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Featured researches published by Rosalie Aprelon.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2004

Nested PCR for detection and genotyping of Ehrlichia ruminantium: use in genetic diversity analysis.

Dominique Martinez; Nathalie Vachiery; Frédéric Stachurski; Yane Kandassamy; Modestine Raliniaina; Rosalie Aprelon; Arona Gueye

Abstract: Ehrlichia ruminantium, the agent of cowdriosis transmitted by Amblyomma ticks, presents an extensive genetic and antigenic diversity of key importance for vaccine formulation. Two means of nested polymerase chain reaction (PCR) targeting were developed to conduct molecular epidemiology studies in the Caribbean and Africa. The first used a conserved DNA fragment for detection of the pathogen in animals and vectors, and the second relied on the polymorphic map1 gene for genotyping. As compared to a PCR, the nested PCR showed a 2‐Log10 improvement of sensitivity and allowed amplification from ticks, blood, brain, and lungs from infected animals, providing a more accurate picture of the tick infection rate. In Guadeloupe, this rate reached 36% (N= 212) instead of 1.7% (N= 224), as previously estimated. Genetic typing was done by restriction fragment length polymorphism or sequencing of map1 amplification products. Molecular epidemiology studies conducted in field sites selected for vaccination trials with inactivated vaccine, revealed the circulation of genetically divergent strains in limited geographical areas. It is known, then, that genetic clustering based on map1 has no predictive value regarding the protective value of a given strain against a new strain. However, tracing the strains by this technique revealed the extent of E. ruminantium diversity that one can expect in a given region, and the method allows differentiation between an inadequate immune response and the challenge by a breakthrough strain on animals dying despite vaccination. Up to now, genetic typing does not avoid cross‐protection studies, which were conducted in parallel, although on a more limited scale. The importance of pathogen diversity studies for optimization of vaccine design is discussed as well as the research for new polymorphic genes. These genes may allow better predictions on cross‐protection, given the recent completion of the sequence of the full genome of two E. ruminantium strains.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2013

West Nile virus surveillance, Brazil, 2008-2010

Tatiana Ometto; Edison Luiz Durigon; Jansen de Araujo; Rosalie Aprelon; Daniel Moura de Aguiar; Guacyara T. Cavalcante; Rosane Marini Melo; José Eduardo Levi; Severino Mendes de Azevedo Junior; Maria Virginia Petry; Isaac S. Neto; Patrícia Serafini; Eliana Villalobos; Elenice Maria Sequetin Cunha; Maria do Carmo Custódio de Souza Hunold Lara; Alessandra Nava; Marcello Schiavo Nardi; Renata Hurtado; Roberta Rodrigues; Angelo Luís Sherer; Janete de Fátima Martins Sherer; Marcelo Plaisant Geraldi; Marina M. M. Seixas; Cássio R. L. Peterka; Debora de Souza Bandeira; Jennifer Pradel; Nathalie Vachiery; Marcelo B. Labruna; Luiz Marcelo Aranha Camargo; Robert S. Lanciotti

BACKGROUND West Nile virus (WNV) is an emergent pathogen that is widely distributed in North and Central America. The recent introduction in South America has focused attention on the spread of WNV across Southern American countries. The transmission network involves mosquitoes, birds, horses and humans. METHODS The serological evaluation of sera from 678 equids and 478 birds was performed using a WNV-specific blocking ELISA, and only the positive results were confirmed by plaque reduction neutralisation tests (PRNTs). Molecular analysis was performed on sera from 992 healthy equids and on 63 macerates of brains from equids that died of encephalitis and had previously tested negative for other pathogens. We also tested swabs from 928 birds. The samples analysed were collected in different biomes of Brazil. RESULTS We identified WNV antibodies by ELISA in thirteen equids and five birds, and PRNT90 confirmed WNV positivity in four equid samples collected in 2009 in an area between the Amazon and the Pantanal. None of the ELISA positive bird samples were confirmed by PRNT90, and all samples tested by RT-PCR were negative. CONCLUSION WNV circulation is confirmed by this large scale survey even in the absence of detection of clinical cases.


