Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Marie-France Cesbron-Delauw is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Marie-France Cesbron-Delauw.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2005

Histone-Modifying Complexes Regulate Gene Expression Pertinent to the Differentiation of the Protozoan Parasite Toxoplasma gondii†

Nehmé Saksouk; Micah M. Bhatti; Sylvie Kieffer; Aaron T. Smith; Karine Musset; Jérôme Garin; William J. Sullivan; Marie-France Cesbron-Delauw; Mohamed-Ali Hakimi

ABSTRACT Pathogenic apicomplexan parasites like Toxoplasma and Plasmodium (malaria) have complex life cycles consisting of multiple stages. The ability to differentiate from one stage to another requires dramatic transcriptional changes, yet there is a paucity of transcription factors in these protozoa. In contrast, we show here that Toxoplasma possesses extensive chromatin remodeling machinery that modulates gene expression relevant to differentiation. We find that, as in other eukaryotes, histone acetylation and arginine methylation are marks of gene activation in Toxoplasma. We have identified mediators of these histone modifications, as well as a histone deacetylase (HDAC), and correlate their presence at target promoters in a stage-specific manner. We purified the first HDAC complex from apicomplexans, which contains novel components in addition to others previously reported in eukaryotes. A Toxoplasma orthologue of the arginine methyltransferase CARM1 appears to work in concert with the acetylase TgGCN5, which exhibits an unusual bias for H3 [K18] in vitro. Inhibition of TgCARM1 induces differentiation, showing that the parasite life cycle can be manipulated by interfering with epigenetic machinery. This may lead to new approaches for therapy against protozoal diseases and highlights Toxoplasma as an informative model to study the evolution of epigenetics in eukaryotic cells.


Experimental Parasitology | 1990

Toxoplasma gondii: Characterization and localization of antigens secreted from tachyzoites

Haleh Charif; Françoise Darcy; Gérard Torpier; Marie-France Cesbron-Delauw; André Capron

Since we had previously demonstrated the protective role played by Toxoplasma excreted-secreted antigens, the aim of the present work was to produce monoclonal antibodies directed against these antigens in order to determine if their localization in the parasite is compatible with a mechanism of excretion or secretion. Western immunoblotting analysis revealed three monoclonal antibodies (TG17-179, TG17-43, and TG17-113) raised against excreted-secreted antigens of 28.5, 27, and 21 kDa, respectively. The TG17-179 which reacts with antigens isolated by Concanavalin A affinity chromatography is directed against a glycosylated 28.5-kDa component. Colloidal immunogold labeling showed the ultrastructural localization of the 21-, 27-, and 28.5-kDa antigens in the matrix of the dense granules of tachyzoites and associated with the microvilli network of the parasitophorous vacuole, after host cell invasion. These observations suggest the following mechanism of Toxoplasma secretion: secreted antigens are first stored in tachyzoite-dense granules and are then released inside the parasitophorous vacuole. Among the secretory molecules characterized here, the native 27-kDa antigen recognized by TG17-43 is a calcium-binding protein found to be intermixed with the 21- and 28.5-kDa antigens inside the dense granules and hence could play a role in the packaging of secretory products. In addition, the 21- and 28.5-kDa antigens were also located beneath the parasite plasma-lemma. This particular location could reflect a transient step characteristic of T. gondii secretion.


Infection and Immunity | 2011

NALP1 influences susceptibility to human congenital toxoplasmosis, proinflammatory cytokine response, and fate of Toxoplasma gondii-infected monocytic cells

William H. Witola; Ernest Mui; Aubrey C. Hargrave; Susan Liu; Magali Hypolite; Alexandre Montpetit; Pierre Cavailles; Cordelia Bisanz; Marie-France Cesbron-Delauw; Gilbert J. Fournié; Rima McLeod

