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Dive into the research topics where Marie Meister is active.

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Featured researches published by Marie Meister.


Cell | 2005

Eater, a Transmembrane Protein Mediating Phagocytosis of Bacterial Pathogens in Drosophila

Christine Kocks; Ju Hyun Cho; Nadine T. Nehme; Johanna Ulvila; Alan Pearson; Marie Meister; Charles Strom; Stephanie L. Conto; Charles Hetru; Lynda M. Stuart; Thilo Stehle; Jules A. Hoffmann; Jean-Marc Reichhart; Dominique Ferrandon; Mika Rämet; R. Alan B. Ezekowitz

Phagocytosis is a complex, evolutionarily conserved process that plays a central role in host defense against infection. We have identified a predicted transmembrane protein, Eater, which is involved in phagocytosis in Drosophila. Transcriptional silencing of the eater gene in a macrophage cell line led to a significant reduction in the binding and internalization of bacteria. Moreover, the N terminus of the Eater protein mediated direct microbial binding which could be inhibited with scavenger receptor ligands, acetylated, and oxidized low-density lipoprotein. In vivo, eater expression was restricted to blood cells. Flies lacking the eater gene displayed normal responses in NF-kappaB-like Toll and IMD signaling pathways but showed impaired phagocytosis and decreased survival after bacterial infection. Our results suggest that Eater is a major phagocytic receptor for a broad range of bacterial pathogens in Drosophila and provide a powerful model to address the role of phagocytosis in vivo.


Cellular Microbiology | 2005

New insights into Drosophila larval haemocyte functions through genome-wide analysis

Phil Irving; Jean-Michel Ubeda; Daniel Doucet; Laurent Troxler; Marie Lagueux; Daniel Zachary; Jules A. Hoffmann; Charles Hetru; Marie Meister

Drosophila blood cells or haemocytes comprise three cell lineages, plasmatocytes, crystal cells and lamellocytes, involved in immune functions such as phagocytosis, melanisation and encapsulation. Transcriptional profiling of activities of distinct haemocyte populations and from naïve or infected larvae, was performed to find genes contributing to haemocyte functions. Of the 13 000 genes represented on the microarray, over 2500 exhibited significantly enriched transcription in haemocytes. Among these were genes encoding integrins, peptidoglycan recognition proteins (PGRPs), scavenger receptors, lectins, cell adhesion molecules and serine proteases. One relevant outcome of this analysis was the gain of new insights into the lamellocyte encapsulation process. We showed that lamellocytes require βPS integrin for encapsulation and that they transcribe one prophenoloxidase gene enabling them to produce the enzyme necessary for melanisation of the capsule. A second compelling observation was that following infection, the gene encoding the cytokine Spätzle was uniquely upregulated in haemocytes and not the fat body. This shows that Drosophila haemocytes produce a signal molecule ready to be activated through cleavage after pathogen recognition, informing distant tissues of infection.


Nature | 2007

Control of blood cell homeostasis in Drosophila larvae by the posterior signalling centre

Joanna Krzemien; Laurence Dubois; Rami Makki; Marie Meister; Alain Vincent; Michèle Crozatier

Drosophila haemocytes (blood cells) originate from a specialized haematopoietic organ—the lymph gland. Larval haematopoietic progenitors (prohaemocytes) give rise to three types of circulating haemocytes: plasmatocytes, crystal cells and lamellocytes. Lamellocytes, which are devoted to encapsulation of large foreign bodies, only differentiate in response to specific immune threats, such as parasitization by wasps. Here we show that a small cluster of signalling cells, termed the PSC (posterior signalling centre), controls the balance between multipotent prohaemocytes and differentiating haemocytes, and is necessary for the massive differentiation of lamellocytes that follows parasitization. Communication between the PSC and haematopoietic progenitors strictly depends on the PSC-restricted expression of Collier, the Drosophila orthologue of mammalian early B-cell factor. PSC cells act, in a non-cell-autonomous manner, to maintain JAK/STAT signalling activity in prohaemocytes, preventing their premature differentiation. Serrate-mediated Notch signalling from the PSC is required to maintain normal levels of col transcription. The key role of the PSC in controlling blood cell homeostasis is reminiscent of interactions between haematopoietic progenitors and their micro-environment in vertebrates, thus further highlighting the interest of Drosophila as a model system for studying the evolution of haematopoiesis and cellular innate immunity.


