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Featured researches published by Michel Simonet.


Infection and Immunity | 2004

The Response Regulator PhoP of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis Is Important for Replication in Macrophages and for Virulence

Jens P. Grabenstein; Michael Marceau; Céline Pujol; Michel Simonet; James B. Bliska

ABSTRACT Yersinia pestis and Yersinia pseudotuberculosis are closely related facultative intracellular pathogens. The response regulator PhoP was previously shown to be important for Y. pestis survival in macrophages and for virulence in a murine bubonic plague infection assay. Here the importance of PhoP for Y. pseudotuberculosis pathogenesis was investigated. Y. pseudotuberculosis phoP mutants were unable to replicate in low-Mg2+ medium or in macrophages. phoP+ Y. pseudotuberculosis strains initiated replication in macrophages after a lag period of ∼5 h, as shown by fluorescence microscopy and viable count assays. Y. pseudotuberculosis phoP mutants died at a low rate in macrophages; there was no decrease in viability over the first 5 h of infection, and there was a 10-fold decrease in viability between 5 and 24 h of infection. Trafficking of phagosomes containing phoP+ or phoP mutant Y. pseudotuberculosis was studied by using immunofluorescence microscopy and cathepsin D as a marker for lysosomes. Phagosomes containing phoP mutant Y. pseudotuberculosis acquired cathepsin D at a higher rate than phagosomes containing phoP+ bacteria. However, the increased rate of marker acquisition for phagosomes containing mutant bacteria was only evident ∼5 h after infection, suggesting that phoP mutants are able to retard phagosome maturation during the lag phase of intracellular growth. The results obtained with a Y. pestis phoP mutant were similar to those described above, except that the rates of intracellular killing and trafficking to cathepsin D-positive vacuoles were significantly higher. A Y. pseudotuberculosis phoP mutant was 100-fold less virulent than the wild-type strain in a murine intestinal infection model, suggesting that survival and replication in macrophages are important for Y. pseudotuberculosis pathogenesis.


Gut | 2009

Toll-like receptor 2 is critical for induction of Reg3β expression and intestinal clearance of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis

Rodrigue Dessein; Meritxell Gironella; Cécile Vignal; Laurent Peyrin-Biroulet; Harry Sokol; Thomas Secher; sandra Lacas-Gervais; Jean-Jacques Gratadoux; Frank Lafont; Jean-Charles Dagorn; Bernhard Ryffel; Shizuo Akira; Philippe Langella; Gabriel Núñez; Jean-Claude Sirard; Juan L. Iovanna; Michel Simonet; Mathias Chamaillard

Objective: Yersinia pseudotuberculosis causes ileitis and mesenteric lymphadenitis by mainly invading the Peyer’s patches that are positioned in the terminal ileum. Whereas toll-like-receptor 2 (TLR2) controls mucosal inflammation by detecting certain microbiota-derived signals, its exact role in protecting Peyer’s patches against bacterial invasion has not been defined. Design: Wild-type, Tlr2-, Nod2- and MyD88-deficient animals were challenged by Y pseudotuberculosis via the oral or systemic route. The role of microbiota in conditioning Peyer’s patches against Yersinia through TLR2 was assessed by delivering, ad libitum, exogenous TLR2 agonists in drinking water to germ-free and streptomycin-treated animals. Bacterial eradication from Peyer’s patches was measured by using a colony-forming unit assay. Expression of cryptdins and the c-type lectin Reg3β was quantified by quantitative reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction analysis. Results: Our data demonstrated that Tlr2-deficient mice failed to limit Yersinia dissemination from the Peyer’s patches and succumbed to sepsis independently of nucleotide-binding and oligomerisation domain 2 (NOD2). Recognition of both microbiota-derived and myeloid differentiation factor 88 (MyD88)-mediated elicitors was found to be critically involved in gut protection against Yersinia-induced lethality, while TLR2 was dispensable to systemic Yersinia infection. Gene expression analyses revealed that optimal epithelial transcript level of the anti-infective Reg3β requires TLR2 activation. Consistently, Yersinia infection triggered TLR2-dependent Reg3β expression in Peyer’s patches. Importantly, oral treatment with exogenous TLR2 agonists in germ-free animals was able to further enhance Yersinia-induced expression of Reg3β and to restore intestinal resistance to Yersinia. Lastly, genetic ablation of Reg3β resulted in impaired clearance of the bacterial load in Peyer’s patches. Conclusions: TLR2/REG3β is thus an essential component in conditioning epithelial defence signalling pathways against bacterial invasion.


Infection and Immunity | 2001

Silencing and reactivation of urease in Yersinia pestis is determined by one G residue at a specific position in the ureD gene.

