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Dive into the research topics where Laurence Bouchet-Delbos is active.

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Featured researches published by Laurence Bouchet-Delbos.


Blood | 2012

Proper desensitization of CXCR4 is required for lymphocyte development and peripheral compartmentalization in mice

Karl Balabanian; Emilie Brotin; Vincent Biajoux; Laurence Bouchet-Delbos; Elodie Lainey; Odile Fenneteau; Dominique Bonnet; Laurence Fiette; Dominique Emilie; Françoise Bachelerie

Desensitization controls G protein-dependent signaling of chemokine receptors. We investigate the physiologic implication of this process for CXCR4 in a mouse model harboring a heterozygous mutation of the Cxcr4 gene, which engenders a desensitization-resistant receptor. Such anomaly is linked to the warts, hypogammaglobulinemia, infections, myelokathexis (WHIM) syndrome, a human rare combined immunodeficiency. Cxcr4(+/mutant(1013)) mice display leukocytes with enhanced responses to Cxcl12 and exhibit leukopenia as reported in patients. Treatment with CXCL12/CXCR4 antagonists transiently reverses blood anomalies, further demonstrating the causal role of the mutant receptor in the leukopenia. Strikingly, neutropenia occurs in a context of normal bone marrow architecture and granulocyte lineage maturation, indicating a minor role for Cxcr4-dependent signaling in those processes. In contrast, Cxcr4(+/1013) mice show defective thymopoiesis and B-cell development, accounting for circulating lymphopenia. Concomitantly, mature T and B cells are abnormally compartmentalized in the periphery, with a reduction of primary follicles in the spleen and their absence in lymph nodes mirrored by an unfurling of the T-cell zone. These mice provide a model to decipher the role of CXCR4 desensitization in the homeostasis of B and T cells and to investigate which manifestations of patients with WHIM syndrome may be overcome by dampening the gain of CXCR4 function.


Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research | 2012

Housekeeping gene variability in the liver of alcoholic patients.

Hédia Boujedidi; Laurence Bouchet-Delbos; Anne-Marie Cassard-Doulcier; Micheline Njiké-Nakseu; Sophie Maitre; Sophie Prévot; Ibrahim Dagher; Hélène Agostini; Cosmin Sebastian Voican; Dominique Emilie; Gabriel Perlemuter; Sylvie Naveau

BACKGROUND Quantification of gene expression using reverse transcription-quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) requires normalization to an endogenous reference gene termed housekeeping gene (HKG). Many of the commonly used HKGs are regulated and vary under experimental conditions and disease stages. Alcoholic liver disease (ALD) is associated with several different liver histological lesions that may modulate HKG expression. We investigated the variability of commonly used HGKs (18S, β-actin, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate [GAPDH], and arginine/serine-rich splicing factor [SFRS4]) in the liver of patients with ALD. METHODS Fifty consecutive patients at different stages of ALD underwent liver biopsy. The stability of HKG was assessed according to liver histological lesions. RESULTS β-actin had the highest coefficient of dispersion (COD) (23.9). β-actin tended to decrease with steatosis and to increase with alcoholic hepatitis; β-actin also increased in patients with both alcoholic hepatitis and cirrhosis. GAPDH and SFRS4 COD were 2.8 and 2.1, respectively. GAPDH was decreased with steatosis and increased with alcoholic hepatitis and fibrosis. 18S had the lowest COD (1.4). Both 18S and SFRS4 levels were not significantly modified with respect to all alcohol-induced liver histological lesions. CONCLUSIONS In patients with ALD, the most constantly expressed HKGs are 18S and SFRS4. These genes are appropriate reference genes for normalization of RT-qPCR in the liver of patients with ALD. The use of other HKGs such as β-actin or GAPDH would lead to misinterpretation of the results.


Blood | 2010

Interleukin-24 inhibits the plasma cell differentiation program in human germinal center B cells

Ghyath Maarof; Laurence Bouchet-Delbos; Hélène Gary-Gouy; Ingrid Durand-Gasselin; Roman Krzysiek; Ali Dalloul

Complex molecular mechanisms control B-cell fate to become a memory or a plasma cell. Interleukin-24 (IL-24) is a class II family cytokine of poorly understood immune function that regulates the cell cycle. We previously observed that IL-24 is strongly expressed in leukemic memory-type B cells. Here we show that IL-24 is also expressed in human follicular B cells; it is more abundant in CD27(+) memory B cells and CD5-expressing B cells, whereas it is low to undetectable in centroblasts and plasma cells. Addition of IL-24 to B cells, cultured in conditions shown to promote plasma cell differentiation, strongly inhibited plasma cell generation and immunoglobulin G (IgG) production. By contrast, IL-24 siRNA increased terminal differentiation of B cells into plasma cells. IL-24 is optimally induced by BCR triggering and CD40 engagement; IL-24 increased CD40-induced B-cell proliferation and modulated the transcription of key factors involved in plasma cell differentiation. It also inhibited activation-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of signal transducer and activator of transcription-3 (STAT-3), and inhibited the transcription of IL-10. Taken together, our results indicate that IL-24 is a novel cytokine involved in T-dependent antigen (Ag)-driven B-cell differentiation and suggest its physiologic role in favoring germinal center B-cell maturation in memory B cells at the expense of plasma cells.


