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Dive into the research topics where Jerome Mauris is active.

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Featured researches published by Jerome Mauris.


Journal of Cell Science | 2014

Molecular basis for MMP9 induction and disruption of epithelial cell–cell contacts by galectin-3

Jerome Mauris; Ashley M. Woodward; Zhiyi Cao; Noorjahan Panjwani; Pablo Argüeso

ABSTRACT Dynamic modulation of the physical contacts between neighboring cells is integral to epithelial processes such as tissue repair and cancer dissemination. Induction of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) activity contributes to the disassembly of intercellular junctions and the degradation of the extracellular matrix, thus mitigating the physical constraint to cell movement. Using the cornea as a model, we show here that a carbohydrate-binding protein, galectin-3, promotes cell–cell detachment and redistribution of the tight junction protein occludin through its N-terminal polymerizing domain. Notably, we demonstrate that galectin-3 initiates cell–cell disassembly by inducing matrix metalloproteinase expression in a manner that is dependent on the interaction with and clustering of the matrix metalloproteinase inducer CD147 (also known as EMMPRIN and basigin) on the cell surface. Using galectin-3-knockout mice in an in vivo model of wound healing, we further show that increased synthesis of MMP9 at the leading edge of migrating epithelium is regulated by galectin-3. These findings establish a new galectin-3-mediated regulatory mechanism for induction of metalloproteinase expression and disruption of cell–cell contacts required for cell motility in migrating epithelia.


Journal of Virology | 2013

Binding of Transmembrane Mucins to Galectin-3 Limits Herpesvirus 1 Infection of Human Corneal Keratinocytes

Ashley M. Woodward; Jerome Mauris; Pablo Argüeso

ABSTRACT Epithelial cells lining mucosal surfaces impose multiple barriers to viral infection. At the ocular surface, the carbohydrate-binding protein galectin-3 maintains barrier function by cross-linking transmembrane mucins on the apical glycocalyx. Despite these defense mechanisms, many viruses have evolved to exploit fundamental cellular processes on host cells. Here, we use affinity assays to show that herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1), but not HSV-2, binds human galectin-3. Knockdown of galectin-3 in human corneal keratinocytes by small interfering RNA significantly impaired HSV-1 infection, but not expression of nectin-1, indicating that galectin-3 is a herpesvirus entry mediator. Interestingly, exposure of epithelial cell cultures to transmembrane mucin isolates decreased viral infectivity. Moreover, HSV-1 failed to elute the biological counterreceptor MUC16 from galectin-3 affinity columns, suggesting that association of transmembrane mucins to galectin-3 provides protection against viral infection. Together, these results indicate that HSV-1 exploits galectin-3 to enhance virus attachment to host cells and support a protective role for transmembrane mucins under physiological conditions by masking viral entry mediators on the epithelial glycocalyx.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Modulation of Ocular Surface Glycocalyx Barrier Function by a Galectin-3 N-terminal Deletion Mutant and Membrane-Anchored Synthetic Glycopolymers

Jerome Mauris; Flavio Mantelli; Ashley M. Woodward; Ziyhi Cao; Carolyn R. Bertozzi; Noorjahan Panjwani; Kamil Godula; Pablo Argüeso

Background Interaction of transmembrane mucins with the multivalent carbohydrate-binding protein galectin-3 is critical to maintaining the integrity of the ocular surface epithelial glycocalyx. This study aimed to determine whether disruption of galectin-3 multimerization and insertion of synthetic glycopolymers in the plasma membrane could be used to modulate glycocalyx barrier function in corneal epithelial cells. Methodology/Principal Findings Abrogation of galectin-3 biosynthesis in multilayered cultures of human corneal epithelial cells using siRNA, and in galectin-3 null mice, resulted in significant loss of corneal barrier function, as indicated by increased permeability to the rose bengal diagnostic dye. Addition of β-lactose, a competitive carbohydrate inhibitor of galectin-3 binding activity, to the cell culture system, transiently disrupted barrier function. In these experiments, treatment with a dominant negative inhibitor of galectin-3 polymerization lacking the N-terminal domain, but not full-length galectin-3, prevented the recovery of barrier function to basal levels. As determined by fluorescence microscopy, both cellobiose- and lactose-containing glycopolymers incorporated into apical membranes of corneal epithelial cells, independently of the chain length distribution of the densely glycosylated, polymeric backbones. Membrane incorporation of cellobiose glycopolymers impaired barrier function in corneal epithelial cells, contrary to their lactose-containing counterparts, which bound to galectin-3 in pull-down assays. Conclusions/Significance These results indicate that galectin-3 multimerization and surface recognition of lactosyl residues is required to maintain glycocalyx barrier function at the ocular surface. Transient modification of galectin-3 binding could be therapeutically used to enhance the efficiency of topical drug delivery.