Florent Sebbane; Annie Devalckenaere; Jeannine Foulon; Elisabeth Carniel; Michel Simonet

ABSTRACT Yersinia pestis, the plague agent, is a naturally nonureolytic microorganism, while all other Yersiniaspecies display a potent urease activity. In this report we demonstrate that Y. pestis harbors a complete urease locus composed of three structural (ureABC) and four accessory (ureEFGD) genes. Absence of ureolytic activity is due to the presence of one additional G residue in a poly(G) stretch, which introduces a premature stop codon in ureD. The presence of the same additional G in eight other Y. pestis isolates indicates that this mutation is species specific. Spontaneous excision of the extra G occurs at a frequency of 10−4 to 10−5 and restores a ureolytic phenotype to Y. pestis. The virulence of two independent ureolytic clones ofY. pestis injected either intravenously, subcutaneously, or intragastrically did not differ from that of the parental strain in the mouse infection model. Coinfection experiments with an equal number of ureolytic and nonureolytic bacteria did not evidence any difference in the ability of the two variants to multiply in vivo and to cause a lethal infection. Altogether our results demonstrate that variation of one extra G residue in ureD determines the ureolytic activity of Y. pestis but does not affect its virulence for mice or its ability to multiply and disseminate.


Cellular Microbiology | 2010

Autophagosomes can support Yersinia pseudotuberculosis replication in macrophages

Kevin Moreau; Sandra Lacas-Gervais; Naonobu Fujita; Florent Sebbane; Tamotsu Yoshimori; Michel Simonet; Frank Lafont

Yersinia pseudotuberculosis is able to replicate inside macrophages. However, the intracellular trafficking of the pathogen after its entry into the macrophage remains poorly understood. Using in vitro infected bone marrow‐derived macrophages, we show that Y. pseudotuberculosis activates the autophagy pathway. Host cell autophagosomes subverted by bacteria do not become acidified and sustain bacteria replication. Moreover, we report that autophagy inhibition correlated with bacterial trafficking inside an acidic compartment. This study indicates that Y. pseudotuberculosis hijacks the autophagy pathway for its replication and also opens up new opportunities for deciphering the molecular basis of the host cell signalling response to intracellular Yersinia infection.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2002

Genes Encoding Specific Nickel Transport Systems Flank the Chromosomal Urease Locus of Pathogenic Yersiniae

Florent Sebbane; Marie-Andrée Mandrand-Berthelot; Michel Simonet

The transition metal nickel is an essential cofactor for a number of bacterial enzymes, one of which is urease. Prior to its incorporation into metalloenzyme active sites, nickel must be imported into the cell. Here, we report identification of two loci corresponding to nickel-specific transport systems in the gram-negative, ureolytic bacterium Yersinia pseudotuberculosis. The loci are located on each side of the chromosomal urease gene cluster ureABCEFGD and have the same orientation as the latter. The yntABCDE locus upstream of the ure genes encodes five predicted products with sequence homology to ATP-binding cassette nickel permeases present in several gram-negative bacteria. The ureH gene, located downstream of ure, encodes a single-component carrier which displays homology to polypeptides of the nickel-cobalt transporter family. Transporters with homology to these two classes are also present (again in proximity to the urease locus) in the other two pathogenic yersiniae, Y. pestis and Y. enterocolitica. An Escherichia coli nikA insertion mutant recovered nickel uptake ability following heterologous complementation with either the ynt or the ureH plasmid-borne gene of Y. pseudotuberculosis, demonstrating that each carrier is necessary and sufficient for nickel transport. Deletion of ynt in Y. pseudotuberculosis almost completely abolished bacterial urease activity, whereas deletion of ureH had no effect. Nevertheless, rates of nickel transport were significantly altered in both ynt and ureH mutants. Furthermore, the ynt ureH double mutant was totally devoid of nickel uptake ability, thus indicating that Ynt and UreH constitute the only routes for nickel entry. Both Ynt and UreH show selectivity for Ni(2+) ions. This is the first reported identification of genes coding for both kinds of nickel-specific permeases situated adjacent to the urease gene cluster in the genome of a microorganism.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2013

CHROMagar Yersinia, a New Chromogenic Agar for Screening of Potentially Pathogenic Yersinia enterocolitica Isolates in Stools

Nicolas Renaud; Laetitia Lecci; René J. Courcol; Michel Simonet; Olivier Gaillot

ABSTRACT CHROMagar Yersinia (CAY) is a new chromogenic medium for the presumptive detection of virulent Yersinia enterocolitica in stools. Based on a comparative analysis of 1,494 consecutive stools from hospitalized patients, CAY was found to be just as sensitive as the reference medium (cefsulodin-irgasan-novobiocin agar) but was significantly more specific and had a very low false-positive rate. CAY reduces the workload (and thus costs) for stool analysis and can therefore be recommended for routine laboratory use.


