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Dive into the research topics where Pierre Redelinghuys is active.

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Featured researches published by Pierre Redelinghuys.


PLOS Biology | 2013

Dectin-1 Is Essential for Reverse Transcytosis of Glycosylated SIgA-Antigen Complexes by Intestinal M Cells

Nicolas Rochereau; Daniel Drocourt; Eric Perouzel; Vincent Pavot; Pierre Redelinghuys; Gordon D. Brown; Gérard Tiraby; Xavier Roblin; Bernard Verrier; Christian Genin; Blaise Corthésy; Stéphane Paul

This work reports the long-awaited identification of Dectin-1 and Siglec-5 as the M cell co-receptors that mediate the reverse transcytosis of secretory IgA molecules to mount a gut immune response.


Biochemical Journal | 2003

Deglycosylation, processing and crystallization of human testis angiotensin-converting enzyme.

Kerry Gordon; Pierre Redelinghuys; Sylva L. U. Schwager; Mario R. W. Ehlers; Anastassios C. Papageorgiou; Ramanathan Natesh; K. Ravi Acharya; Edward D. Sturrock

Angiotensin I-converting enzyme (ACE) is a highly glycosylated type I integral membrane protein. A series of underglycosylated testicular ACE (tACE) glycoforms, lacking between one and five N-linked glycosylation sites, were used to assess the role of glycosylation in tACE processing, crystallization and enzyme activity. Whereas underglycosylated glycoforms showed differences in expression and processing, their kinetic parameters were similar to that of native tACE. N-glycosylation of Asn-72 or Asn-109 was necessary and sufficient for the production of enzymically active tACE but glycosylation of Asn-90 alone resulted in rapid intracellular degradation. All mutants showed similar levels of phorbol ester stimulation and were solubilized at the same juxtamembrane cleavage site as the native enzyme. Two mutants, tACEDelta36-g1234 and -g13, were successfully crystallized, diffracting to 2.8 and 3.0 A resolution respectively. Furthermore, a truncated, soluble tACE (tACEDelta36NJ), expressed in the presence of the glucosidase-I inhibitor N -butyldeoxynojirimycin, retained the activity of the native enzyme and yielded crystals belonging to the orthorhombic P2(1)2(1)2(1) space group (cell dimensions, a=56.47 A, b=84.90 A, c=133.99 A, alpha=90 degrees, beta=90 degrees and gamma=90 degrees ). These crystals diffracted to 2.0 A resolution. Thus underglycosylated human tACE mutants, lacking O-linked oligosaccharides and most N-linked oligosaccharides or with only simple N-linked oligosaccharides attached throughout the molecule, are suitable for X-ray diffraction studies.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

The N Domain of Human Angiotensin-I-converting Enzyme: THE ROLE OF N-GLYCOSYLATION AND THE CRYSTAL STRUCTURE IN COMPLEX WITH AN N DOMAIN-SPECIFIC PHOSPHINIC INHIBITOR, RXP407*

Colin S. Anthony; Hazel R. Corradi; Sylva L. U. Schwager; Pierre Redelinghuys; Dimitris Georgiadis; Vincent Dive; K. Ravi Acharya; Edward D. Sturrock

Angiotensin-I-converting enzyme (ACE) plays a critical role in the regulation of blood pressure through its central role in the renin-angiotensin and kallikrein-kinin systems. ACE contains two domains, the N and C domains, both of which are heavily glycosylated. Structural studies of ACE have been fraught with severe difficulties because of surface glycosylation of the protein. In order to investigate the role of glycosylation in the N domain and to create suitable forms for crystallization, we have investigated the importance of the 10 potential N-linked glycan sites using enzymatic deglycosylation, limited proteolysis, and mass spectrometry. A number of glycosylation mutants were generated via site-directed mutagenesis, expressed in CHO cells, and analyzed for enzymatic activity and thermal stability. At least eight of 10 of the potential glycan sites are glycosylated; three C-terminal sites were sufficient for expression of active N domain, whereas two N-terminal sites are important for its thermal stability. The minimally glycosylated Ndom389 construct was highly suitable for crystallization studies. The structure in the presence of an N domain-selective phosphinic inhibitor RXP407 was determined to 2.0 Å resolution. The Ndom389 structure revealed a hinge region that may contribute to the breathing motion proposed for substrate binding.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Characterisation of innate fungal recognition in the lung.