BMC Cancer | 2011

CXCL12 expression by healthy and malignant ovarian epithelial cells

Véronique Machelon; Françoise Gaudin; Sophie Camilleri-Broët; Salam Nasreddine; Laurence Bouchet-Delbos; Eric Pujade-Lauraine; Jérôme Alexandre; Laurence Gladieff; Fernando Arenzana-Seisdedos; Dominique Emilie; Sophie Prévot; Philippe Broët; Karl Balabanian

BackgroundCXCL12 has been widely reported to play a biologically relevant role in tumor growth and spread. In epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC), CXCL12 enhances tumor angiogenesis and contributes to the immunosuppressive network. However, its prognostic significance remains unclear. We thus compared CXCL12 status in healthy and malignant ovaries, to assess its prognostic value.MethodsImmunohistochemistry was used to analyze CXCL12 expression in the reproductive tracts, including the ovaries and fallopian tubes, of healthy women, in benign and borderline epithelial tumors, and in a series of 183 tumor specimens from patients with advanced primary EOC enrolled in a multicenter prospective clinical trial of paclitaxel/carboplatin/gemcitabine-based chemotherapy (GINECO study). Univariate COX model analysis was performed to assess the prognostic value of clinical and biological variables. Kaplan-Meier methods were used to generate progression-free and overall survival curves.ResultsEpithelial cells from the surface of the ovary and the fallopian tubes stained positive for CXCL12, whereas the follicles within the ovary did not. Epithelial cells in benign, borderline and malignant tumors also expressed CXCL12. In EOC specimens, CXCL12 immunoreactivity was observed mostly in epithelial tumor cells. The intensity of the signal obtained ranged from strong in 86 cases (47%) to absent in 18 cases (<10%). This uneven distribution of CXCL12 did not reflect the morphological heterogeneity of EOC. CXCL12 expression levels were not correlated with any of the clinical parameters currently used to determine EOC prognosis or with HER2 status. They also had no impact on progression-free or overall survival.ConclusionOur findings highlight the previously unappreciated constitutive expression of CXCL12 on healthy epithelia of the ovary surface and fallopian tubes, indicating that EOC may originate from either of these epithelia. We reveal that CXCL12 production by malignant epithelial cells precedes tumorigenesis and we confirm in a large cohort of patients with advanced EOC that CXCL12 expression level in EOC is not a valuable prognostic factor in itself.Trial RegistrationClinicalTrials.gov: NCT00052468


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2002

CX3C Chemokine Fractalkine in Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension

Karl Balabanian; Arnaud Foussat; Peter Dorfmüller; Ingrid Durand-Gasselin; Francis Capel; Laurence Bouchet-Delbos; Alain Portier; Anne Marfaing-Koka; Roman Krzysiek; Anne-Cécile Rimaniol; Gérald Simonneau; Dominique Emilie; Marc Humbert


Blood | 2003

Synthesis of glucocorticoid-induced leucine zipper (GILZ) by macrophages: an anti-inflammatory and immunosuppressive mechanism shared by glucocorticoids and IL-10

Dominique Berrebi; Stefano Bruscoli; Nicolas Cohen; Arnaud Foussat; Graziella Migliorati; Laurence Bouchet-Delbos; Marie-Christine Maillot; Alain Portier; Jacques Couderc; Pierre Galanaud; Michel Peuchmaur; Carlo Riccardi; Dominique Emilie


Blood | 2001

Deregulation of the expression of the fractalkine/fractalkine receptor complex in HIV-1-infected patients

Arnaud Foussat; Laurence Bouchet-Delbos; Dominique Berrebi; Ingrid Durand-Gasselin; Aurore Coulomb-L'Hermine; Roman Krzysiek; Pierre Galanaud; Yves Levy; Dominique Emilie


Blood | 2002

Interleukin-10 modulates the sensitivity of peritoneal B lymphocytes to chemokines with opposite effects on stromal cell-derived factor-1 and B-lymphocyte chemoattractant.

Karl Balabanian; Arnaud Foussat; Laurence Bouchet-Delbos; Jacques Couderc; Roman Krzysiek; Ali Amara; Françoise Baleux; Alain Portier; Pierre Galanaud; Dominique Emilie


Blood | 2001

Preferential and persistent depletion of CCR5+T-helper lymphocytes with nonlymphoid homing potential despite early treatment of primary HIV infection

Roman Krzysiek; Annick Rudent; Laurence Bouchet-Delbos; Arnaud Foussat; Claudie Boutillon; Alain Portier; Didier Ingrand; Daniel Sereni; Pierre Galanaud; Liliane Grangeot-Keros; Dominique Emilie


M S-medecine Sciences | 2011

CXCR4, une cible thérapeutique dans certains déficits immunitaires rares?

Alexandre Bignon; Vincent Biajoux; Laurence Bouchet-Delbos; Dominique Emilie; O. Lortholary; Karl Balabanian

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Vincent Biajoux

French Institute of Health and Medical Research

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