featured researches published by Emmanuel L. Gautier.


Nature Immunology | 2012

Gene-expression profiles and transcriptional regulatory pathways that underlie the identity and diversity of mouse tissue macrophages

Emmanuel L. Gautier; Tal Shay; Jennifer Miller; Melanie Greter; Claudia Jakubzick; Stoyan Ivanov; Julie Helft; Andrew Chow; Kutlu G. Elpek; Simon Gordonov; Amin R. Mazloom; Avi Ma'ayan; Wei-Jen Chua; Ted H. Hansen; Shannon J. Turley; Miriam Merad; Gwendalyn J. Randolph

We assessed gene expression in tissue macrophages from various mouse organs. The diversity in gene expression among different populations of macrophages was considerable. Only a few hundred mRNA transcripts were selectively expressed by macrophages rather than dendritic cells, and many of these were not present in all macrophages. Nonetheless, well-characterized surface markers, including MerTK and FcγR1 (CD64), along with a cluster of previously unidentified transcripts, were distinctly and universally associated with mature tissue macrophages. TCEF3, C/EBP-α, Bach1 and CREG-1 were among the transcriptional regulators predicted to regulate these core macrophage-associated genes. The mRNA encoding other transcription factors, such as Gata6, was associated with single macrophage populations. We further identified how these transcripts and the proteins they encode facilitated distinguishing macrophages from dendritic cells.


Nature Immunology | 2012

Deciphering the transcriptional network of the dendritic cell lineage

Jennifer Miller; Brian D. Brown; Tal Shay; Emmanuel L. Gautier; Vladimir Jojic; Ariella Cohain; Gaurav Pandey; Marylene Leboeuf; Kutlu G. Elpek; Julie Helft; Daigo Hashimoto; Andrew Chow; Jeremy Price; Melanie Greter; Milena Bogunovic; Angelique Bellemare-Pelletier; Paul S. Frenette; Gwendalyn J. Randolph; Shannon J. Turley; Miriam Merad

Although much progress has been made in the understanding of the ontogeny and function of dendritic cells (DCs), the transcriptional regulation of the lineage commitment and functional specialization of DCs in vivo remains poorly understood. We made a comprehensive comparative analysis of CD8+, CD103+, CD11b+ and plasmacytoid DC subsets, as well as macrophage DC precursors and common DC precursors, across the entire immune system. Here we characterized candidate transcriptional activators involved in the commitment of myeloid progenitor cells to the DC lineage and predicted regulators of DC functional diversity in tissues. We identified a molecular signature that distinguished tissue DCs from macrophages. We also identified a transcriptional program expressed specifically during the steady-state migration of tissue DCs to the draining lymph nodes that may control tolerance to self tissue antigens.


Immunity | 2014

Embryonic and Adult-Derived Resident Cardiac Macrophages Are Maintained through Distinct Mechanisms at Steady State and during Inflammation

Slava Epelman; Kory J. Lavine; Anna E. Beaudin; Dorothy K. Sojka; Javier A. Carrero; Boris Calderon; Thaddeus Brija; Emmanuel L. Gautier; Stoyan Ivanov; Ansuman T. Satpathy; Joel D. Schilling; Reto A. Schwendener; Ismail Sergin; Babak Razani; E. Camilla Forsberg; Wayne M. Yokoyama; Emil R. Unanue; Marco Colonna; Gwendalyn J. Randolph; Douglas L. Mann

Cardiac macrophages are crucial for tissue repair after cardiac injury but are not well characterized. Here we identify four populations of cardiac macrophages. At steady state, resident macrophages were primarily maintained through local proliferation. However, after macrophage depletion or during cardiac inflammation, Ly6c(hi) monocytes contributed to all four macrophage populations, whereas resident macrophages also expanded numerically through proliferation. Genetic fate mapping revealed that yolk-sac and fetal monocyte progenitors gave rise to the majority of cardiac macrophages, and the heart was among a minority of organs in which substantial numbers of yolk-sac macrophages persisted in adulthood. CCR2 expression and dependence distinguished cardiac macrophages of adult monocyte versus embryonic origin. Transcriptional and functional data revealed that monocyte-derived macrophages coordinate cardiac inflammation, while playing redundant but lesser roles in antigen sampling and efferocytosis. These data highlight the presence of multiple cardiac macrophage subsets, with different functions, origins, and strategies to regulate compartment size.


