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Dive into the research topics where Jean Robert Harle is active.

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Featured researches published by Jean Robert Harle.


Medicine | 2000

Q fever 1985-1998. Clinical and epidemiologic features of 1,383 infections.

Didier Raoult; Hervé Tissot-Dupont; Cédric Foucault; Joanny Gouvernet; Pierre Edouard Fournier; E. Bernit; Andreas Stein; Meyer Nesri; Jean Robert Harle; Pierre Jean Weiller

In order to describe the clinical features and the epidemiologic findings of 1,383 patients hospitalized in France for acute or chronic Q fever, we conducted a retrospective analysis based on 74,702 sera tested in our diagnostic center, National Reference Center and World Health Organization Collaborative Center for Rickettsial Diseases. The physicians in charge of all patients with evidence of acute Q fever (seroconversion and/or presence of IgM) or chronic Q fever (prolonged disease and/or IgG antibody titer to phase I of Coxiella burnetii > or = 800) were asked to complete a questionnaire, which was computerized. A total of 1,070 cases of acute Q fever was recorded. Males were more frequently diagnosed, and most cases were identified in the spring. Cases were observed more frequently in patients between the ages of 30 and 69 years. We classified patients according to the different clinical forms of acute Q fever, hepatitis (40%), pneumonia and hepatitis (20%), pneumonia (17%), isolated fever (17%), meningoencephalitis (1%), myocarditis (1%), pericarditis (1%), and meningitis (0.7%). We showed for the first time, to our knowledge, that different clinical forms of acute Q fever are associated with significantly different patient status. Hepatitis occurred in younger patients, pneumonia in older and more immunocompromised patients, and isolated fever was more common in female patients. Risk factors were not specifically associated with a clinical form except meningoencephalitis and contact with animals. The prognosis was usually good except for those with myocarditis or meningoencephalitis as 13 patients died who were significantly older than others. For chronic Q fever, antibody titers to C. burnetii phase I above 800 and IgA above 50 were predictive in 94% of cases. Among 313 patients with chronic Q fever, 259 had endocarditis, mainly patients with previous valvulopathy; 25 had an infection of vascular aneurysm or prosthesis. Patients with endocarditis or vascular infection were more frequently immunocompromised and older than those with acute Q fever. Fifteen women were infected during pregnancy; they were significantly more exposed to animals and gave birth to only 5 babies, only 2 with a normal birth weight. More rare manifestations observed were chronic hepatitis (8 cases), osteoarticular infection (7 cases), and chronic pericarditis (3 cases). Nineteen patients were observed who experienced first a documented acute infection, then, due to underlying conditions, a chronic infection. To our knowledge, we report the largest series of Q fever to date. Our results indicate that Q fever is a protean disease, grossly underestimated, with some of the clinical manifestations being only recently reported, such as Q fever during pregnancy, chronic vascular infection, osteomyelitis, pericarditis, and myocarditis. Our data confirm that chronic Q fever is mainly determined by host factors and demonstrate for the first time that host factors may also play a role in the clinical expression of acute Q fever.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2014

Modular transcriptional repertoire analyses of adults with systemic lupus erythematosus reveal distinct type I and type II interferon signatures.

L. Chiche; N. Jourde-Chiche; Elizabeth Whalen; Scott R. Presnell; Vivian H. Gersuk; Kristen K Dang; Esperanza Anguiano; Charlie Quinn; S. Burtey; Yvon Berland; G. Kaplanski; Jean Robert Harle; Virginia Pascual; Damien Chaussabel

The role of interferon‐α (IFNα) in the pathogenesis of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is strongly supported by gene expression studies. The aim of this study was to improve characterization of the blood IFN signature in adult SLE patients.


European Journal of Immunology | 2004

Comparative analysis of NK cell subset distribution in normal and lymphoproliferative disease of granular lymphocyte conditions

Véronique Pascal; Nicolas Schleinitz; Corinne Brunet; Sophie Ravet; Elodie Bonnet; Xavier Lafarge; Mhammed Touinssi; Denis Reviron; Jean François Viallard; Jean François Moreau; Julie Déchanet-Merville; Patrick Blanco; Jean Robert Harle; José Sampol; Eric Vivier; Françoise Dignat-George; Pascale Paul

