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Dive into the research topics where Jean-Luc Battini is active.

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Featured researches published by Jean-Luc Battini.


Cell | 2003

The ubiquitous glucose transporter GLUT-1 is a receptor for HTLV.

Nicolas Manel; Felix J. Kim; Sandrina Kinet; Naomi Taylor; Marc Sitbon; Jean-Luc Battini

The human T cell leukemia virus (HTLV) is associated with leukemia and neurological syndromes. The physiopathological effects of HTLV envelopes are unclear and the identity of the receptor, present on all vertebrate cell lines, has been elusive. We show that the receptor binding domains of both HTLV-1 and -2 envelope glycoproteins inhibit glucose transport by interacting with GLUT-1, the ubiquitous vertebrate glucose transporter. Receptor binding and HTLV envelope-driven infection are selectively inhibited when glucose transport or GLUT-1 expression are blocked by cytochalasin B or siRNAs, respectively. Furthermore, ectopic expression of GLUT-1, but not the related transporter GLUT-3, restores HTLV infection abrogated by either GLUT-1 siRNAs or interfering HTLV envelope glycoproteins. Therefore, GLUT-1 is a receptor for HTLV. Perturbations in glucose metabolism resulting from interactions of HTLV envelope glycoproteins with GLUT-1 are likely to contribute to HTLV-associated disorders.


Cell | 2008

Erythrocyte Glut1 triggers dehydroascorbic acid uptake in mammals unable to synthesize vitamin C.

Amélie Montel-Hagen; Sandrina Kinet; Nicolas Manel; Cédric Mongellaz; Rainer Prohaska; Jean-Luc Battini; Jean Delaunay; Marc Sitbon; Naomi Taylor

Of all cells, human erythrocytes express the highest level of the Glut1 glucose transporter. However, the regulation and function of Glut1 during erythropoiesis are not known. Here, we report that glucose transport actually decreases during human erythropoiesis despite a >3-log increase in Glut1 transcripts. In contrast, Glut1-mediated transport of L-dehydroascorbic acid (DHA), an oxidized form of ascorbic acid (AA), is dramatically enhanced. We identified stomatin, an integral erythrocyte membrane protein, as regulating the switch from glucose to DHA transport. Notably though, we found that erythrocyte Glut1 and associated DHA uptake are unique traits of humans and the few other mammals that have lost the ability to synthesize AA from glucose. Accordingly, we show that mice, a species capable of synthesizing AA, express Glut4 but not Glut1 in mature erythrocytes. Thus, erythrocyte-specific coexpression of Glut1 with stomatin constitutes a compensatory mechanism in mammals that are unable to synthesize vitamin C.


Cell Stem Cell | 2014

Glucose and Glutamine Metabolism Regulate Human Hematopoietic Stem Cell Lineage Specification

Leal Oburoglu; Saverio Tardito; Vanessa Fritz; Stéphanie C. de Barros; Peggy Merida; Marco Craveiro; João I. Mamede; Gaspard Cretenet; Cédric Mongellaz; Xiuli An; Dorota Klysz; Jawida Touhami; Myriam Boyer-Clavel; Jean-Luc Battini; Valérie Dardalhon; Valérie S. Zimmermann; Narla Mohandas; Eyal Gottlieb; Marc Sitbon; Sandrina Kinet; Naomi Taylor

The metabolic state of quiescent hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) is an important regulator of self-renewal, but it is unclear whether or how metabolic parameters contribute to HSC lineage specification and commitment. Here, we show that the commitment of human and murine HSCs to the erythroid lineage is dependent upon glutamine metabolism. HSCs require the ASCT2 glutamine transporter and active glutamine metabolism for erythroid specification. Blocking this pathway diverts EPO-stimulated HSCs to differentiate into myelomonocytic fates, altering in vivo HSC responses and erythroid commitment under stress conditions such as hemolytic anemia. Mechanistically, erythroid specification of HSCs requires glutamine-dependent de novo nucleotide biosynthesis. Exogenous nucleosides rescue erythroid commitment of human HSCs under conditions of limited glutamine catabolism, and glucose-stimulated nucleotide biosynthesis further enhances erythroid specification. Thus, the availability of glutamine and glucose to provide fuel for nucleotide biosynthesis regulates HSC lineage commitment under conditions of metabolic stress.


