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Dive into the research topics where Marie-Noelle Ungeheuer is active.

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Featured researches published by Marie-Noelle Ungeheuer.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

Human Opiorphin, a natural antinociceptive modulator of opioid-dependent pathways

Anne Wisner; Evelyne Dufour; Michaël Messaoudi; Amine Nejdi; Audrey Marcel; Marie-Noelle Ungeheuer; Catherine Rougeot

Mammalian zinc ectopeptidases play important roles in turning off neural and hormonal peptide signals at the cell surface, notably those processing sensory information. We report here the discovery of a previously uncharacterized physiological inhibitor of enkephalin-inactivating zinc ectopeptidases in humans, which we have named Opiorphin. It is a QRFSR peptide that inhibits two enkephalin-catabolizing ectoenzymes, human neutral ecto-endopeptidase, hNEP (EC 3.4.24.11), and human ecto-aminopeptidase, hAP-N (EC 3.4.11.2). Opiorphin displays potent analgesic activity in chemical and mechanical pain models by activating endogenous opioid-dependent transmission. Its function is closely related to the rat sialorphin peptide, which is an inhibitor of pain perception and acts by potentiating endogenous μ- and δ-opioid receptor-dependent enkephalinergic pathways. Here we demonstrate the functional specificity in vivo of human Opiorphin. The pain-suppressive potency of Opiorphin is as effective as morphine in the behavioral rat model of acute mechanical pain, the pin-pain test. Thus, our discovery of Opiorphin is extremely exciting from a physiological point of view in the context of endogenous opioidergic pathways, notably in modulating mood-related states and pain sensation. Furthermore, because of its in vivo properties, Opiorphin may have therapeutic implications.


Immunity | 2014

Functional Analysis via Standardized Whole-Blood Stimulation Systems Defines the Boundaries of a Healthy Immune Response to Complex Stimuli

Darragh Duffy; Vincent Rouilly; Valentina Libri; Milena Hasan; Benoît Beitz; Mikael David; Alejandra Urrutia; Aurélie Bisiaux; Samuel T. LaBrie; Annick Dubois; Ivo G. Boneca; Cécile Delval; Stéphanie Thomas; Lars Rogge; Manfred Schmolz; Lluis Quintana-Murci; Matthew L. Albert; Laurent Abel; Andrés Alcover; Philippe Bousso; Ana Cumano; Marc Daëron; Caroline Demangel; Ludovic Deriano; James P. Di Santo; Françoise Dromer; Gérard Eberl; Jost Enninga; Antonio A. Freitas; Ivo Gomperts-Boneca

Standardization of immunophenotyping procedures has become a high priority. We have developed a suite of whole-blood, syringe-based assay systems that can be used to reproducibly assess induced innate or adaptive immune responses. By eliminating preanalytical errors associated with immune monitoring, we have defined the protein signatures induced by (1) medically relevant bacteria, fungi, and viruses; (2) agonists specific for defined host sensors; (3) clinically employed cytokines; and (4) activators of T cell immunity. Our results provide an initial assessment of healthy donor reference values for induced cytokines and chemokines and we report the failure to release interleukin-1α as a common immunological phenotype. The observed naturally occurring variation of the immune response may help to explain differential susceptibility to disease or response to therapeutic intervention. The implementation of a general solution for assessment of functional immune responses will help support harmonization of clinical studies and data sharing.


British Journal of Dermatology | 2015

First nicastrin mutation in PASH (pyoderma gangrenosum, acne and suppurative hidradenitis) syndrome.

