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Featured researches published by Patrick Ave.


PLOS Pathogens | 2007

The OmpA-Like Protein Loa22 Is Essential for Leptospiral Virulence

Paula Ristow; Pascale Bourhy; Flávia Weykamp da Cruz McBride; Cláudio Pereira Figueira; Michel Huerre; Patrick Ave; Isabelle Saint Girons; Albert I. Ko; Mathieu Picardeau

Pathogenic mechanisms of Leptospira interrogans, the causal agent of leptospirosis, remain largely unknown. This is mainly due to the lack of tools for genetic manipulations of pathogenic species. In this study, we characterized a mutant obtained by insertion of the transposon Himar1 into a gene encoding a putative lipoprotein, Loa22, which has a predicted OmpA domain based on sequence identity. The resulting mutant did not express Loa22 and was attenuated in virulence in the guinea pig and hamster models of leptospirosis, whereas the genetically complemented strain was restored in Loa22 expression and virulence. Our results show that Loa22 was expressed during host infection and exposed on the cell surface. Loa22 is therefore necessary for virulence of L. interrogans in the animal model and represents, to our knowledge, the first genetically defined virulence factor in Leptospira species.


Cellular Microbiology | 2004

Production of phthiocerol dimycocerosates protects Mycobacterium tuberculosis from the cidal activity of reactive nitrogen intermediates produced by macrophages and modulates the early immune response to infection

Cécile Rousseau; Nathalie Winter; Elisabeth Pivert; Yann Bordat; Olivier Neyrolles; Patrick Ave; Michel Huerre; Brigitte Gicquel; Mary Jackson

The growth of Mycobacterium tuberculosis mutants unable to synthesize phthiocerol dimycocerosates (DIMs) was recently shown to be impaired in mouse lungs. However, the precise role of these molecules in the course of infection remained to be determined. Here, we provide evidence that the attenuation of a DIM‐deficient strain takes place during the acute phase of infection in both lungs and spleen of mice, and that this attenuation results in part from the increased sensitivity of the mutant to the cidal activity of reactive nitrogen intermediates released by activated macrophages. We also show that the DIM‐deficient mutant, the growth and survival of which were not impaired within resting macrophages and dendritic cells, induced these cells to secrete more tumour necrosis factor (TNF)‐α and interleukin (IL)‐6 than the wild‐type strain. Although purified DIM molecules by themselves had no effect on the activation of macrophages and dendritic cells in vitro, we found that the proper localization of DIMs in the cell envelope of M. tuberculosis is critical to their biological effects. Thus, our findings suggest that DIM production contributes to the initial growth of M. tuberculosis by protecting it from the nitric oxide‐dependent killing of macrophages and modulating the early immune response to infection.


Journal of Virology | 2000

High Levels of Viral Replication during Primary Simian Immunodeficiency Virus SIVagm Infection Are Rapidly and Strongly Controlled in African Green Monkeys

Ousmane M. Diop; Aïssatou Guèye; Marisa Dias-Tavares; Christopher Kornfeld; Abdourahmane Faye; Patrick Ave; Michel Huerre; Sylvie Corbet; Françoise Barré-Sinoussi; Michaela Müller-Trutwin

ABSTRACT In contrast to pathogenic human immunodeficiency virus and simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) infections, chronic SIVagm infections in African green monkeys (AGMs) are characterized by persistently low peripheral and tissue viral loads that correlate with the lack of disease observed in these animals. We report here data on the dynamics of acute SIVagm infection in AGMs that exhibit remarkable similarities with viral replication patterns observed in peripheral blood during the first 2 weeks of pathogenic SIVmac infections. Plasma viremia was evident at day 3 postinfection (p.i.) in AGMs, and rapid viral replication led by days 7 to 10 to peak viremias characterized by high levels of antigenemia (1.2 to 5 ng of p27/ml of plasma), peripheral DNA viral load (104 to 105 DNA copies/106 peripheral blood mononuclear cells [PBMC]), and plasma RNA viral load (2 × 106 to 2 × 108 RNA copies/ml). The lymph node (LN) RNA and DNA viral load patterns were similar to those in blood, with peaks observed between day 7 and day 14. These values in LNs (ranging from 3 × 105 to 3 × 106 RNA copies/106LN cell [LNC] and 103 to 104 DNA copies/106 LNC) were at no time point higher than those observed in the blood. Both in LNs and in blood, rapid and significant decreases were observed in all infected animals after this peak of viral replication. Within 3 to 4 weeks p.i., antigenemia was no longer detectable and peripheral viral loads decreased to values similar to those characteristic of the chronic phase of infection (102to 103 DNA copies/106 PBMC and 2 × 103 to 2 × 105 RNA copies/ml of plasma). In LNs, viral loads declined to 5 × 101 to 103 DNA copies and 104 to 3 × 105 RNA copies per 106 LNC at day 28 p.i. and continued to decrease until day 84 p.i. (<10 to 3 × 104 RNA copies/106 LNC). Despite extensive viremia during primary infection, neither follicular hyperplasia nor CD8+ cell infiltration into LN germinal centers was detected. Altogether, these results indicate that the nonpathogenic outcome of SIVagm infection in its natural host is associated with a rapidly induced control of viral replication in response to SIVagm infection, rather than with a poorly replicating virus or a constitutive host genetic resistance to virus replication.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2009

