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Featured researches published by Stéphanie Dabo.


Viruses | 2012

dsRNA-Dependent Protein Kinase PKR and its Role in Stress, Signaling and HCV Infection

Stéphanie Dabo; Eliane F. Meurs

The double-stranded RNA-dependent protein kinase PKR plays multiple roles in cells, in response to different stress situations. As a member of the interferon (IFN)‑Stimulated Genes, PKR was initially recognized as an actor in the antiviral action of IFN, due to its ability to control translation, through phosphorylation, of the alpha subunit of eukaryotic initiation factor 2 (eIF2α). As such, PKR participates in the generation of stress granules, or autophagy and a number of viruses have designed strategies to inhibit its action. However, PKR deficient mice resist most viral infections, indicating that PKR may play other roles in the cell other than just acting as an antiviral agent. Indeed, PKR regulates several signaling pathways, either as an adapter protein and/or using its kinase activity. Here we review the role of PKR as an eIF2α kinase, its participation in the regulation of the NF-κB, p38MAPK and insulin pathways, and we focus on its role during infection with the hepatitis C virus (HCV). PKR binds the HCV IRES RNA, cooperates with some functions of the HCV core protein and may represent a target for NS5A or E2. Novel data points out for a role of PKR as a pro-HCV agent, both as an adapter protein and as an eIF2α-kinase, and in cooperation with the di-ubiquitin-like protein ISG15. Developing pharmaceutical inhibitors of PKR may help in resolving some viral infections as well as stress-related damages.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Hepatitis C Virus Controls Interferon Production through PKR Activation

Noëlla Arnaud; Stéphanie Dabo; Patrick Maillard; Agata Budkowska; Katerina I. Kalliampakou; Penelope Mavromara; Dominique Garcin; Jacques Hugon; Anne Gatignol; Daisuke Akazawa; Takaji Wakita; Eliane F. Meurs

Hepatitis C virus is a poor inducer of interferon (IFN), although its structured viral RNA can bind the RNA helicase RIG-I, and activate the IFN-induction pathway. Low IFN induction has been attributed to HCV NS3/4A protease-mediated cleavage of the mitochondria-adapter MAVS. Here, we have investigated the early events of IFN induction upon HCV infection, using the cell-cultured HCV JFH1 strain and the new HCV-permissive hepatoma-derived Huh7.25.CD81 cell subclone. These cells depend on ectopic expression of the RIG-I ubiquitinating enzyme TRIM25 to induce IFN through the RIG-I/MAVS pathway. We observed induction of IFN during the first 12 hrs of HCV infection, after which a decline occurred which was more abrupt at the protein than at the RNA level, revealing a novel HCV-mediated control of IFN induction at the level of translation. The cellular protein kinase PKR is an important regulator of translation, through the phosphorylation of its substrate the eIF2α initiation factor. A comparison of the expression of luciferase placed under the control of an eIF2α-dependent (IRESEMCV) or independent (IRESHCV) RNA showed a specific HCV-mediated inhibition of eIF2α-dependent translation. We demonstrated that HCV infection triggers the phosphorylation of both PKR and eIF2α at 12 and 15 hrs post-infection. PKR silencing, as well as treatment with PKR pharmacological inhibitors, restored IFN induction in JFH1-infected cells, at least until 18 hrs post-infection, at which time a decrease in IFN expression could be attributed to NS3/4A-mediated MAVS cleavage. Importantly, both PKR silencing and PKR inhibitors led to inhibition of HCV yields in cells that express functional RIG-I/MAVS. In conclusion, here we provide the first evidence that HCV uses PKR to restrain its ability to induce IFN through the RIG-I/MAVS pathway. This opens up new possibilities to assay PKR chemical inhibitors for their potential to boost innate immunity in HCV infection.


PLOS Pathogens | 2011

Hepatitis C Virus Reveals a Novel Early Control in Acute Immune Response

Noëlla Arnaud; Stéphanie Dabo; Daisuke Akazawa; Masayoshi Fukasawa; Fumiko Shinkai-Ouchi; Jacques Hugon; Takaji Wakita; Eliane F. Meurs