S. Duchatelet; S. Miskinyte; Olivier Join-Lambert; Marie-Noelle Ungeheuer; Camille Frances; A. Nassif; A. Hovnanian

DEAR EDITOR, PASH (pyoderma gangrenosum, acne and suppurative hidradenitis) syndrome is a new clinical entity associating pyoderma gangrenosum (PG), severe acne and hidradenitis suppurativa (HS). The absence of pyogenic sterile arthritis (PA) distinguishes PASH syndrome from PAPASH (pyogenic arthritis, pyoderma gangrenosum, acne and hidradenitis suppurativa) and PAPA (pyogenic arthritis, pyoderma gangrenosum and acne) syndromes, which exhibit PA in combination with PG, severe acne with or without HS, respectively. Mutations in the coding region of the proline-serine-threonine-phosphatase interacting protein 1 gene (PSTPIP1) were identified in patients with PAPA and PAPASH syndromes, although PAPA syndrome is genetically heterogenous. HS (OMIM#142690) is a chronic skin disease characterized by nodules, cysts and abscesses in apocrine gland-bearing sites. Loss-of-function mutations in the c-secretase genes, nicastrin (NCSTN), presenilin enhancer gamma secretase subunit (PSENEN) and presenilin 1 (PSEN1), have been reported in a small number of HS cases. Furthermore, c-secretase is an intramembranous protease complex capable of cleaving transmembrane proteins, including Notch receptors. Mutations in the c-secretase genes may


Clinical Immunology | 2015

The Milieu Intérieur study — An integrative approach for study of human immunological variance ☆

Stéphanie Thomas; Vincent Rouilly; Etienne Patin; Cécile Alanio; Annick Dubois; Cécile Delval; Louis-Guillaume Marquier; Nicolas Fauchoux; Seloua Sayegrih; Muriel Vray; Darragh Duffy; Lluis Quintana-Murci; Matthew L. Albert; Laurent Abel; Andrés Alcover; Philippe Bousso; Pierre Bruhns; Ana Cumano; Marc Daëron; Caroline Demangel; Ludovic Deriano; James P. Di Santo; Françoise Dromer; Gérard Eberl; Jost Enninga; Antonio A. Freitas; Odile Gelpi; Ivo Gomperts-Boneca; Serge Hercberg; Olivier Lantz

The Milieu Intérieur Consortium has established a 1000-person healthy population-based study (stratified according to sex and age), creating an unparalleled opportunity for assessing the determinants of human immunologic variance. Herein, we define the criteria utilized for participant enrollment, and highlight the key data that were collected for correlative studies. In this report, we analyzed biological correlates of sex, age, smoking-habits, metabolic score and CMV infection. We characterized and identified unique risk factors among healthy donors, as compared to studies that have focused on the general population or disease cohorts. Finally, we highlight sex-bias in the thresholds used for metabolic score determination and recommend a deeper examination of current guidelines. In sum, our clinical design, standardized sample collection strategies, and epidemiological data analyses have established the foundation for defining variability within human immune responses.


Biopreservation and Biobanking | 2012

Influence of Pre-analytical Variables on VEGF Gene Expression and Circulating Protein Concentrations

Mohsen Azimi-Nezhad; Daniel Lambert; Catherine Ottone; Corinne Perrin; Celine Chapel; Gwenaëlle Gaillard; Michèle Pfister; Christine Masson; Eric Tabone; Fay Betsou; David Meyronet; Marie-Noelle Ungeheuer; Sophie Visvikis Siest

BACKGROUND The extended role of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in human pathophysiology led us to evaluate pre-analytical parameters possibly influencing its levels in peripheral blood and tissues. The effects on VEGF protein levels and mRNA expression were measured after storage delay (blood and tissue), use of different types of anticoagulants (blood), and after different numbers of freeze-thaw cycles (blood). METHODS Blood from healthy donors was sampled simultaneously in ethylene diamine tetraacetic acid (EDTA), acid citrate dextrose (ACD-A), hirudin, and serum separation tubes. For each anticoagulant, VEGF was measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) with different conditions of delay at 4°C before centrifugation (2 h, 4 h, or 48 h) and of different numbers of freeze-thaw cycles (1, 2, and 10). The transcripts coding for the VEGF165 isoform were quantified in peripheral blood mononuclear cells by RT-PCR. Muscle biopsy samples were frozen with delays of 15, 30, or 60 min after surgery. VEGF expression was quantified on immunofluorescence stained slides. RESULTS The period of storage and the number of freeze-thaw cycles correlated with an increase in the levels of circulating VEGF (for each anticoagulant but not for serum) and its expression in PBMCs. VEGF expression measured from muscle biopsy sections was higher with freezing delays, with a peak at 30 and 60 min as compared to 15 min. CONCLUSIONS The most reliable conditions for measuring both circulating VEGF and its gene expression are to reduce time between blood collection and centrifugation, and to avoid multiple freeze-thaw cycles. Serum collection tubes with no additive and no separator were less sensitive to the pre-analytical variations analyzed in this study. Freezing delay had a significant influence on VEGF protein expression in tissue samples.