Inês Faro-Trindade; Janet A. Willment; Ann M. Kerrigan; Pierre Redelinghuys; Sabelo Hadebe; Delyth M. Reid; Naren Srinivasan; Helen Wainwright; Dirk M. Lang; Chad Steele; Gordon D. Brown

The innate recognition of fungi by leukocytes is mediated by pattern recognition receptors (PRR), such as Dectin-1, and is thought to occur at the cell surface triggering intracellular signalling cascades which lead to the induction of protective host responses. In the lung, this recognition is aided by surfactant which also serves to maintain the balance between inflammation and pulmonary function, although the underlying mechanisms are unknown. Here we have explored pulmonary innate recognition of a variety of fungal particles, including zymosan, Candida albicans and Aspergillus fumigatus, and demonstrate that opsonisation with surfactant components can limit inflammation by reducing host-cell fungal interactions. However, we found that this opsonisation does not contribute directly to innate fungal recognition and that this process is mediated through non-opsonic PRRs, including Dectin-1. Moreover, we found that pulmonary inflammatory responses to resting Aspergillus conidia were initiated by these PRRs in acidified phagolysosomes, following the uptake of fungal particles by leukocytes. Our data therefore provides crucial new insights into the mechanisms by which surfactant can maintain pulmonary function in the face of microbial challenge, and defines the phagolysosome as a novel intracellular compartment involved in the innate sensing of extracellular pathogens in the lung.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Early Murine T-lymphocyte Activation Is Accompanied by a Switch from N-Glycolyl- to N-Acetyl-neuraminic Acid and Generation of Ligands for Siglec-E

Pierre Redelinghuys; Aristotelis Antonopoulos; Yan Liu; Maria A. Campanero-Rhodes; Emma McKenzie; Stuart M. Haslam; Anne Dell; Ten Feizi; Paul R. Crocker

It is well established that murine T-lymphocyte activation is accompanied by major changes in cell-surface sialylation, potentially influencing interactions with sialic acid-binding immunoglobulin-like lectins (siglecs). In the present study, we analyzed early activation of murine CD4+ and CD8+ T-lymphocytes at 24 h. We observed a striking and selective up-regulation in the binding of a recombinant soluble form of siglec-E, an inhibitory siglec, which is expressed on several myeloid cell types including antigen-presenting dendritic cells. In contrast, much lower levels of T cell binding were observed with other siglecs, including sialoadhesin, CD22, and siglec-F and the plant lectins Maackia amurensis leukoagglutinin and Sambucus nigra agglutinin. By mass spectrometry, the sialic acid content of 24-h-activated CD4+ and CD8+ T-lymphocytes exhibited an increased proportion of N-acetyl-neuraminic acid (NeuAc) to N-glycolyl-neuraminic acid (NeuGc) in N-glycans. Reduced levels of NeuGc on the surface of activated T cells were demonstrated using an antibody specific for NeuGc and the expression levels of the gene encoding NeuAc- to NeuGc-converting enzyme, CMP-NeuAc hydroxylase, were also reduced. Siglec-E bound a wide range of sialylated structures in glycan arrays, had a preference for NeuAc versus NeuGc-terminated sequences and could recognize a set of sialoglycoproteins that included CD45, in lysates from activated T-lymphocytes. Collectively, these results show that early in T cell activation, glycan remodelling involves a switch from NeuGc- to NeuAc-terminating oligosaccharides on cell surface glycoproteins. This is associated with a strong up-regulation of siglec-E ligands, which may be important in promoting cellular interactions between early activated T-lymphocytes and myeloid cells expressing this inhibitory receptor.


Infection and Immunity | 2012

Dectin-1 Is Not Required for Controlling Candida albicans Colonization of the Gastrointestinal Tract

Simon Vautier; Rebecca A. Drummond; Pierre Redelinghuys; Graeme I. Murray; Donna M. MacCallum; Gordon D. Brown

ABSTRACT Candida albicans is normally found as a commensal microbe, commonly colonizing the gastrointestinal tract in humans. However, this fungus can also cause mucosal and systemic infections once immune function is compromised. Dectin-1 is an innate pattern recognition receptor essential for the control of fungal infections in both mice and humans; however, its role in the control of C. albicans colonization of the gastrointestinal tract has not been defined. Here, we demonstrate that in mice dectin-1 is essential for the control of gastrointestinal invasion during systemic infection, with dectin-1 deficiency associating with impaired fungal clearance and dysregulated cytokine production. Surprisingly, however, following oral infection, dectin-1 was not required for the control of mucosal colonization of the gastrointestinal tract, in terms of either fungal burdens or cytokine response. Thus, in mice, dectin-1 is essential for controlling systemic infection with C. albicans but appears to be redundant for the control of gastrointestinal colonization.


Immunology Letters | 2011

Inhibitory C-type lectin receptors in myeloid cells.