ABSTRACT NALP1 is a member of the NOD-like receptor (NLR) family of proteins that form inflammasomes. Upon cellular infection or stress, inflammasomes are activated, triggering maturation of proinflammatory cytokines and downstream cellular signaling mediated through the MyD88 adaptor. Toxoplasma gondii is an obligate intracellular parasite that stimulates production of high levels of proinflammatory cytokines that are important in innate immunity. In this study, susceptibility alleles for human congenital toxoplasmosis were identified in the NALP1 gene. To investigate the role of the NALP1 inflammasome during infection with T. gondii, we genetically engineered a human monocytic cell line for NALP1 gene knockdown by RNA interference. NALP1 silencing attenuated progression of T. gondii infection, with accelerated host cell death and eventual cell disintegration. In line with this observation, upregulation of the proinflammatory cytokines interleukin-1β (IL-1β), IL-18, and IL-12 upon T. gondii infection was not observed in monocytic cells with NALP1 knockdown. These findings suggest that the NALP1 inflammasome is critical for mediating innate immune responses to T. gondii infection and pathogenesis. Although there have been recent advances in understanding the potent activity of inflammasomes in directing innate immune responses to disease, this is the first report, to our knowledge, on the crucial role of the NALP1 inflammasome in the pathogenesis of T. gondii infections in humans.


Eukaryotic Cell | 2011

Type II Toxoplasma gondii KU80 knockout strains enable functional analysis of genes required for cyst development and latent infection.

Alejandra Falla; Leah M. Rommereim; Tadakimi Tomita; Jason P. Gigley; Corinne Mercier; Marie-France Cesbron-Delauw; Louis M. Weiss; David J. Bzik

ABSTRACT Type II Toxoplasma gondii KU80 knockouts (Δku80) deficient in nonhomologous end joining were developed to delete the dominant pathway mediating random integration of targeting episomes. Gene targeting frequency in the type II Δku80 Δhxgprt strain measured at the orotate (OPRT) and the uracil (UPRT) phosphoribosyltransferase loci was highly efficient. To assess the potential of the type II Δku80 Δhxgprt strain to examine gene function affecting cyst biology and latent stages of infection, we targeted the deletion of four parasite antigen genes (GRA4, GRA6, ROP7, and tgd057) that encode characterized CD8+ T cell epitopes that elicit corresponding antigen-specific CD8+ T cell populations associated with control of infection. Cyst development in these type II mutant strains was not found to be strictly dependent on antigen-specific CD8+ T cell host responses. In contrast, a significant biological role was revealed for the dense granule proteins GRA4 and GRA6 in cyst development since brain tissue cyst burdens were drastically reduced specifically in mutant strains with GRA4 and/or GRA6 deleted. Complementation of the Δgra4 and Δgra6 mutant strains using a functional allele of the deleted GRA coding region placed under the control of the endogenous UPRT locus was found to significantly restore brain cyst burdens. These results reveal that GRA proteins play a functional role in establishing cyst burdens and latent infection. Collectively, our results suggest that a type II Δku80 Δhxgprt genetic background enables a higher-throughput functional analysis of the parasite genome to reveal fundamental aspects of parasite biology controlling virulence, pathogenesis, and transmission.


Trends in Plant Science | 2001

The apicoplast: a new member of the plastid family

Eric Maréchal; Marie-France Cesbron-Delauw

Protozoan parasites of the phylum Apicomplexa include pathogens such as Plasmodium, Toxoplasma and Cryptosporidium. They have been shown to contain a vestigial nonphotosynthetic plastid, the apicoplast, which might have arisen by secondary endosymbiosis. Little is known about the function of the apicoplast but the parasites exhibit delayed cell death when their apicoplast is impaired. The discovery of the apicoplast opens an unexpected opportunity to link current fundamental research on plant and algal plastids to the physiology of apicomplexans. For example, the apicoplast might provide new targets for innovative drugs that act as herbicides and do not affect the mammalian host.


Parasite Immunology | 1999

Protective immunity in the rat model of congenital toxoplasmosis and the potential of excreted-secreted antigens as vaccine components

Lionel Zenner; Jérôme Estaquier; Françoise Darcy; Pierrette Maes; André Capron; Marie-France Cesbron-Delauw

