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Dive into the research topics where Jean-Marie Seigneurin is active.

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Featured researches published by Jean-Marie Seigneurin.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2005

Long-Term Shedding of Infectious Epstein-Barr Virus after Infectious Mononucleosis

Samira Fafi-Kremer; Patrice Morand; Jean-Paul Brion; Patricia Pavese; Monique Baccard; Raphaële Germi; Odile Genoulaz; Sandrine Nicod; Michel Jolivet; Rob W.H. Ruigrok; Jean-Paul Stahl; Jean-Marie Seigneurin

Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) DNA loads in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs), plasma, and saliva, as well as infectivity of the virus in saliva, were evaluated in 20 patients for 6 months after the onset of infectious mononucleosis (IM). All patients displayed sustained high EBV DNA loads in the saliva, associated with a persistent infectivity of saliva at day 180. EBV DNA load in PBMCs decreased significantly from day 0 to day 180 (in spite of a viral rebound between day 30 and day 90 in 90% of the patients), and EBV DNA rapidly disappeared from plasma. These data show that patients with IM remain highly infectious during convalescence.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2002

The Crystal Structure of the Epstein–Barr Virus Protease Shows Rearrangement of the Processed C Terminus

Marlyse Buisson; Jean-François Hernandez; David Lascoux; Guy Schoehn; Eric Forest; Gérard J. Arlaud; Jean-Marie Seigneurin; Rob W.H. Ruigrok; Wim P. Burmeister

Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) belongs to the gamma-herpesvirinae subfamily of the Herpesviridae. The protease domain of the assemblin protein of herpesviruses forms a monomer-dimer equilibrium in solution. The protease domain of EBV was expressed in Escherichia coli and its structure was solved by X-ray crystallography to 2.3A resolution after inhibition with diisopropyl-fluorophosphate (DFP). The overall structure confirms the conservation of the homodimer and its structure throughout the alpha, beta, and gamma-herpesvirinae. The substrate recognition could be modelled using information from the DFP binding, from a crystal contact, suggesting that the substrate forms an antiparallel beta-strand extending strand beta5, and from the comparison with the structure of a peptidomimetic inhibitor bound to cytomegalovirus protease. The long insert between beta-strands 1 and 2, which was disordered in the KSHV protease structure, was found to be ordered in the EBV protease and shows the same conformation as observed for proteases in the alpha and beta-herpesvirus families. In contrast to previous structures, the long loop located between beta-strands 5 and 6 is partially ordered, probably due to DFP inhibition and a crystal contact. It also contributes to substrate recognition. The protease shows a specific recognition of its own C terminus in a binding pocket involving residue Phe210 of the other monomer interacting across the dimer interface. This suggests conformational changes of the protease domain after its release from the assemblin precursor followed by burial of the new C terminus and a possible effect onto the monomer-dimer equilibrium. The importance of the processed C terminus was confirmed using a mutant protease carrying a C-terminal extension and a mutated release site, which shows different solution properties and a strongly reduced enzymatic activity.


Cancer | 1994

Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in four children infected with the human immunodeficiency virus. Association with Epstein-Barr virus and treatment

David Nadal; Rosmarie Caduff; Eva Frey; Shabir Hassam; Dieter R. Zimmermann; Jean-Marie Seigneurin; Hans-JÜRg Plüss; Reinhard A. Seger

Background. Reports on lymphoid malignancy and its treatment in children infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) are limited.


Journal of Virological Methods | 1991

The polymerase chain reaction for the detection of HIV-1 genomic RNA in plasma from infected individuals

Michèle Ottmann; Patricia Innocenti; Muriel Thenadey; Max Micoud; François Pelloquin; Jean-Marie Seigneurin

HIV (human immunodeficiency virus) viraemia in serum or plasma of HIV-infected individuals was investigated by the polymerase chain reaction assay (PCR) in combination with reverse transcription to detect HIV-1 genomic RNA. Before PCR, plasma or serum was ultracentrifuged, precipitated virions were then treated with a RNase-free DNase, and a cDNA from the HIV-1 genomic RNA was synthesized. Thirty-three fresh plasma and seven sera from either HIV-1 antibody-positive individuals or patients treated with AZT were tested. Plasma from three patients were assayed 3 or 6 months apart. Twelve sera from HIV-1 antibody-negative individuals were used as negative control. PCR was performed with primers in LTR, gag and env regions: 11 of 40 samples were positive with three primer pairs, 16 with two primer pairs and 11 with only one primer pair. PCR on HIV-1 genomic cDNA was positive in 38 out of the 40 plasma or serum samples (95%), regardless of the clinical stage of the infection: HIV-1 was detected in 14 of the 15 untreated subjects and in 24 of the 25 AZT-treated patients. HIV p24 antigen was detected in the serum of 38% of subjects (15 of 40). The results suggest that this method is suitable for the detection of viral particles in plasma or serum from HIV-1-infected individuals irrespective of antiviral treatment.