Pierre Redelinghuys; Gordon D. Brown

C-type lectin receptors encoded by the natural killer gene complex play critical roles in enabling NK cell discrimination between self and non-self. In recent years, additional genes at this locus have been identified with patterns of expression that extend to cells of the myeloid lineage where many of the encoded inhibitory receptors have equally important functions as regulators of immune homeostasis. In the present review we highlight the roles of some of these receptors including recent insights gained with regard to the identification of exogenous and endogenous ligands, mechanisms of cellular inhibition and activation, regulated expression within different cellular and immune contexts, as well as functions that include the regulation of bone homeostasis and involvement in autoimmunity.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2005

Development of Domain‐Selective Angiotensin I‐Converting Enzyme Inhibitors

Pierre Redelinghuys; Aloysius T. Nchinda; Edward D. Sturrock

Somatic angiotensin‐converting enzyme (ACE) is an essential component of the renin‐angiotensin system and consequently plays a key role in blood pressure and electrolyte homeostasis. Thus, ACE inhibitors are widely used in the treatment of cardiovascular disease, causing a decrease in the production of angiotensin II and an increase in the circulating vasodilator bradykinin. The ectodomain of ACE consists of two parts (N and C domains), each bearing an active site that differs in substrate and inhibitor specificity. Advances in the elucidation of the functional roles of these two domains and an expanded view of the renin‐angiotensin system underscore the need for the next generation of domain‐selective inhibitors with improved pharmacologic profiles. Moreover, recent breakthroughs in determining the crystal structure of testis ACE (identical to the C domain) and its homologue ACE2 provide new mechanistic insights into the interactions of ACE inhibitors and substrates with active site pockets. This review summarizes the structural basis and recent synthetic chemistry approaches to the development of novel domain‐selective inhibitors.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Microbial Ligand Costimulation Drives Neutrophilic Steroid-Refractory Asthma

Sabelo Hadebe; Frank Kirstein; Kaat Fierens; Kong Chen; Rebecca A. Drummond; Simon Vautier; Sara Sajaniemi; Graeme I. Murray; David L. Williams; Pierre Redelinghuys; Todd A. Reinhart; Beth A. Fallert Junecko; Jay K. Kolls; Bart N. Lambrecht; Frank Brombacher; Gordon D. Brown

Asthma is a heterogeneous disease whose etiology is poorly understood but is likely to involve innate responses to inhaled microbial components that are found in allergens. The influence of these components on pulmonary inflammation has been largely studied in the context of individual agonists, despite knowledge that they can have synergistic effects when used in combination. Here we have explored the effects of LPS and β-glucan, two commonly-encountered microbial agonists, on the pathogenesis of allergic and non-allergic respiratory responses to house dust mite allergen. Notably, sensitization with these microbial components in combination acted synergistically to promote robust neutrophilic inflammation, which involved both Dectin-1 and TLR-4. This pulmonary neutrophilic inflammation was corticosteroid-refractory, resembling that found in patients with severe asthma. Thus our results provide key new insights into how microbial components influence the development of respiratory pathology.


Biological Chemistry | 2006

Homologous substitution of ACE C-domain regions with N-domain sequences: effect on processing, shedding, and catalytic properties

Zenda L. Woodman; Sylva L. U. Schwager; Pierre Redelinghuys; Anthony J. Chubb; Elizabeth L. van der Merwe; Mario R. W. Ehlers; Edward D. Sturrock

Abstract Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) exists as two isoforms: somatic ACE (sACE), comprised of two homologous N and C domains, and testis ACE (tACE), comprised of the C domain only. The N and C domains are both active, but show differences in substrate and inhibitor specificity. While both isoforms are shed from the cell surface via a sheddase-mediated cleavage, tACE is shed much more efficiently than sACE. To delineate the regions of tACE that are important in catalytic activity, intracellular processing, and regulated ectodomain shedding, regions of the tACE sequence were replaced with the corresponding N-domain sequence. The resultant chimeras C1–163Ndom-ACE, C417–579Ndom-ACE, and C583–623Ndom-ACE were processed to the cell surface of transfected Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells, and were cleaved at the identical site as that of tACE. They also showed acquisition of N-domain-like catalytic properties. Homology modelling of the chimeric proteins revealed structural changes in regions required for tACE-specific catalytic activity. In contrast, C164–416Ndom-ACE and C191–214Ndom-ACE demonstrated defective intracellular processing and were neither enzymatically active nor shed. Therefore, critical elements within region D164–V416 and more specifically I191–T214 are required for the processing, cell-surface targeting, and enzyme activity of tACE, and cannot be substituted for by the homologous N-domain sequence.

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Rebecca A. Drummond

National Institutes of Health

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Frank Brombacher

International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology

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Frank Kirstein

International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology

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