Mélanie Denizot
University of La Réunion
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Publication
Featured researches published by Mélanie Denizot.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2006
Lucile Espert; Mélanie Denizot; Marina Grimaldi; Véronique Robert-Hebmann; Mihayl Varbanov; Patrice Codogno; Martine Biard-Piechaczyk
HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins (Env), expressed at the cell surface, induce apoptosis of uninfected CD4+ T cells, contributing to the development of AIDS. Here we demonstrate that, independently of HIV replication, transfected or HIV-infected cells that express Env induced autophagy and accumulation of Beclin 1 in uninfected CD4+ T lymphocytes via CXCR4. The same phenomena occurred in a T cell line and in transfected HEK.293 cells that expressed both wild-type CXCR4 and a truncated form of CD4 that is unable to bind the lymphocyte-specific protein kinase Lck. Env-mediated autophagy is required to trigger CD4+ T cell apoptosis since blockade of autophagy at different steps, by either drugs (3-methyladenine and bafilomycin A1) or siRNAs specific for Beclin 1/Atg6 and Atg7 genes, totally inhibited the apoptotic process. Furthermore, CD4+ T cells still underwent Env-mediated cell death with autophagic features when apoptosis was inhibited. These results suggest that HIV-infected cells can induce autophagy in bystander CD4+ T lymphocytes through contact of Env with CXCR4, leading to apoptotic cell death, a mechanism most likely contributing to immunodeficiency.
Journal of Immunology | 2010
Jean-Jacques Hoarau; Marie-Christine Jaffar Bandjee; Pascale Krejbich Trotot; Trina Das; Ghislaine Li-Pat-Yuen; Bérengère Dassa; Mélanie Denizot; Elsa Guichard; Anne Ribera; Tawfiq Henni; Frank Tallet; Marie Pierre Moiton; Bernard Alex Gauzere; Sandrine Bruniquet; Zaïnoul Jaffar Bandjee; Philippe Morbidelli; Gérard Martigny; Michel Jolivet; Marc Grandadam; Hugues J. Tolou; Vincent Vieillard; Patrice Debré; Brigitte Autran; Philippe Gasque
Alphaviruses, including Chikungunya virus (CHIKV), produce a transient illness in humans, but severe forms leading to chronic incapacitating arthralgia/arthritis have been reported by mechanisms largely ill-characterized. The pathogenesis of CHIKV was addressed in a prospective cohort study of 49 hospitalized patients from Reunion Island subsequently categorized into two distinct groups at 12 mo postinfection. Comprehensive analyses of the clinical and immunological parameters throughout the disease course were analyzed in either the “recovered” or the “chronic” groups to identify prognostic markers of arthritis-like pathology after CHIKV disease. We found that the chronic group consisted mainly of more elderly patients (>60 y) and with much higher viral loads (up to 1010 viruses per milliliter of blood) during the acute phase. Remarkably, a rapid innate immune antiviral response was demonstrated by robust dendritic/NK/CD4/CD8 cell activation and accompanied by a rather weak Th1/Th2 cytokine response in both groups. Interestingly, the antiviral immune response witnessed by high levels of IFN-α mRNA in PBMCs and circulating IL-12 persisted for months only in the chronic group. CHIKV (RNA and proteins) was found in perivascular synovial macrophages in one chronic patient 18 mo postinfection surrounded by infiltrating NK and T cells (CD4++ but rare cytotoxic CD8). Fibroblast hyperplasia, strong angiogenesis, tissue lesions given the high levels of matrix metalloproteinase 2, and acute cell death [high cleaved poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase staining] were observed in the injured synovial tissue. These observed cellular and molecular events may contribute to chronic arthralgia/arthritis targeted by methotrexate used empirically for effective treatment but with immunosuppressive function in a context of viral persistence.
