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Dive into the research topics where Garabet Yeretssian is active.

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Featured researches published by Garabet Yeretssian.


Immunity | 2010

Control of intestinal homeostasis, colitis, and colitis-associated colorectal cancer by the inflammatory caspases.

Jeremy Dupaul-Chicoine; Garabet Yeretssian; Karine Doiron; Kirk S. Bergstrom; Christian R. McIntire; Philippe M. LeBlanc; Charles Meunier; Claire Turbide; Philippe Gros; Nicole Beauchemin; Bruce A. Vallance; Maya Saleh

Inflammatory caspases are essential effectors of inflammation and cell death. Here, we investigated their roles in colitis and colorectal cancer and report a bimodal regulation of intestinal homeostasis, inflammation and tumorigenesis by caspases-1 and -12. Casp1(-/-) mice exhibited defects in mucosal tissue repair and succumbed rapidly after dextran sulfate sodium administration. This phenotype was rescued by administration of exogenous interleukin-18 and was partially reproduced in mice deficient in the inflammasome adaptor ASC. Casp12(-/-) mice, in which the inflammasome is derepressed, were resistant to acute colitis and showed signs of enhanced repair. Together with their increased inflammatory response, the enhanced repair response of Casp12(-/-) mice rendered them more susceptible to colorectal cancer induced by azoxymethane (AOM)+DSS. Taken together, our results indicate that the inflammatory caspases are critical in the induction of inflammation in the gut after injury, which is necessary for tissue repair and maintenance of immune tolerance.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

The Caspase-1 Digestome Identifies the Glycolysis Pathway as a Target during Infection and Septic Shock

Wei Shao; Garabet Yeretssian; Karine Doiron; Sabah N. A. Hussain; Maya Saleh

Caspase-1 is an essential effector of inflammation, pyroptosis, and septic shock. Few caspase-1 substrates have been identified to date, and these substrates do not account for its wide range of actions. To understand the function of caspase-1, we initiated the systematic identification of its cellular substrates. Using the diagonal gel proteomic approach, we identified 41 proteins that are directly cleaved by caspase-1. Among these were chaperones, cytoskeletal and translation machinery proteins, and proteins involved in immunity. A series of unexpected proteins along the glycolysis pathway were also identified, including aldolase, triose-phosphate isomerase, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, α-enolase, and pyruvate kinase. With the exception of the latter, the identified glycolysis enzymes were specifically cleaved in vitro by recombinant caspase-1, but not caspase-3. The enzymatic activity of wild-type glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, but not a non-cleavable mutant, was dampened by caspase-1 processing. In vivo, stimuli that fully activated caspase-1, including Salmonella typhimurium infection and septic shock, caused a pronounced processing of these proteins in the macrophage and diaphragm muscle, respectively. Notably, these stimuli inhibited glycolysis in wild-type cells compared with caspase-1-deficient cells. The systematic characterization of caspase-1 substrates identifies the glycolysis pathway as a caspase-1 target and provides new insights into its function during pyroptosis and septic shock.


Cell Host & Microbe | 2008

Caspase-12 modulates NOD signaling and regulates antimicrobial peptide production and mucosal immunity.

Philippe M. LeBlanc; Garabet Yeretssian; Nancy Rutherford; Karine Doiron; Amal Nadiri; Lei Zhu; Douglas R. Green; Samantha Gruenheid; Maya Saleh

Bacterial sensing by intracellular Nod proteins and other Nod-like receptors (NLRs) activates signaling pathways that mediate inflammation and pathogen clearance. Nod1 and Nod2 associate with the kinase Rip2 to stimulate NF-kappaB signaling. Other cytosolic NLRs assemble caspase-1-activating multiprotein complexes termed inflammasomes. Caspase-12 modulates the caspase-1 inflammasome, but unlike other NLRs, Nod1 and Nod2 have not been linked to caspases, and mechanisms regulating the Nod-Rip2 complex are less clear. We report that caspase-12 dampens mucosal immunity to bacterial infection independent of its effects on caspase-1. Caspase-12 deficiency enhances production of antimicrobial peptides, cytokines, and chemokines to entric pathogens, an effect dependent on bacterial type III secretion and the Nod pathway. Mechanistically, caspase-12 binds to Rip2, displacing Traf6 from the signaling complex, inhibiting its ubiquitin ligase activity, and blunting NF-kappaB activation. Nod activation and resulting antimicrobial peptide production constitute an early innate defense mechanism, and caspase-12 inhibits this mucosal antimicrobial response.


Nature | 2011

Non-apoptotic role of BID in inflammation and innate immunity

Garabet Yeretssian; Ricardo G. Correa; Karine Doiron; Patrick Fitzgerald; Christopher P. Dillon; Douglas R. Green; John C. Reed; Maya Saleh

Innate immunity is a fundamental defence response that depends on evolutionarily conserved pattern recognition receptors for sensing infections or danger signals. Nucleotide-binding and oligomerization domain (NOD) proteins are cytosolic pattern-recognition receptors of paramount importance in the intestine, and their dysregulation is associated with inflammatory bowel disease. They sense peptidoglycans from commensal microorganisms and pathogens and coordinate signalling events that culminate in the induction of inflammation and anti-microbial responses. However, the signalling mechanisms involved in this process are not fully understood. Here, using genome-wide RNA interference, we identify candidate genes that modulate the NOD1 inflammatory response in intestinal epithelial cells. Our results reveal a significant crosstalk between innate immunity and apoptosis and identify BID, a BCL2 family protein, as a critical component of the inflammatory response. Colonocytes depleted of BID or macrophages from Bid−/− mice are markedly defective in cytokine production in response to NOD activation. Furthermore, Bid−/− mice are unresponsive to local or systemic exposure to NOD agonists or their protective effect in experimental colitis. Mechanistically, BID interacts with NOD1, NOD2 and the IκB kinase (IKK) complex, impacting NF-κB and extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) signalling. Our results define a novel role of BID in inflammation and immunity independent of its apoptotic function, furthering the mounting evidence of evolutionary conservation between the mechanisms of apoptosis and immunity.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Gender differences in expression of the human caspase-12 long variant determines susceptibility to Listeria monocytogenes infection

Garabet Yeretssian; Karine Doiron; Wei Shao; Blair R. Leavitt; Michael R. Hayden; Donald W. Nicholson; Maya Saleh

Inflammatory caspases are important effectors of innate immunity. Caspase-12, of the inflammatory caspase subfamily, is expressed in all mammals tested to date, but has acquired deleterious mutation in humans. A single-nucleotide polymorphism introduces a premature stop codon in caspase-12 in the majority of the population. However, in 20% of African descendants, caspase-12 is expressed and sensitizes to infections and sepsis. Here, we examined the modalities by which human caspase-12 confers susceptibility to infection. We have generated a fully humanized mouse that expresses the human caspase-12 rare variant (Csp-12L) in a mouse casp-12−/− background. Characterization of the humanized mouse uncovered sex differences in Csp-12L expression and gender disparity in innate immunity to Listeria monocytogenes infection. The Csp-12L transgene completely reversed the knockout resistance-to-infection phenotype in casp-12−/− males. In contrast, it had a marginal effect on the response of female mice. We found that estrogen levels modulated the expression of caspase-12. Csp-12L was expressed in male mice but its expression was repressed in female mice. Administration of 17-β-estradiol (E2) to humanized male mice had a direct suppressive effect on Csp-12L expression and conferred relative resistance to infection. Chromatin immunoprecipitation experiments revealed that caspase-12 is a direct transcriptional target of the estrogen receptor alpha (ERα) and mapped the estrogen response element (ERE) to intron 7 of the gene. We propose that estrogen-mediated inhibition of Csp-12L expression is a built-in mechanism that has evolved to protect females from infection.


Apoptosis | 2009

Inflammasomes in infection and inflammation

Christian R. McIntire; Garabet Yeretssian; Maya Saleh

Two of the main challenges that multicellular organisms faced during evolution were to cope with invading microorganisms and eliminate and replace dying cells. Our innate immune system evolved to handle both tasks. Key aspects of innate immunity are the detection of invaders or tissue injury and the activation of inflammation that alarms the system through the action of cytokine and chemokine cascades. While inflammation is essential for host resistance to infections, it is detrimental when produced chronically or in excess and is linked to various diseases, most notably auto-immune diseases, auto-inflammatory disorders, cancer and septic shock. Essential regulators of inflammation are enzymes termed “the inflammatory caspases”. They are activated by cellular sensors of danger signals, the inflammasomes, and subsequently convert pro-inflammatory cytokines into their mature active forms. In addition, they regulate non-conventional protein secretion of alarmins and cytokines, glycolysis and lipid biogenesis, and the execution of an inflammatory form of cell death termed “pyroptosis”. By acting as key regulators of inflammation, energy metabolism and cell death, inflammatory caspases and inflammasomes exert profound influences on innate immunity and infectious and non-infectious inflammatory diseases.


Cytokine | 2008

Molecular regulation of inflammation and cell death

Garabet Yeretssian; Katherine Labbé; Maya Saleh

Cell death and innate immunity are ancient evolutionary conserved processes that utilize a dazzling number of related molecular effectors and parallel signal transduction mechanisms. The investigation of the molecular mechanisms linking the sensing of a danger signal (pathogens or tissue damage) to the induction of an inflammatory response has witnessed a renaissance in the last few years. This was initiated by the identification of pattern recognition receptors (PRRs), including Toll-like receptors (TLRs) and more recently cytosolic Nod-like receptors (NLRs), that brought innate immunity to center stage and opened the field to the study of signal transduction pathways, adaptors and central effectors linked to PRRs. This led to the characterization of the inflammasome, a macromolecular complex, scaffolded by NLRs, that recruits and activates inflammatory caspases, which are essential effectors in inflammation and cell death responses. In this review, we describe the molecular pathways of cell death and innate immunity with a focus on recent advancements in both fields and an emphasis on the striking analogies between NLR innate immunity and mitochondrial apoptosis pathways.


Journal of Immunology | 2010

Caspase-12 Dampens the Immune Response to Malaria Independently of the Inflammasome by Targeting NF-κB Signaling

Katherine Labbé; Jenny Miu; Garabet Yeretssian; Lena Serghides; Mifong Tam; Constance A.M. Finney; Laura K. Erdman; Marie-Line Goulet; Kevin C. Kain; Mary M. Stevenson; Maya Saleh

Pathogen sensing by the inflammasome activates inflammatory caspases that mediate inflammation and cell death. Caspase-12 antagonizes the inflammasome and NF-κB and is associated with susceptibility to bacterial sepsis. A single-nucleotide polymorphism (T125C) in human Casp12 restricts its expression to Africa, Southeast Asia, and South America. Here, we investigated the role of caspase-12 in the control of parasite replication and pathogenesis in malaria and report that caspase-12 dampened parasite clearance in blood-stage malaria and modulated susceptibility to cerebral malaria. This response was independent of the caspase-1 inflammasome, as casp1−/− mice were indistinguishable from wild-type animals in response to malaria, but dependent on enhanced NF-κB activation. Mechanistically, caspase-12 competed with NEMO for association with IκB kinase-α/β, effectively preventing the formation of the IκB kinase complex and inhibiting downstream transcriptional activation by NF-κB. Systemic inhibition of NF-κB or Ab neutralization of IFN-γ reversed the increased resistance of casp12−/− mice to blood-stage malaria infection.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Positional Mapping and Candidate Gene Analysis of the Mouse Ccs3 Locus That Regulates Differential Susceptibility to Carcinogen-Induced Colorectal Cancer

Charles Meunier; Lauren Van Der Kraak; Claire Turbide; Normand Groulx; Ingrid Labouba; Pablo Cingolani; Mathieu Blanchette; Garabet Yeretssian; Anne-Marie Mes-Masson; Maya Saleh; Nicole Beauchemin; Philippe Gros

The Ccs3 locus on mouse chromosome 3 regulates differential susceptibility of A/J (A, susceptible) and C57BL/6J (B6, resistant) mouse strains to chemically-induced colorectal cancer (CRC). Here, we report the high-resolution positional mapping of the gene underlying the Ccs3 effect. Using phenotype/genotype correlation in a series of 33 AcB/BcA recombinant congenic mouse strains, as well as in groups of backcross populations bearing unique recombinant chromosomes for the interval, and in subcongenic strains, we have delineated the maximum size of the Ccs3 physical interval to a ∼2.15 Mb segment. This interval contains 12 annotated transcripts. Sequencing of positional candidates in A and B6 identified many either low-priority coding changes or non-protein coding variants. We found a unique copy number variant (CNV) in intron 15 of the Nfkb1 gene. The CNV consists of two copies of a 54 bp sequence immediately adjacent to the exon 15 splice site, while only one copy is found in CRC-susceptible A. The Nfkb1 protein (p105/p50) expression is much reduced in A tumors compared to normal A colonic epithelium as analyzed by immunohistochemistry. Studies in primary macrophages from A and B6 mice demonstrate a marked differential activation of the NfκB pathway by lipopolysaccharide (kinetics of stimulation and maximum levels of phosphorylated IκBα), with a more robust activation being associated with resistance to CRC. NfκB has been previously implicated in regulating homeostasis and inflammatory response in the intestinal mucosa. The interval contains another positional candidate Slc39a8 that is differentially expressed in A vs B6 colons, and that has recently been associated in CRC tumor aggressiveness in humans.


Nature | 2012

Yeretssian et al. reply

Garabet Yeretssian; Ricardo G. Correa; Karine Doiron; Patrick Fitzgerald; Christopher P. Dillon; Douglas R. Green; John C. Reed; Maya Saleh

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Douglas R. Green

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Christopher P. Dillon

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Patrick Fitzgerald

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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