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Dive into the research topics where Monique Lafon is active.

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Featured researches published by Monique Lafon.


Journal of Virology | 2005

Virus Infection Switches TLR-3-Positive Human Neurons To Become Strong Producers of Beta Interferon

Christophe Prehaud; Françoise Mégret; Mireille Lafage; Monique Lafon

ABSTRACT To study the capacity of human neurons to mount innate immunity responses to viral infections, we infected cells of a human postmitotic neuron-derivative cell line, NT2-N, with rabies virus (RABV) and herpes simplex type 1 (HSV-1). Changes in neuronal gene expression were analyzed by use of Affymetrix microarrays. Applying a twofold cutoff, RABV increased the transcription of 228 genes, and HSV-1 increased the transcription of 263 genes. The most striking difference between the two infections concerns genes involved in immunity. These genes represent 24% of the RABV-upregulated genes and only 4.9% of the HSV-1-upregulated genes. Following RABV infection, the most upregulated genes belong to the immunity cluster and included almost exclusively genes for beta interferon (IFN-β) primary and secondary responses as well as genes for chemokines (CCL-5, CXCL-10) and inflammatory cytokines (interleukin 6 [IL-6], tumor necrosis factor alpha, interleukin 1 alpha). In contrast, HSV-1 infection did not increase IFN-β gene transcripts and triggered the production of only IL-6 and interferon regulatory factor 1 mRNAs. The microarray results were confirmed by real-time PCR, immunocytochemistry, and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Human neurons were found to express Toll-like receptor 3. They produced IFN-β after treatment with poly(I:C) but not with lipopolysaccharide. Thus, human neurons can mount an innate immunity response to double-stranded RNA. These observations firmly establish that human neurons, in absence of glia, have the intrinsic machinery to sense virus infection.


Journal of Molecular Neuroscience | 2006

The innate immune facet of brain: human neurons express TLR-3 and sense viral dsRNA.

Monique Lafon; Françoise Mégret; Mireille Lafage; Christophe Prehaud

Inflammation is an important factor in the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative diseases, such as Alzheimers disease or multiple sclerosis, and during microbial infections of the nervous system. Glial cells were thought to be the main contributor for cytokine and chemokine production and Toll-like receptor (TLR) expression in the brain. Here, we report that human neurons express TLR-3, a major receptor in virus-mediated innate immune response. We established that these cells can mount a strong inflammatory response characterized by the expression of inflammatory cytokines (TNF-α, IL-6), chemokines (CCL-5 and CXCL-10), and antiviral molecules (2′5′OAS and IFN-β) after treatment with dsRNA—a by-product of viral infection and ligand of TLR-3. This work firmly establishes that human neurons, in absence of glia, have the intrinsic machinery to trigger robust inflammatory, chemoattractive, and antiviral responses.


Journal of Virology | 2005

Modulation of HLA-G Expression in Human Neural Cells after Neurotropic Viral Infections

Monique Lafon; Christophe Prehaud; Françoise Mégret; Mireille Lafage; Gaël Mouillot; Michèle Roa; Philippe Moreau; Nathalie Rouas-Freiss; Edgardo D. Carosella

ABSTRACT HLA-G is a nonclassical human major histocompatibility complex class I molecule. It may promote tolerance, leading to acceptance of the semiallogeneic fetus and tumor immune escape. We show here that two viruses—herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1), a neuronotropic virus inducing acute infection and neuron latency; and rabies virus (RABV), a neuronotropic virus triggering acute neuron infection—upregulate the neuronal expression of several HLA-G isoforms, including HLA-G1 and HLA-G5, the two main biologically active isoforms. RABV induces mostly HLA-G1, and HSV-1 induces mostly HLA-G3 and HLA-G5. HLA-G expression is upregulated in infected cells and neighboring uninfected cells. Soluble mediators, such as beta interferon (IFN-β) and IFN-γ, upregulate HLA-G expression in uninfected cells. The membrane-bound HLA-G1 isoform was detected on the surface of cultured RABV-infected neurons but not on the surface of HSV-1-infected cells. Thus, neuronotropic viruses that escape the host immune response totally (RABV) or partially (HSV-1) regulate HLA-G expression on human neuronal cells differentially. HLA-G may therefore be involved in the escape of certain viruses from the immune response in the nervous system.