Progress in Neurobiology | 2010
Trina Das; Marie Christine Jaffar-Bandjee; Jean Jacques Hoarau; Pascale Krejbich Trotot; Mélanie Denizot; Ghislaine Lee-Pat-Yuen; Renubala Sahoo; Pascale Guiraud; Duksha Ramful; Stephanie Robin; Jean Luc Alessandri; Bernard Alex Gauzere; Philippe Gasque
Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) is transmitted by Aedes mosquitoes and causes an acute symptomatic illness with fever, skin rash, and incapacitating arthralgia, which can evolve into chronic rheumatoid arthritis in elderly patients. This is a tropical disease originally described in central/east Africa in the 1960s, but its 2004 re-emergence in Africa and rapid spread in lands in and around the Indian Ocean (Reunion island, India, Malaysia) as well as Europe (Italy) led to almost 6 million cases worldwide. The risk of importation and spreading diseases with long-term sequelae is even greater today given the global distribution of the vectors (including in the Americas), increased tourism and the apparent capacity of CHIKV to produce high levels of viremia (10(9)-10(12) virus/ml of blood) and new mutants. CHIKV-associated neuropathology was described early in the 1960s, but it is the unprecedented incidence rate in Indian Ocean areas with efficient clinical facilities that allowed a better description of cases with severe encephalitis, meningoencephalitis, peripheral neuropathies and deaths among newborns (mother-to-child infection), infants and elderly patients. Death rates following CHIKV infection were estimated at 1:1000 cases in la Reunions outbreak. These clinical observations have been corroborated by experimental infection in several mouse models, leading to CNS pathologies. We further describe in this review the capacity of CHIKV to infect neurons and glial cells, delineate the fundamental innate (intrinsic) immune defence mechanisms to protect from infection and argue about the possible mechanisms involved in the encephalopathy.
Autophagy | 2008
Mélanie Denizot; Mihayl Varbanov; Lucile Espert; Véronique Robert-Hebmann; Sophie Sagnier; Elisabet García; Marta Curriu; Robert Mamoun; Julià Blanco; Martine Biard-Piechaczyk
Cell-expressed HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins (gp120 and gp41, called Env) induce autophagy in uninfected CD4 T cells, leading to their apoptosis, a mechanism most likely contributing to immunodeficiency. The presence of CD4 and CXCR4 on target cells is required for this process, but Env-induced autophagy is independent of CD4 signaling. Here, we demonstrate that CXCR4-mediated signaling pathways are not directly involved in autophagy and cell death triggering. Indeed, cells stably expressing mutated forms of CXCR4, unable to transduce different Gi-dependent and -independent signals, still undergo autophagy and cell death after coculture with effector cells expressing Env. After gp120 binding to CD4 and CXCR4, the N terminus fusion peptide (FP) of gp41 is inserted into the target membrane, and gp41 adopts a trimeric extended pre-hairpin intermediate conformation, target of HIV fusion inhibitors such as T20 and C34, before formation of a stable six-helix bundle structure and cell-to-cell fusion. Interestingly, Env-mediated autophagy is triggered in both single cells (hemifusion) and syncytia (complete fusion), and prevented by T20 and C34. The gp41 fusion activity is responsible for Env-mediated autophagy since the Val2Glu mutation in the gp41 FP totally blocks this process. On the contrary, deletion of the C-terminal part of gp41 enhances Env-induced autophagy. These results underline the major role of gp41 in inducing autophagy in the uninfected cells and indicate that the entire process leading to HIV entry into target cells through binding of Env to its receptors, CD4 and CXCR4, is responsible for autophagy and death in the uninfected, bystander cells.
The FASEB Journal | 2011
Pascale Krejbich-Trotot; Mélanie Denizot; Jean-Jacques Hoarau; Trina Das; Philippe Gasque
Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) surprised medical workers by a massive outbreak in the Indian Ocean region, reaching Europe in 2007, with exceptional pathologies in infants and elderly patients. Although CHIKV was recently shown to persist in myo‐blasts, monocytes, and macrophages, we argued that robust antiviral mechanisms, including apoptosis, are essential to ward off the virus. Herein, we tested the capacity of CHIKVto mobilize the apoptotic machinery in HeLa cells as well as primary fibroblasts, making use of several inhibitors of caspases, cell blebbing, and engulfment of the apoptotic blebs by neighboring cells. CHIKV triggered apoptosis through intrinsic and extrinsic pathways. Bystander apoptosis was also evidenced in neighboring cells in a caspase‐8‐dependent manner. Remarkably, by hiding in apoptotic blebs, CHIKV was able to infect neighboring cells. In HeLa cells, these events were inhibited specifically by zVAD‐fmk and DEVD‐cho (caspase inhibitors), blebbistatin, Y‐27632 (ROCK inhibitor), and genistein, annexin V, and cytochalasin B (inhibitors of blebbing and engulf‐ment). These CHIKV‐apoptotic blebs were also capable of infecting macrophages (primary cultures, MM6‐ and THP1‐PMA differentiated cells) otherwise refractory to infection by CHIKV alone. Remarkably, viral replication in macrophages did not yield a proinflammatory response. We describe a novel infectious mechanism by which CHIKV invades host cells and escapes the host response.—Krejbich‐Trotot, P., Denizot, M., Hoarau, J.‐J., Jaffar‐Bandjee, M.‐C., Das, T., Gasque, P. Chikun‐gunya virus mobilizes the apoptotic machinery to invade host cell defenses. FASEB J. 25, 314–325 (2011). www.fasebj.org
