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Dive into the research topics where Luc Fetler is active.

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Featured researches published by Luc Fetler.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2007

In vivo imaging of cytotoxic T cell infiltration and elimination of a solid tumor.

Alexandre Boissonnas; Luc Fetler; Ingrid S. Zeelenberg; Stéphanie Hugues; Sebastian Amigorena

Although the immune system evolved to fight infections, it may also attack and destroy solid tumors. In most cases, tumor rejection is initiated by CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs), which infiltrate solid tumors, recognize tumor antigens, and kill tumor cells. We use a combination of two-photon intravital microscopy and immunofluorescence on ordered sequential sections to analyze the infiltration and destruction of solid tumors by CTLs. We show that in the periphery of a thymoma growing subcutaneously, activated CTLs migrate with high instantaneous velocities. The CTLs arrest in close contact to tumor cells expressing their cognate antigen. In regions where most tumor cells are dead, CTLs resume migration, sometimes following collagen fibers or blood vessels. CTLs migrating along blood vessels preferentially adopt an elongated morphology. CTLs also infiltrate tumors in depth, but only when the tumor cells express the cognate CTL antigen. In tumors that do not express the cognate antigen, CTL infiltration is restricted to peripheral regions, and lymphocytes neither stop moving nor kill tumor cells. Antigen expression by tumor cells therefore determines both CTL motility within the tumor and profound tumor infiltration.


Nature Cell Biology | 2011

External forces control mitotic spindle positioning

Jenny Fink; Nicolas Carpi; Timo Betz; Angelique Bétard; Meriem Chebah; Ammar Azioune; Michel Bornens; Cécile Sykes; Luc Fetler; Damien Cuvelier; Matthieu Piel

The response of cells to forces is essential for tissue morphogenesis and homeostasis. This response has been extensively investigated in interphase cells, but it remains unclear how forces affect dividing cells. We used a combination of micro-manipulation tools on human dividing cells to address the role of physical parameters of the micro-environment in controlling the cell division axis, a key element of tissue morphogenesis. We found that forces applied on the cell body direct spindle orientation during mitosis. We further show that external constraints induce a polarization of dynamic subcortical actin structures that correlate with spindle movements. We propose that cells divide according to cues provided by their mechanical micro-environment, aligning daughter cells with the external force field.


Immunity | 2008

Intercellular Adhesion Molecule-1-Dependent Stable Interactions between T Cells and Dendritic Cells Determine CD8+ T Cell Memory

Alix Scholer; Stéphanie Hugues; Alexandre Boissonnas; Luc Fetler; Sebastian Amigorena

The initiation of cytotoxic immune responses requires the direct interaction between naive CD8+ T lymphocytes and dendritic cells (DCs). Multiphoton imaging in intact lymph nodes (LNs) showed that during priming, naive T cells and DCs establish sequentially brief (i.e., minutes) and long (hours) antigen-specific contacts. We show here that the expression of the Intercellular Adhesion Molecule-1 (ICAM-1) by mature DCs is critical for long-lasting contacts with CD8+ T cells but dispensable for short-lived antigen-specific interactions. Serial brief DC-T cell contacts induced early CD8+ T cell activation, proliferation, and differentiation into effector cytotoxic T lymphocytes in the first few days after immunization. ICAM-1-deficient mature DCs, however, failed to induce fully effective priming, because CD8+ T cells produced reduced amounts of interferon gamma and were clonally depleted after 2 weeks. In addition, Icam1(-/-) mice failed to respond to rechallenge. We conclude that ICAM-1-dependent long-lasting interactions between mature DCs and naive CD8+ T cells determine the survival of activated CD8+ T cells and the establishment of effective memory.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Cellular capsules as a tool for multicellular spheroid production and for investigating the mechanics of tumor progression in vitro

Kevin Alessandri; Bibhu Ranjan Sarangi; Vasily Gurchenkov; Bidisha Sinha; Tobias Reinhold Kießling; Luc Fetler; Felix Rico; Simon Scheuring; Christophe Lamaze; Anthony Simon; Sara Geraldo; Danijela Matic Vignjevic; Hugo Domejean; Leslie Rolland; Anette Funfak; Jérôme Bibette; Nicolas Bremond; Pierre Nassoy

