Irene Garcia
University of Geneva
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Publication
Featured researches published by Irene Garcia.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997
Yves Chicheportiche; Paul R. Bourdon; Haoda Xu; Yen-Ming Hsu; Hamish S. Scott; Catherine Hession; Irene Garcia; Jeffrey L. Browning
The members of the tumor necrosis factor (TNF) family play pivotal roles in the regulation of the immune system. Here we describe a new ligand in this family, designated TWEAK. The mouse and human versions of this protein are unusually conserved with 93% amino acid identity in the receptor binding domain. The protein was efficiently secreted from cells indicating that, like TNF, TWEAK may have the long range effects of a secreted cytokine. TWEAK transcripts were abundant and found in many tissues, suggesting that TWEAK and TRAIL belong to a new group of widely expressed ligands. Like many members of the TNF family, TWEAK was able to induce interleukin-8 synthesis in a number of cell lines. The human adenocarcinoma cell line, HT29, underwent apoptosis in the presence of both TWEAK and interferon-γ. Thus, TWEAK resembles many other TNF ligands in the capacity to induce cell death; however, the fact that TWEAK-sensitive cells are relatively rare suggests that TWEAK along with lymphotoxins α/β and possibly CD30L trigger death via a weaker, nondeath domain-dependent mechanism.
The EMBO Journal | 1997
Ivan Rodriguez; Christiane Ody; Kimi Araki; Irene Garcia; Pierre Vassalli
Transgenic mice expressing high levels of the BclxL or Bcl2 proteins in the male germinal cells show a highly abnormal adult spermatogenesis accompanied by sterility. This appears to result from the prevention of an early and massive wave of apoptosis in the testis, which occurs among germinal cells during the first round of spermatogenesis. In contrast, sporadic apoptosis among spermatogonia, which occurs in normal adult testis, is not prevented in adult transgenic mice. The physiological early apoptotic wave in the testis is coincident, in timing and localization, with a temporary high expression of the apoptosis‐promoting protein Bax, which disappears at sexual maturity. The critical role played by the intracellular balance, probably hormonally controlled, of the BclxL and Bax proteins (Bcl2 is apparently not expressed in normal mouse testis) in this early apoptotic wave is shown by the occurrence of a comparable testicular syndrome in mice defective in the bax gene. The apoptotic wave appears necessary for normal mature spermatogenesis to develop, probably because it maintains a critical cell number ratio between some germinal cell stages and Sertoli cells, whose normal functions and differentiation involve an elaborate network of communication.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1995
Yoshitaka Miyazaki; Kimi Araki; Christian Vesin; Irene Garcia; Yusuf Kapanci; Jeffrey A. Whitsett; Pierre F. Piguet; Pierre Vassalli
The murine TNF-alpha gene was expressed under the control of the human surfactant protein SP-C promoter in transgenic mice. A number of the SP-C TNF-alpha mice died at birth or after a few weeks with very severe lung lesions. Surviving mice transmitted a pulmonary disease to their offspring, the severity and evolution of which was related to the level of TNF-alpha mRNA in the lung; TNF-alpha RNA was detected in alveolar epithelium, presumably in type II epithelial cells. In a longitudinal study of two independent mouse lines, pulmonary pathology, at 1-2 mo of age, consisted of a leukocytic alveolitis with a predominance of T lymphocytes. Leukocyte infiltration was associated with endothelial changes and increased levels of mRNA for the endothelial adhesion molecule VCAM-1. In the following months, alveolar spaces enlarged in association with thickening of the alveolar walls due to an accumulation of desmin-containing fibroblasts, collagen fibers, and lymphocytes. Alveolar surfaces were lined by regenerating type II epithelial cells, and alveolar spaces contained desquamating epithelial cells in places. Platelet trapping in the damaged alveolar capillaries was observed. Pulmonary pathology in the SP-C TNF-alpha mice bears a striking resemblance to human idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, in which increased expression of TNF-alpha in type II epithelial cells has also been noted. These mice provide a valuable animal model for understanding the pathogenesis of pulmonary fibrosis and exploring possible therapeutic approaches.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1997
Patrick Ammann; René Rizzoli; Jean-Philippe Bonjour; Sandrine Bourrin; Jean-Marc Meyer; Pierre Vassalli; Irene Garcia
To evaluate the role of tumor necrosis factor (TNF alpha) in bone loss resulting from estrogen deficiency, the effects of ovariectomy were explored in six-month-old transgenic mice expressing high blood levels of a soluble TNF receptor type I (sTNFR1)-FcIgG3 fusion protein, which neutralizes TNF alpha, and in their nontransgenic littermates used as controls. These transgenic mice were identical to control mice in bone mass (evaluated by bone mineral density and content) and strength. 12 weeks after ovariectomy, the decrease in bone mass and increase in osteocalcin (marker of bone turnover) found in control mice were not observed in transgenic mice, which were not different from sham-operated mice, transgenic or not. This observation suggests a critical role for TNF alpha in the pathogenesis of bone loss induced by estrogen deficiency, a common cause of morbidity in postmenopausal women.