Current Opinion in Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2013

The ocular surface epithelial barrier and other mechanisms of mucosal protection: from allergy to infectious diseases

Flavio Mantelli; Jerome Mauris; Pablo Argüeso

Purpose of reviewStudies completed in the last decade provide new insights into the role of the epithelial glycocalyx in maintaining ocular surface barrier function. This review summarizes these findings, their relevance to allergic and infectious disease, and highlights the potential benefits of exploiting the modulation of barrier integrity for therapeutic gain. Recent findingsThe molecular components sealing the space between adjacent ocular surface epithelial cells, such as tight junctions, have been extensively characterized, and their contribution to the paracellular barrier established. A second layer of protection – the transcellular barrier – is provided by transmembrane mucins and their O-glycans on the glycocalyx. Cell surface glycans bind carbohydrate-binding proteins to promote formation of complexes that are no longer thought to be a static structure, but, instead, a dynamic system that responds to extrinsic signals and modulates pathogenic responses. Although functioning as a protective mechanism to maintain homeostasis, the glycocalyx also restricts drug targeting of epithelial cells. SummaryThe traditional model of intercellular junctions protecting the ocular surface epithelia has recently been expanded to include an additional glycan shield that lines apical membranes on the ocular surface. A better understanding of this apical barrier may lead to better management of ocular surface disease.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Clusterin Seals the Ocular Surface Barrier in Mouse Dry Eye

Aditi Bauskar; Wendy J. Mack; Jerome Mauris; Pablo Argüeso; Martin Heur; B.A. Nagel; Grant R. Kolar; Martin Gleave; Takahiro Nakamura; Shigeru Kinoshita; Janet Moradian-Oldak; Noorjahan Panjwani; Stephen C. Pflugfelder; Mark R. Wilson; M. Elizabeth Fini; Shinwu Jeong

Dry eye is a common disorder caused by inadequate hydration of the ocular surface that results in disruption of barrier function. The homeostatic protein clusterin (CLU) is prominent at fluid-tissue interfaces throughout the body. CLU levels are reduced at the ocular surface in human inflammatory disorders that manifest as severe dry eye, as well as in a preclinical mouse model for desiccating stress that mimics dry eye. Using this mouse model, we show here that CLU prevents and ameliorates ocular surface barrier disruption by a remarkable sealing mechanism dependent on attainment of a critical all-or-none concentration. When the CLU level drops below the critical all-or-none threshold, the barrier becomes vulnerable to desiccating stress. CLU binds selectively to the ocular surface subjected to desiccating stress in vivo, and in vitro to the galectin LGALS3, a key barrier component. Positioned in this way, CLU not only physically seals the ocular surface barrier, but it also protects the barrier cells and prevents further damage to barrier structure. These findings define a fundamentally new mechanism for ocular surface protection and suggest CLU as a biotherapeutic for dry eye.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2017

N-Glycosylation affects the stability and barrier function of the MUC16 mucin

Takazumi Taniguchi; Ashley M. Woodward; Paula Magnelli; Nicole M. McColgan; Sylvain Lehoux; Sarah Melissa P. Jacobo; Jerome Mauris; Pablo Argüeso

Transmembrane mucins are highly O-glycosylated glycoproteins that coat the apical glycocalyx on mucosal surfaces and represent the first line of cellular defense against infection and injury. Relatively low levels of N-glycans are found on transmembrane mucins, and their structure and function remain poorly characterized. We previously reported that carbohydrate-dependent interactions of transmembrane mucins with galectin-3 contribute to maintenance of the epithelial barrier at the ocular surface. Now, using MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry, we report that transmembrane mucin N-glycans in differentiated human corneal epithelial cells contain primarily complex-type structures with N-acetyllactosamine, a preferred galectin ligand. In N-glycosylation inhibition experiments, we find that treatment with tunicamycin and siRNA-mediated knockdown of the Golgi N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase I gene (MGAT1) induce partial loss of both total and cell-surface levels of the largest mucin, MUC16, and a concomitant reduction in glycocalyx barrier function. Moreover, we identified a distinct role for N-glycans in promoting MUC16s binding affinity toward galectin-3 and in causing retention of the lectin on the epithelial cell surface. Taken together, these studies define a role for N-linked oligosaccharides in supporting the stability and function of transmembrane mucins on mucosal surfaces.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