Immunology Letters | 2013

Immunodominance of HLA-B27-restricted HIV KK10-specific CD8+ T-cells is not related to naïve precursor frequency

Maria Candela Iglesias; Olivia Briceño; Emma Gostick; Arnaud Moris; Céline Meaudre; David A. Price; Marie-Noelle Ungeheuer; Asier Sáez-Cirión; Roberto Mallone; Victor Appay

The factors that determine the immunodominance, efficacy and almost ubiquitous presence of CD8(+) T-cell responses to the HLA-B27-restricted HIV-1 p24 Gag-derived KK10 epitope remain to be fully elucidated. Here, we show that neither the precursor frequency nor the priming capacity of KK10-reactive CD8(+) T-cells within the naïve pool differ substantially in comparison to other specificities. These data implicate alternative mechanisms in the relative protection conferred by CD8(+) T-cell responses to this epitope.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2017

The Microbiological Landscape of Anaerobic Infections in Hidradenitis Suppurativa: A Prospective Metagenomic Study

Hélène Guet-Revillet; Jean-Philippe Jais; Marie-Noelle Ungeheuer; Hélène Coignard-Biehler; Sabine Duchatelet; Maïa Delage; Thi Lam; Alain Hovnanian; O. Lortholary; Xavier Nassif; A. Nassif; Olivier Join-Lambert

Background Hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) is a frequent and severe disease of the skin, characterized by recurrent or chronic skinfold suppurative lesions with a high impact on quality of life. Although considered inflammatory, antimicrobial treatments can improve or lead to clinical remission of HS, suggesting triggering microbial factors. Indeed, mixed anaerobic microbiota are associated with a majority of HS lesions. Our aim in this study was to characterize the landscape of anaerobic infections in HS using high-throughput sequencing. Methods We sampled and cultured 149 lesions and 175 unaffected control skinfold areas from 65 adult HS patients. The microbiome of 80 anaerobic lesions was compared to that of 88 control samples by 454 high-throughput sequencing after construction of 16S ribosomal RNA gene libraries. Results Bacterial cultures detected anaerobes in 83% of lesions vs 53% of control samples, combined with milleri group streptococci and actinomycetes in 33% and 26% of cases, respectively. High-throughput sequencing identified 43 taxa associated with HS lesions. Two gram-negative anaerobic rod taxa, Prevotella and Porphyromonas, predominated, contrasting with a reduced abundance of aerobic commensals. These rare taxa of normal skinfold microbiota were associated with lesions independently of gender, duration and familial history of HS, body mass index, and location. Two main additional taxa, Fusobacterium and Parvimonas, correlated with the clinical severity of HS. Conclusions In this study we reveal the high prevalence and particular landscape of mixed anaerobic infection in HS, paving the way for rationale targeted antimicrobial treatments.


Blood | 2016

Anoxia and glucose supplementation preserve neutrophil viability and function.

Valérie Monceaux; Clarisse Chiche-Lapierre; Catherine Chaput; Véronique Witko-Sarsat; Marie-Christine Prévost; Cormac T. Taylor; Marie-Noelle Ungeheuer; Philippe J. Sansonetti; Benoit Marteyn