The Journal of Molecular Diagnostics | 2008

Evaluation of the Epstein-Barr Virus R-Gene Quantification Kit in Whole Blood with Different Extraction Methods and PCR Platforms

Samira Fafi-Kremer; Patrice Morand; Côme Barranger; Gérard Barguès; Stéphane Magro; Jérôme Bés; Philippe Bourgeois; Martine Joannes; Jean-Marie Seigneurin

Reliable real-time quantitative PCR assays to measure Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) DNA load (EBV) are useful for monitoring EBV-associated diseases. We evaluated a new commercial kit, EBV R-gene Quantification kit (Argene, Varilhes, France) to quantify EBV DNA load in whole blood. Assay performance was assessed with two PCR platforms (LightCycler 2.0 and SmartCycler 2.0) and three commercial DNA extraction methods. The assay was compared with our in-house real-time EBV PCR using samples from the Quality Control for Molecular Diagnostics 2006 EBV proficiency program and using 167 whole-blood specimens from individuals with infectious mononucleosis, from transplanted or HIV-infected patients, and from EBV-seropositive healthy carriers. The EBV R-gene assay was sensitive to 500 copies of EBV DNA per milliliter of whole blood with the two PCR platforms and the three extraction methods and was linear across 4 orders of magnitude. Intra- and interassay coefficients of variations were less than 20%. Nine of 10 samples tested with the EBV R-gene were in agreement with the expected qualitative results of the Quality Control for Molecular Diagnostics 2006 EBV proficiency program, and 7 of 10 samples were within +/-0.5 log units of the expected quantitative values, with discrepant results mostly observed for low viral load (ie, <1000 copies/ml). In the clinical specimens, the correlation between the R-gene assay and the in-house PCR was high (r=0.92). In conclusion, the EBV R-gene assay accurately assesses the EBV DNA load in whole blood of patients with various forms of EBV infections.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2005

A Prospective Follow-Up of Epstein-Barr Virus LMP1 Genotypes in Saliva and Blood during Infectious Mononucleosis

Samira Fafi-Kremer; Patrice Morand; Raphaële Germi; Mirvat Ballout; Jean-Paul Brion; Odile Genoulaz; Sandrine Nicod; Jean-Paul Stahl; Rob W.H. Ruigrok; Jean-Marie Seigneurin

To monitor multiple Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infections during the early and convalescent stages of infectious mononucleosis (IM), a cloning and sequencing study of the LMP1 gene was conducted in saliva and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from 23 patients with IM at day 0 (D0) and day 180 (D180) after the onset of the disease. Multiple EBV strains were detected in 9 (39%) of the patients during follow-up, with 7 of 9 cases detected as early as D0. Six of the nine patients harbored the same dominant strain in saliva and PBMCs during follow-up, with a trend toward a restriction of the number of EBV strains in saliva but not in PBMCs at D180. Furthermore, transmission of a minor strain was observed between partners in a heterosexual couple. There was no correlation between multiple infections and EBV DNA load in either compartment.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2008

Prion early kinetics revisited using a streptomycin-based PrPres extraction method

Edwige Leclere; Aly Moussa; Latifa Chouaf-Lakhdar; Anthony W. Coleman; Jean-Marie Seigneurin; Hervé Perron; Anna Bencsik

The use of streptomycin in the PrP(sc) detection procedures represents a new and attractive way to detect more PrP(sc), the best marker for the transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs). Actually, the streptomycin PrP(sc) aggregating property reported recently was established as beneficial in PrP(sc) detection using immunohistochemistry in diagnostic as well as in experimental conditions. The present study reports in details how to use advantageously this original streptomycin property in PrP(res) biochemical extraction and detection. Using TSE diagnostic brain material, specificity and increased sensitivity using streptomycin-treated samples were substantiated. Then an early sequential brain and spleen sampling (from 7 to 49 days post-inoculation) from C57Bl/6 mice inoculated intra-cerebrally or intra-peritoneally with C506M3 scrapie strain was analysed using streptomycin versus ultracentrifugation PrP(res) extraction. Whatever the inoculation route, streptomycin allowed earlier PrP(res) detection in spleen (7 d.p.i.), then in brain suggesting a stronger affinity of the infectious agent for the lymphoid compartment.


Journal of Clinical Virology | 2004

Assessment of automated DNA extraction coupled with real-time PCR for measuring Epstein–Barr virus load in whole blood, peripheral mononuclear cells and plasma

Samira Fafi-Kremer; Karen Brengel-Pesce; Gérard Barguès; Marie-Josette Bourgeat; Odile Genoulaz; Jean-Marie Seigneurin; Patrice Morand


Archive | 1993

Process and culture medium for the production of cells infected by a multiple sclerosis associated virus

Herve Perron; Jean-Marie Seigneurin


Journal of Virological Methods | 2007

Real-time quantitative PCR for assessment of antiviral drug effects against Epstein-Barr virus replication and EBV late mRNA expression

Mirvat Ballout; Raphaële Germi; Samira Fafi-Kremer; Josette Guimet; Gérard Barguès; Jean-Marie Seigneurin; Patrice Morand

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Herve Perron

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Patrice Morand

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Odile Genoulaz

Joseph Fourier University

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Raphaële Germi

Joseph Fourier University

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Jean-Paul Brion

Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Grenoble

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Jean-Paul Stahl

Joseph Fourier University

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Mirvat Ballout

Joseph Fourier University

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