An ex-vivo human intestinal model to study Entamoeba histolytica pathogenesis.

Devendra Bansal; Patrick Ave; Sophie Kernéis; Pascal Frileux; Olivier Boché; Anne Catherine Baglin; Geneviève Dubost; Anne-Sophie Leguern; Marie-Christine Prévost; Rivka Bracha; David Mirelman; Nancy Guillén; Elisabeth Labruyère

Amoebiasis (a human intestinal infection affecting 50 million people every year) is caused by the protozoan parasite Entamoeba histolytica. To study the molecular mechanisms underlying human colon invasion by E. histolytica, we have set up an ex vivo human colon model to study the early steps in amoebiasis. Using scanning electron microscopy and histological analyses, we have established that E. histolytica caused the removal of the protective mucus coat during the first two hours of incubation, detached the enterocytes, and then penetrated into the lamina propria by following the crypts of Lieberkühn. Significant cell lysis (determined by the release of lactodehydrogenase) and inflammation (marked by the secretion of pro-inflammatory molecules such as interleukin 1 beta, interferon gamma, interleukin 6, interleukin 8 and tumour necrosis factor) were detected after four hours of incubation. Entamoeba dispar (a closely related non-pathogenic amoeba that also colonizes the human colon) was unable to invade colonic mucosa, lyse cells or induce an inflammatory response. We also examined the behaviour of trophozoites in which genes coding for known virulent factors (such as amoebapores, the Gal/GalNAc lectin and the cysteine protease 5 (CP-A5), which have major roles in cell death, adhesion (to target cells or mucus) and mucus degradation, respectively) were silenced, together with the corresponding tissue responses. Our data revealed that the signalling via the heavy chain Hgl2 or via the light chain Lgl1 of the Gal/GalNAc lectin is not essential to penetrate the human colonic mucosa. In addition, our study demonstrates that E. histolytica silenced for CP-A5 does not penetrate the colonic lamina propria and does not induce the hosts pro-inflammatory cytokine secretion.


Molecular Microbiology | 2007

The regulation of zinc homeostasis by the ZafA transcriptional activator is essential for Aspergillus fumigatus virulence.

Miguel Ángel Moreno; Oumaïma Ibrahim-Granet; Rocío Vicentefranqueira; Jorge Amich; Patrick Ave; Fernando Leal; Jean-Paul Latgé; José Antonio Calera

We have previously shown that Aspergillus fumigatus is able to grow in zinc‐limiting media and that this ability is regulated at transcriptional level by both the availability of zinc and pH. When A. fumigatus grows as a pathogen, it must necessarily obtain zinc from the zinc‐limiting environment provided by host tissue. Accordingly, the regulation of zinc homeostasis by some zinc‐responsive transcriptional regulator in A. fumigatus must be essential for fungal growth within tissues of an immunocompromised host and, in turn, for pathogenicity. Here we provide evidence of the role of the zafA gene in regulating zinc homeostasis and its relevance in the virulence of A. fumigatus. Thus, we observed that (i) zafA can functionally replace the ZAP1 gene from Saccharomyces cerevisiae that encodes the zinc‐responsive transcriptional activator Zap1 protein; (ii) the expression of zafA itself is induced in zinc‐limiting media and repressed by zinc; (iii) deletion of zafA impairs the germination and growth capacity of A. fumigatus in zinc‐limiting media; and (iv) the deletion of zafA abrogates A. fumigatus virulence in a murine model of invasive aspergillosis. In light of these observations, we concluded that ZafA is a zinc‐responsive transcriptional activator that represents an essential attribute for A. fumigatus pathogenicity. Consequently, ZafA may constitute a new target for the development of chemotherapeutic agents against Aspergillus, because no zafA orthologues have been found in mammals.