We have characterized the heterogeneity of human blood NK cell subsets defined by expression of KIR, lectin like receptors and NK cell differentiation markers within a cohort of 51 healthy Caucasian individuals. High inter‐individual variability in cell surface expression of most NK cell markers is observed. Range values defining NK cell subsets in healthy donors were further used as references to characterize 14 patients with NK‐type lymphoproliferative disease of granular lymphocytes (NK‐LDGL). Alterations of the KIR repertoire were noted in all NK‐LDGL patients. NK cell expansions were classified as oligoclonal KIR+ or as non‐detectable KIR (ndKIR) using anti‐KIR2DL1/2DS1, anti‐KIR2DL2/2DL3/2DS2, anti‐KIR3DL1 and anti‐KIR2DS4 monoclonal antibodies. A major reduction in the size of the CD56bright NK cell subset was a constant feature of NK‐LDGL. Altered distribution of CD94+, CD161+, and CD162R+ NK cell subsets was also observed in NK‐LDGL patients. Considering the potential role of NK cells in eliminating tumors or virus‐infected cells, the reference values defined in this study should be valuable to characterize both quantitative and qualitative alterations of the NK cell repertoire in pathological conditions and to monitor NK cell reconstitution following hematopoietic transplantation.


Medicine | 2004

Prospective investigation of a large outbreak of meningitis due to echovirus 30 during summer 2000 in marseilles, france.

E. Bernit; Xavier de Lamballerie; Christine Zandotti; Pierre Berger; V. Veit; Nicolas Schleinitz; Philippe de Micco; Jean Robert Harle; Rémi N. Charrel

Abstract: Enteroviruses (EVs) are responsible for an array of clinical diseases affecting different systems of the organism. Many cases are asymptomatic; the most severe clinical syndromes caused by EVs are due to infection of the central nervous system and present as aseptic meningitis or encephalitis. We report here a large outbreak of enteroviral meningitis that spread in Marseilles, France, during the year 2000. The dominant strain of the outbreak was genetically identified as a human echovirus 30. The study was conducted prospectively from May to December 2000, with an investigative protocol recording epidemiologic, clinical, and laboratory data. A total of 250 patients with febrile neurologic manifestations were included between May 15 and December 30, 2000. A total of 195 cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples, 114 throat swabs, and 85 stool specimens were processed through viral culture and resulted in respectively 117 (60%), 61 (54%), and 58 (68%) cultures positive for EV; 69/106 (65%) CSF samples tested positive for the presence of EV RNA. None of the throat swab cultures but 5 of the stool cultures in control patients were positive. One hundred thirty-nine (55.6%) patients were considered confirmed cases because they had positive culture or reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) in CSF, and 38 (15.2%) patients were considered probable cases because they had a positive throat and/or stool culture and a negative (or not performed) procedure in CSF. The 177 confirmed and probable cases were not significantly different from the remaining 73 patients in terms of age distribution and epidemiologic, clinical, and biologic characteristics. The median age was 18.4 years (range, 15 d to 84 yr), and 92% of patients were younger than 40 years old. The male:female sex ratio was 1.8:1. We found no evidence of cases spread in nosocomial, household, or institutional settings, or limited community spread. All patients were immunocompetent except 4 adults. Meningoencephalitis represented 5.6% of cases. All but 3 of the 177 patients had a good outcome without sequelae. Two immunocompetent adults with meningoencephalitis had neurologic sequelae and an immunosuppressed adult had a fatal outcome. Upper respiratory symptoms were noted in 18.5% of patients, diarrhea in 11.5%, various types of rash in 4.5%, and myalgia in 3.8%. In CSF, white cell count was elevated in 90% of cases, with a percentage of neutrophils >50% in 55% of cases. Protein level was increased in 43% of cases. In blood, C-reactive protein was elevated in 67% of cases. Other blood parameters were unremarkable. Clinical and laboratory features did not differ from those related to other pathogens that caused meningitis and meningoencephalitis. Hence, unnecessary treatment for other infections is frequently instituted during EV infections. Virologic diagnosis is important to distinguish between EV and other treatable bacterial and viral diseases. Abbreviations: CSF = cerebrospinal fluid; ECV-30 = Echovirus 30; EV = enterovirus.


Rheumatology | 2014

Contribution of anti-β2glycoprotein I IgA antibodies to the diagnosis of anti-phospholipid syndrome: potential interest of target domains to discriminate thrombotic and non-thrombotic patients

Laura Despierres; Abdou Beziane; G. Kaplanski; Brigitte Granel; Jacques Serratrice; William Cohen; Florence Bretelle; Pascal Rossi; Pierre-Emmanuel Morange; Pierre Jean Weiller; Jean Robert Harle; Pierre Bongrand; Nathalie Bardin