The EMBO Journal | 1995

Functional analysis and regulation of nuclear import of dorsal during the immune response in Drosophila

Bruno Lemaitre; Marie Meister; S Govind; Philippe Georgel; Ruth Steward; J M Reichhart; Jules A. Hoffmann

In addition to its function in embryonic development, the NF‐kappa B/rel‐related gene dorsal (dl) of Drosophila is expressed in larval and adult fat body where its RNA expression is enhanced upon injury. Injury also leads to a rapid nuclear translocation of dl from the cytoplasm in fat body cells. Here we present data which strongly suggest that the nuclear localization of dl during the immune response is controlled by the Toll signaling pathway, comprising gene products that participate in the intracellular part of the embryonic dorsoventral pathway. We also report that in mutants such as Toll or cactus, which exhibit melanotic tumor phenotypes, dl is constitutively nuclear. Together, these results point to a potential link between the Toll signaling pathway and melanotic tumor induction. Although dl has been shown previously to bind to kappa B‐related motifs within the promoter of the antibacterial peptide coding gene diptericin, we find that injury‐induced expression of diptericin can occur in the absence of dl. Furthermore, the melanotic tumor phenotype of Toll and cactus is not dl dependent. These data underline the complexity of the Drosophila immune response. Finally, we observed that like other rel proteins, dl can control the level of its own transcription.


Cellular Microbiology | 2003

Drosophila blood cells

Marie Meister; Marie Lagueux

Drosophila blood cells or haemocytes belong to three lineages: plasmatocytes, crystal cells and lamellocytes. There is no equivalent of a lymphoid lineage in insects which have no adaptive immunity. Haematopoiesis is under the control of a number of transcription factors and signalling pathways (such as GATA factors, JAK/STAT or Notch pathways) most of which have homologues which participate in the control of mammalian haematopoiesis. Drosophila plasmatocytes are professional phagocytes reminiscent of the cells from the mammalian monocyte/macrophage lineage. Several receptors responsible for recognition of microorganisms or apoptotic corpses have been identified, which include a Scavenger Receptor, a CD36 homologue and a peptidoglycan recognition protein. Crystal cells contain the enzymes necessary for humoral melanization that accompanies a number of immune reactions. The production of melanin generates, as by‐products, cytotoxic free radicals that are believed to participate in the killing of pathogens. Finally, lamellocytes represent a cell type that specifically differentiates after parasitism of Drosophila larvae and forms a capsule around the invader. Encapsulation together with melanization eventually kill the parasite within the capsule.


PLOS Biology | 2004

Cellular immune response to parasitization in Drosophila requires the EBF orthologue collier.

Michèle Crozatier; Jean-Michel Ubeda; Alain Vincent; Marie Meister

Drosophila immune response involves three types of hemocytes (‘blood cells’). One cell type, the lamellocyte, is induced to differentiate only under particular conditions, such as parasitization by wasps. Here, we have investigated the mechanisms underlying the specification of lamellocytes. We first show that collier (col), the Drosophila orthologue of the vertebrate gene encoding early B-cell factor (EBF), is expressed very early during ontogeny of the lymph gland, the larval hematopoietic organ. In this organ, Col expression prefigures a specific posterior region recently proposed to act as a signalling centre, the posterior signalling centre (PSC). The complete lack of lamellocytes in parasitized col mutant larvae revealed the critical requirement for Col activity in specification of this cell type. In wild-type larvae, Col expression remains restricted to the PSC following parasitization, despite the massive production of lamellocytes. We therefore propose that Col endows PSC cells with the capacity to relay an instructive signal that orients hematopoietic precursors towards the lamellocyte fate in response to parasitization. Considered together with the role of EBF in lymphopoiesis, these findings suggest new parallels in cellular immunity between Drosophila and vertebrates. Further investigations on Col/EBF expression and function in other phyla should provide fresh insight into the evolutionary origin of lymphoid cells.


The EMBO Journal | 1992

Insect immunity: developmental and inducible activity of the Drosophila diptericin promoter.