Virology Journal | 2011
Pascale Krejbich-Trotot; Ghislaine Li-Pat-Yuen; Jean-Jacques Hoarau; Laurence Briant; Philippe Gasque; Mélanie Denizot
BackgroundChikungunya Virus (ChikV) surprised by a massive re-emerging outbreak in Indian Ocean in 2006, reaching Europe in 2007 and exhibited exceptional severe physiopathology in infants and elderly patients. In this context, it is important to analyze the innate immune host responses triggered against ChikV. Autophagy has been shown to be an important component of the innate immune response and is involved in host defense elimination of different pathogens. However, the autophagic process was recently observed to be hijacked by virus for their own replication. Here we provide the first evidence that hallmarks of autophagy are specifically found in HEK.293 infected cells and are involved in ChikV replication.MethodsTo test the capacity of ChikV to mobilize the autophagic machinery, we performed fluorescence microscopy experiments on HEK.GFP.LC3 stable cells, and followed the LC3 distribution during the time course of ChikV infection. To confirm this, we performed electron microscopy on HEK.293 infected cells. To test the effect of ChikV-induced-autophagy on viral replication, we blocked the autophagic process, either by pharmacological (3-MA) or genetic inhibition (siRNA against the transcript of Beclin 1, an autophagic protein), and analyzed the percentage of infected cells and the viral RNA load released in the supernatant. Moreover, the effect of induction of autophagy by Rapamycin on viral replication was tested.ResultsThe increasing number of GFP-LC3 positive cells with a punctate staining together with the enhanced number of GFP-LC3 dots per cell showed that ChikV triggered an autophagic process in HEK.293 infected cells. Those results were confirmed by electron microscopy analysis since numerous membrane-bound vacuoles characteristic of autophagosomes were observed in infected cells. Moreover, we found that inhibition of autophagy, either by biochemical reagent and RNA interference, dramatically decreases ChikV replication.ConclusionsTaken together, our results suggest that autophagy may play a promoting role in ChikV replication. Investigating in details the relationship between autophagy and viral replication will greatly improve our knowledge of the pathogenesis of ChikV and provide insight for the design of candidate antiviral therapeutics.
Microbes and Infection | 2009
Marie Christine Jaffar-Bandjee; Trina Das; Jean Jacques Hoarau; Pascale Krejbich Trotot; Mélanie Denizot; Anne Ribera; Pierre Roques; Philippe Gasque
Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) causes an acute symptomatic illness with fever, skin rash (hypersensitivity vasculitis), incapacitating arthralgia which can evolve to chronic arthritis in elderly patients. Clinical observations from cohort studies have been corroborated with data from experimental infection in several mouse and non-human primate models as discussed herein.
Journal of Infection | 2012
Mélanie Denizot; Jim W. Neal; Philippe Gasque
The emerging viruses represent a group of pathogens that are intimately connected to a diverse range of animal vectors. The recent escalation of air travel climate change and urbanization has meant humans will have increased risk of contacting these pathogens resulting in serious CNS infections. Many RNA viruses enter the CNS by evading the BBB due to axonal transport from the periphery. The systemic adaptive and CNS innate immune systems express pattern recognition receptors PRR (TLRs, RiG-1 and MDA-5) that detect viral nucleic acids and initiate host antiviral response. However, several emerging viruses (West Nile Fever, Influenza A, Enterovirus 71 Ebola) are recognized and internalized by host cell receptors (TLR, MMR, DC-SIGN, CD162 and Scavenger receptor B) and escape immuno surveillance by the host systemic and innate immune systems. Many RNA viruses express viral proteins WNF (E protein), Influenza A (NS1), EV71 (protein 3C), Rabies (Glycoprotein), Ebola proteins (VP24 and VP 35) that inhibit the host cell anti-virus Interferon type I response promoting virus replication and encephalitis. The therapeutic use of RNA interference methodologies to silence gene expression of viral peptides and treat emerging virus infection of the CNS is discussed.
