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Dive into the research topics where Simon Vautier is active.

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Featured researches published by Simon Vautier.


PLOS Pathogens | 2014

Fungal chitin dampens inflammation through IL-10 induction mediated by NOD2 and TLR9 activation

Jeanette Wagener; R. K. Subbarao Malireddi; Megan D. Lenardon; Martin Köberle; Simon Vautier; Donna M. MacCallum; Tilo Biedermann; Martin Schaller; Mihai G. Netea; Thirumala-Devi Kanneganti; Gordon D. Brown; Alistair J. P. Brown; Neil A. R. Gow

Chitin is an essential structural polysaccharide of fungal pathogens and parasites, but its role in human immune responses remains largely unknown. It is the second most abundant polysaccharide in nature after cellulose and its derivatives today are widely used for medical and industrial purposes. We analysed the immunological properties of purified chitin particles derived from the opportunistic human fungal pathogen Candida albicans, which led to the selective secretion of the anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10. We identified NOD2, TLR9 and the mannose receptor as essential fungal chitin-recognition receptors for the induction of this response. Chitin reduced LPS-induced inflammation in vivo and may therefore contribute to the resolution of the immune response once the pathogen has been defeated. Fungal chitin also induced eosinophilia in vivo, underpinning its ability to induce asthma. Polymorphisms in the identified chitin receptors, NOD2 and TLR9, predispose individuals to inflammatory conditions and dysregulated expression of chitinases and chitinase-like binding proteins, whose activity is essential to generate IL-10-inducing fungal chitin particles in vitro, have also been linked to inflammatory conditions and asthma. Chitin recognition is therefore critical for immune homeostasis and is likely to have a significant role in infectious and allergic disease. Authors Summary Chitin is the second most abundant polysaccharide in nature after cellulose and an essential component of the cell wall of all fungal pathogens. The discovery of human chitinases and chitinase-like binding proteins indicates that fungal chitin is recognised by cells of the human immune system, shaping the immune response towards the invading pathogen. We show that three immune cell receptors– the mannose receptor, NOD2 and TLR9 recognise chitin and act together to mediate an anti-inflammatory response via secretion of the cytokine IL-10. This mechanism may prevent inflammation-based damage during fungal infection and restore immune balance after an infection has been cleared. By increasing the chitin content in the cell wall pathogenic fungi may influence the immune system in their favour, by down-regulating protective inflammatory immune responses. Furthermore, gene mutations and dysregulated enzyme activity in the described chitin recognition pathway are implicated in inflammatory conditions such as Crohns Disease and asthma, highlighting the importance of the discovered mechanism in human health.


PLOS Pathogens | 2013

Differential Adaptation of Candida albicans In Vivo Modulates Immune Recognition by Dectin-1

Mohlopheni J. Marakalala; Simon Vautier; Joanna Potrykus; Louise A. Walker; Kelly M. Shepardson; Alex Hopke; Héctor M. Mora-Montes; Ann M. Kerrigan; Mihai G. Netea; Graeme I. Murray; Donna M. MacCallum; Robert T. Wheeler; Carol A. Munro; Neil A. R. Gow; Robert A. Cramer; Alistair J. P. Brown; Gordon D. Brown

The β-glucan receptor Dectin-1 is a member of the C-type lectin family and functions as an innate pattern recognition receptor in antifungal immunity. In both mouse and man, Dectin-1 has been found to play an essential role in controlling infections with Candida albicans, a normally commensal fungus in man which can cause superficial mucocutaneous infections as well as life-threatening invasive diseases. Here, using in vivo models of infection, we show that the requirement for Dectin-1 in the control of systemic Candida albicans infections is fungal strain-specific; a phenotype that only becomes apparent during infection and cannot be recapitulated in vitro. Transcript analysis revealed that this differential requirement for Dectin-1 is due to variable adaptation of C. albicans strains in vivo, and that this results in substantial differences in the composition and nature of their cell walls. In particular, we established that differences in the levels of cell-wall chitin influence the role of Dectin-1, and that these effects can be modulated by antifungal drug treatment. Our results therefore provide substantial new insights into the interaction between C. albicans and the immune system and have significant implications for our understanding of susceptibility and treatment of human infections with this pathogen.


Cytokine & Growth Factor Reviews | 2010

C-type lectins, fungi and Th17 responses.

Simon Vautier; Maria da Glória Sousa; Gordon D. Brown

Th17 cells are a recently discovered subset of T helper cells characterised by the release of IL-17, and are thought to be important for mobilization of immune responses against microbial pathogens, but which also contribute to the development of autoimmune diseases. The identification of C-type lectin receptors which are capable of regulating the balance between Th1 and Th17 responses has been of particular recent interest, which they control, in part, though the release of Th17 inducing cytokines. Many of these receptors recognise fungi, and other pathogens, and play key roles in driving the development of protective anti-microbial immunity. Here we will review the C-type lectins that have been linked to Th17 type responses and will briefly examine the role of Th17 responses in murine and human anti-fungal immunity.