A human PMS2 homologue from Aquifex aeolicus stimulates an ATP-dependent DNA helicase.

Jerome Mauris; Thomas C. Evans

Mismatch repair in Escherichia coli involves a number of proteins including MutL and UvrD. Eukaryotes also possess MutL homologues; however, no UvrD helicase homologues have been identified. The hyperthermophilic bacterium Aquifex aeolicus has a MutL protein (Aae MutL) that possesses a latent endonuclease activity similar to eukaryotic, but different from E. coli, MutL proteins. By sequence homology Aq793 is a member of the PcrA/UvrD/Rep helicase subfamily. We expressed Aae MutL and the putative A. aeolicus DNA helicase (Aq793) proteins in E. coli. Using synthetic oligonucleotide substrates, we observed that lower concentrations of Aq793 were required to unwind double-stranded DNA that had a 3′-poly(dT) overhang as compared with double-stranded DNA with a 5′-poly(dT) or lacking a poly(dT) tail. This unwinding activity was stimulated by adding Aae MutL with maximal stimulation observed at an ∼1.5:1 (MutL:Aq793) stoichiometric ratio. The enhancement of Aq793 helicase activity did not require the Aae MutL protein to retain endonuclease activity. Furthermore, the C-terminal 123 amino acid residues of Aae MutL were sufficient to stimulate Aq793 helicase activity, albeit at a significantly reduced efficacy. To the best of our knowledge this is the first time a human PMS2 homologue has been demonstrated to stimulate a PcrA/UvrD/Rep subfamily helicase, and this finding may further our understanding of the evolution of the mismatch repair pathway.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Establishment of a novel in vitro model of stratified epithelial wound healing with barrier function.

Miguel González-Andrades; Luis Alonso-Pastor; Jerome Mauris; Andrea Cruzat; Claes H. Dohlman; Pablo Argüeso

The repair of wounds through collective movement of epithelial cells is a fundamental process in multicellular organisms. In stratified epithelia such as the cornea and skin, healing occurs in three steps that include a latent, migratory, and reconstruction phases. Several simple and inexpensive assays have been developed to study the biology of cell migration in vitro. However, these assays are mostly based on monolayer systems that fail to reproduce the differentiation processes associated to multilayered systems. Here, we describe a straightforward in vitro wound assay to evaluate the healing and restoration of barrier function in stratified human corneal epithelial cells. In this assay, circular punch injuries lead to the collective migration of the epithelium as coherent sheets. The closure of the wound was associated with the restoration of the transcellular barrier and the re-establishment of apical intercellular junctions. Altogether, this new model of wound healing provides an important research tool to study the mechanisms leading to barrier function in stratified epithelia and may facilitate the development of future therapeutic applications.


American Journal of Ophthalmology | 2015

Alteration of Galectin-3 in Tears of Patients With Dry Eye Disease

Yuichi Uchino; Jerome Mauris; Ashley M. Woodward; Julia Dieckow; Francisco Amparo; Reza Dana; Flavio Mantelli; Pablo Argüeso


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2018

Colocalization of Galectin-3 With CD147 Is Associated With Increased Gelatinolytic Activity in Ulcerating Human Corneas

Andrea Cruzat; Miguel González-Andrades; Jerome Mauris; Dina B. AbuSamra; Preethi Chidambaram; Kenneth R. Kenyon; James Chodosh; Claes H. Dohlman; Pablo Argüeso

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Pablo Argüeso

Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary

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Ashley M. Woodward

Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary

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Flavio Mantelli

Sapienza University of Rome

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Francisco Amparo

Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary

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Julia Dieckow

Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary

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Reza Dana

Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary

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Andrea Cruzat

Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary

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Claes H. Dohlman

Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary

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