Ilse Hurbain
Curie Institute
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Publication
Featured researches published by Ilse Hurbain.
Immunity | 2013
Xavier Lahaye; Takeshi Satoh; Matteo Gentili; Silvia Cerboni; Cécile Conrad; Ilse Hurbain; Ahmed El Marjou; Christine Lacabaratz; Jean-Daniel Lelièvre; Nicolas Manel
HIV-2 is less pathogenic for humans than HIV-1 and might provide partial cross-protection from HIV-1-induced pathology. Although both viruses replicate in the T cells of infected patients, only HIV-2 replicates efficiently in dendritic cells (DCs) and activates innate immune pathways. How HIV is sensed in DC is unknown. Capsid-mutated HIV-2 revealed that sensing by the host requires viral cDNA synthesis, but not nuclear entry or genome integration. The HIV-1 capsid prevented viral cDNA sensing up to integration, allowing the virus to escape innate recognition. In contrast, DCs sensed capsid-mutated HIV-1 and enhanced stimulation of T cells in the absence of productive infection. Finally, we found that DC sensing of HIV-1 and HIV-2 required the DNA sensor cGAS. Thus, the HIV capsid is a determinant of innate sensing of the viral cDNA by cGAS in dendritic cells. This pathway might potentially be harnessed to develop effective vaccines against HIV-1.
The EMBO Journal | 2004
Virginie Braun; Vincent Fraisier; Graça Raposo; Ilse Hurbain; Jean-Baptiste Sibarita; Philippe Chavrier; Thierry Galli; Florence Niedergang
Phagocytosis relies on extension of plasmalemmal pseudopods generated by focal actin polymerisation and delivery of membranes from intracellular pools. Here we show that compartments of the late endocytic pathway, bearing the tetanus neurotoxin‐insensitive vesicle‐associated membrane protein (TI‐VAMP/VAMP7), are recruited upon particle binding and undergo exocytosis before phagosome sealing in macrophages during Fc receptor (FcR)‐mediated phagocytosis. Expression of the dominant‐negative amino‐terminal domain of TI‐VAMP or depletion of TI‐VAMP with small interfering RNAs inhibited phagocytosis mediated by Fc or complement receptors. In addition, inhibition of TI‐VAMP activity led to a reduced exocytosis of late endocytic vesicles and this resulted in an early blockade of pseudopod extension, as observed by scanning electron microscopy. Therefore, TI‐VAMP defines a new pathway of membrane delivery required for optimal FcR‐mediated phagocytosis.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2009
Cédric Delevoye; Ilse Hurbain; Danièle Tenza; Jean-Baptiste Sibarita; Stéphanie Uzan-Gafsou; Hiroshi Ohno; Willie J. C. Geerts; Arie J. Verkleij; Jean Salamero; Michael S. Marks; Graça Raposo
The clathrin adaptor protein AP-1 and the motor KIF13A work together to deliver cargo into maturing melanosomes.