Journal of Immunology | 2002
Maria L. Olleros; Reto Guler; Nadia Corazza; Dominique Vesin; Hans-Pietro Eugster; Gilles Marchal; Pierre Chavarot; Christoph Mueller; Irene Garcia
The contribution of a transmembrane (Tm) form of TNF to protective immunity against Mycobacterium bovis bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) was studied in transgenic (tg) mice expressing a noncleavable Tm TNF but lacking the TNF/lymphotoxin-α (LT-α) locus (Tm TNF tg mice). These mice were as resistant to BCG infection as wild-type mice, whereas TNF/LT-α−/−, TNF−/−, and LT-α−/− mice succumbed. Tm TNF tg mice developed granulomas of smaller size but at 2- to 4-fold increased frequencies compared with wild-type mice. Granulomas were mainly formed by monocytes and activated macrophages expressing Tm TNF mRNA and accumulating acid phosphatase. NO synthase 2 activation as a key macrophage bactericidal mechanism was low during the acute phase of infection in Tm TNF tg mice but was still sufficient to limit bacterial growth and increased in late infection. While infection with virulent Mycobacterium tuberculosis resulted in very rapid death of TNF/LT-α−/− mice, it also resulted in survival of Tm TNF tg mice which presented an increase in the number of CFU in spleen (5-fold) and lungs (10-fold) as compared with bacterial load of wild-type mice. In conclusion, the Tm form of TNF induces an efficient cell-mediated immunity and total resistance against BCG even in the absence of LT-α and secreted TNF. However, Tm TNF-mediated protection against virulent M. tuberculosis infection can also be efficient but not as strong as in BCG infection, in which cognate cellular interactions may play a more predominant role in providing long-term surveillance and containment of BCG-infected macrophages.
Blood | 2012
Solenne Vigne; Gaby Palmer; Praxedis Martin; Céline Lamacchia; D. Strebel; Emiliana Rodriguez; Maria L. Olleros; Dominique Vesin; Irene Garcia; Francesca Ronchi; Federica Sallusto; John E. Sims; Cem Gabay
The interleukin-1 (IL-1) superfamily of cytokines comprises a set of pivotal mediators of inflammation. Among them, the action of IL-36 cytokines in immune responses has remained elusive. In a recent study, we demonstrated a direct effect of IL-36 on immune cells. Here we show that, among T cells, the IL-36 receptor is predominantly expressed on naive CD4(+) T cells and that IL-36 cytokines act directly on naive T cells by enhancing both cell proliferation and IL-2 secretion. IL-36β acts in synergy with IL-12 to promote Th1 polarization and IL-36 signaling is also involved in mediating Th1 immune responses to Bacillus Calmette-Guerin infection in vivo. Our findings point toward a critical function of IL-36 in the priming of Th1 cell responses in vitro, and in adaptive immunity in a model of mycobacterial infection in vivo.