Science | 2010

ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters and HDL Suppress Hematopoietic Stem Cell Proliferation

Laurent Yvan-Charvet; Tamara A. Pagler; Emmanuel L. Gautier; Serine Avagyan; Read Siry; Seongah Han; Carrie L. Welch; Nan Wang; Gwendalyn J. Randolph; Hans Snoeck; Alan R. Tall

Inhibiting Leukocytosis Leukocytosis—an elevated white blood cell count—contributes by unknown mechanisms to the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis and associated coronary heart disease. Now, Yvan-Charvet et al. (p. 1689, published online 20 May; see the Perspective by Hansson and Björkholm) show that the adenosine triphosphate–binding cassette transporters ABCA1 and ABCG1 are critical suppressors of atherosclerosis-associated leukocytosis. Mice deficient in both transporters in blood-producing hematopoietic cells possessed increased levels of hematopoietic stem and multipotential progenitor cells and accelerated atherosclerosis. ABCA1 and ABGA1 protect against atherosclerosis by promoting cholesterol efflux from cholesterol-laden macrophage foam cells to lipid-poor high-density lipoprotein (HDL) and apolipoprotein A-1. The leukocytosis and atherosclerosis in ABCA1- and ABG1-deficient mice were reversed in the presence of high amounts of HDL. Thus, signaling already known to inhibit atherosclerosis by reducing cholesterol in atherosclerotic plaques also reduces atherosclerosis-associated leukocytosis. Pathways that reduce cholesterol in atherosclerosis also suppress increased immune cell numbers associated with the disease. Elevated leukocyte cell numbers (leukocytosis), and monocytes in particular, promote atherosclerosis; however, how they become increased is poorly understood. Mice deficient in the adenosine triphosphate–binding cassette (ABC) transporters ABCA1 and ABCG1, which promote cholesterol efflux from macrophages and suppress atherosclerosis in hypercholesterolemic mice, displayed leukocytosis, a transplantable myeloproliferative disorder, and a dramatic expansion of the stem and progenitor cell population containing Lin–Sca-1+Kit+ (LSK) in the bone marrow. Transplantation of Abca1–/– Abcg1–/– bone marrow into apolipoprotein A-1 transgenic mice with elevated levels of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) suppressed the LSK population, reduced leukocytosis, reversed the myeloproliferative disorder, and accelerated atherosclerosis. The findings indicate that ABCA1, ABCG1, and HDL inhibit the proliferation of hematopoietic stem and multipotential progenitor cells and connect expansion of these populations with leukocytosis and accelerated atherosclerosis.


Immunity | 2013

Minimal Differentiation of Classical Monocytes as They Survey Steady-State Tissues and Transport Antigen to Lymph Nodes

Claudia V. Jakubzick; Emmanuel L. Gautier; Sophie L. Gibbings; Dorothy K. Sojka; Andreas Schlitzer; Theodore E. Johnson; Stoyan Ivanov; Qiaonan Duan; Shashi Bala; Tracy Condon; Nico van Rooijen; John Grainger; Yasmine Belkaid; Avi Ma’ayan; David W. H. Riches; Wayne M. Yokoyama; Florent Ginhoux; Peter M. Henson; Gwendalyn J. Randolph

