Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Frédéric Subra is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Frédéric Subra.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2008

The G140S mutation in HIV integrases from raltegravir-resistant patients rescues catalytic defect due to the resistance Q148H mutation

Olivier Delelis; Isabelle Malet; Li Na; Luba Tchertanov; V. Calvez; Anne-Genevieve Marcelin; Frédéric Subra; Eric Deprez; Jean-François Mouscadet

Raltegravir (MK-0518) is the first integrase (IN) inhibitor to be approved by the US FDA and is currently used in clinical treatment of viruses resistant to other antiretroviral compounds. Virological failure of Raltegravir treatment is associated with mutations in the IN gene following two main distinct genetic pathways involving either the N155 or Q148 residue. Importantly, in most cases, an additional mutation at the position G140 is associated with the Q148 pathway. Here, we investigated the viral DNA kinetics for mutants identified in Raltegravir-resistant patients. We found that (i) integration is impaired for Q148H when compared with the wild-type, G140S and G140S/Q148H mutants; and (ii) the N155H and G140S mutations confer lower levels of resistance than the Q148H mutation. We also characterized the corresponding recombinant INs properties. Enzymatic performances closely parallel ex vivo studies. The Q148H mutation ‘freezes’ IN into a catalytically inactive state. By contrast, the conformational transition converting the inactive form into an active form is rescued by the G140S/Q148H double mutation. In conclusion, the Q148H mutation is responsible for resistance to Raltegravir whereas the G140S mutation increases viral fitness in the G140S/Q148H context. Altogether, these results account for the predominance of G140S/Q148H mutants in clinical trials using Raltegravir.


PLOS ONE | 2008

Critical Involvement of the ATM-Dependent DNA Damage Response in the Apoptotic Demise of HIV-1-Elicited Syncytia

Jean Luc Perfettini; Roberta Nardacci; Mehdi Bourouba; Frédéric Subra; Laurent Gros; Claire Séror; Gwenola Manic; Filippo Rosselli; Alessandra Amendola; Peggy Masdehors; Luciana Chessa; Giuseppe Novelli; David M. Ojcius; Jan Konrad Siwicki; Magdalena Chechlinska; Christian Auclair; José R. Regueiro; Marie Lise Gougeon; Mauro Piacentini; Guido Kroemer

DNA damage can activate the oncosuppressor protein ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM), which phosphorylates the histone H2AX within characteristic DNA damage foci. Here, we show that ATM undergoes an activating phosphorylation in syncytia elicited by the envelope glycoprotein complex (Env) of human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) in vitro. This was accompanied by aggregation of ATM in discrete nuclear foci that also contained phospho-histone H2AX. DNA damage foci containing phosphorylated ATM and H2AX were detectable in syncytia present in the brain or lymph nodes from patients with HIV-1 infection, as well as in a fraction of blood leukocytes, correlating with viral status. Knockdown of ATM or of its obligate activating factor NBS1 (Nijmegen breakage syndrome 1 protein), as well as pharmacological inhibition of ATM with KU-55933, inhibited H2AX phosphorylation and prevented Env-elicited syncytia from undergoing apoptosis. ATM was found indispensable for the activation of MAP kinase p38, which catalyzes the activating phosphorylation of p53 on serine 46, thereby causing p53 dependent apoptosis. Both wild type HIV-1 and an HIV-1 mutant lacking integrase activity induced syncytial apoptosis, which could be suppressed by inhibiting ATM. HIV-1-infected T lymphoblasts from patients with inactivating ATM or NBS1 mutations also exhibited reduced syncytial apoptosis. Altogether these results indicate that apoptosis induced by a fusogenic HIV-1 Env follows a pro-apoptotic pathway involving the sequential activation of ATM, p38MAPK and p53.


Journal of Virology | 2004

Styrylquinolines, Integrase Inhibitors Acting Prior to Integration: a New Mechanism of Action for Anti-Integrase Agents

Sabine Bonnenfant; Claire Marie Thomas; Claudio Vita; Frédéric Subra; Eric Deprez; Fatima Zouhiri; Didier Desmaële; Jean d'Angelo; Jean François Mouscadet; Hervé Leh