Functional studies of human neutrophils and their transfusion for clinical purposes have been hampered by their short life span after isolation. Here, we demonstrate that neutrophil viability is maintained for 20 hours in culture media at 37°C under anoxic conditions with 3 mM glucose and 32 μg/mL dimethyloxalylglycine supplementation, as evidenced by stabilization of Mcl-1, proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), and pro-caspase-3. Notably, neutrophil morphology (nucleus shape and cell-surface markers) and functions (phagocytosis, degranulation, calcium release, chemotaxis, and reactive oxygen species production) were comparable to blood circulating neutrophils. The observed extension in neutrophil viability was reversed upon exposure to oxygen. Extending neutrophil life span allowed efficient transfection of plasmids (40% transfection efficiency) and short interfering RNA (interleukin-8, PCNA, and Bax), as a validation of effective and functional genetic manipulation of neutrophils both in vitro and in vivo. In vivo, transfusion of conditioned neutrophils in a neutropenic guinea pig model increased bacterial clearance of Shigella flexneri upon colonic infection, strongly suggesting that these conditioned neutrophils might be suitable for transfusion purposes. In summary, such conditioning of neutrophils in vitro should facilitate their study and offer new opportunities for genetic manipulation and therapeutic use.


Clinical Immunology | 2017

Standardized whole blood stimulation improves immunomonitoring of induced immune responses in multi-center study

Darragh Duffy; Vincent Rouilly; Cécile Braudeau; Véronique Corbière; Raouf Djebali; Marie-Noelle Ungeheuer; Régis Josien; Samuel T. LaBrie; Olivier Lantz; Delphine Louis; Eva Martínez-Cáceres; Françoise Mascart; Jose G. Ruiz de Morales; Catherine Ottone; Lydia Redjah; Nina Salabert-Le Guen; Alain Savenay; Manfred Schmolz; Antoine Toubert; Matthew L. Albert

Functional immune responses are increasingly important for clinical studies, providing in depth biomarker information to assess immunotherapy or vaccination. Incorporating functional immune assays into routine clinical practice has remained limited due to challenges in standardizing sample preparation. We recently described the use of a whole blood syringe-based system, TruCulture®, which permits point-of-care standardized immune stimulation. Here, we report on a multi-center clinical study in seven FOCIS Centers of Excellence to directly compare TruCulture to conventional PBMC methods. Whole blood and PBMCs from healthy donors were exposed to LPS, anti-CD3 anti-CD28 antibodies, or media alone. 55 protein analytes were analyzed centrally by Luminex multi-analyte profiling in a CLIA-certified laboratory. TruCulture responses showed greater reproducibility and improved the statistical power for monitoring differential immune response activation. The use of TruCulture addresses a major unmet need through a robust and flexible method for immunomonitoring that can be reproducibly applied in multi-center clinical studies. ONE SENTENCE SUMMARY A multi-center study revealed greater reproducibility from whole blood stimulation systems as compared to PBMC stimulation for studying induced immune responses.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Dendritic Cells from HIV Controllers Have Low Susceptibility to HIV-1 Infection In Vitro but High Capacity to Capture HIV-1 Particles

Chiraz Hamimi; Annie David; Pierre Versmisse; Laurence Weiss; Timothée Bruel; David Zucman; Victor Appay; Arnaud Moris; Marie-Noelle Ungeheuer; Caroline Lascoux-Combe; Françoise Barré-Sinoussi; Michaela Müller-Trutwin; Faroudy Boufassa; Olivier Lambotte; Gianfranco Pancino; Asier Sáez-Cirión

HIV controllers (HICs), rare HIV-1 infected individuals able to control viral replication without antiretroviral therapy, are characterized by an efficient polyfunctional and cytolytic HIV-specific CD8+ T cell response. The mechanisms underlying the induction and maintenance of such response in many HICs despite controlled viremia are not clear. Dendritic cells play a crucial role in the generation and reactivation of T cell responses but scarce information is available on those cells in HICs. We found that monocyte derived dendritic cells (MDDCs) from HICs are less permissive to HIV-1 infection than cells from healthy donors. In contrast MDDCs from HICs are particularly efficient at capturing HIV-1 particles when compared to cells from healthy donors or HIV-1 patients with suppressed viral load on antiretroviral treatment. MDDCs from HICs expressed on their surface high levels of syndecan-3, DC-SIGN and MMR, which could cooperate to facilitate HIV-1 capture. The combination of low susceptibility to HIV-1 infection but enhanced capacity to capture particles might allow MDDCs from HICs to preserve their function from the deleterious effect of infection while facilitating induction of HIV-specific CD8+ T cells by cross-presentation in a context of low viremia.

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