It is thought that monocytes rapidly differentiate to macrophages or dendritic cells (DCs) upon leaving blood. Here we have shown that Ly-6C⁺ monocytes constitutively trafficked into skin, lung, and lymph nodes (LNs). Entry was unaffected in gnotobiotic mice. Monocytes in resting lung and LN had similar gene expression profiles to blood monocytes but elevated transcripts of a limited number of genes including cyclo-oxygenase-2 (COX-2) and major histocompatibility complex class II (MHCII), induced by monocyte interaction with endothelium. Parabiosis, bromodoxyuridine (BrdU) pulse-chase analysis, and intranasal instillation of tracers indicated that instead of contributing to resident macrophages in the lung, recruited endogenous monocytes acquired antigen for carriage to draining LNs, a function redundant with DCs though differentiation to DCs did not occur. Thus, monocytes can enter steady-state nonlymphoid organs and recirculate to LNs without differentiation to macrophages or DCs, revising a long-held view that monocytes become tissue-resident macrophages by default.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2011

Suppressed monocyte recruitment drives macrophage removal from atherosclerotic plaques of Apoe–/– mice during disease regression

Stephane Potteaux; Emmanuel L. Gautier; Susan B. Hutchison; Nico van Rooijen; Daniel J. Rader; Michael J. Thomas; Mary G. Sorci-Thomas; Gwendalyn J. Randolph

Experimental models of atherosclerosis suggest that recruitment of monocytes into plaques drives the progression of this chronic inflammatory condition. Cholesterol-lowering therapy leads to plaque stabilization or regression in human atherosclerosis, characterized by reduced macrophage content, but the mechanisms that underlie this reduction are incompletely understood. Mice lacking the gene Apoe (Apoe-/- mice) have high levels of cholesterol and spontaneously develop atherosclerotic lesions. Here, we treated Apoe-/- mice with apoE-encoding adenoviral vectors that induce plaque regression, and investigated whether macrophage removal from plaques during this regression resulted from quantitative alterations in the ability of monocytes to either enter or exit plaques. Within 2 days after apoE complementation, plasma cholesterol was normalized to wild-type levels, and HDL levels were increased 4-fold. Oil red O staining and quantitative mass spectroscopy revealed that esterified cholesterol content was markedly reduced. Plaque macrophage content decreased gradually and was 72% lower than baseline 4 weeks after apoE complementation. Importantly, this reduction in macrophages did not involve migratory egress from plaques or CCR7, a mediator of leukocyte emigration. Instead, marked suppression of monocyte recruitment coupled with a stable rate of apoptosis accounted for loss of plaque macrophages. These data suggest that therapies to inhibit monocyte recruitment to plaques may constitute a more viable strategy to reduce plaque macrophage burden than attempts to promote migratory egress.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2011

CD103+ pulmonary dendritic cells preferentially acquire and present apoptotic cell–associated antigen

A. Nicole Desch; Gwendalyn J. Randolph; Kenneth M. Murphy; Emmanuel L. Gautier; Ross M. Kedl; Mireille H. Lahoud; Irina Caminschi; Ken Shortman; Peter M. Henson; Claudia V. Jakubzick

CD103-expressing dendritic cells in the lungs preferentially take up and cross-present antigen from apoptotic cells.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2009

Regulation of the Migration and Survival of Monocyte Subsets by Chemokine Receptors and Its Relevance to Atherosclerosis

Emmanuel L. Gautier; Claudia Jakubzick; Gwendalyn J. Randolph

Monocytes are central mediators in the advance of atherosclerotic plaque, making them a natural therapeutic target for reducing disease burden. Here, we highlight recent advances in our current understanding of monocyte heterogeneity and its relevance to regulation of monocyte accumulation and function within atherosclerotic plaques. Differences that distinguish monocyte subsets include differential expression of chemokine receptors, especially CCR2 and CX3CR1. Ablation of expression of these 2 receptors (or their ligands) in mice has an additive inhibition on monocyte recruitment to atherosclerotic plaques. Moreover, simultaneously interfering with 3 key pathways--CCR2, CX3CR1, and CCR5--essentially abolishes atherosclerosis in mice. Here, we discuss how these chemokine receptors act at multiple points on at least 1 monocyte subset, regulating their mobilization from bone marrow, survival, or recruitment to plaques. Finally, we discuss how this knowledge may be useful clinically, emphasizing that CX3CR1 may in particular be a viable target for therapeutic manipulation of monocyte-derived cell fate in cardiovascular disease.