PLOS Pathogens | 2009

Toll-Like Receptor 3 (TLR3) Plays a Major Role in the Formation of Rabies Virus Negri Bodies

Pauline Ménager; Pascal Roux; Françoise Mégret; Jean-Pierre Bourgeois; Anne-Marie Le Sourd; Anne Danckaert; Mireille Lafage; Christophe Prehaud; Monique Lafon

Human neurons express the innate immune response receptor, Toll-like receptor 3 (TLR3). TLR3 levels are increased in pathological conditions such as brain virus infection. Here, we further investigated the production, cellular localisation, and function of neuronal TLR3 during neuronotropic rabies virus (RABV) infection in human neuronal cells. Following RABV infection, TLR3 is not only present in endosomes, as observed in the absence of infection, but also in detergent-resistant perinuclear inclusion bodies. As well as TLR3, these inclusion bodies contain the viral genome and viral proteins (N and P, but not G). The size and composition of inclusion bodies and the absence of a surrounding membrane, as shown by electron microscopy, suggest they correspond to the previously described Negri Bodies (NBs). NBs are not formed in the absence of TLR3, and TLR3−/− mice—in which brain tissue was less severely infected—had a better survival rate than WT mice. These observations demonstrate that TLR3 is a major molecule involved in the spatial arrangement of RABV–induced NBs and viral replication. This study shows how viruses can exploit cellular proteins and compartmentalisation for their own benefit.


Journal of Virology | 2003

Glycoprotein of Nonpathogenic Rabies Viruses Is a Key Determinant of Human Cell Apoptosis

Christophe Prehaud; Stéphanie Lay; Bernhard Dietzschold; Monique Lafon

ABSTRACT We showed that, unlike pathogenic rabies virus (RV) strain CVS, attenuated RV strain ERA triggers the caspase-dependent apoptosis of human cells. Furthermore, we observed that the induction of apoptosis is correlated with a particular virus antigen distribution: the overexpression of the viral G protein on the cell surface, with continuous localization on the cytoplasmic membrane, and large cytoplasmic inclusions of the N protein. To determine whether one of these two major RV proteins (G and N proteins) triggers apoptosis, we constructed transgenic Jurkat T-cell lines that drive tetracycline-inducible gene expression to produce the G and N proteins of ERA and CVS individually. The induction of ERA G protein (G-ERA) expression but not of ERA N protein expression resulted in apoptosis, and G-ERA was more efficient at triggering apoptosis than was CVS G protein. To test whether other viral proteins participated in the induction of apoptosis, human cells were infected with recombinant RV in which the G protein gene from the attenuated strain had been replaced by its virulent strain counterpart (CVS). Only RV containing the G protein from the nonpathogenic RV strain was able to trigger the apoptosis of human cells. Thus, the ability of RV strains to induce apoptosis is largely determined by the viral G protein.


Journal of NeuroVirology | 2006

Expression of Toll-like receptor 3 in the human cerebellar cortex in rabies, herpes simplex encephalitis, and other neurological diseases

Alan C. Jackson; John P. Rossiter; Monique Lafon

There is recent in vitro evidence that human neurons express the innate immune response receptor, Toll-like receptor-3 (TLR-3), and that expression is enhanced in viral infections. The authors examined the immunohistochemical expression of TLR-3 in the cerebellar cortex of postmortem human brains. Purkinje cells were found to express TLR-3 in all cases of rabies (4 of 4) and herpes simplex encephalitis (2 of 2) as well as in cases of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (1 of 2), stroke (1 of 2), and Alzheimer’s disease (3 of 3). In cases of viral infection, direct viral infection was not necessary for enhanced neuronal TLR-3 expression, suggesting that soluble factors likely play an important role in inducing TLR-3 expression. In addition to neurons, occasional Bergmann glia expressed TLR-3 in some cases. This study has provided evidence that human brain neurons can express TLR-3 in vivo and suggests that neurons may play an important role in initiating an inflammatory reaction in a variety of neurological diseases.


Journal of Immunology | 2008

Detrimental Contribution of the Immuno-Inhibitor B7-H1 to Rabies Virus Encephalitis

Monique Lafon; Françoise Mégret; Sven G. Meuth; Ole J. Simon; Myriam L. Velandia Romero; Mireille Lafage; Lieping Chen; Lena Alexopoulou; Richard A. Flavell; Christophe Prehaud; Heinz Wiendl

Rabies virus is the etiological agent of an acute encephalitis, which in absence of post exposure treatment is fatal in almost all cases. Virus lethality rests on its ability to evade the immune response. In this study, we analyzed the role of the immuno-inhibitory molecule B7-H1 in this virus strategy. We showed that in the brain and spinal cord of mice, rabies virus infection resulted in significant up-regulation of B7-H1 expression, which is specifically expressed in infected neurons. Correlatively, clinical rabies in B7-H1−/− mice is markedly less severe than in wild-type mice. B7-H1−/− mice display resistance to rabies. Virus invasion is reduced and the level of migratory CD8 T cells increases into the nervous system, while CD4/CD8 ratio remains unchanged in the periphery. In vivo, neuronal B7-H1 expression is critically depending on TLR3 signaling and IFN-β, because TLR3−/− mice—in which IFN-β production is reduced—showed only a limited increase of B7-H1 transcripts after infection. These data provide evidence that neurons can express the B7-H1 molecule after viral stress or exposure to a particular cytokine environment. They show that the B7-H1/PD-1 pathway can be exploited locally and in an organ specific manner—here the nervous system—by a neurotropic virus to promote successful host invasion.