Recognition of viral RNA structures by the intracytosolic RNA helicase RIG-I triggers induction of innate immunity. Efficient induction requires RIG-I ubiquitination by the E3 ligase TRIM25, its interaction with the mitochondria-bound MAVS protein, recruitment of TRAF3, IRF3- and NF-κB-kinases and transcription of Interferon (IFN). In addition, IRF3 alone induces some of the Interferon-Stimulated Genes (ISGs), referred to as early ISGs. Infection of hepatocytes with Hepatitis C virus (HCV) results in poor production of IFN despite recognition of the viral RNA by RIG-I but can lead to induction of early ISGs. HCV was shown to inhibit IFN production by cleaving MAVS through its NS3/4A protease and by controlling cellular translation through activation of PKR, an eIF2α-kinase containing dsRNA-binding domains (DRBD). Here, we have identified a third mode of control of IFN induction by HCV. Using HCVcc and the Huh7.25.CD81 cells, we found that HCV controls RIG-I ubiquitination through the di-ubiquitine-like protein ISG15, one of the early ISGs. A transcriptome analysis performed on Huh7.25.CD81 cells silenced or not for PKR and infected with JFH1 revealed that HCV infection leads to induction of 49 PKR-dependent genes, including ISG15 and several early ISGs. Silencing experiments revealed that this novel PKR-dependent pathway involves MAVS, TRAF3 and IRF3 but not RIG-I, and that it does not induce IFN. Use of PKR inhibitors showed that this pathway requires the DRBD but not the kinase activity of PKR. We then demonstrated that PKR interacts with HCV RNA and MAVS prior to RIG-I. In conclusion, HCV recruits PKR early in infection as a sensor to trigger induction of several IRF3-dependent genes. Among those, ISG15 acts to negatively control the RIG-I/MAVS pathway, at the level of RIG-I ubiquitination.These data give novel insights in the machinery involved in the early events of innate immune response.


Journal of Virology | 2012

The Double-Stranded RNA Bluetongue Virus Induces Type I Interferon in Plasmacytoid Dendritic Cells via a MYD88-Dependent TLR7/8-Independent Signaling Pathway

Suzana Ruscanu; Florentina Pascale; Mickael Bourge; Behzad Hemati; Jamila Elhmouzi-Younes; Céline Urien; Michel Bonneau; Haru Takamatsu; Jayne Hope; Peter P. C. Mertens; Gilles Meyer; Meredith Stewart; Polly Roy; Eliane F. Meurs; Stéphanie Dabo; Stéphan Zientara; Emmanuel Bréard; Corinne Sailleau; Emilie Chauveau; Damien Vitour; Bernard Charley; Isabelle Schwartz-Cornil

ABSTRACT Dendritic cells (DCs), especially plasmacytoid DCs (pDCs), produce large amounts of alpha/beta interferon (IFN-α/β) upon infection with DNA or RNA viruses, which has impacts on the physiopathology of the viral infections and on the quality of the adaptive immunity. However, little is known about the IFN-α/β production by DCs during infections by double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) viruses. We present here novel information about the production of IFN-α/β induced by bluetongue virus (BTV), a vector-borne dsRNA Orbivirus of ruminants, in sheep primary DCs. We found that BTV induced IFN-α/β in skin lymph and in blood in vivo. Although BTV replicated in a substantial fraction of the conventional DCs (cDCs) and pDCs in vitro, only pDCs responded to BTV by producing a significant amount of IFN-α/β. BTV replication in pDCs was not mandatory for IFN-α/β production since it was still induced by UV-inactivated BTV (UV-BTV). Other inflammatory cytokines, including tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α), interleukin-6 (IL-6), and IL-12p40, were also induced by UV-BTV in primary pDCs. The induction of IFN-α/β required endo-/lysosomal acidification and maturation. However, despite being an RNA virus, UV-BTV did not signal through Toll-like receptor 7 (TLR7) for IFN-α/β induction. In contrast, pathways involving the MyD88 adaptor and kinases dsRNA-activated protein kinase (PKR) and stress-activated protein kinase (SAPK)/Jun N-terminal protein kinase (JNK) were implicated. This work highlights the importance of pDCs for the production of innate immunity cytokines induced by a dsRNA virus, and it shows that a dsRNA virus can induce IFN-α/β in pDCs via a novel TLR-independent and Myd88-dependent pathway. These findings have implications for the design of efficient vaccines against dsRNA viruses.


Journal of Virology | 2013

NS3 of Bluetongue virus interferes with the induction of type I interferon

Emilie Chauveau; Virginie Doceul; Estelle Lara; Emmanuel Bréard; Corinne Sailleau; Pierre-Olivier Vidalain; Eliane F. Meurs; Stéphanie Dabo; Isabelle Schwartz-Cornil; Stéphan Zientara; Damien Vitour

ABSTRACT Upon infection with Bluetongue virus (BTV), an arthropod-borne virus, type I interferon (IFN-I) is produced in vivo and in vitro. IFN-I is essential for the establishment of an antiviral cellular response, and most if not all viruses have elaborated strategies to counteract its action. In this study, we assessed the ability of BTV to interfere with IFN-I synthesis and identified the nonstructural viral protein NS3 as an antagonist of the IFN-I system.