Oncogene | 2005

HTLV-1 tropism and envelope receptor

Nicolas Manel; Jean-Luc Battini; Naomi Taylor; Marc Sitbon

The identification of CD4 as the primary receptor for HIV followed shortly after the discovery of the virus, but the HTLV receptor remained long elusive, until its recent identification as the GLUT1 glucose transporter. In the present review, we describe the status of the literature that surrounded this discovery as well as the in vitro and in vivo observations that led to the identification of GLUT1. Also, we will explore a few tracks to conciliate the in vitro and in vivo data on HTLV-1 tropism within the context of the HTLV literature that has accumulated over the past 25 years. A close examination of these data leads us to conclude that the preferential detection of HTLV-1 in CD4+ T lymphocyte subsets in vivo, even in the absence of leukemia, is not likely to be directly related to envelope receptor interactions, but rather to an array of postentry selection bottlenecks in vivo. Furthermore, we propose that infection of other hematopoietic and nonhematopoietic cells is likely to take place during the lifetime of an individual, with a burst early during the infection.


Cell Reports | 2013

Inorganic Phosphate Export by the Retrovirus Receptor XPR1 in Metazoans

Donatella Giovannini; Jawida Touhami; Pierre Charnet; Marc Sitbon; Jean-Luc Battini

Inorganic phosphate uptake is a universal function accomplished by transporters that are present across the living world. In contrast, no phosphate exporter has ever been identified in metazoans. Here, we show that depletion of XPR1, a multipass membrane molecule initially identified as the cell-surface receptor for xenotropic and polytropic murine leukemia retroviruses (X- and P-MLV), induced a decrease in phosphate export and that reintroduction of various XPR1 proteins, from fruit fly to human, rescued this defect. Inhibition of phosphate export was also obtained with a soluble ligand generated from the envelope-receptor-binding domain of X-MLV in all human cell lines tested, as well as in diverse stem cells and epithelial cells derived from renal proximal tubules, the main site of phosphate homeostasis regulation. These results provide new insights on phosphate export in metazoans and the role of Xpr1 in this function.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Glut1-mediated glucose transport regulates HIV infection

Séverine Loisel-Meyer; Louise Swainson; Marco Craveiro; Leal Oburoglu; Cédric Mongellaz; Caroline Costa; Marion Martinez; François-Loïc Cosset; Jean-Luc Battini; Leonard A. Herzenberg; Leonore A. Herzenberg; Kondala R. Atkuri; Marc Sitbon; Sandrina Kinet; Els Verhoeyen; Naomi Taylor

Cell cycle entry is commonly considered to positively regulate HIV-1 infection of CD4 T cells, raising the question as to how quiescent lymphocytes, representing a large portion of the viral reservoir, are infected in vivo. Factors such as the homeostatic cytokine IL-7 have been shown to render quiescent T cells permissive to HIV-1 infection, presumably by transiently stimulating their entry into the cell cycle. However, we show here that at physiological oxygen (O2) levels (2–5% O2 tension in lymphoid organs), IL-7 stimulation generates an environment permissive to HIV-1 infection, despite a significantly attenuated level of cell cycle entry. We identify the IL-7–induced increase in Glut1 expression, resulting in augmented glucose uptake, as a key factor in rendering these T lymphocytes susceptible to HIV-1 infection. HIV-1 infection of human T cells is abrogated either by impairment of Glut1 signal transduction or by siRNA-mediated Glut1 down-regulation. Consistent with this, we show that the susceptibility of human thymocyte subsets to HIV-1 infection correlates with Glut1 expression; single-round infection is markedly higher in the Glut1-expressing double-positive thymocyte population than in any of the Glut1-negative subsets. Thus, our studies reveal the Glut1-mediated metabolic pathway as a critical regulator of HIV-1 infection in human CD4 T cells and thymocytes.


