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Dive into the research topics where Isabelle Tardieux is active.

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Featured researches published by Isabelle Tardieux.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2010

The surface protein HvgA mediates group B streptococcus hypervirulence and meningeal tropism in neonates

Asmaa Tazi; Olivier Disson; Samuel Bellais; Abdelouhab Bouaboud; Nicolas Dmytruk; Shaynoor Dramsi; Michel-Yves Mistou; Huot Khun; Charlotte Mechler; Isabelle Tardieux; Patrick Trieu-Cuot; Marc Lecuit; Claire Poyart

Lethal meningitis triggered by the hypervirulent group B streptococcus clone ST-17 is mediated by a novel surface protein called HvgA.


Cell Host & Microbe | 2009

Host Cell Entry by Apicomplexa Parasites Requires Actin Polymerization in the Host Cell

Virginie Gonzalez; Audrey Combe; Violaine David; Nicholas A. Malmquist; Violaine Delorme; Carole Leroy; Samantha Blazquez; Robert Ménard; Isabelle Tardieux

Apicomplexa are obligate intracellular parasites that actively invade host cells using their membrane-associated, actin-myosin motor. The current view is that host cell invasion by Apicomplexa requires the formation of a parasite-host cell junction, which has been termed the moving junction, but does not require the active participation of host actin. Using Toxoplasma gondii tachyzoites and Plasmodium berghei sporozoites, we show that host actin participates in parasite entry. Parasites induce the formation of a ring-shaped F-actin structure in the host cell at the parasite-cell junction, which remains stable during parasite entry. The Arp2/3 complex, an actin-nucleating factor, is recruited at the ring structure and is important for parasite entry. We propose that Apicomplexa invasion of host cells requires not only the parasite motor but also de novo polymerization of host actin at the entry site for anchoring the junction on which the parasite pulls to penetrate the host cell.


Nature Communications | 2013

Apical membrane antigen 1 mediates apicomplexan parasite attachment but is dispensable for host cell invasion

Daniel Y. Bargieri; Nicole Andenmatten; Vanessa Lagal; Sabine Thiberge; Jamie A. Whitelaw; Isabelle Tardieux; Markus Meissner; Robert Ménard

Apicomplexan parasites invade host cells by forming a ring-like junction with the cell surface and actively sliding through the junction inside an intracellular vacuole. Apical membrane antigen 1 is conserved in apicomplexans and a long-standing malaria vaccine candidate. It is considered to have multiple important roles during host cell penetration, primarily in structuring the junction by interacting with the rhoptry neck 2 protein and transducing the force generated by the parasite motor during internalization. Here, we generate Plasmodium sporozoites and merozoites and Toxoplasma tachyzoites lacking apical membrane antigen 1, and find that the latter two are impaired in host cell attachment but the three display normal host cell penetration through the junction. Therefore, apical membrane antigen 1, rather than an essential invasin, is a dispensable adhesin of apicomplexan zoites. These genetic data have implications on the use of apical membrane antigen 1 or the apical membrane antigen 1–rhoptry neck 2 interaction as targets of intervention strategies against malaria or other diseases caused by apicomplexans.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2013

A Toxoplasma dense granule protein, GRA24, modulates the early immune response to infection by promoting a direct and sustained host p38 MAPK activation

Laurence Braun; Marie-Pierre Brenier-Pinchart; Manickam Yogavel; Aurélie Curt-Varesano; Rose-Laurence Curt-Bertini; Tahir Hussain; Sylvie Kieffer-Jaquinod; Yohann Couté; Hervé Pelloux; Isabelle Tardieux; Amit Sharma; Hassan Belrhali; Alexandre Bougdour; Mohamed-Ali Hakimi

Toxoplasma gondii secretes a novel dense granule protein, GRA24, that traffics from the vacuole to the host cell nucleus where it prolongs p38a activation and correlates with proinflammatory cytokine production.


Cell Host & Microbe | 2011

Independent Roles of Apical Membrane Antigen 1 and Rhoptry Neck Proteins during Host Cell Invasion by Apicomplexa

Donatella Giovannini; Stephan Späth; Céline Lacroix; Audrey Perazzi; Daniel Y. Bargieri; Vanessa Lagal; Camille Lebugle; Audrey Combe; Sabine Thiberge; Patricia Baldacci; Isabelle Tardieux; Robert Ménard

During invasion, apicomplexan parasites form an intimate circumferential contact with the host cell, the tight junction (TJ), through which they actively glide. The TJ, which links the parasite motor to the host cell cytoskeleton, is thought to be composed of interacting apical membrane antigen 1 (AMA1) and rhoptry neck (RON) proteins. Here we find that, in Plasmodium berghei, while both AMA1 and RON4 are important for merozoite invasion of erythrocytes, only RON4 is required for sporozoite invasion of hepatocytes, indicating that RON4 acts independently of AMA1 in the sporozoite. Further, in the Toxoplasma gondii tachyzoite, AMA1 is dispensable for normal RON4 ring and functional TJ assembly but enhances tachyzoite apposition to the cell and internalization frequency. We propose that while the RON proteins act at the TJ, AMA1 mainly functions on the zoite surface to permit correct attachment to the cell, which may facilitate invasion depending on the zoite-cell combination.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2007

SET8-Mediated Methylations of Histone H4 Lysine 20 Mark Silent Heterochromatic Domains in Apicomplexan Genomes

Céline F. Sautel; Dominique Cannella; Olivier Bastien; Sylvie Kieffer; Delphine Aldebert; Jérôme Garin; Isabelle Tardieux; Hassan Belrhali; Mohamed-Ali Hakimi

ABSTRACT Posttranslational histone modifications modulate chromatin-templated processes in various biological systems. H4K20 methylation is considered to have an evolutionarily ancient role in DNA repair and genome integrity, while its function in heterochromatin function and gene expression is thought to have arisen later during evolution. Here, we identify and characterize H4K20 methylases of the Set8 family in Plasmodium and Toxoplasma, two medically important members of the protozoan phylum Apicomplexa. Remarkably, parasite Set8-related proteins display H4K20 mono-, di-, and trimethylase activities, in striking contrast to the monomethylase-restricted human Set8. Structurally, few residues forming the substrate-specific channel dictate enzyme methylation multiplicity. These enzymes are cell cycle regulated and focally enriched at pericentric and telomeric heterochromatin in both parasites. Collectively, our findings provide new insights into the evolution of Set8-mediated biochemical pathways, suggesting that the heterochromatic function of the marker is not restricted to metazoans. Thus, these lower eukaryotes have developed a diverse panel of biological stages through their high capacity to differentiate, and epigenetics only begins to emerge as a strong determinant of their biology.


Journal of Cell Science | 2012

Toxofilin upregulates the host cortical actin cytoskeleton dynamics, facilitating Toxoplasma invasion

Violaine D. Delorme-Walker; Marie Abrivard; Vanessa Lagal; Karen L. Anderson; Audrey Perazzi; Virginie Gonzalez; Christopher Page; Juliette Chauvet; Wendy Ochoa; Niels Volkmann; Dorit Hanein; Isabelle Tardieux

Summary Toxoplasma gondii, a human pathogen and a model apicomplexan parasite, actively and rapidly invades host cells. To initiate invasion, the parasite induces the formation of a parasite–cell junction, and progressively propels itself through the junction, inside a newly formed vacuole that encloses the entering parasite. Little is known about how a parasite that is a few microns in diameter overcomes the host cell cortical actin barrier to achieve the remarkably rapid process of internalization (less than a few seconds). Using correlative light and electron microscopy in conjunction with electron tomography and three-dimensional image analysis we identified that toxofilin, an actin-binding protein, secreted by invading parasites correlates with localized sites of disassembly of the host cell actin meshwork. Moreover, quantitative fluorescence speckle microscopy of cells expressing toxofilin showed that toxofilin regulates actin filament disassembly and turnover. Furthermore, Toxoplasma tachyzoites lacking toxofilin, were found to be impaired in cortical actin disassembly and exhibited delayed invasion kinetics. We propose that toxofilin locally upregulates actin turnover thus increasing depolymerization events at the site of entry that in turn loosens the local host cell actin meshwork, facilitating parasite internalization and vacuole folding.


Traffic | 2008

Migration of Apicomplexa Across Biological Barriers: The Toxoplasma and Plasmodium Rides

Isabelle Tardieux; Robert Ménard

The invasive stages of Apicomplexa parasites, called zoites, have been largely studied in in vitro systems, with a special emphasis on their unique gliding and host cell invasive capacities. In contrast, the means by which these parasites reach their destination in their hosts are still poorly understood. We summarize here our current understanding of the cellular basis of in vivo parasitism by two well‐studied Apicomplexa zoites, the Toxoplasma tachyzoite and the Plasmodium sporozoite. Despite being close relatives, these two zoites use different strategies to reach their goal and establish infection.


Cellular Microbiology | 2014

Toxoplasma exports dense granule proteins beyond the vacuole to the host cell nucleus and rewires the host genome expression

Alexandre Bougdour; Isabelle Tardieux; Mohamed-Ali Hakimi

Toxoplasma gondii is the most widespread apicomplexan parasite and occupies a large spectrum of niches by infecting virtually any warm‐blooded animals. As an obligate intracellular parasite, Toxoplasma has evolved a repertoire of strategies to fine‐tune the cellular environment in an optimal way to promote growth and persistence in host tissues hence increasing the chance to be transmitted to new hosts. Short and long‐term intracellular survival is associated with Toxoplasma ability to both evade the host deleterious immune defences and to stimulate a beneficial immune balance by governing host cell gene expression. It is only recently that parasite proteins responsible for driving these transcriptional changes have been identified. While proteins contained in the apical secretory Rhoptry organelle have already been identified as bona fide secreted effectors that divert host signalling pathways, recent findings revealed that dense granule proteins should be added to the growing list of effectors as they reach the host cell cytoplasm and nucleus and target various host cell pathways in the course of cell infection. Herein, we emphasize on a novel subfamily of dense granule residentproteins, exemplified with the GRA16 and GRA24 members we recently discovered as both are exported beyond the vacuole‐containing parasites and reach the host cell nucleus to reshape the host genome expression.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2016

Toxoplasma gondii TgIST co-opts host chromatin repressors dampening STAT1-dependent gene regulation and IFN-γ–mediated host defenses

Laurence Braun; Marie-Pierre Brenier-Pinchart; Julien Vollaire; Véronique Josserand; Rose-Laurence Bertini; Aurélie Varesano; Bastien Touquet; Pieter-Jan De Bock; Yohann Couté; Isabelle Tardieux; Alexandre Bougdour; Mohamed-Ali Hakimi

Gay et al. identify a Toxoplasma gondii secreted effector that recruits NuRD transcriptional repressor and blocks IFN-γ–stimulated STAT1-dependent gene expression, thus dampening host responses to infection.

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Virginie Gonzalez

Paris Descartes University

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Bastien Touquet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Laurence Braun

Joseph Fourier University

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Violaine Delorme

Scripps Research Institute

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