Journal of Neurochemistry | 2004
Fabienne de Bilbao; Denis Arsenijevic; Philippe Vallet; Ole P. Hjelle; Ole Petter Ottersen; Constantin Bouras; Yvette Raffin; Karin Abou; Wolfgang Langhans; Sheila Collins; Julie Plamondon; Marie-Clotilde Alves-Guerra; Anne Haguenauer; Irene Garcia; Denis Richard; Daniel Ricquier; Panteleimon Giannakopoulos
Uncoupling protein 2 (UCP2) is suggested to be a regulator of reactive oxygen species production in mitochondria. We performed a detailed study of brain injury, including regional and cellular distribution of UCP2 mRNA, as well as measures of oxidative stress markers following permanent middle cerebral artery occlusion in UCP2 knockout (KO) and wild‐type (WT) mice. Three days post ischemia, there was a massive induction of UCP2 mRNA confined to microglia in the peri‐infarct area of WT mice. KO mice were less sensitive to ischemia as assessed by reduced brain infarct size, decreased densities of deoxyuridine triphosphate nick end‐labelling (TUNEL)‐labelled cells in the peri‐infact area and lower levels of lipid peroxidation compared with WT mice. This resistance may be related to the substantial increase of basal manganese superoxide dismutase levels in neurons of KO mice. Importantly, we found a specific decrease of mitochondrial glutathione (GSH) levels in UCP2 expressing microglia of WT, but not in KO mice after ischemia. This specific association between UCP2 and mitochondrial GSH levels regulation was further confirmed using lipopolysaccharide models of peripheral inflammation, and in purified peritoneal macrophages. Moreover, our data imply that UCP2 is not directly involved in the regulation of ROS production but acts by regulating mitochondrial GSH levels in microglia.
American Journal of Pathology | 2005
Maria L. Olleros; Reto Guler; Dominique Vesin; Roumen Parapanov; Gilles Marchal; Eduardo Martinez-Soria; Nadia Corazza; Jean-Claude Pache; Christoph Mueller; Irene Garcia
To study the specific role of transmembrane tumor necrosis factor (TmTNF) in host defense mechanisms against bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG) and Mycobacterium tuberculosis infections, we compared the immune responses of TNF/lymphotoxin (LT)-alpha(-/-) mice expressing a noncleavable transgenic TmTNF (TmTNF tg) to those of TNF/LT-alpha(-/-) and wild-type mice. Susceptibility of TNF/LT-alpha(-/-) mice to BCG infection was associated with impaired induction of systemic RANTES but not of monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 (MCP-1), the development of excessive local and systemic Th1-type immune responses, and a substantially reduced inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) activity. Resistance of TmTNF tg mice to BCG infection was associated with efficient activation of iNOS in granulomas and with the regulated release of local and systemic chemokines and Th1-type cytokines. However, M. tuberculosis infection of TmTNF tg mice resulted in longer survival and enhanced resistance compared to TNF/LT-alpha(-/-) mice but higher sensitivity than wild-type mice. TmTNF tg mice exhibited reduced pulmonary iNOS expression and showed an exacerbated cellular infiltration in the lungs despite a modest bacillary content. Our data thus indicate a role for TmTNF in host defense against mycobacteria by contributing to induction and regulation of Th1-type cytokine and chemokine expression leading to development of bactericidal granulomas expressing iNOS, which critically determines susceptibility versus resistance of the host to mycobacterial infections.
Frontiers in Immunology | 2015
Leslie Chávez-Galán; Maria L. Olleros; Dominique Vesin; Irene Garcia
Monocytes are considered to be precursor cells of the mononuclear phagocytic system, and macrophages are one of the leading members of this cellular system. Macrophages play highly diverse roles in maintaining an organism’s integrity by either directly participating in pathogen elimination or repairing tissue under sterile inflammatory conditions. There are different subpopulations of macrophages and each one has its own characteristics and functions. In this review, we summarize present knowledge on the polarization of macrophages that allows the generation of subpopulations called classically activated macrophages or M1 and alternative activated macrophages or M2. Furthermore, there are macrophages that their origin and characterization still remain unclear but have been involved as main players in some human pathologies. Thus, we also review three other categories of macrophages: tumor-associated macrophages, CD169+ macrophages, and the recently named TCR+ macrophages. Based on the literature, we provide information on the molecular characterization of these macrophage subpopulations and their specific involvement in several human pathologies such as cancer, infectious diseases, obesity, and asthma. The refined characterization of the macrophage subpopulations can be useful in designing new strategies, supplementing those already established for the treatment of diseases using macrophages as a therapeutic target.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2007
J. M. Rodríguez-Martínez; C. Velasco; Irene Garcia; María Eliecer Cano; Luis Martínez-Martínez; Álvaro Pascual
ABSTRACT The influence of qnrA1 on the development of quinolone resistance in Enterobacteriaceae was evaluated by using the mutant prevention concentration parameter. The expression of qnrA1 considerably increased the mutant prevention concentration compared to strains without this gene. In the presence of qnrA1, mutations in gyrA and parC genes were easily selected to produce high levels of quinolone resistance.