ABSTRACT We have previously shown that styrylquinolines (SQLs) are integrase inhibitors in vitro. They compete with the long terminal repeat substrate for integrase. Here, we describe the cellular mode of action of these molecules. We show that SQLs do not interfere with virus entry. In fact, concentrations of up to 20 times the 50% inhibitory concentration did not inhibit cell-to-cell fusion or affect the interaction between GP120 and CD4 in vitro. Moreover, the pseudotype of the retrovirus envelope did not affect drug activity. Quantitative reverse transcription PCR experiments showed that SQLs do not inhibit the entry of the genomic RNA. In contrast, the treatment of human immunodeficiency virus type 1-infected cells with SQLs reduced the amount of the late cDNA, suggesting for the first time that integrase targeting molecules may affect the accumulation of DNA during reverse transcription. The cellular target of SQLs was confirmed by the appearance of mutations in the integrase gene when viruses were grown in the presence of increasing concentrations of SQLs. Finally, these mutations led to SQL-resistant viruses when introduced into the wild-type sequence. In contrast, SQLs were fully active against reverse transcriptase inhibitor- and diketo acid-resistant viruses, positioning SQLs as a second group of anti-integrase compounds.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2010

Impact of Y143 HIV-1 Integrase Mutations on Resistance to Raltegravir In Vitro and In Vivo

Olivier Delelis; Sylvain Thierry; Frédéric Subra; Françoise Simon; Isabelle Malet; Chakib Alloui; Sophie Sayon; Vincent Calvez; Eric Deprez; Anne-Geneviève Marcelin; Luba Tchertanov; Jean-François Mouscadet

ABSTRACT Integrase (IN), the HIV-1 enzyme responsible for the integration of the viral genome into the chromosomes of infected cells, is the target of the recently approved antiviral raltegravir (RAL). Despite this drugs activity against viruses resistant to other antiretrovirals, failures of raltegravir therapy were observed, in association with the emergence of resistance due to mutations in the integrase coding region. Two pathways involving primary mutations on residues N155 and Q148 have been characterized. It was suggested that mutations at residue Y143 might constitute a third primary pathway for resistance. The aims of this study were to investigate the susceptibility of HIV-1 Y143R/C mutants to raltegravir and to determine the effects of these mutations on the IN-mediated reactions. Our observations demonstrate that Y143R/C mutants are strongly impaired for both of these activities in vitro. However, Y143R/C activity can be kinetically restored, thereby reproducing the effect of the secondary G140S mutation that rescues the defect associated with the Q148R/H mutants. A molecular modeling study confirmed that Y143R/C mutations play a role similar to that determined for Q148R/H mutations. In the viral replicative context, this defect leads to a partial block of integration responsible for a weak replicative capacity. Nevertheless, the Y143 mutant presented a high level of resistance to raltegravir. Furthermore, the 50% effective concentration (EC50) determined for Y143R/C mutants was significantly higher than that obtained with G140S/Q148R mutants. Altogether our results not only show that the mutation at position Y143 is one of the mechanisms conferring resistance to RAL but also explain the delayed emergence of this mutation.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2008

KIT mutations induce intracellular retention and activation of an immature form of the KIT protein in gastrointestinal stromal tumors.

Séverine Tabone-Eglinger; Frédéric Subra; Hiba El Sayadi; Laurent Alberti; Eric Tabone; Jean-Philippe Michot; Nathalie Théou-Anton; Antoinette Lemoine; Jean-Yves Blay; Jean-François Emile

Purpose: Gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST) are frequently associated with gain-of-function mutations of KIT, which can be inhibited by imatinib both in vitro and in vivo. The survival of patients with GIST, following imatinib therapy, has been correlated with the nature of mutations but not with KIT expression. Experimental Design: Subcellular localization, activation, and trafficking of the mature and the immature forms of KIT were investigated in GIST samples and in NIH3T3 cells infected with two different GIST-type exon 11–mutated human KIT cDNA. Results: Paranuclear dot expression of KIT was more frequent in GISTs with homozygous KIT mutations than in those with heterozygous (P = 0.01) or no mutations (P < 0.01). Activation of the immature 125 kDa form of KIT was detected in most GISTs with KIT mutations but not in GISTs without KIT mutations. In NIH3T3 cells, mutant KIT was mainly retained within endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi compartments in an immature constitutively phosphorylated form, whereas the wild-type KIT was expressed at the plasma membrane, in a mature nonphosphorylated form. Imatinib-induced inhibition of the phosphorylation of immature and mature mutant KIT proteins resulted in the restoration of KIT expression at the cell surface. Conclusions: These results show that GIST-type KIT mutations induce an activation-dependent alteration of normal maturation and trafficking, resulting in the intracellular retention of the activated kinase within the cell. These observations likely account for the absence of correlation between response to imatinib and KIT expression using immunohistochemistry and may deserve to be investigated in other tyrosine kinase–activated tumors.