Significance Tumor growth intrinsically generates pressure onto the surrounding tissues, which conversely compress the tumor. These mechanical forces have been suggested to contribute to tumor growth regulation. We developed a microfluidic technique to produce 3D cell-based assays and to interrogate the interplay between tumor growth and mechanics in vitro. Multicellular spheroids are grown in permeable elastic capsules. Capsule deformation provides a direct measure of the exerted pressure. By simultaneously imaging the spheroid by confocal microscopy, we show that confinement induces a drastic cellular reorganization, including increased motility of peripheral cells. We propose that compressive stress has a beneficial impact on slowing down tumor evolution but may have a detrimental effect by triggering cell invasion and metastasis. Deciphering the multifactorial determinants of tumor progression requires standardized high-throughput preparation of 3D in vitro cellular assays. We present a simple microfluidic method based on the encapsulation and growth of cells inside permeable, elastic, hollow microspheres. We show that this approach enables mass production of size-controlled multicellular spheroids. Due to their geometry and elasticity, these microcapsules can uniquely serve as quantitative mechanical sensors to measure the pressure exerted by the expanding spheroid. By monitoring the growth of individual encapsulated spheroids after confluence, we dissect the dynamics of pressure buildup toward a steady-state value, consistent with the concept of homeostatic pressure. In turn, these confining conditions are observed to increase the cellular density and affect the cellular organization of the spheroid. Postconfluent spheroids exhibit a necrotic core cemented by a blend of extracellular material and surrounded by a rim of proliferating hypermotile cells. By performing invasion assays in a collagen matrix, we report that peripheral cells readily escape preconfined spheroids and cell–cell cohesivity is maintained for freely growing spheroids, suggesting that mechanical cues from the surrounding microenvironment may trigger cell invasion from a growing tumor. Overall, our technology offers a unique avenue to produce in vitro cell-based assays useful for developing new anticancer therapies and to investigate the interplay between mechanics and growth in tumor evolution.


Science | 2012

Regulatory T Cells Increase the Avidity of Primary CD8+ T Cell Responses and Promote Memory

Luigia Pace; Andy Tempez; Catharina Arnold-Schrauf; Fabrice Lemaître; Philippe Bousso; Luc Fetler; Tim Sparwasser; Sebastian Amigorena

Treg-ulating Immune Responses There are many checks and balances to keep the immune system from running amok. One of the most critical is a specialized population of T cells, called regulatory T cells (Tregs). In their absence, a lethal autoimmune disease develops in both humans and mice. Although Tregs are well known for their suppression of autoimmune responses, how they modulate responses to infectious agents is less well understood. Using inducible deletion of Tregs in mice, Pace et al. (p. 532) showed that Tregs are important for shaping the avidity of CD8+ T cell responses. In the absence of Tregs, CD8+ T cell responses were of lower avidity, and the CD8+ T cells were more responsive to lower-affinity antigens. When Tregs were absent, stable interactions between T cell and antigen-presenting cells were increased as a result of higher amounts of chemokine expression in the lymph nodes. Treg depletion also resulted in a lower-avidity CD8+ T cell response to infection with the bacterial pathogen Listeria monocytogenes. Regulatory T cells enhance the avidity of T cells, thereby promoting responses to foreign antigens instead of self-antigens. Although regulatory T cells (Tregs) are known to suppress self-reactive autoimmune responses, their role during T cell responses to nonself antigens is not well understood. We show that Tregs play a critical role during the priming of immune responses in mice. Treg depletion induced the activation and expansion of a population of low-avidity CD8+ T cells because of overproduction of CCL-3/4/5 chemokines, which stabilized the interactions between antigen-presenting dendritic cells and low-avidity T cells. In the absence of Tregs, the avidity of the primary immune response was impaired, which resulted in reduced memory to Listeria monocytogenes. These results suggest that Tregs are important regulators of the homeostasis of CD8+ T cell priming and play a critical role in the induction of high-avidity primary responses and effective memory.


Journal of the Royal Society Interface | 2012

Mechanical state, material properties and continuous description of an epithelial tissue.

Isabelle Bonnet; Philippe Marcq; Floris Bosveld; Luc Fetler; Yohanns Bellaïche; François Graner

During development, epithelial tissues undergo extensive morphogenesis based on coordinated changes of cell shape and position over time. Continuum mechanics describes tissue mechanical state and shape changes in terms of strain and stress. It accounts for individual cell properties using only a few spatially averaged material parameters. To determine the mechanical state and parameters in the Drosophila pupa dorsal thorax epithelium, we severed in vivo the adherens junctions around a disc-shaped domain comprising typically a hundred cells. This enabled a direct measurement of the strain along different orientations at once. The amplitude and the anisotropy of the strain increased during development. We also measured the stress-to-viscosity ratio and similarly found an increase in amplitude and anisotropy. The relaxation time was of the order of 10 s. We propose a space–time, continuous model of the relaxation. Good agreement with experimental data validates the description of the epithelial domain as a continuous, linear, visco-elastic material. We discuss the relevant time and length scales. Another material parameter, the ratio of external friction to internal viscosity, is estimated by fitting the initial velocity profile. Together, our results contribute to quantify forces and displacements, and their time evolution, during morphogenesis.