Traffic | 2008
Sylvain Loubéry; Claire Wilhelm; Ilse Hurbain; Sophie Neveu; Daniel Louvard; Evelyne Coudrier
Important progress has been made during the past decade in the identification of molecular motors required in the distribution of early and late endosomes and the proper trafficking along the endocytic pathway. There is little direct evidence, however, that these motors drive movement of the endosomes. To evaluate the contributions of kinesin‐1, dynein and kinesin‐2 to the movement of early and late endosomes along microtubules, we made use of a cytosol‐free motility assay using magnetically isolated early and late endosomes as well as biochemical analyses and live‐cell imaging. By making use of specific antibodies, we confirmed that kinesin‐1 and dynein move early endosomes and we found that kinesin‐2 moves both early and late endosomes in the cell‐free assay. Unexpectedly, dynein did not move late endosomes in the cell‐free assay. We provide evidence from disruption of dynein function and latrunculin A treatment, suggesting that dynein regulates late endosome movement indirectly, possibly through a mechanism involving the actin cytoskeleton. These data provide new insights into the complex regulation of endosomes’ motility and suggest that dynein is not the major motor required to move late endosomes toward the minus end of microtubules.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008
Ilse Hurbain; Willie J. C. Geerts; Thomas Boudier; Sergio Marco; Arie J. Verkleij; Michael S. Marks; Graça Raposo
Melanosomes are lysosome-related organelles (LROs) in which melanins are synthesized and stored. Early stage melanosomes are characterized morphologically by intralumenal fibrils upon which melanins are deposited in later stages. The integral membrane protein Pmel17 is a component of the fibrils, can nucleate fibril formation in the absence of other pigment cell-specific proteins, and forms amyloid-like fibrils in vitro. Before fibril formation Pmel17 traffics through multivesicular endosomal compartments, but how these compartments participate in downstream events leading to fibril formation is not fully known. By using high-pressure freezing of MNT-1 melanoma cells and freeze substitution to optimize ultrastructural preservation followed by double tilt 3D electron tomography, we show that the amyloid-like fibrils begin to form in multivesicular compartments, where they radiate from the luminal side of intralumenal membrane vesicles. The fibrils in fully formed stage II premelanosomes organize into sheet-like arrays and exclude the remaining intralumenal vesicles, which are smaller and often in continuity with the limiting membrane. These observations indicate that premelanosome fibrils form in association with intralumenal endosomal membranes. We suggest that similar processes regulate amyloid formation in pathological models.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013
Leila Rochin; Ilse Hurbain; Lutgarde Serneels; Cécile Fort; Brenda Watt; Pascal Leblanc; Michael S. Marks; Bart De Strooper; Graça Raposo; Guillaume van Niel
Amyloids are often associated with pathologic processes such as in Alzheimer’s disease (AD), but can also underlie physiological processes such as pigmentation. Formation of pathological and functional amyloidogenic substrates can require precursor processing by proteases, as exemplified by the generation of Aβ peptide from amyloid precursor protein (APP) by beta-site APP cleaving enzyme (BACE)1 and γ-secretase. Proteolytic processing of the pigment cell-specific Melanocyte Protein (PMEL) is also required to form functional amyloid fibrils during melanogenesis, but the enzymes involved are incompletely characterized. Here we show that the BACE1 homologue BACE2 processes PMEL to generate functional amyloids. BACE2 is highly expressed in pigment cells and Bace2−/− but not Bace1−/− mice display coat color defects, implying a specific role for BACE2 during melanogenesis. By using biochemical and morphological analyses, combined with RNA silencing, pharmacologic inhibition, and BACE2 overexpression in a human melanocytic cell line, we show that BACE2 cleaves the integral membrane form of PMEL within the juxtamembrane domain, releasing the PMEL luminal domain into endosomal precursors for the formation of amyloid fibrils and downstream melanosome morphogenesis. These studies identify an amyloidogenic substrate of BACE2, reveal an important physiological role for BACE2 in pigmentation, and highlight analogies in the generation of PMEL-derived functional amyloids and APP-derived pathological amyloids.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009
Brenda Watt; Guillaume van Niel; Douglas M. Fowler; Ilse Hurbain; Kelvin C. Luk; Steven Stayrook; Mark A. Lemmon; Graça Raposo; James Shorter; Jeffery W. Kelly; Michael S. Marks
Pmel17 is a transmembrane protein that mediates the early steps in the formation of melanosomes, the subcellular organelles of melanocytes in which melanin pigments are synthesized and stored. In melanosome precursor organelles, proteolytic fragments of Pmel17 form insoluble, amyloid-like fibrils upon which melanins are deposited during melanosome maturation. The mechanism(s) by which Pmel17 becomes competent to form amyloid are not fully understood. To better understand how amyloid formation is regulated, we have defined the domains within Pmel17 that promote fibril formation in vitro. Using purified recombinant fragments of Pmel17, we show that two regions, an N-terminal domain of unknown structure and a downstream domain with homology to a polycystic kidney disease-1 repeat, efficiently form amyloid in vitro. Analyses of fibrils formed in melanocytes confirm that the polycystic kidney disease-1 domain forms at least part of the physiological amyloid core. Interestingly, this same domain is also required for the intracellular trafficking of Pmel17 to multivesicular compartments within which fibrils begin to form. Although a domain of imperfect repeats (RPT) is required for fibril formation in vivo and is a component of fibrils in melanosomes, RPT is not necessary for fibril formation in vitro and in isolation is unable to adopt an amyloid fold in a physiologically relevant time frame. These data define the structural core of Pmel17 amyloid, imply that the RPT domain plays a regulatory role in timing amyloid conversion, and suggest that fibril formation might be physically linked with multivesicular body sorting.