Vaccine | 2010

Efficiency of inactivated vaccines against heartwater in Burkina Faso: impact of Ehrlichia ruminantium genetic diversity.

Hassane Adakal; Frédéric Stachurski; Maurice Konkobo; Sébastien Zoungrana; Damien F. Meyer; Valérie Pinarello; Rosalie Aprelon; Isabel Marcelino; Paula M. Alves; Dominique Martinez; Thierry Lefrançois; Nathalie Vachiery

In order to identify the appropriate strains to use in vaccination trials against heartwater in Burkina Faso, the protective effect of Gardel and Welgevonden strains was assessed against local strains on sheep vaccinated by infection-and-treatment method: Gardel protected significantly against Burkina Faso strains tested (survival rate 59% for immunised sheep vs 13% for control sheep) while Welgevonden did not (survival rate 45% for immunised sheep vs 25% for control sheep). The efficacy of the ISA50 inactivated vaccine, produced under industrial process, was evaluated in sheep during field challenges in two successive years. During year 1, there was a limited protective effect of the Gardel vaccine with 65% of survival rate for the vaccinated group compared to 49% for the control group (N=153, p=0.053). During year 2, the vaccine containing Gardel and a local strain gave an increased protective effect compared to the first trial: 72% of the vaccinated animals survived compared to 47% of the naïve animals (N=173, p<0.001). There was an important genetic diversity of strains in the field with detection of 11 different map1 genotypes in brains from control and vaccinated sheep post mortem. Map1 genotyping of strains detected in brains from control sheep showed that genotype distribution varied according to time and study areas, which could explain the difference in efficacy of the vaccine.


International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health | 2013

West Nile Virus Transmission in Sentinel Chickens and Potential Mosquito Vectors, Senegal River Delta, 2008-2009

Assane Gueye Fall; Amadou Diaite; Momar Talla Seck; Thierry Lefrançois; Nathalie Vachiery; Rosalie Aprelon; Ousmane Faye; Lassana Konate; Renaud Lancelot

West Nile virus (WNV) is an arthropod-borne Flavivirus usually transmitted to wild birds by Culex mosquitoes. Humans and horses are susceptible to WNV but are dead-end hosts. WNV is endemic in Senegal, particularly in the Senegal River Delta. To assess transmission patterns and potential vectors, entomological and sentinel serological was done in Ross Bethio along the River Senegal. Three sentinel henhouses (also used as chicken-baited traps) were set at 100 m, 800 m, and 1,300 m from the river, the latter close to a horse-baited trap. Blood samples were taken from sentinel chickens at 2-week intervals. Seroconversions were observed in sentinel chickens in November and December. Overall, the serological incidence rate was 4.6% with 95% confidence interval (0.9; 8.4) in the sentinel chickens monitored for this study. Based on abundance pattern, Culex neavei was the most likely mosquito vector involved in WNV transmission to sentinel chickens, and a potential bridge vector between birds and mammals.


Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology | 2016

Recombination Is a Major Driving Force of Genetic Diversity in the Anaplasmataceae Ehrlichia ruminantium

N. Cangi; Jonathan Gordon; Laure Bournez; Valérie Pinarello; Rosalie Aprelon; Karine Huber; Thierry Lefrançois; Luis Neves; Damien F. Meyer; Nathalie Vachiery