Virology Journal | 2012
Vincent G. Thon-Hon; Mélanie Denizot; Ghislaine Li-Pat-Yuen; Claude Giry; Philippe Gasque
BackgroundChikungunya virus (CHIKV) is an arthritogenic member of the Alphavirus genus (family Togaviridae) transmitted by Aedes mosquitoes. CHIKV is now known to target non hematopoietic cells such as epithelial, endothelial cells, fibroblasts and to less extent monocytes/macrophages. The type I interferon (IFN) response is an early innate immune mechanism that protects cells against viral infection. Cells express different pattern recognition receptors (including TLR7 and RIG-I) to sense viruses and to induce production of type I IFNs which in turn will bind to their receptor. This should result in the phosphorylation and translocation of STAT molecules into the nucleus to promote the transcription of IFN-stimulated antiviral genes (ISGs). We herein tested the capacity of CHIKV clinical isolate to infect two different human fibroblast cell lines HS 633T and HT-1080 and we analyzed the resulting type I IFN innate immune response.MethodsIndirect immunofluorescence and quantitative RT-PCR were used to test for the susceptibility of both fibroblast cell lines to CHIKV.ResultsInterestingly, the two fibroblast cell lines HS 633T and HT-1080 were differently susceptible to CHIKV infection and the former producing at least 30-fold higher viral load at 48 h post-infection (PI). We found that the expression of antiviral genes (RIG-I, IFN-β, ISG54 and ISG56) was more robust in the more susceptible cell line HS 633T at 48 h PI. Moreover, CHIKV was shown to similarly interfere with the nuclear translocation of pSTAT1 in both cell lines.ConclusionCritically, CHIKV can control the IFN response by preventing the nuclear translocation of pSTAT1 in both fibroblast cell lines. Counter-intuitively, the relative resistance of HT-1080 cells to CHIKV infection could not be attributed to more robust innate IFN- and ISG-dependent antiviral responses. These cell lines may prove to be valuable models to screen for novel mechanisms mobilized differentially by fibroblasts to control CHIKV infection, replication and spreading from cell to cell.
Archive | 2011
Mélanie Denizot; Vincent G. Thon-Hon; Shiril Kumar; Jim W. Neal; Philippe Gasque
A wide variety of emerging and re-emerging viruses (e.g. arboviruses, ‘arthropod-borne viruses’) contributes to neurological diseases. Infections can be associated with new viral variants that are more efficiently transmitted and lead to massive outbreak and increased reports of complicated cases involving the CNS (Tsetsarkin et al., 2007; Vazeille et al., 2007). It is also possible that viruses may have acquired increased neurovirulence by a previously non-neurotropic virus. Viruses that appear to have recently become more neurovirulent include for example the West Nile flavivirus (WNV), Chikungunya alphavirus (CHIKV) and the enterovirus 71 (ENV71) (Griffin, 2010). In addition to these newer challenges, Japanese encephalitis flavivirus (JEV), rabies, polio, measles virus (MV), human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and human herpes virus (HHV) remain important causes of neurologic diseases. Focusing on CHIKV, this is an alphavirus of the Togaviridae family transmitted by mosquitoes of the Aedes (Ae) genus. The alphavirus group comprises 29 viruses, six of which of the ‘Old World, ie Africa’ can cause human joint disorders (arthralgia evolving to arthritis), namely CHIKV, O’nyong-nyong virus (ONNV), Semliki forest virus (SFV), Ross River (RRV), Sindbis virus (SINV), Mayaro virus (MAYV) while the so-called ‘New World’ such as Eastern equine encephalitis virus (EEEV) and Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (VEEV) can cause severe brain damage (Das et al., 2010; Jaffar-Bandjee et al., 2009). Interestingly, CHIKV-associated neuropathology was first described in the 1960s but it is the unprecedented incidence rate in the Indian Ocean with efficient clinical facilities that allowed a better description of cases with severe encephalitis, meningoencephalitis, peripheral neuropathies and deaths among newborns (mother-to-child infection), infants and elderly patients (Das et al., 2010; Jaffar-Bandjee et al., 2009). The follow-up of the neonates contaminated by CHIKV clearly indicates poor outcomes and neurodevelopment defects (Jaffar-Bandjee et al., 2011). Neurological manifestations described in adults requiring hospitalization involved cases of encephalopathy frequently associated