Hepatology | 2006

The protein kinase IKKε can inhibit HCV expression independently of IFN and its own expression is downregulated in HCV-infected livers†

Myriam Vilasco; Esther Larrea; Damien Vitour; Stéphanie Dabo; Adrien Breiman; Béatrice Regnault; Jose-Ignacio Riezu; Pierre Eid; Jesús Prieto; Eliane F. Meurs

During a viral infection, binding of viral double‐stranded RNAs (dsRNAs) to the cytosolic RNA helicase RIG‐1 leads to recruitment of the mitochondria‐associated Cardif protein, involved in activation of the IRF3‐phosphorylating IKKε/TBK1 kinases, interferon (IFN) induction, and development of the innate immune response. The hepatitis C virus (HCV) NS3/4A protease cleaves Cardif and abrogates both IKKε/TBK1 activation and IFN induction. By using an HCV replicon model, we previously showed that ectopic overexpression of IKKε can inhibit HCV expression. Here, analysis of the IKKε transcriptome profile in these HCV replicon cells showed induction of several genes associated with the antiviral action of IFN. Interestingly, IKKε still inhibits HCV expression in the presence of neutralizing antibodies to IFN receptors or in the presence of a dominant negative STAT1α mutant. This suggests that good IKKε expression levels are important for rapid activation of the cellular antiviral response in HCV‐infected cells, in addition to provoking IFN induction. To determine the physiological importance of IKKε in HCV infection, we then analyzed its expression levels in liver biopsy specimens from HCV‐infected patients. This analysis also included genes of the IFN induction pathway (RIG‐I, MDA5, LGP2, Cardif, TBK1), and three IKKε‐induced genes (IFN‐β, CCL3, and ISG15). The results show significant inhibition of expression of IKKε and of the RNA helicases RIG‐I/MDA5/LGP2 in the HCV‐infected patients, whereas expression of TBK1 and Cardif was not significantly altered. In conclusion, given the antiviral potential of IKKε and of the RNA helicases, these in vivo data strongly support an important role for these genes in the control of HCV infection.(HEPATOLOGY 2006;44:1635–1647.)


Developmental and Comparative Immunology | 2018

Development of molecular and cellular tools to decipher the type I IFN pathway of the common vampire bat

Sarkis Sarkis; Marie-Claude Lise; Edith Darcissac; Stéphanie Dabo; Marcel Falk; Laura Chaulet; Christine Neuveut; Eliane F. Meurs; Anne Lavergne; Vincent Lacoste

&NA; Though the common vampire bat, Desmodus rotundus, is known as the main rabies virus reservoir in Latin America, no tools are available to investigate its antiviral innate immune system. To characterize the IFN‐I pathway, we established an immortalized cell line from a D. rotundus fetal lung named FLuDero. Then we molecularly characterized some of the Toll‐like receptors (TLR3, 7, 8 and 9), the three RIG‐I‐like receptor members, as well as IFN&agr;1 and IFN&bgr;. Challenging the FLuDero cell line with poly (I:C) resulted in an up‐regulation of both IFN&agr;1 and IFN&bgr; and the induction of expression of the different pattern recognition receptors characterized. These findings provide evidence of the intact dsRNA recognition machinery and the IFN‐I signaling pathway in our cellular model. Herein, we generated a sum of insightful specific molecular and cellular tools that will serve as a useful model to study virus–host interactions of the common vampire bat. HighlightsAn immortalized clonal cell line from Desmodus rotundus was established.TLRs, RLRs and IFN‐I genes implicated in the antiviral response were molecularly characterized.RLR members share high structural domain organization with their mammalian counterparts and an expected similar function.Significant induction of these genes after stimulation confirms a robust and functional IFN‐I pathway in these cells.


Archive | 2008

Use of a modulating agent that interacts with the pbd of plk proteins for modulating ifn induction

Eliane F. Meurs; Damien Vitour; Stéphanie Dabo; Pierre-Olivier Vidalain; Frédéric Tangy; Yves Jacob


Developmental and Comparative Immunology | 2018

A potential robust antiviral defense state in the common vampire bat: Expression, induction and molecular characterization of the three interferon-stimulated genes -OAS1, ADAR1 and PKR

Sarkis Sarkis; Stéphanie Dabo; Marie-Claude Lise; Christine Neuveut; Eliane F. Meurs; Vincent Lacoste; Anne Lavergne


Cytokine | 2013

57: Pivotal role of the IKK-related kinase IKK epsilon to modulate IL29 or type I IFN induction during hepatitis C virus infection

Stéphanie Dabo; Claire Gondeau; Martine Daujat-Chavanieu; Daniela Bruni; Takaji Wakita; Eliane F. Meurs

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Takaji Wakita

National Institutes of Health

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Daisuke Akazawa

National Institutes of Health

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