Retrovirology | 2004

HTLV-1 and -2 envelope SU subdomains and critical determinants in receptor binding

Felix J. Kim; Nicolas Manel; Edith N Garrido; Carine Valle; Marc Sitbon; Jean-Luc Battini

BackgroundHuman T-cell leukemia virus (HTLV) -1 and -2 are deltaretroviruses that infect a wide range of cells. Glut1, the major vertebrate glucose transporter, has been shown to be the HTLV Env receptor. While it is well established that the extracellular surface component (SU) of the HTLV envelope glycoprotein (Env) harbors all of the determinants of interaction with the receptor, identification of SU subdomains that are necessary and sufficient for interaction with the receptor, as well as critical amino acids therein, remain to be precisely defined. Although highly divergent in the rest of their genomes, HTLV and murine leukemia virus (MLV) Env appear to be related and based on homologous motifs between the HTLV and MLV SU, we derived chimeric HTLV/MLV Env and soluble HTLV-1 and -2 truncated amino terminal SU subdomains.ResultsUsing these SU constructs, we found that the 183 and 178 amino terminal residues of the HTLV-1 and -2 Env, respectively, were sufficient to efficiently bind target cells of different species. Binding resulted from bona fide interaction with the HTLV receptor as isolated SU subdomains specifically interfered with HTLV Env-mediated binding, cell fusion, and cell-free as well as cell-to-cell infection. Therefore, the HTLV receptor-binding domain (RBD) lies in the amino terminus of the SU, immediately upstream of a central immunodominant proline rich region (Env residues 180 to 205), that we show to be dispensible for receptor-binding and interference. Moreover, we identified a highly conserved tyrosine residue at position 114 of HTLV-1 Env, Tyr114, as critical for receptor-binding and subsequent interference to cell-to-cell fusion and infection. Finally, we observed that residues in the vicinity of Tyr114 have lesser impact on receptor binding and had various efficiency in interference to post-binding events.ConclusionsThe first 160 residues of the HTLV-1 and -2 mature cleaved SU fold as autonomous domains that contain all the determinants required for binding the HTLV receptor.


Retrovirology | 2007

Isolated receptor binding domains of HTLV-1 and HTLV-2 envelopes bind Glut-1 on activated CD4+ and CD8+ T cells

Sandrina Kinet; Louise Swainson; Madakasira Lavanya; Cédric Mongellaz; Amélie Montel-Hagen; Marco Craveiro; Nicolas Manel; Jean-Luc Battini; Marc Sitbon; Naomi Taylor

BackgroundWe previously identified the glucose transporter Glut-1, a member of the multimembrane-spanning facilitative nutrient transporter family, as a receptor for both HTLV-1 and HTLV-2. However, a recent report concluded that Glut-1 cannot serve as a receptor for HTLV-1 on CD4 T cells: This was based mainly on their inability to detect Glut-1 on this lymphocyte subset using the commercial antibody mAb1418. It was therefore of significant interest to thoroughly assess Glut-1 expression on CD4 and CD8 T cells, and its association with HTLV-1 and -2 envelope binding.ResultsAs previously reported, ectopic expression of Glut-1 but not Glut-3 resulted in significantly augmented binding of tagged proteins harboring the receptor binding domains of either HTLV-1 or HTLV-2 envelope glycoproteins (H1RBD or H2RBD). Using antibodies raised against the carboxy-terminal peptide of Glut-1, we found that Glut-1 expression was significantly increased in both CD4 and CD8 cells following TCR stimulation. Corresponding increases in the binding of H1RBD as well as H2RBD, not detected on quiescent T cells, were observed following TCR engagement. Furthermore, increased Glut-1 expression was accompanied by a massive augmentation in glucose uptake in TCR-stimulated CD4 and CD8 lymphocytes. Finally, we determined that the apparent contradictory results obtained by Takenouchi et al were due to their monitoring of Glut-1 with a mAb that does not bind cells expressing endogenous Glut-1, including human erythrocytes that harbor 300,000 copies per cell.ConclusionTransfection of Glut-1 directly correlates with the capacities of HTLV-1 and HTLV-2 envelope-derived ligands to bind cells. Moreover, Glut-1 is induced by TCR engagement, resulting in massive increases in glucose uptake and binding of HTLV-1 and -2 envelopes to both CD4 and CD8 T lymphocytes. Therefore, Glut-1 is a primary binding receptor for HTLV-1 and HTLV-2 envelopes on activated CD4 as well as CD8 lymphocytes.