Cellular Microbiology | 2007

Methylcitrate synthase from Aspergillus fumigatus is essential for manifestation of invasive aspergillosis

Oumaïma Ibrahim-Granet; Marc Dubourdeau; Jean-Paul Latgé; Patrick Ave; Michel Huerre; Axel A. Brakhage; Matthias Brock

Invasive aspergillosis is a life‐threatening disease mainly caused by the fungus Aspergillus fumigatus. In immunocompromised individuals conidia are not efficiently inactivated, which can end in invasive fungal growth. However, the metabolic requirements of the fungus are hardly known. Earlier investigations revealed an accumulation of toxic propionyl‐CoA in a methylcitrate synthase mutant, when grown on propionyl‐CoA‐generating carbon sources. During invasive growth propionyl‐CoA could derive from proteins, which are released from infected host tissues. We therefore assumed that a methylcitrate synthase mutant might display an attenuated virulence. Here we show that the addition of propionate to cell culture medium enhanced the ability of alveolar macrophages to kill methylcitrate synthase mutant but not wild‐type conidia. When tested in a murine infection model, the methylcitrate synthase mutant displayed attenuated virulence and, furthermore, was cleared from tissues when mice survived the first phase of acute infection. The amplification of cDNA from infected mouse lungs confirmed the transcription of the methylcitrate synthase gene during invasion, which leads to the suggestion that amino acids indeed serve as growth‐supporting nutrients during invasive growth of A. fumigatus. Thus, blocking of methylcitrate synthase activity abrogates fungal growth and provides a suitable target for new antifungals.


Journal of Gene Medicine | 2006

Efficient in toto targeted recombination in mouse liver by meganuclease-induced double-strand break.

Agnès Gouble; Julianne Smith; Sylvia Bruneau; Christophe Perez; Valérie Guyot; Jean-Pierre Cabaniols; Sophie Leduc; Laurence Fiette; Patrick Ave; Béatrice Micheau; Philippe Duchateau

Sequence‐specific endonucleases with large recognition sites can cleave DNA in living cells, and, as a consequence, stimulate homologous recombination (HR) up to 10 000‐fold. The recent development of artificial meganucleases with chosen specificities has provided the potential to target any chromosomal locus. Thus, they may represent a universal genome engineering tool and seem to be very promising for acute gene therapy. However, in toto applications depend on the ability to target somatic tissues as well as the proficiency of somatic cells to perform double‐strand break (DSB)‐induced HR.


Infection and Immunity | 2008

Roles of α and β Carbonic Anhydrases of Helicobacter pylori in the Urease-Dependent Response to Acidity and in Colonization of the Murine Gastric Mucosa

Stéphanie Bury-Moné; George L. Mendz; Graham E. Ball; Marie Thibonnier; Kerstin Stingl; Chantal Ecobichon; Patrick Ave; Michel Huerre; Agnès Labigne; Jean-Michel Thiberge; Hilde De Reuse

ABSTRACT Carbon dioxide occupies a central position in the physiology of Helicobacter pylori owing to its capnophilic nature, the large amounts of carbon dioxide produced by urease-mediated urea hydrolysis, and the constant bicarbonate supply in the stomach. Carbonic anhydrases (CA) catalyze the interconversion of carbon dioxide and bicarbonate and are involved in functions such as CO2 transport or trapping and pH homeostasis. H. pylori encodes a periplasmic α-CA (α-CA-HP) and a cytoplasmic β-CA (β-CA-HP). Single CA inactivation and double CA inactivation were obtained for five genetic backgrounds, indicating that H. pylori CA are not essential for growth in vitro. Bicarbonate-carbon dioxide exchange rates were measured by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy using lysates of parental strains and CA mutants. Only the mutants defective in the α-CA-HP enzyme showed strongly reduced exchange rates. In H. pylori, urease activity is essential for acid resistance in the gastric environment. Urease activity measured using crude cell extracts was not modified by the absence of CA. With intact CA mutant cells incubated in acidic conditions (pH 2.2) in the presence of urea there was a delay in the increase in the pH of the incubation medium, a phenotype most pronounced in the absence of H. pylori α-CA. This correlated with a delay in acid activation of the urease as measured by slower ammonia production in whole cells. The role of CA in vivo was examined using the mouse model of infection with two mouse-adapted H. pylori strains, SS1 and X47-2AL. Compared to colonization by the wild-type strain, colonization by X47-2AL single and double CA mutants was strongly reduced. Colonization by SS1 CA mutants was not significantly different from colonization by wild-type strain SS1. However, when mice were infected by SS1 Δ(β-CA-HP) or by a SS1 double CA mutant, the inflammation scores of the mouse gastric mucosa were strongly reduced. In conclusion, CA contribute to the urease-dependent response to acidity of H. pylori and are required for high-grade inflammation and efficient colonization by some strains.