OBJECTIVES Although the last international guidelines for aPL recommended determination of IgA aCL and anti-β2glycoprotein I (aβ2GPI) antibodies for the evaluation of APS in the absence of conventional IgG or IgM aCL and aβ2GPI antibodies, the clinical value of these antibodies remains controversial. We evaluated the clinical utility of IgA aPL and of the determination of target domains of aβ2GPI IgA antibodies. METHODS A retrospective analysis was performed on sera from 439 patients referred for routine detection of aPL IgA by in-house ELISA. Sera positive for aβ2GPI IgA were subsequently tested for aβ2GPI domain 1 (D1) and domain 4/5 (D4/5) antibodies using ELISAs. RESULTS The prevalence of aβ2GPI IgA antibodies was 16% in patients, significantly different from controls (1%, P < 0.0001). These antibodies were associated with clinical contexts related to APS as thrombosis (28.6% vs. 15%, P = 0.009) and SLE (42% vs. 15%, P < 0.0001). Interestingly, determination of their target domains revealed a significant association between aβ2GPI IgA directed against D4/5 and SLE without thrombosis (66.7 vs. 16.7%, P = 0.002). In contrast, aCL IgA were not more prevalent in patients than in controls. CONCLUSION Our study confirmed the interest of aβ2GP1 IgA in the exploration of APS and suggests that identification of target domains of aβ2GP1 IgA may be useful in the evaluation of thrombotic risk in SLE patients.


Journal of Hepatology | 1996

Lack of interaction between hepatitis C virus and alcohol in the pathogenesis of cirrhosis. A statistical study

Muriel Alemy-Carreau; Jean-Pierre Durbec; Jacques Giordanella; Simone Rousseau; Georges Blanc; Denis Monges; Marc Perréard; Jean Robert Harle; Pierre Jean Weiller; A. Gerolami

BACKGROUND/AIMS In several studies markers of hepatitis C virus infection have been shown to be present in alcoholic patients with cirrhosis. Our work was designed to test the likely hypothesis that this association is due to an interaction between hepatitis C virus and alcohol in the pathogenesis of cirrhosis. METHODS We compared alcohol consumption and repartition of anti-HCV antibodies detected by an immunoblot recombinant assay in 101 male patients with cirrhosis and in 120 male controls. Interactions between anti-hepatitis C virus, alcohol and cirrhosis were calculated using log linear hierarchical models for frequency data. The basis of the method is that an interaction between hepatitis C virus and alcohol implies that a model built on the hypothesis of a role of hepatitis C virus and alcohol in the disease should be improved by a coefficient associated with multiplicative effects of hepatitis C virus and alcohol. RESULTS In patients with cirrhosis the mean alcohol consumption (148 +/- 100 g per day) and the incidence of positivity for anti-HCV antibodies (45%) were significantly higher than in controls. The results were consistent with a theoretical model built with the hypothesis of an independent role of both alcohol and hepatitis C virus. The goodness of fit between this model and the actual distribution of alcohol consumption and hepatitis C virus markers was not improved by introduction of an interaction between hepatitis C virus and alcohol. CONCLUSIONS In alcoholic subjects with hepatitis C virus infection, the probability to have cirrhosis seemed to be explained by additive effects of alcohol and hepatitis C virus. From a purely statistical point of view, no interaction between hepatitis C virus and alcohol consumption on a multiplicative scale could be demonstrated.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Pattern of DAP12 Expression in Leukocytes from Both Healthy and Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Patients

Nicolas Schleinitz; Laurent Chiche; Sophie Guia; Gaëlle Bouvier; Julie Vernier; Alexis Morice; Elisabeth Houssaint; Jean Robert Harle; G. Kaplanski; Felix A. Montero-Julian; Frédéric Vély

DAP12 is an ITAM-bearing transmembrane adaptor originally identified on the surface of Natural Killer cells. A broad expression among other immune cells was later found in myeloid and lymphoid cells. However, data on DAP12 expression pattern rely only on immunoblot and microarray analysis. Here, we describe the generation and the characterization of an anti-DAP12 monoclonal antibody. Using this novel reagent, we show that DAP12 expression is restricted to innate immune cells in basal condition. Since a decreased expression of DAP12 has been suggested in NK cells of systemic lupus erythematosus patients, we have further investigated the NK cell receptor repertoire and leukocyte expression of DAP12 in these patients and no major changes were detectable when compared to controls.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Comparing HLA Shared Epitopes in French Caucasian Patients with Scleroderma

Doua F. Azzouz; Justyna M. Rak; Isabelle Fajardy; Yannick Allanore; K. Tiev; Dominique Farge-Bancel; Marielle Martin; Sami B. Kanaan; Philippe P. Pagni; E. Hachulla; Jean Robert Harle; Rémi Didelot; Brigitte Granel; Jean Cabane; Jean Roudier; Nathalie C. Lambert