Journal of Virology | 2003

Human T-Cell Leukemia Virus Type 1 Envelope-Mediated Syncytium Formation Can Be Activated in Resistant Mammalian Cell Lines by a Carboxy-Terminal Truncation of the Envelope Cytoplasmic Domain

Felix J. Kim; Nicolas Manel; Yvan Boublik; Jean-Luc Battini; Marc Sitbon

ABSTRACT Human T-cell leukemia virus (HTLV) envelope (Env) glycoproteins induce fusion, leading to rampant syncytium formation in a broad range of cell lines. Here, we identified murine, hamster, canine, and porcine cell lines that are resistant to HTLV-1 Env-induced syncytium formation. This resistance was not due to the absence of functional receptors for HTLV Env, as these cells were susceptible to infection with HTLV Env-pseudotyped virions. As murine leukemia virus (MLV) Env and HTLV Env present close structural homologies (F. J. Kim, I. Seiliez, C. Denesvre, D. Lavillette, F. L. Cosset, and M. Sitbon, J. Biol. Chem. 275:23417-23420, 2000), and because activation of syncytium formation by MLV Env generally requires cleavage of the R peptide in the cytoplasmic domain of the Env transmembrane (TM) component, we assessed whether truncation of the cytoplasmic domain of HTLV Env would alleviate this resistance. Indeed, in all resistant cell lines, truncation of the last 8 amino acids of the HTLV Env cytoplasmic domain (HdC8) was sufficient to overcome resistance to HTLV Env-induced syncytium formation. Furthermore, HdC8-mediated cell-to-cell infection titers varied according to the target cell lines and could be significantly higher than that observed with HTLV Env on HeLa cells. These data indicate that a determinant located within the 8 carboxy-terminal cytoplasmic amino acids of TM plays a distinct role in HTLV Env-mediated cell-to-cell infection and syncytium formation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005

Human T Cell Leukemia Virus Envelope Binding and Virus Entry Are Mediated by Distinct Domains of the Glucose Transporter GLUT1

Nicolas Manel; Jean-Luc Battini; Marc Sitbon

The glucose transporter GLUT1, a member of the multimembrane-spanning facilitative nutrient transporter family, serves as a receptor for human T cell leukemia virus (HTLV) infection. Here, we show that the 7 amino acids of the extracellular loop 6 of GLUT1 (ECL6) placed in the context of the related GLUT3 transporter were sufficient for HTLV envelope binding. Glutamate residue 426 in ECL6 was identified as critical for binding. However, binding to ECL6 was not sufficient for HTLV envelope-driven infection. Infection required two additional determinants located in ECL1 and ECL5, which otherwise did not influence HTLV envelope binding. Moreover the single N-glycosylation chain located in ECL1 was not required for HTLV infection. Therefore, binding involves a discrete determinant in the carboxyl terminal ECL6, whereas post-binding events engage extracellular sequences in the amino and carboxyl terminus of GLUT1.

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Marc Sitbon

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Naomi Taylor

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Sandrina Kinet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Felix J. Kim

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jawida Touhami

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Cédric Mongellaz

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Madakasira Lavanya

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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