J M Reichhart; Marie Meister; Jean-Luc Dimarcq; Daniel Zachary; D. Hoffmann; C Ruiz; G Richards; Jules A. Hoffmann

Diptericins are 9 kDa inducible antibacterial peptides initially isolated from immune haemolymph of Phormia (Diptera). Following the isolation of a Drosophila cDNA encoding a diptericin homologue, we have now cloned a genomic fragment containing the Drosophila diptericin gene. To dissect the regulation of this gene, we have transformed flies with a fusion gene in which the reporter beta‐galactosidase gene is under the control of 2.2 kb upstream sequences of the diptericin gene. We show that such a fusion gene is inducible by injection of live bacteria or complete Freunds adjuvant and respects the tissue specific expression pattern of the resident diptericin gene. Our analysis reveals at least four distinct phases in the regulation of this gene: young larvae, late third instar larvae, pupae and adults. This complexity may be related to the presence in the upstream sequences of multiple copies of response elements previously characterized in genes encoding acute phase response proteins in mammals (e.g. NK‐kappa B, NF‐kappa B related, NF‐IL6 response elements).


The EMBO Journal | 1993

Insect immunity. Two 17 bp repeats nesting a kappa B-related sequence confer inducibility to the diptericin gene and bind a polypeptide in bacteria-challenged Drosophila.

Christine Kappler; Marie Meister; Marie Lagueux; E Gateff; Jules A. Hoffmann; J M Reichhart

The Drosophila diptericin gene codes for a 9 kDa antibacterial peptide and is rapidly and transiently expressed in larvae and adults after bacterial challenge. It is also induced in a tumorous Drosophila blood cell line by the addition of lipopolysaccharide (LPS). The promoter of this gene contains two 17 bp repeats located closely upstream of the TATA‐box and harbouring a decameric kappa B‐related sequence. This study reports that the replacement of the two 17 bp repeats by random sequences abolishes bacteria inducibility in transgenic fly lines. In transfected tumorous blood cells, the replacement of both or either of the 17 bp motifs reduces dramatically LPS inducibility, whereas multiple copies significantly increase the level of transcriptional activation by LPS challenge. A specific DNA‐protein binding activity is evidenced in cytoplasmic and nuclear extracts of induced blood cells and fat body. It is absent in controls. It is proposed that induction of the diptericin gene mediated by the two 17 bp repeats occurs via a mechanism similar to that of mammalian NF‐kappa B.


EMBO Reports | 2002

PVF2, a PDGF/VEGF‐like growth factor, induces hemocyte proliferation in Drosophila larvae

Anne-Isabelle Munier; Daniel Doucet; Emmanuel Perrodou; Daniel Zachary; Marie Meister; Jules A. Hoffmann; Charles A. Janeway; Marie Lagueux

Blood cells play a crucial role in both morphogenetic and immunological processes in Drosophila, yet the factors regulating their proliferation remain largely unknown. In order to address this question, we raised antibodies against a tumorous blood cell line and identified an antigenic determinant that marks the surface of prohemocytes and also circulating plasmatocytes in larvae. This antigen was identified as a Drosophila homolog of the mammalian receptor for platelet‐derived growth factor (PDGF)/vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). The Drosophila receptor controls cell proliferation in vitro. By overexpressing in vivo one of its putative ligands, PVF2, we induced a dramatic increase in circulating hemocytes. These results identify the PDGF/VEGF receptor homolog and one of its ligands as important players in Drosophila hematopoiesis.


Current Biology | 2002

Notch signaling controls lineage specification during Drosophila larval hematopoiesis.

Bernard Duvic; Jules A. Hoffmann; Marie Meister; Julien Royet

Drosophila larval hemocytes originate from a hematopoietic organ called lymph glands, which are composed of paired lobes located along the dorsal vessel. Two mature blood cell populations are found in the circulating hemolymph: the macrophage-like plasmatocytes, and the crystal cells that contain enzymes of the immune-related melanization process. A third class of cells, called lamellocytes, are normally absent in larvae but differentiate after infection by parasites too large to be phagocytosed. Here we present evidence that the Notch signaling pathway plays an instructive role in the differentiation of crystal cells. Loss-of-function mutations in Notch result in severely decreased crystal cell numbers, whereas overexpression of Notch provokes the differentiation of high numbers of these cells. We demonstrate that, in this process, Serrate, not Delta, is the Notch ligand. In addition, Notch function is necessary for lamellocyte proliferation upon parasitization, although Notch overexpression does not result in lamellocyte production. Finally, Notch does not appear to play a role in the differentiation of the plasmatocyte lineage. This study underlines the existence of parallels in the genetic control of hematopoiesis in Drosophila and in mammals.

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Dive into the Marie Meister's collaboration.

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Jules A. Hoffmann

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Bruno Lemaitre

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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J M Reichhart

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Marie Lagueux

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Daniel Zachary

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Anne Braun

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Charles Hetru

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Christine Kappler

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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François Holder

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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