Infection and Immunity | 2007

Aspergillus fumigatus Does Not Require Fatty Acid Metabolism via Isocitrate Lyase for Development of Invasive Aspergillosis

Felicitas Schöbel; Oumaı̈ma Ibrahim-Granet; Patrick Ave; Jean-Paul Latgé; Axel A. Brakhage; Matthias Brock

ABSTRACT Aspergillus fumigatus is the most prevalent airborne filamentous fungus causing invasive aspergillosis in immunocompromised individuals. Only a limited number of determinants directly associated with virulence are known, and the metabolic requirements of the fungus to grow inside a host have not yet been investigated. Previous studies on pathogenic microorganisms, i.e., the bacterium Mycobacterium tuberculosis and the yeast Candida albicans, have revealed an essential role for isocitrate lyase in pathogenicity. In this study, we generated an isocitrate lyase deletion strain to test whether this strain shows attenuation in virulence. Results have revealed that isocitrate lyase from A. fumigatus is not required for the development of invasive aspergillosis. In a murine model of invasive aspergillosis, the wild-type strain, an isocitrate lyase deletion strain, and a complemented mutant strain were similarly effective in killing mice. Moreover, thin sections demonstrated invasive growth of all strains. Additionally, thin sections of lung tissue from patients with invasive aspergillosis stained with anti-isocitrate lyase antibodies remained negative. From these results, we cannot exclude the use of lipids or fatty acids as a carbon source for A. fumigatus during invasive growth. Nevertheless, test results do imply that the glyoxylate cycle from A. fumigatus is not required for the anaplerotic synthesis of oxaloacetate under infectious conditions. Therefore, an antifungal drug inhibiting fungal isocitrate lyases, postulated to act against Candida infections, is assumed to be ineffective against A. fumigatus.


PLOS ONE | 2008

Defective Innate Cell Response and Lymph Node Infiltration Specify Yersinia pestis Infection

Françoise Guinet; Patrick Ave; Louis M. Jones; Michel Huerre; Elisabeth Carniel

Since its recent emergence from the enteropathogen Yersinia pseudotuberculosis, Y. pestis, the plague agent, has acquired an intradermal (id) route of entry and an extreme virulence. To identify pathophysiological events associated with the Y. pestis high degree of pathogenicity, we compared disease progression and evolution in mice after id inoculation of the two Yersinia species. Mortality studies showed that the id portal was not in itself sufficient to provide Y. pseudotuberculosis with the high virulence power of its descendant. Surprisingly, Y. pseudotuberculosis multiplied even more efficiently than Y. pestis in the dermis, and generated comparable histological lesions. Likewise, Y. pseudotuberculosis translocated to the draining lymph node (DLN) and similar numbers of the two bacterial species were found at 24 h post infection (pi) in this organ. However, on day 2 pi, bacterial loads were higher in Y. pestis-infected than in Y. pseudotuberculosis-infected DLNs. Clustering and multiple correspondence analyses showed that the DLN pathologies induced by the two species were statistically significantly different and identified the most discriminating elementary lesions. Y. pseudotuberculosis infection was accompanied by abscess-type polymorphonuclear cell infiltrates containing the infection, while Y. pestis-infected DLNs exhibited an altered tissue density and a vascular congestion, and were typified by an invasion of the tissue by free floating bacteria. Therefore, Y. pestis exceptional virulence is not due to its recently acquired portal of entry into the host, but is associated with a distinct ability to massively infiltrate the DLN, without inducing in this organ an organized polymorphonuclear cell reaction. These results shed light on pathophysiological processes that draw the line between a virulent and a hypervirulent pathogen.

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Richard L. Ferrero

Hudson Institute of Medical Research

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