The disease, Heartwater, caused by the Anaplasmataceae E. ruminantium, represents a major problem for tropical livestock and wild ruminants. Up to now, no effective vaccine has been available due to a limited cross protection of vaccinal strains on field strains and a high genetic diversity of Ehrlichia ruminantium within geographical locations. To address this issue, we inferred the genetic diversity and population structure of 194 E. ruminantium isolates circulating worldwide using Multilocus Sequence Typing based on lipA, lipB, secY, sodB, and sucA genes. Phylogenetic trees and networks were generated using BEAST and SplitsTree, respectively, and recombination between the different genetic groups was tested using the PHI test for recombination. Our study reveals the repeated occurrence of recombination between E. ruminantium strains, suggesting that it may occur frequently in the genome and has likely played an important role in the maintenance of genetic diversity and the evolution of E. ruminantium. Despite the unclear phylogeny and phylogeography, E. ruminantium isolates are clustered into two main groups: Group 1 (West Africa) and a Group 2 (worldwide) which is represented by West, East, and Southern Africa, Indian Ocean, and Caribbean strains. Some sequence types are common between West Africa and Caribbean and between Southern Africa and Indian Ocean strains. These common sequence types highlight two main introduction events due to the movement of cattle: from West Africa to Caribbean and from Southern Africa to the Indian Ocean islands. Due to the long branch lengths between Group 1 and Group 2, and the propensity for recombination between these groups, it seems that the West African clusters of Subgroup 2 arrived there more recently than the original divergence of the two groups, possibly with the original waves of domesticated ruminants that spread across the African continent several thousand years ago.


Veterinary Research | 2015

An in vitro model to assess the immunosuppressive effect of tick saliva on the mobilization of inflammatory monocyte-derived cells

Nathalie Vachiery; Carinne Puech; Patricia Cavelier; Valérie Rodrigues; Rosalie Aprelon; Thierry Lefrançois; Dominique Martinez; Mathieu Epardaud

Tick-borne pathogens cause potent infections. These pathogens benefit from molecules contained in tick saliva that have evolved to modulate host innate and adaptive immune responses. This is called “saliva-activated transmission” and enables tick-borne pathogens to evade host immune responses. Ticks feed on their host for relatively long periods; thus, mechanisms counteracting the inflammation-driven recruitment and activation of innate effector cells at the bite site, are an effective strategy to escape the immune response. Here, we developed an original in vitro model to evaluate and to characterize the immunomodulatory effects of tick saliva that prevent the establishment of a local inflammatory immune response. This model mimics the tick bite and enables the assessment of the effect of saliva on the inflammatory-associated dynamic recruitment of cells from the mononuclear phagocyte system. Using this model, we were able to recapitulate the dual effect of tick saliva on the mobilization of inflammatory monocyte-derived cells, i.e. (i) impaired recruitment of monocytes from the blood to the bite wound; and (ii) poor mobilization of monocyte-derived cells from the skin to the draining lymph node. This simple tool reconstitutes the effect of tick saliva in vivo, which we characterized in the mouse, and should enable the identification of important factors facilitating pathogen infection. Furthermore, this model may be applied to the characterization of any pathogen-derived immunosuppressive molecule affecting the establishment of the inflammatory immune response.


Vaccine | 2015

A user-friendly and scalable process to prepare a ready-to-use inactivated vaccine: the example of heartwater in ruminants under tropical conditions.

Isabel Marcelino; Thierry Lefrançois; Dominique Martinez; Ken Giraud-Girard; Rosalie Aprelon; Nathalie Mandonnet; Jérôme Gaucheron; François Bertrand; Nathalie Vachiery