Science Signaling | 2010

Attenuation of Rabies Virulence: Takeover by the Cytoplasmic Domain of Its Envelope Protein

Christophe Prehaud; Nicolas Wolff; Elouan Terrien; Mireille Lafage; Françoise Mégret; Nicolas Babault; Florence Cordier; Gene S. Tan; Elodie Maitrepierre; Pauline Ménager; Damien Chopy; Sylviane Hoos; Patrick England; Muriel Delepierre; Matthias J. Schnell; Henri Buc; Monique Lafon

Survival of rabies virus–infected neurons depends on a single amino acid in the PDZ-binding site of a viral protein. Tipping the Balance Strains of rabies virus, which infects neurons, may be virulent, in which case the cells survive long enough for the virus to replicate and spread, or they may be attenuated, in which case the infected cells die by apoptosis. Préhaud et al. compared one attenuated and one virulent viral strain and found that a single amino acid change in a region of a viral envelope protein that binds to host cell proteins was sufficient to account for the death or survival of infected cells. The binding properties of the attenuated virus protein were expanded, thereby affecting the balance in the activities of host kinases and phosphatases sufficiently to trigger cell death. These findings may inform strategies to engineer attenuated viruses, which are often used in live vaccines. The capacity of a rabies virus to promote neuronal survival (a signature of virulence) or death (a marker of attenuation) depends on the cellular partners recruited by the PDZ-binding site (PDZ-BS) of its envelope glycoprotein (G). Neuronal survival requires the selective association of the PDZ-BS of G with the PDZ domains of two closely related serine-threonine kinases, MAST1 and MAST2. Here, we found that a single amino acid change in the PDZ-BS triggered the apoptotic death of infected neurons and enabled G to interact with additional PDZ partners, in particular the tyrosine phosphatase PTPN4. Knockdown of PTPN4 abrogated virus-mediated apoptosis. Thus, we propose that attenuation of rabies virus requires expansion of the set of host PDZ proteins with which G interacts, which interferes with the finely tuned homeostasis required for survival of the infected neuron.


Journal of NeuroVirology | 2000

Abortive rabies virus central nervous infection is controlled by T lymphocyte local recruitment and induction of apoptosis

Anne Galelli; Leïla Baloul; Monique Lafon

Nonfatal paralysis, induced by the attenuated Pasteur strain of rabies virus, is characterised by local and irreversible flaccid paralysis of the inoculated limbs. We characterised the spread and localisation of virus in the CNS of infected mice, determined the nature of cell injury and examined the role of the immune response. Data indicate that infection of BALB/c mice induced paralysis in 60% of infected mice, the others recovering without sequelae. In both groups of mice, virus was detected in restricted sub-populations of neurons from the brain and spinal cord, and intensity of the neuropathology correlated with levels of rabies RNA and apoptotic infected neurons. However, apoptosis of neurons and paralysis were not due to a direct deleterious effect of the virus, but induced by a T-dependent immune response, as evidenced by their absence in nude mice. Paralysed and asymptomatic mice developed a similar rabies virus-specific IgG2a antibody response, thus excluding the role of any modification of the humoral immune response. In contrast, three events were critically associated with the development of neurological symptoms: the amount of virus in the CNS, the level of apoptosis in both infected neurons and uninfected surrounding cells and the progressive parenchymal infiltration of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells at the site of infection. These data suggest that during nonfatal rabies infection, the levels of viral replication and primary degeneration of infected neurons by apoptosis could be responsible for the infiltration of T lymphocytes capable of inducing secondary degeneration of neural cells.


Advances in Virus Research | 2011

Evasive Strategies in Rabies Virus Infection

Monique Lafon

Rabies virus (RABV) is a strictly neurotropic virus that slowly propagates in the nervous system (NS) of the infected host from the site of entry (usually due to a bite) up to the site of exit (salivary glands). Successful achievement of the virus cycle relies on the preservation of the neuronal network. Once RABV has entered the NS, its progression is not interrupted either by destruction of the infected neurons or by the immune response, which are major host mechanisms for combating viral infection. RABV has developed two main mechanisms to escape the host defenses: (1) its ability to kill protective migrating T cells and (2) its ability to sneak into the NS without triggering apoptosis of the infected neurons and preserving the integrity of neurites.

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Christophe Prehaud

Thomas Jefferson University

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