Molecular Cancer Research | 2009

The Aberrant Localization of Oncogenic Kit Tyrosine Kinase Receptor Mutants Is Reversed on Specific Inhibitory Treatment

Houcine Bougherara; Frédéric Subra; Ronan Crépin; Patrick Tauc; Christian Auclair; Marie-Alix Poul

Kit is a cell surface type III tyrosine kinase (TK) receptor implicated in cell transformation through overexpression or oncogenic mutation. Two categories of Kit mutants displaying mutations either in the juxtamembrane intracellular domain (regulatory mutants) or in the catalytic domain (catalytic mutants) have been described. To explore the effect of Kit oncogenic mutations on its subcellular localization, we constructed enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP)–tagged human Kit chimeras harboring mutations either in the regulatory (V560G) or in the catalytic (D816V) domain. When expressed in Chinese hamster ovary cells, EGFP-tagged wild-type Kit was activated on stem cell factor stimulation, whereas both EGFP-tagged Kit mutants displayed a constitutive TK activity. Constitutively activated mutants exhibited a high-mannose–type N-glycosylation pattern and an intracellular localization, suggesting that these mutants induce downstream oncogenic signaling without the need to reach the cell surface. Inhibition of constitutive Kit TK activity with dasatinib induced a complex, mature N-glycosylation pattern identical to unstimulated wild-type Kit and resulted in the redistribution of the mutants to the plasma membrane. This relocalization was clearly correlated to the inhibition of TK activity because imatinib, a specific inhibitor of the V560G mutant, inactive on the catalytic D816V mutant, induced only the relocalization of the V560G mutant. These data show that on TK inhibition, the aberrant localization of Kit mutants can be fully reversed. Kit mutants are then exported and/or stabilized at the cell surface as inactive and fully N-glycosylated isoforms. (Mol Cancer Res 2009;7(9):1525–33)


Retrovirology | 2013

Quantitative analysis of the time-course of viral DNA forms during the HIV-1 life cycle

Soundasse Munir; Sylvain Thierry; Frédéric Subra; Eric Deprez; Olivier Delelis

BackgroundHIV-1 DNA is found both integrated in the host chromosome and unintegrated in various forms: linear (DNAL) or circular (1-LTRc, 2-LTRc or products of auto-integration). Here, based on pre-established strategies, we extended and characterized in terms of sensitivity two methodologies for quantifying 1-LTRc and DNAL, respectively, the latter being able to discriminate between unprocessed or 3′-processed DNA.ResultsQuantifying different types of viral DNA genome individually provides new information about the dynamics of all viral DNA forms and their interplay. For DNAL, we found that the 3′-processing reaction was efficient during the early stage of the replication cycle. Moreover, strand-transfer inhibitors (Dolutegravir, Elvitegravir, Raltegravir) affected 3′-processing differently. The comparisons of 2-LTRc accumulation mediated by either strand-transfer inhibitors or catalytic mutation of integrase indicate that 3′-processing efficiency did not influence the total 2-LTRc accumulation although the nature of the LTR-LTR junction was qualitatively affected. Finally, a significant proportion of 1-LTRc was generated concomitantly with reverse transcription, although most of the 1-LTRc were produced in the nucleus.ConclusionsWe describe the fate of viral DNA forms during HIV-1 infection. Our study reveals the interplay between various forms of the viral DNA genome, the distribution of which can be affected by mutations and by inhibitors of HIV-1 viral proteins. In the latter case, the quantification of 3′-processed DNA in infected cells can be informative about the mechanisms of future integrase inhibitors directly in the cell context.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2014

Identification of Highly Conserved Residues Involved in Inhibition of HIV-1 RNase H Function by Diketo Acid Derivatives

Angela Corona; Francesco Saverio Di Leva; Sylvain Thierry; Luca Pescatori; Giuliana Cuzzucoli Crucitti; Frédéric Subra; Olivier Delelis; Francesca Esposito; Giuseppe Rigogliuso; Roberta Costi; Sandro Cosconati; Ettore Novellino; Roberto Di Santo; Enzo Tramontano