Circulation | 2009

Macrophage Apoptosis Exerts Divergent Effects on Atherogenesis as a Function of Lesion Stage

Emmanuel L. Gautier; Thierry Huby; Joseph L. Witztum; Betty Ouzilleau; Elizabeth R. Miller; Flora Saint-Charles; Pierre Aucouturier; M. John Chapman; Philippe Lesnik

Background— Because apoptotic cell clearance appears to be defective in advanced compared with early atherosclerotic plaques, macrophage apoptosis may differentially affect plaque progression as a function of lesion stage. Methods and Results— We first evaluated the impact of targeted protection of macrophages against apoptosis at both early and advanced stages of atherosclerosis. Increased resistance of macrophages to apoptosis in early atherosclerotic lesions was associated with increased plaque burden; in contrast, it afforded protection against progression to advanced lesions. Conversely, sustained induction of apoptosis in lesional macrophages of advanced lesions resulted in a significant increase in lesion size. Such enhanced lesion size occurred as a result not only of apoptotic cell accumulation but also of elevated chemokine expression and subsequent intimal recruitment of circulating monocytes. Conclusions— Considered together, our data suggest that macrophage apoptosis is atheroprotective in fatty streak lesions, but in contrast, defective clearance of apoptotic debris in advanced lesions favors arterial wall inflammation and enhanced recruitment of monocytes, leading to enhanced atherogenesis.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2013

Lymphatic vasculature mediates macrophage reverse cholesterol transport in mice

Catherine Martel; Wenjun Li; Brian Fulp; Andrew M. Platt; Emmanuel L. Gautier; Marit Westerterp; Robert Bittman; Alan R. Tall; Shu-Hsia Chen; Michael J. Thomas; Daniel Kreisel; Melody A. Swartz; Mary G. Sorci-Thomas; Gwendalyn J. Randolph

Reverse cholesterol transport (RCT) refers to the mobilization of cholesterol on HDL particles (HDL-C) from extravascular tissues to plasma, ultimately for fecal excretion. Little is known about how HDL-C leaves peripheral tissues to reach plasma. We first used 2 models of disrupted lymphatic drainage from skin--1 surgical and the other genetic--to quantitatively track RCT following injection of [3H]-cholesterol-loaded macrophages upstream of blocked or absent lymphatic vessels. Macrophage RCT was markedly impaired in both models, even at sites with a leaky vasculature. Inhibited RCT was downstream of cholesterol efflux from macrophages, since macrophage efflux of a fluorescent cholesterol analog (BODIPY-cholesterol) was not altered by impaired lymphatic drainage. We next addressed whether RCT was mediated by lymphatic vessels from the aortic wall by loading the aortae of donor atherosclerotic Apoe-deficient mice with [2H]6-labeled cholesterol and surgically transplanting these aortae into recipient Apoe-deficient mice that were treated with anti-VEGFR3 antibody to block lymphatic regrowth or with control antibody to allow such regrowth. [2H]-Cholesterol was retained in aortae of anti-VEGFR3-treated mice. Thus, the lymphatic vessel route is critical for RCT from multiple tissues, including the aortic wall. These results suggest that supporting lymphatic transport function may facilitate cholesterol clearance in therapies aimed at reversing atherosclerosis.

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Gwendalyn J. Randolph

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Stoyan Ivanov

Washington University in St. Louis

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Andrew Chow

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Frank Tacke

RWTH Aachen University

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