The use of cheap and thermoresistant vaccines in poor tropical countries for the control of animal diseases is a key issue. Our work aimed at designing and validating a process for the large-scale production of a ready-to-use inactivated vaccine for ruminants. Our model was heartwater caused by the obligate intracellular bacterium Ehrlichia ruminantium (ER). The conventional inactivated vaccine against heartwater (based on whole bacteria inactivated with sodium azide) is prepared immediately before injection, using a syringe-extrusion method with Montanide ISA50. This is a fastidious time-consuming process and it limits the number of vaccine doses available. To overcome these issues, we tested three different techniques (syringe, vortex and homogenizer) and three Montanide ISA adjuvants (50, 70 and 70M). High-speed homogenizer was the optimal method to emulsify ER antigens with both ISA70 and 70M adjuvants. The emulsions displayed a good homogeneity (particle size below 1 μm and low phase separation), conductivity below 10 μS/cm and low antigen degradation at 4 °C for up to 1 year. The efficacy of the different formulations was then evaluated during vaccination trials on goats. The inactivated ER antigens emulsified with ISA70 and ISA70M in a homogenizer resulted in 80% and 100% survival rates, respectively. A cold-chain rupture assay using ISA70M+ER was performed to mimic possible field conditions exposing the vaccine at 37 °C for 4 days before delivery. Surprisingly, the animal survival rate was still high (80%). We also observed that the MAP-1B antibody response was very similar between animals vaccinated with ISA70+ER and ISA70M+ER emulsions, suggesting a more homogenous antigen distribution and presentation in these emulsions. Our work demonstrated that the combination of ISA70 or ISA70M and homogenizer is optimal for the production of an effective ready-to-use inactivated vaccine against heartwater, which could easily be produced on an industrial scale.


Advances in Animal Biosciences | 2010

Assessment of genetic variability of resistance to heartwater in Creole goats

Jean-Christophe Bambou; Nathalie Vachiery; P. Despois; Ken Giraud-Girard; Rémy Arquet; Valérie Pinarello; Rosalie Aprelon; Claude Barbier; J. Gobardham; Nathalie Mandonnet; Thierry Lefrançois

The FEC, EOSI and PCV significantly varied across the experimental infection (P , 0.001). Infection type did not affect FEC and PCV. FEC increased until the end of the infection (D35) and was two fold higher in R than in S kids (P , 0.0001). The PCV decreased significantly (P , 0.0001) but no difference was observed between R and S kids. These results suggest that experimental infection with a single dose of 10,000 H. contortus L3 could lead to a standardized genetic evaluation design for resistance to strongyles in Creole goats. Infection type affected EOSI (P , 0.05), basically at D42 (792. 10 cells/mL vs 513.10 cells/mL, in TI and SI respectively). These data are so far consistent with a role of eosinophils in the killing of infective larval stages, but not adults, of most helminths (Meeusen et al., 2005). The post-weaning grazing management affected FEC (P 5 0.0003) but not EOSI and PCV. During experimental infection, FEC was higher in animals from grazing group 25% than 75% and 100% (P , 0.0001). No interaction of grazing management 3 genetic status was observed. Here we showed that without any effect on genetic status, the level of infection of kids during the post-weaning period could help in preventing severe infection rate at the adult stage. The results suggest that stimulation of the immune system in young animals increase the efficiency of the protective immune response at a further stage. This result needs further studies to understand the mechanisms underlying this observation.


Advances in Animal Biosciences | 2010

Vaccinal approach using inactivated vaccine against heartwater and Ehrlichia ruminantium genetic diversity

Nathalie Vachiery; Danièle Meyer; I. Marcelino; Paula M. Alves; Modestine Raliniaina; Frédéric Stachurski; Hassane Adakal; Christian Sheikboudou; Rosalie Aprelon; Valérie Pinarello; Thierry Lefrançois; Dominique Martinez


Archive | 2017

Screening of tick-borne pathogens in Caribbean ticks using new High-throughput technologies (DOMOTICK project). [0208]

Mathilde Gondard; Sabine Delannoy; Elodie Devillers; Valérie Pinarello; Rosalie Aprelon; Sarah Temmam; Marc Eloit; Muriel Vayssier-Taussat; Emmanuel Albina; Sara Moutailler

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Nathalie Vachiery

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Frédéric Stachurski

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Thierry Lefrançois

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Valérie Pinarello

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Dominique Martinez

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Ken Giraud-Girard

Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement

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Valérie Rodrigues

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Philippe Holzmuller

Institut de recherche pour le développement

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Bernard Fernandez

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Alexandre Andersen

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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