ABSTRACT HIV-1 reverse transcriptase (RT)-associated RNase H activity is an essential function in viral genome retrotranscription. RNase H is a promising drug target for which no inhibitor is available for therapy. Diketo acid (DKA) derivatives are active site Mg2+-binding inhibitors of both HIV-1 RNase H and integrase (IN) activities. To investigate the DKA binding site of RNase H and the mechanism of action, six couples of ester and acid DKAs, derived from 6-[1-(4-fluorophenyl)methyl-1H-pyrrol-2-yl)]-2,4-dioxo-5-hexenoic acid ethyl ester (RDS1643), were synthesized and tested on both RNase H and IN functions. Most of the ester derivatives showed selectivity for HIV-1 RNase H versus IN, while acids inhibited both functions. Molecular modeling and site-directed mutagenesis studies on the RNase H domain demonstrated different binding poses for ester and acid DKAs and proved that DKAs interact with residues (R448, N474, Q475, Y501, and R557) involved not in the catalytic motif but in highly conserved portions of the RNase H primer grip motif. The ester derivative RDS1759 selectively inhibited RNase H activity and viral replication in the low micromolar range, making contacts with residues Q475, N474, and Y501. Quantitative PCR studies and fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) analyses showed that RDS1759 selectively inhibited reverse transcription in cell-based assays. Overall, we provide the first demonstration that RNase H inhibition by DKAs is due not only to their chelating properties but also to specific interactions with highly conserved amino acid residues in the RNase H domain, leading to effective targeting of HIV retrotranscription in cells and hence offering important insights for the rational design of RNase H inhibitors.


British Journal of Cancer | 2009

Prognosis and predictive value of KIT exon 11 deletion in GISTs

J-B Bachet; Isabelle Hostein; A. Le Cesne; S. Brahimi; Alain Beauchet; Severine Tabone-Eglinger; Frédéric Subra; B. Bui; Florence Duffaud; P. Terrier; J.-M. Coindre; J. Y. Blay; J-F Emile

Background:KIT exon 11 mutations are observed in 60% of gastrointestinal stromal tumours (GIST). Exon 11 codes for residues Tyr568 and Tyr570, which play a major role in signal transduction and degradation of KIT. Our aim was to compare the outcome of patients with deletion of both Tyr568–570 (delTyr) and the most frequent deletion delWK557–558 (delWK).Methods:Pathology and clinical characteristics of 68 patients with delTyr (n=26) or delWK (n=42) were reviewed and compared.Results:GISTs with delTyr were more frequently extragastric than those with delWK (69 vs 26%, P<0.0005). After curative surgery, median relapse-free survival were 10.8 and 11.1 months for patients with delTyr (n=14) and delWK (n=29), respectively (P=0.92). All patients treated with imatinib for a non-resectable or metastatic GIST had an objective response (n=15) or a stable disease (n=21) as best response, regardless of mutation. Median progression-free survival with imatinib were 21.9 and 18.9 months for patients with GIST with delTyr (n=14) and delWK (n=22), respectively (P=0.43).Conclusion:In this large retrospective series, the type of KIT exon 11 mutation was correlated with the origin of GIST, but not with prognosis or response to imatinib.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Cell-penetrating Peptides with Intracellular Actin-remodeling Activity in Malignant Fibroblasts

Diane Delaroche; François-Xavier Cantrelle; Frédéric Subra; Carine van Heijenoort; Eric Guittet; Chen-Yu Jiao; Laurent Blanchoin; Gérard Chassaing; Solange Lavielle; Christian Auclair; Sandrine Sagan

Cell-penetrating peptides can cross cell membranes and are commonly seen as biologically inert molecules. However, we found that some cell-penetrating peptides could remodel actin cytoskeleton in oncogene-transformed NIH3T3/EWS-Fli cells. These cells have profound actin disorganization related to their tumoral transformation. These arginine- and/or tryptophan-rich peptides could cross cell membrane and induce stress fiber formation in these malignant cells, whereas they had no perceptible effect in non-tumoral fibroblasts. In addition, motility (migration speed, random motility coefficient, wound healing) of the tumor cells could be decreased by the cell-permeant peptides. Although the peptides differently influenced actin polymerization in vitro, they could directly bind monomeric actin as determined by NMR and calorimetry studies. Therefore, cell-penetrating peptides might interact with intracellular protein partners, such as actin. In addition, the fact that they could reverse the tumoral phenotype is of interest for therapeutic purposes.

Collaboration


Dive into the Frédéric Subra's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Christian Auclair

École normale supérieure de Cachan

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Olivier Delelis

École normale supérieure de Cachan

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jean-François Mouscadet

École normale supérieure de Cachan

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Eric Deprez

École normale supérieure de Cachan

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Olivier Français

École normale supérieure de Cachan

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bruno Le Pioufle

École normale supérieure de Cachan

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jean François Mouscadet

École normale supérieure de Cachan

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge