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Dive into the research topics where Hugues Gascan is active.

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Featured researches published by Hugues Gascan.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2007

The humoral pattern recognition receptor PTX3 is stored in neutrophil granules and localizes in extracellular traps

Sébastien Jaillon; Giuseppe Peri; Yves Delneste; Isabelle Frémaux; Andrea Doni; Federica Moalli; Cecilia Garlanda; Luigina Romani; Hugues Gascan; Silvia Bellocchio; Silvia Bozza; Marco A. Cassatella; Pascale Jeannin; Alberto Mantovani

The long pentraxin (PTX) 3 is produced by macrophages and myeloid dendritic cells in response to Toll-like receptor agonists and represents a nonredundant component of humoral innate immunity against selected pathogens. We report that, unexpectedly, PTX3 is stored in specific granules and undergoes release in response to microbial recognition and inflammatory signals. Released PTX3 can partially localize in neutrophil extracellular traps formed by extruded DNA. Eosinophils and basophils do not contain preformed PTX3. PTX3-deficient neutrophils have defective microbial recognition and phagocytosis, and PTX3 is nonredundant for neutrophil-mediated resistance against Aspergillus fumigatus. Thus, neutrophils serve as a reservoir, ready for rapid release, of the long PTX3, a key component of humoral innate immunity with opsonic activity.


Nature Immunology | 2003

Binding of the Drosophila cytokine Spätzle to Toll is direct and establishes signaling.

Alexander N.R. Weber; Servane Tauszig-Delamasure; Jules A. Hoffmann; Eric Lelièvre; Hugues Gascan; Keith Ray; Mary A. Morse; Jean-Luc Imler

The extracellular protein Spätzle is required for activation of the Toll signaling pathway in the embryonic development and innate immune defense of Drosophila. Spätzle is synthesized as a pro-protein and is processed to a functional form by a serine protease. We show here that the mature form of Spätzle triggers a Toll-dependent immune response after injection into the hemolymph of flies. Spätzle specifically bound to Drosophila cells and to Cos-7 cells expressing Toll. Furthermore, in vitro experiments showed that the mature form of Spätzle bound to the Toll ectodomain with high affinity and with a stoichiometry of one Spätzle dimer to two receptors. The Spätzle pro-protein was inactive in all these assays, indicating that the pro-domain sequence, which is natively unstructured, acts to prevent interaction of the cytokine and its receptor Toll. These results show that, in contrast to the human Toll-like receptors, Drosophila Toll requires only an endogenous protein ligand for activation and signaling.


Development | 2006

Target-dependent specification of the neurotransmitter phenotype: cholinergic differentiation of sympathetic neurons is mediated in vivo by gp130 signaling

Matthias Stanke; Chi Vinh Duong; Manuela Pape; Markus Geissen; Guido J. Burbach; Thomas Deller; Hugues Gascan; Rosanna Parlato; Günther Schütz; Hermann Rohrer

Sympathetic neurons are generated through a succession of differentiation steps that initially lead to noradrenergic neurons innervating different peripheral target tissues. Specific targets, like sweat glands in rodent footpads, induce a change from noradrenergic to cholinergic transmitter phenotype. Here, we show that cytokines acting through the gp130 receptor are present in sweat glands. Selective elimination of the gp130 receptor in sympathetic neurons prevents the acquisition of cholinergic and peptidergic features (VAChT, ChT1, VIP) without affecting other properties of sweat gland innervation. The vast majority of cholinergic neurons in the stellate ganglion, generated postnatally, are absent in gp130-deficient mice. These results demonstrate an essential role of gp130-signaling in the target-dependent specification of the cholinergic neurotransmitter phenotype.


Glia | 2008

Neonatal and adult microglia cross-present exogenous antigens

Céline Beauvillain; Sabrina Donnou; Ulrich Jarry; Mari Scotet; Hugues Gascan; Yves Delneste; Pierre Guermonprez; Pascale Jeannin; Dominique Couez

Some observations have suggested that cells from the central nervous system (CNS) could present exogenous antigens on major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules to CD8+ T cells (a process called cross‐presentation). Microglia are the major myeloid immunocompetent cells of the CNS. When activated, following the injury of the nervous parenchyma, they become fully competent antigen‐presenting cells (APC) that prime CD4+ T lymphocytes. We therefore tested the cross‐presentation capacity of murine microglia. We report that a microglial cell line (C8‐B4), neonatal microglia, and interestingly adult microglia cross‐present soluble exogenous antigen (ovalbumin) to a OVA‐specific CD8+ T‐cell hybridoma and cross‐prime OVA‐specific naive OT‐1 CD8+ T cells. In both these cases, C8‐B4 and neonatal microglia cross‐present OVA as well as peritoneal macrophages. Although cross‐presentation by adult microglia is less efficient, it is increased by GM‐CSF and CpG oligodeoxynucleotide (ODN) stimulation. Using microglial cells either exposed to an inhibitor of proteasome, lactacystin, or purified from TAP−/− mice, we demonstrate that the microglia cross‐present antigen in proteasome‐ and TAP‐dependant pathways, respectively. Last, microglia purified from adult mice injected intracerebrally with OVA efficiently stimulate OVA‐specific CD8+ T cells, thereby showing that microglia take up and process exogenous antigen into MHC class I in vivo. This first demonstration of the cross‐presentation property of microglia offers novel therapeutic approaches to modulate CD8 T‐cell responses in the brain.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Molecular and Functional Characterization of a Soluble Form of Oncostatin M/Interleukin-31 Shared Receptor

Caroline Diveu; Emilie Venereau; Josy Froger; Elisa Ravon; Linda Grimaud; François Rousseau; Sylvie Chevalier; Hugues Gascan

Activation of the signaling transduction pathways mediated by oncostatin M (OSM) requires the binding of the cytokine to either type I OSM receptor (leukemia inhibitory factor receptor/gp130) or to type II OSM receptor (OSMR/gp130). In the present work we have developed an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay detecting a soluble form of OSMR (sOSMR) secreted by glioblastoma, hepatoma, and melanoma tumor cell lines. sOSMR was also present in sera of healthy individuals, with increased levels in multiple myeloma. Molecular cloning of a corresponding cDNA was carried out, and it encoded for a 70-kDa protein consisting of a half cytokine binding domain containing the canonical WSXWS motif, an immunoglobulin-like domain, and the first half of a second cytokine binding domain with cysteines in fixed positions. Analysis of the soluble receptor distribution revealed a preferential expression in lung, liver, pancreas, and placenta. sOSMR was able to bind OSM and interleukin-31 when associated to soluble gp130 or soluble interleukin-31R, respectively, and to neutralize both cytokine properties. We have also shown that OSM could positively regulate the synthesis of its own soluble receptor in tumor cells.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Invariant NKT cells drive hepatic cytokinic microenvironment favoring efficient granuloma formation and early control of Leishmania donovani infection.

Florence Robert-Gangneux; Anne-Sophie Drogoul; Octavie Rostan; Claire Piquet-Pellorce; Jérôme Cayon; Mariette Lisbonne; André Herbelin; Hugues Gascan; Claude Guiguen; Michel Samson; Jean-Pierre Gangneux

The development of inflammatory granulomas around infected Kupffer cells is necessary for hepatic parasite clearance during visceral leishmaniasis. Invariant NKT (iNKT) cells are predominant T cells in the mouse liver and can synthesize large quantities of IL-4 and IFN-γ, two cytokines involved in granuloma formation. This study analyzed the role of iNKT cells in the hepatic immune response during Leishmania donovani infection, using a murine model of wild-type (WT) and iNKT cell-deficient (Jα18-/-) C57BL/6 mice sacrificed 15, 30 or 60 days post-infection. We recorded hepatic parasite loads, cytokine expression, and analyzed granulomatous response by immunohistochemistry and hepatic immune cell infiltration by flow cytometry. Whereas WT animals rapidly controlled the infection and developed an inflammatory response associated with a massive influx of iNKT cells observed by flow cytometry, Jα18-/- mice had significantly higher parasitic loads on all time points. This lack of control of parasite burden was associated with a delay in granuloma maturation (28.1% of large granulomas at day 60 versus 50.7% in WT). Cytokine transcriptome analysis showed that mRNA of 90/101 genes encoding chemokines, cytokines and their receptors, was underexpressed in Jα18-/- mice. Detection of IL-4 and TNF-α by ELISA in liver extracts was also significantly lower in Jα18-/- mice. Consistent with flow cytometry analysis, cytokinome profile in WT mice showed a bias of expression towards T cell-chemoattractant chemokines on D15, and displayed a switch towards expression of granulocytes and/or monocytes -chemoattractant chemokines on D60. In Jα18-/- mice, the significantly lower expression of CXCL5, MIP-2 and CCL2 mRNA was correlated with a defect in myeloperoxidase positive-cell attraction observed by immunohistochemistry and with a lower granulocyte and monocyte infiltration in the liver, as shown by flow cytometry. These data indicate that iNKT cells play a role in early and sustained pro-inflammatory cytokine response warranting efficient organization of hepatic granulomas and parasite clearance.


Blood | 2007

Neutrophils efficiently cross-prime naive T cells in vivo.

Céline Beauvillain; Yves Delneste; Mari Scotet; Audrey Peres; Hugues Gascan; Pierre Guermonprez; Vincenzo Barnaba; Pascale Jeannin


Blood | 1996

Nerve growth factor is involved in the supportive effect by bone marrow-derived stromal cells of the factor-dependent human cell line UT-7

I Auffray; S Chevalier; J Froger; Brigitte Izac; William Vainchenker; Hugues Gascan; Laure Coulombel


Archive | 2013

differentiation into tumor-associated macrophage-like cells Tumor-associated leukemia inhibitory factor and IL-6 skew monocyte

Hugues Gascan; Mohamed Hebbar; Pascale Jeannin; Laurence Preisser; Ignacio Anegon; Laurent Catala; Norbert Ifrah; Philippe Descamps; Dorothée Duluc; Yves Delneste; Fang Tan; Marie-Pierre Moles; Linda Grimaud; Julien Lenoir


Archive | 2011

Gegen die p19-Untereinheit von menschlichem IL-23 gerichtete Antikörper, deren Verwendung zur Herstellung von therapeutischen Molekülen

Sylvie Chevalier; Yannick Danger; Josy-Anne Froger; Hugues Gascan; Caroline Mary; Nicolas Poirier; Bernard Vanhove

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Fang Tan

University of Angers

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