Cytokine | 2012

C-type lectin receptors and cytokines in fungal immunity

Simon Vautier; Donna M. MacCallum; Gordon D. Brown

Fungi are the cause of opportunistic infections, predominantly in immunocompromised individuals although, primary fungal infections can occur in apparently healthy individuals. Successful host defence requires an effective innate and adaptive immune response. Central to host immune responses are the induction of cytokines; the signals which help to activate the innate immune system and which play a central role in directing the development of pathogen-specific immunity. C-type lectins play a central role in the recognition and shaping of immune responses to fungal pathogens, in part, through the induction and modulation of cytokine responses. Understanding which cytokines induce protective responses to these pathogens and how C-type lectins and other receptors direct cytokine production may allow development of novel antifungal therapies. Here we review the C-type lectins, their influence on cytokine production and subsequent immune responses in antifungal immunity.


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.


Cellular Microbiology | 2015

Candida albicans colonization and dissemination from the murine gastrointestinal tract: the influence of morphology and Th17 immunity

Simon Vautier; Rebecca A. Drummond; Kong Chen; Graeme I. Murray; David Kadosh; Alistair J. P. Brown; Neil A. R. Gow; Donna M. MacCallum; Jay K. Kolls; Gordon D. Brown

The ability of Candida albicans to cause disease is associated with its capacity to undergo morphological transition between yeast and filamentous forms, but the role of morphology in colonization and dissemination from the gastrointestinal (GI) tract remains poorly defined. To explore this, we made use of wild‐type and morphological mutants of C. albicans in an established model of GI tract colonization, induced following antibiotic treatment of mice. Our data reveal that GI tract colonization favours the yeast form of C. albicans, that there is constitutive low level systemic dissemination in colonized mice that occurs irrespective of fungal morphology, and that colonization is not controlled by Th17 immunity in otherwise immunocompetent animals. These data provide new insights into the mechanisms of pathogenesis and commensalism of C. albicans, and have implications for our understanding of human disease.


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.


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2016

MICL controls inflammation in rheumatoid arthritis

Pierre Redelinghuys; Lauren Whitehead; Andrea Augello; Rebecca A. Drummond; Jean-Michel Levesque; Simon Vautier; Delyth M. Reid; Bernhard Kerscher; Julie Taylor; Peter Nigrovic; John Wright; Graeme I. Murray; Janet A. Willment; Lynne J. Hocking; Maria J. G. Fernandes; Cosimo De Bari; Iain B. McInnes; Gordon D. Brown

Background Myeloid inhibitory C-type lectin-like receptor (MICL, Clec12A) is a C-type lectin receptor (CLR) expressed predominantly by myeloid cells. Previous studies have suggested that MICL is involved in controlling inflammation. Objective To determine the role of this CLR in inflammatory pathology using Clec12A−/− mice. Methods Clec12A−/− mice were generated commercially and primarily characterised using the collagen antibody-induced arthritis (CAIA) model. Mechanisms and progress of disease were characterised by clinical scoring, histology, flow cytometry, irradiation bone-marrow chimera generation, administration of blocking antibodies and in vivo imaging. Characterisation of MICL in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) was determined by immunohistochemistry and single nucleotide polymorphism analysis. Anti-MICL antibodies were detected in patient serum by ELISA and dot-blot analysis. Results MICL-deficient animals did not present with pan-immune dysfunction, but exhibited markedly exacerbated inflammation during CAIA, owing to the inappropriate activation of myeloid cells. Polymorphisms of MICL were not associated with disease in patients with RA, but this CLR was the target of autoantibodies in a subset of patients with RA. In wild-type mice the administration of such antibodies recapitulated the Clec12A−/− phenotype. Conclusions MICL plays an essential role in regulating inflammation during arthritis and is an autoantigen in a subset of patients with RA. These data suggest an entirely new mechanism underlying RA pathogenesis, whereby the threshold of myeloid cell activation can be modulated by autoantibodies that bind to cell membrane-expressed inhibitory receptors.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Correction: 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

There is an error in Affiliation 1 for authors Sabelo Hadebe, Rebecca A. Drummond, Simon Vautier, Sara Sajaniemi, Pierre Redelinghuys, and Gordon D. Brown. Affiliation 1 should be: Aberdeen Fungal Group, Infection, Immunity and Inflammation Programme, University of Aberdeen, United Kingdom.


PLOS Pathogens | 2013

Correction: Differential Adaptation of Candida albicans In Vivo Modulates Immune Recognition by Dectin-1.

Mohlopheni J. Marakalala; Simon Vautier; Joanna Potrykus; Louise A. Walker; Kelly M. Shepardson; Alex Hopke; Héctor M. Mora-Montes; Ann M. Kerrigan; Mihai G. Netea; Graeme I. Murray; Donna M. MacCallum; Robert T. Wheeler; Carol A. Munro; Neil A. R. Gow; Robert A. Cramer; Alistair J. P. Brown; Gordon D. Brown

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Rebecca A. Drummond

National Institutes of Health

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Kong Chen

University of Pittsburgh

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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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