European Journal of Cell Biology | 2012

Do cancer cells have distinct adhesions in 3D collagen matrices and in vivo

Sara Geraldo; Anthony Simon; Nadia Elkhatib; Daniel Louvard; Luc Fetler; Danijela Vignjevic

During metastasis, cancer cells breach the basement membrane and migrate through the stroma mostly composed of a network of collagen I fibers. Cell migration on 2D is initiated by protrusion of the cell membrane followed by formation of adhesions that link the actin cytoskeleton to the extracellular matrix (ECM). Cells then move forwards by exerting traction forces on the adhesions at its front and by disassembling adhesions at the rear. In 2D, only the ventral surface of a migrating cell is in contact with the ECM, where cell-matrix adhesions are assembled. In 3D matrices, even though the whole surface of a migrating cell is available for interacting with the ECM, it is unclear whether discrete adhesion structures actually exist. Using high-resolution confocal microscopy we imaged the endogenous adhesome proteins in three different cancer cell types embedded in non-pepsinized collagen type I, polymerized at a slow rate, to allow the formation of a network that resembles the organization of EMC observed in vivo. Vinculin aggregates were detected in the cellular protrusions, frequently colocalizing with collagen fibers, implying they correspond to adhesion structures in 3D. As the distance from the substrate bottom increases, adhesion aggregates become smaller and almost undetectable in some cell lines. Using intravital imaging we show here, for the first time, the existence of adhesome proteins aggregates in vivo. These aggregates share similarities with the ones found in 3D collagen matrices. It still remains to be determined if adhesions assembled in 3D and in vivo share functional similarities to the well-described adhesions in 2D. This will provide a major step forward in understanding cell migration in more physiological environments.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Direct observation in solution of a preexisting structural equilibrium for a mutant of the allosteric aspartate transcarbamoylase.

Luc Fetler; Evan R. Kantrowitz; Patrice Vachette

Many signaling and metabolic pathways rely on the ability of some of the proteins involved to undergo a substrate-induced transition between at least two structural states. Among the various models put forward to account for binding and activity curves of those allosteric proteins, the Monod, Wyman, and Changeux model for allostery theory has certainly been the most influential, although a central postulate, the preexisting equilibrium between the low-activity, low-affinity quaternary structure and the high-activity, high-affinity quaternary structure states in the absence of substrates, has long awaited direct experimental substantiation. Upon substrate binding, allosteric Escherichia coli aspartate transcarbamoylase adopts alternate quaternary structures, stabilized by a set of interdomain and intersubunit interactions, which are readily differentiated by their solution x-ray scattering curves. Disruption of a salt link, which is observed only in the low-activity, low-affinity quaternary structure, between Lys-143 of the regulatory chain and Asp-236 of the catalytic chain yields a mutant enzyme that is in a reversible equilibrium between at least two states in the absence of ligand, a major tenet of the Monod, Wyman, and Changeux model. By using this mutant as a magnifying glass of the structural effect of ligand binding, a comparative analysis of the binding of carbamoyl phosphate (CP) and analogs points out the crucial role of the amine group of CP in facilitating the transition toward the high-activity, high-affinity quaternary state. Thus, the cooperative binding of aspartate in aspartate transcarbamoylase appears to result from the combination of the preexisting quaternary structure equilibrium with local changes induced by CP binding.


Current Topics in Microbiology and Immunology | 2009

Multiphoton Imaging of Cytotoxic T Lymphocyte-Mediated Antitumor Immune Responses

Alexandre Boissonnas; Alix Scholer-Dahire; Luc Fetler; Sebastian Amigorena

The actual contribution of T lymphocytes to protection against tumors is still unclear. In vitro imaging experiments show that tumor specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) are competent to kill target cells by conventional cytotoxic pathways. The emergence of multiphoton imaging in the past decade now allows real time in vivo imaging of CTLs. New insights are available on the behavior of antitumor T cells during the priming phase, during their traffic within the tumor tissue, and on their interactions with tumor cells during the effector phase. Recent reports suggest that direct killing of tumor cells by CTLs is a slow process, suggesting that the ratio of effector to target cells is determinant, or that additional cytotoxic contribution by other cell types is required to induce efficient tumor rejection. This review will focus on the publications that have imaged antitumor immune responses dynamically and discuss how this new information contributes to understand the implication of CTLs in tumor rejection.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2007

In vivo imaging of cytotoxic T cell infiltration and elimination of a solid tumor

Alexandre Boissonnas; Luc Fetler; Ingrid S. Zeelenberg; Stéphanie Hugues; Sebastian Amigorena

Boissonnas et al. 2007. J. Exp. Med. doi:10.1084/jem.20061890[OpenUrl][1][Abstract/FREE Full Text][2] [1]: {openurl}?query=rft.jtitle%253DJ.%2BExp.%2BMed.%26rft_id%253Dinfo%253Adoi%252F10.1084%252Fjem.20061890%26rft_id%253Dinfo%253Apmid%252F17261634%26rft.genre%253Darticle%26rft_val_fmt%253Dinfo%

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Alexandre Boissonnas

French Institute of Health and Medical Research

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