Biology of the Cell | 2011
Ilse Hurbain; Martin Sachse
Our knowledge of the organization of the cell is linked, to a great extent, to light and electron microscopy. Choosing either photons or electrons for imaging has many consequences on the image obtained, as well as on the experiment required in order to generate the image. One apparent effect on the experimental side is in the sample preparation, which can be quite elaborate for electron microscopy. In recent years, rapid freezing, cryo‐preparation and cryo‐electron microscopy have been more widely used because they introduce fewer artefacts during preparation when compared with chemical fixation and room temperature processing. In addition, cryo‐electron microscopy allows the visualization of the hydrated specimens. In the present review, we give an introduction to the rapid freezing of biological samples and describe the preparation steps. We focus on bulk samples that are too big to be directly viewed under the electron microscope. Furthermore, we discuss the advantages and limitations of freeze substitution and cryo‐electron microscopy of vitreous sections and compare their application to the study of bacteria and mammalian cells and to tomography.
Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2009
Eva-Maria S. Grimm-Günter; Céline Revenu; Sonia Ramos; Ilse Hurbain; Neil Smyth; Evelyne Ferrary; Daniel Louvard; Sylvie Robine; Francisco Rivero
Plastin 1 (I-plastin, fimbrin) along with villin and espin is a prominent actin-bundling protein of the intestinal brush border microvilli. We demonstrate here that plastin 1 accumulates in the terminal web and interacts with keratin 19, possibly contributing to anchoring the rootlets to the keratin network. This prompted us to investigate the importance of plastin 1 in brush border assembly. Although in vivo neither villin nor espin is required for brush border structure, plastin 1-deficient mice have conspicuous ultrastructural alterations: microvilli are shorter and constricted at their base, and, strikingly, their core actin bundles lack true rootlets. The composition of the microvilli themselves is apparently normal, whereas that of the terminal web is profoundly altered. Although the plastin 1 knockout mice do not show any overt gross phenotype and present a normal intestinal microanatomy, the alterations result in increased fragility of the epithelium. This is seen as an increased sensitivity of the brush border to biochemical manipulations, decreased transepithelial resistance, and increased sensitivity to dextran sodium sulfate-induced colitis. Plastin 1 thus emerges as an important regulator of brush border morphology and stability through a novel role in the organization of the terminal web, possibly by connecting actin filaments to the underlying intermediate filament network.
Cytoskeleton | 2011
James Sillibourne; Christian G. Specht; Ignacio Izeddin; Ilse Hurbain; Phong Tran; Antoine Triller; Xavier Darzacq; Maxime Dahan; Michel Bornens
The structure of the centrosome was resolved by EM many years ago to reveal a pair of centrioles embedded in a dense network of proteins. More recently, the molecular composition of the centrosome was catalogued by mass spectroscopy and many novel components were identified. Determining precisely where a novel component localizes to within the centrosome remains a challenge, and until now it has required the use of immuno‐EM. This technique is both time‐consuming and unreliable, as it often fails due to problems with antigen accessibility. We have investigated the use of two nanoscopic techniques, photoactivated localization microscopy (PALM) and stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy (STORM), as alternative techniques for localizing centrosomal proteins. The localization of a known centrosomal component, the distal appendage protein Cep164 was investigated by direct STORM (dSTORM) and resolved with a high spatial resolution. We further validated the use of nanoscopic PALM imaging by showing that the previously uncharacterized centrosomal protein CCDC123 (Cep123) localizes to the distal appendages, forming ring‐like structures with a diameter of 500 nm. Our results demonstrate that both PALM and STORM imaging have great potential as alternatives to immuno‐EM.