Microbiology | 2009

An iron-regulated LysR-type element mediates antimicrobial peptide resistance and virulence in Yersinia pseudotuberculosis.

Sonia Arafah; Marie-Laure Rosso; Linda Rehaume; Robert E. W. Hancock; Michel Simonet; Michael Marceau

During the course of its infection of the mammalian digestive tract, the entero-invasive, Gram-negative bacterium Yersinia pseudotuberculosis must overcome various hostile living conditions (notably, iron starvation and the presence of antimicrobial compounds produced in situ). We have previously reported that in vitro bacterial growth during iron deprivation raises resistance to the antimicrobial peptide polymyxin B; here, we show that this phenotype is mediated by a chromosomal gene (YPTB0333) encoding a transcriptional regulator from the LysR family. We determined that the product of YPTB0333 is a pleiotropic regulator which controls (in addition to its own expression) genes encoding the Yfe iron-uptake system and polymyxin B resistance. Lastly, by using a mouse model of oral infection, we demonstrated that YPTB0333 is required for colonization of Peyers patches and mesenteric lymph nodes by Y. pseudotuberculosis.


Infection and Immunity | 2004

Yersinia pseudotuberculosis Anti-Inflammatory Components Reduce Trinitrobenzene Sulfonic Acid-Induced Colitis in the Mouse

Michael Marceau; Laurent Dubuquoy; Christel Caucheteux-Rousseaux; Benoît Foligné; Pierre Desreumaux; Michel Simonet

ABSTRACT Rectal instillation of trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid (TNBS) induces acute colitis in the mouse. We tested the efficacy of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis anti-inflammatory components in preventing TNBS-triggered colitis. Animals were orally inoculated with virulence-attenuated Yersinia cells (a phoP mutant) prior to TNBS administration. Under these experimental conditions, colonic lesions and tumor necrosis factor alpha mRNA levels were significantly reduced.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Efficacy of Ciprofloxacin-Gentamicin Combination Therapy in Murine Bubonic Plague

Nadine Lemaître; Isabelle Ricard; Elizabeth Pradel; Benoît Foligné; René J. Courcol; Michel Simonet; Florent Sebbane

Potential benefits of combination antibiotic therapy for the treatment of plague have never been evaluated. We compared the efficacy of a ciprofloxacin (CIN) and gentamicin (GEN) combination therapy with that of each antibiotic administered alone (i) against Yersinia pestis in vitro and (ii) in a mouse model of bubonic plague in which animals were intravenously injected with antibiotics for five days, starting at two different times after infection (44 h and 56 h). In vitro, the CIN+GEN combination was synergistic at 0.5x the individual drugs’ MICs and indifferent at 1x- or 2x MIC. In vivo, the survival rate for mice treated with CIN+GEN was similar to that observed with CIN alone and slightly higher than that observed for GEN alone 100, 100 and 85%, respectively when treatment was started 44 h post challenge. 100% of survivors were recorded in the CIN+GEN group vs 86 and 83% in the CIN and GEN groups, respectively when treatment was delayed to 56 h post-challenge. However, these differences were not statistically significant. Five days after the end of treatment, Y. pestis were observed in lymph nodes draining the inoculation site (but not in the spleen) in surviving mice in each of the three groups. The median lymph node log10 CFU recovered from persistently infected lymph nodes was significantly higher with GEN than with CIN (5.8 vs. 3.2, p = 0.04) or CIN+GEN (5.8 vs. 2.8, p = 0.01). Taken as the whole, our data show that CIN+GEN combination is as effective as CIN alone but, regimens containing CIN are more effective to eradicate Y. pestis from the draining lymph node than the recommended GEN monotherapy. Moreover, draining lymph nodes may serve as a reservoir for the continued release of Y. pestis into the blood – even after five days of intravenous antibiotic treatment.


Infection and Immunity | 2005

Linkage of the Horizontally Acquired ypm and pil Genes in Yersinia pseudotuberculosis

François Collyn; Hiroshi Fukushima; Christophe Carnoy; Michel Simonet; Pascal Vincent

ABSTRACT The superantigen-encoding ypm gene and the pil gene cluster governing type IV pilus biogenesis have been laterally acquired by Yersinia pseudotuberculosis. PCR assays on 270 unrelated strains from various environmental and animal sources revealed a significant association of ypm and pil in isolates.

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Florent Sebbane

National Institutes of Health

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Michael Marceau

Lille University of Science and Technology

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