Although many studies have analyzed HLA allele frequencies in several ethnic groups in patients with scleroderma (SSc), none has been done in French Caucasian patients and none has evaluated which one of the common amino acid sequences, 67FLEDR71, shared by HLA-DRB susceptibility alleles, or 71TRAELDT77, shared by HLA-DQB1 susceptibility alleles in SSc, was the most important to develop the disease. HLA-DRB and DQB typing was performed for a total of 468 healthy controls and 282 patients with SSc allowing FLEDR and TRAELDT analyses. Results were stratified according to patient’s clinical subtypes and autoantibody status. Moreover, standardized HLA-DRß1 and DRß5 reverse transcriptase Taqman PCR assays were developed to quantify ß1 and ß5 mRNA in 20 subjects with HLA-DRB1*15 and/or DRB1*11 haplotypes. FLEDR motif is highly associated with diffuse SSc (χ2 = 28.4, p<10−6) and with anti-topoisomerase antibody (ATA) production (χ2 = 43.9, p<10−9) whereas TRAELDT association is weaker in both subgroups (χ2 = 7.2, p = 0.027 and χ2 = 14.6, p = 0.0007 respectively). Moreover, FLEDR motif- association among patients with diffuse SSc remains significant only in ATA subgroup. The risk to develop ATA positive SSc is higher with double dose FLEDR than single dose with respectively, adjusted standardised residuals of 5.1 and 2.6. The increase in FLEDR motif is mostly due to the higher frequency of HLA-DRB1*11 and DRB1*15 haplotypes. Furthermore, FLEDR is always carried by the most abundantly expressed ß chain: ß1 in HLA DRB1*11 haplotypes and ß5 in HLA-DRB1*15 haplotypes. In French Caucasian patients with SSc, FLEDR is the main presenting motif influencing ATA production in dcSSc. These results open a new field of potential therapeutic applications to interact with the FLEDR peptide binding groove and prevent ATA production, a hallmark of severity in SSc.


Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2004

Heterogeneity of anti-β2-glycoprotein I antibodies. A factor of variability in test results

Marielle Sanmarco; Nathalie Bardin; Miri Blank; Véronique Pascal; Marie Christine Alessi; Françoise Dignat-George; Yehuda Shoenfeld; Jean Robert Harle

The aim of this study was to evaluate the heterogeneity of IgGanti-beta2-glycoprotein I antibodies (IgG-abeta2GPI) as regarding their reactivity pattern against different sources of human beta2 GPI, their avidity and their association with clinical events of antiphospholipid syndrome (APS). Three thousand six hundred and eighty-four consecutive patient sera were routinely tested for IgGabeta2 GPI over 1 year using an in-house ELISA with 2 different commercial preparations of human purified beta2GPI. Of the 340 sera found positive, all those clinically documented were included in this study; 61 were positive with only one preparation (S1) and 59 with both (S2). The results of ELISA were confirmed by Western blot. Heterogeneity was stressed by testing sera with a human recombinant protein and 3 beta2GPI-related peptides. No contribution of glycosylation in the binding to beta2GPI was found. The avidity indices for each protein were significantly higher in S1 than in S2 (p=0.0021). S2 were more associated with antiphospholipid antibodies than S1 (75% versus 21% ; p<0.0001). A similar frequency of the main clinical features of APS was found in S1 and S2 sera (69% and 71%, respectively). In conclusion, our data show a heterogeneity in the antigenic reactivity pattern of IgG- abeta2 GPI and a relationship between a binding profile and antibody avidity. This heterogeneity could represent a crucial factor of variability in test results and underlines the difficulty of getting standardisation.


International Journal of Rheumatology | 2013

Serum Immunoglobulin Free Light Chain Assessment in IgG4-Related Disease

A. Grados; M. Ebbo; José Boucraut; Frédéric Vély; Pierre Aucouturier; Aude Rigolet; Benjamin Terrier; David Saadoun; Pascale Ghillani-Dalbin; Nathalie Costedoat-Chalumeau; Jean Robert Harle; Nicolas Schleinitz

Immunoglobulin free light chains are produced in excess during normal antibody synthesis. Their evaluation is commonly used in case of a monoclonal gammopathy. In polyclonal hypergammaglobulinemia related to the Sjögren syndrome or systemic lupus, erythematosus serum free light chain levels are increased and could correlate with disease activity. We show here that the κ (P < 0.0001) and λ (P = 0.0003) free light chains and the κ : λ ratio (P = 0.0049) are increased in sixteen patients with IgG4-related disease when compared to healthy controls. The increase of κ and λ free light chains probably reflects the marked polyclonal B cell activation of the disease. We could not assess in this small cohort of patients a significative correlation of serum free light chain levels and disease activity or extension.

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G. Kaplanski

Aix-Marseille University

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E. Bernit

Aix-Marseille University

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Mickael Ebbo

Aix-Marseille University

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P.J. Weiller

Aix-Marseille University

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