Toxoplasma infection is a major cause of severe foetal pathology both in humans and in domestic animals, particularly sheep. We have previously reported the development of an experimental model to study congenital toxoplasmosis in the rat. Here we demonstrate that, as in humans, total protection against congenital toxoplasmosis can be achieved regardless of the strain of Toxoplasma gondii used to infect rats, or when initial and challenge infections were carried out with different strains. Chronic infection is associated with a highly specific immunity that involves both B‐and T‐cell responses beginning at day 10 postinfection. The antibody isotype analysis revealed that whereas immunoglobulin (Ig)G2b is the major elicited isotype, no IgG1 antibodies are detected. T cell proliferation was assayed using crude Toxoplasma extracts or excretory‐secretory antigens (ESA). The analysis of T cell supernatants showed the specific secretion of both interleukin‐2 and interferon‐γ by activated T cells. Immunization of rats before pregnancy with either crude Toxoplasma extracts or with ESA elicited a B cell response that included antibodies of the IgG1 isotype and conferred on the newborns high levels of protection. Preliminary experiments of immunization using two HPLC‐purified ESA, GRA2 and GRA5, conferred, a significant protection although to a lesser extent. This experimental model represents an attractive model for the identification of future vaccine candidates against congenital toxoplasmosis.


Journal of Immunology | 2000

T Cell Clones Raised from Chronically Infected Healthy Humans by Stimulation with Toxoplasma gondii Excretory-Secretory Antigens Cross-React with Live Tachyzoites: Characterization of the Fine Antigenic Specificity of the Clones and Implications for Vaccine Development

Ignazia Prigione; Paola Facchetti; Laurence Lecordier; Didier Deslée; Sabrina Chiesa; Marie-France Cesbron-Delauw; Vito Pistoia

Excreted-secreted Ags (ESA) of Toxoplasma gondii (Tg) play an important role in the stimulation of the host immune system in both acute and chronic infections. To identify the parasite Ag(s) involved in the maintenance of T cell-mediated long term immunity, 40 ESA-specific T cell clones were derived from three chronically infected healthy subjects. All the clones were CD4+ and recognized both ESA and live tachyzoites in a HLA-DR-restricted manner. Conversely, CD4+ tachyzoite-specific T cell clones from the same subjects proliferated in response to ESA, pointing to shared immunodominant Ags between ESA and Tg tachyzoites. By T cell blot analysis using SDS-PAGE-fractionated parasite extracts, the following patterns of reactivity were detected. Of 25 clones, 6 recognized Tg fractions in the 24- to 28-kDa range and proliferated to purified GRA2, 5 reacted with Tg fractions in the 30- to 33-kDa range; and 4 of them proved to be specific for rSAg1. Although surface Ag (SAg1) is not a member of ESA, small amounts of this protein were present in ESA preparation by Western blot. Of 25 clones, 8 responded to Tg fractions in the 50- to 60-kDa range but not to the 55-kDa recombinant rhoptries-2 parasite Ag, and 6 did not react with any Tg fraction but proliferated in response to either ESA or total parasite extracts. In conclusion, CD4+ T cells specific for either ESA (GRA2) or SAg1 may be involved in the maintenance of long term immunity to Tg in healthy chronically infected individuals.


Molecular Microbiology | 1996

Common cis-acting elements critical for the expression of several genes of Toxoplasma gondii

Corinne Mercier; Sophie Lefebvre-Van Hende; Gary E. Garber; Laurence Lecordier; André Capron; Marie-France Cesbron-Delauw

Transient transformation of Toxoplasma using the CAT (chloramphenicol acetyl transferase) reporter gene has been used to map promoter elements of four genes encoding dense granule proteins (GRA1, GRA2, GRA5 and GRA6). Intense CAT activities (GRA1 > GRA5 > GRA2 > GRA6) are detected for constructs containing 379 bp, 276 bp, 209 bp and 265 bp upstream of the transcription start site of the GRA1GRA2GRA5 and GRA6 genes, respectively. Deletion analysis shows that optimal promoter activity of each gene is contained in the proximal region of the transcription start site: −129 to −47 for GRA1, −87 to −37 for GRA2, −156 to −30 for GRA5 and −146 to −27 for GRA6. Quantitative CAT assay and mutation analysis show that repeated motifs (A/TGAGACG) found in either orientation with respect to transcription are critical elements of these defined promoter regions. We have found such sequence elements in the upstream region of other Toxoplasma genes such as Tub1 and within the stretch of 27 bp repeats of the SAG1 promoter.


Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2000

Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assays Using the Recombinant Dense Granule Antigens GRA6 and GRA1 of Toxoplasma gondii for Detection of Immunoglobulin G Antibodies

Laurence Lecordier; Marie-Pierre Fourmaux; Corinne Mercier; Eric Dehecq; E. Masy; Marie-France Cesbron-Delauw

ABSTRACT The potential of the dense granule antigens GRA1 and GRA6 ofToxoplasma gondii to be used as diagnosis reagents in a recombinant form was evaluated. Both proteins were expressed inEscherichia coli as glutathione-S-transferase (GST) fusions. The GST-GRA1 fusion comprises the entire GRA1 sequence devoid of its N-terminal signal peptide. Separate expression of the two N- and C-terminal hydrophilic regions of GRA6 showed that only the N-terminal hydrophilic part of the protein was recognized by a pool of positive human sera in an immunoblot. One hundred T. gondii-positive and 98 negative human sera were tested in two separate immunoglobulin G (IgG)-direct enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs) using either GST-GRA1 or GST-GRA6-Nt recombinant protein. Whereas the sensitivity of the GST-GRA1 IgG ELISA was low (68%), the GST-GRA6-Nt IgG ELISA reached a sensitivity of 96%. The reactivity to GRA6-Nt was shown to be high even with human sera of low IgG titers. In addition, comparison of the optical density values for each serum revealed that GRA1 may complement GRA6-Nt to reach an overall sensitivity of 98%. Therefore, the GST-GRA6-Nt ELISA could be used together with another antigen like GRA1 for the development of a recombinant antigen-based test for serodiagnosis of toxoplasmosis.


Biochemical Journal | 2006

Toxoplasma gondii acyl-lipid metabolism: de novo synthesis from apicoplast-generated fatty acids versus scavenging of host cell precursors

Cordelia Bisanz; Olivier Bastien; Delphine Grando; Juliette Jouhet; Eric Maréchal; Marie-France Cesbron-Delauw

Toxoplasma gondii is an obligate intracellular parasite that contains a relic plastid, called the apicoplast, deriving from a secondary endosymbiosis with an ancestral alga. Metabolic labelling experiments using [14C]acetate led to a substantial production of numerous glycero- and sphingo-lipid classes in extracellular tachyzoites. Syntheses of all these lipids were affected by the herbicide haloxyfop, demonstrating that their de novo syntheses necessarily required a functional apicoplast fatty acid synthase II. The complex metabolic profiles obtained and a census of glycerolipid metabolism gene candidates indicate that synthesis is probably scattered in the apicoplast membranes [possibly for PA (phosphatidic acid), DGDG (digalactosyldiacylglycerol) and PG (phosphatidylglycerol)], the endoplasmic reticulum (for major phospholipid classes and ceramides) and mitochondria (for PA, PG and cardiolipid). Based on a bioinformatic analysis, it is proposed that apicoplast produced acyl-ACP (where ACP is acyl-carrier protein) is transferred to glycerol-3-phosphate for apicoplast glycerolipid synthesis. Acyl-ACP is also probably transported outside the apicoplast stroma and irreversibly converted into acyl-CoA. In the endoplasmic reticulum, acyl-CoA may not be transferred to a three-carbon backbone by an enzyme similar to the cytosolic plant glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase, but rather by a dual glycerol-3-phosphate/dihydroxyacetone-3-phosphate acyltransferase like in animal and yeast cells. We further showed that intracellular parasites could also synthesize most of their lipids from scavenged host cell precursors. The observed appearance of glycerolipids specific to either the de novo pathway in extracellular parasites (unknown glycerolipid 1 and the plant like DGDG), or the intracellular stages (unknown glycerolipid 8), may explain the necessary coexistence of both de novo parasitic acyl-lipid synthesis and recycling of host cell compounds.

Collaboration


Dive into the Marie-France Cesbron-Delauw's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Corinne Mercier

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Corinne Mercier

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Cordelia Bisanz

Joseph Fourier University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Eric Maréchal

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Laurence Lecordier

Université libre de Bruxelles

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Karine Musset

Joseph Fourier University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jean Gagnon

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lionel Zenner

École Normale Supérieure

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge