Stéphanie Dogniaux
Curie Institute
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Publication
Featured researches published by Stéphanie Dogniaux.
Nature Immunology | 2013
Paola Larghi; David Williamson; Jean-Marie Carpier; Stéphanie Dogniaux; Karine Chemin; Armelle Bohineust; Lydia Danglot; Katharina Gaus; Thierry Galli; Claire Hivroz
The mechanisms by which Lat (a key adaptor in the T cell antigen receptor (TCR) signaling pathway) and the TCR come together after TCR triggering are not well understood. We investigate here the role of SNARE proteins, which are part of protein complexes involved in the docking, priming and fusion of vesicles with opposing membranes, in this process. Here we found, by silencing approaches and genetically modified mice, that the vesicular SNARE VAMP7 was required for the recruitment of Lat-containing vesicles to TCR-activation sites. Our results indicated that this did not involve fusion of Lat-containing vesicles with the plasma membrane. VAMP7, which localized together with Lat on the subsynaptic vesicles, controlled the phosphorylation of Lat, formation of the TCR-Lat-signaling complex and, ultimately, activation of T cells. Our findings suggest that the transport and docking of Lat-containing vesicles with target membranes containing TCRs regulates TCR-induced signaling.
European Journal of Immunology | 2009
Capucine Picard; Stéphanie Dogniaux; Karine Chemin; Zofia Maciorowski; Annick Lim; Fabienne Mazerolles; Frédéric Rieux-Laucat; Marie-Claude Stolzenberg; Marianne Debré; Jean-Paul Magny; Françoise Le Deist; Alain Fischer; Claire Hivroz
Complete lack of function of the tyrosine kinase ZAP70 in humans results in a severe immunodeficiency, characterized by a lack of mature CD8+ T cells and non‐functional CD4+ T cells. We report herein an immunodeficiency with an inherited hypomorphic mutation of ZAP70 due to a single G‐to‐A substitution in a non‐coding intron. This mutation introduces a new acceptor splice site and allows low levels of normal alternative splicing and of WT ZAP70 expression. This partial deficiency results in a compromised TCR signaling that was totally restored by increased expression of ZAP70, demonstrating that defective activation of the patient T cells was indeed caused by the low level of ZAP70 expression. This partial ZAP70 deficiency was associated with an attenuated clinical and immunological phenotype as compared with complete ZAP70 deficiency. CD4+ helper T‐cell populations including, follicular helper T cells, Th1, Th17 and Treg were detected in the blood. Finally, the patient had no manifestation of autoimmunity suggesting that the T‐cell tolerogenic functions were not compromised, in contrast to what has been observed in mice carrying hypomorphic mutations of Zap70. This report extends the phenotype spectrum of ZAP70 deficiency with a residual function of ZAP70.
Seminars in Immunopathology | 2010
Alain Fischer; Capucine Picard; Karine Chemin; Stéphanie Dogniaux; Françoise Le Deist; Claire Hivroz
The protein tyrosine kinase ZAP70 became the subject of intense scrutiny in the early nineties, when ZAP70 mutations were characterized in several young patients presenting with severe T cell immunodeficiencies. The association of a lack of expression of ZAP70 with an immunodeficiency consisting in a markedly reduced T lymphocyte-mediated immunity highlighted the crucial role of this tyrosine kinase in T cell development and function. This discovery was soon accompanied by the characterization of the substrates of ZAP70 and the signalling cascades that depend on ZAP70 activity. These studies demonstrated that ZAP70 was indeed at the crossroad of several signalling pathways that control T lymphocyte development and function. Recently, a revival of interest for this protein came again from studies associating abnormal ZAP70 expression with pathological conditions. Some chronic lymphocytic leukemia B cells were shown to express ZAP70, and this expression was correlated with bad prognosis. Mouse models also revealed that partial defects in ZAP70 activity can be associated with autoimmunity. These last results suggested that ZAP70 is involved in the fine balance between immunity and tolerance. In this review, we will discuss the role of ZAP70 in T cell activation and focus on what we learnt from pathological conditions associated with defective expression or activity of the ZAP70 kinase.
Oncotarget | 2016
Asma Beldi-Ferchiou; Marion Lambert; Stéphanie Dogniaux; Frédéric Vély; Eric Vivier; Daniel Olive; Stéphanie Dupuy; Frank Levasseur; David Zucman; Celeste Lebbe; Damien Sene; Claire Hivroz; Sophie Caillat-Zucman
Programmed Death-1 (PD-1), an inhibitory receptor expressed by activated lymphocytes, is involved in regulating T- and B-cell responses. PD-1 and its ligands are exploited by a variety of cancers to facilitate tumor escape through PD-1-mediated functional exhaustion of effector T cells. Here, we report that PD-1 is upregulated on Natural Killer (NK) cells from patients with Kaposi sarcoma (KS). PD-1 was expressed in a sub-population of activated, mature CD56dimCD16pos NK cells with otherwise normal expression of NK surface receptors. PD-1pos NK cells from KS patients were hyporesponsive ex vivo following direct triggering of NKp30, NKp46 or CD16 activating receptors, or short stimulation with NK cell targets. PD-1pos NK cells failed to degranulate and release IFNγ, but exogenous IL-2 or IL-15 restored this defect. That PD-1 contributed to NK cell functional impairment and was not simply a marker of dysfunctional NK cells was confirmed in PD-1-transduced NKL cells. In vitro, PD-1 was induced at the surface of healthy control NK cells upon prolonged contact with cells expressing activating ligands, i.e. a condition mimicking persistent stimulation by tumor cells. Thus, PD-1 appears to plays a critical role in mediating NK cell exhaustion. The existence of this negative checkpoint fine-tuning NK activation highlights the possibility that manipulation of the PD-1 pathway may be a strategy for circumventing tumor escape not only from the T cell-, but also the NK-cell mediated immune surveillance.
Journal of Immunology | 2012
Karine Chemin; Armelle Bohineust; Stéphanie Dogniaux; Marie Tourret; Sarah Guégan; Francesc Miro; Claire Hivroz
Cytokine secretion by T lymphocytes plays a central role in mounting adaptive immune responses. However, little is known about how newly synthesized cytokines, once produced, are routed within T cells and about the mechanisms involved in regulating their secretions. In this study, we investigated the role of cytoskeleton remodeling at the immunological synapse (IS) in cytokine secretion. We show that a key regulator of cytoskeleton remodeling, the Rho GTPase Cdc42, controls IFN-γ secretion by primary human CD4+ T lymphocytes. Surprisingly, microtubule organizing center polarity at the IS, which does not depend on Cdc42, is not required for cytokine secretion by T lymphocytes, whereas microtubule polymerization is required. In contrast, actin remodeling at the IS, which depends on Cdc42, controls the formation of the polymerized actin ring at the IS, the dynamic concentration of IFN-γ–containing vesicles inside this ring, and the secretion of these vesicles. These results reveal a previously unidentified role of Cdc42-dependent actin remodeling in cytokine exocytosis at the IS.
Blood | 2008
Cinzia Nobile; Marianne Lind; Francesc Miro; Karine Chemin; Marie Tourret; Giovanni Occhipinti; Stéphanie Dogniaux; Sebastian Amigorena; Claire Hivroz
Dendritic cells (DCs) control T cell-based immunity. To do so they need to mature and migrate to sites of T-cell priming. We have previously shown that cognate interactions of human CD4+ T cells with DCs induce DC maturation. We show here that CC chemokines produced during antigen-specific T-DC interactions also induce strong morphologic modifications and migration of immature DCs. These modifications are required for efficient T-cell activation. Moreover, we show that CC chemokines produced during antigen-specific DC-T-cell interactions induce the dissolution of structures involved in cell motility and present on immature DCs (ie, podosomes). We thus propose a model in which chemokines secreted during Ag-specific contact between T cells and DCs induce disassembly of interacting and neighboring immature DC podosomes, leading to recruitment of more immature DCs toward sites of antigenic stimulation and to amplification of T-cell responses.
Journal of Immunology | 2010
Marie Tourret; Sarah Guégan; Karine Chemin; Stéphanie Dogniaux; Francesc Miro; Armelle Bohineust; Claire Hivroz
Ag-specific interaction between T lymphocytes and dendritic cells (DCs) leads to both T cell and DC activation. CD154 (CD40 ligand)/CD40 interactions have been shown to play a major, although not exclusive, role in this functional cross-talk. Interactions between T cells and DCs are structured by an immunological synapse (IS), characterized by polarization of the T cell microtubule cytoskeleton toward the interacting DCs. Yet the role T cell polarization may play in T cell-induced DC activation is mostly unknown. In this study, we address the role of T cell polarity in CD154-dependent activation of DCs in a human model, using two different tools to block T cell polarity (i.e., a microtubule depolymerizing drug and an inhibitor of atypical protein kinase C). We show that CD154 is recruited and concentrated at the IS formed between human primary T cells and autologous DCs and that this recruitment requires T cell polarity at the IS. Moreover, we show that T cell polarization at the IS controls T cell-dependent CD154–CD40 signaling in DCs as well as CD154-dependent IL-12 secretion by DCs. This study shows that T cell polarity at the IS plays a key role in CD154/CD40-dependent cross-talk between CD4+ T cells and DCs.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2018
Jean-Marie Carpier; Andres E. Zucchetti; Laurence Bataille; Stéphanie Dogniaux; Massiullah Shafaq-Zadah; Sabine Bardin; Marco Lucchino; Mathieu Maurin; Leonel Joannas; Joao G. Magalhaes; Ludger Johannes; Thierry Galli; Bruno Goud; Claire Hivroz
The adapter molecule linker for activation of T cells (LAT) orchestrates the formation of signalosomes upon T cell receptor (TCR) stimulation. LAT is present in different intracellular pools and is dynamically recruited to the immune synapse upon stimulation. However, the intracellular traffic of LAT and its function in T lymphocyte activation are ill defined. We show herein that LAT, once internalized, transits through the Golgi–trans-Golgi network (TGN), where it is repolarized to the immune synapse. This retrograde transport of LAT depends on the small GTPase Rab6 and the target soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor attachment protein receptor (t-SNARE) Syntaxin-16, two regulators of the endosome-to-Golgi/TGN retrograde transport. We also show in vitro in Syntaxin-16– or Rab6-silenced human cells and in vivo in CD4+ T lymphocytes of the Rab6 knockout mouse that this retrograde traffic controls TCR stimulation. These results establish that the retrograde traffic of LAT from the plasma membrane to the Golgi-TGN controls the polarized delivery of LAT at the immune synapse and T lymphocyte activation.
Biophysical Journal | 2015
Nathalie Bufi; Michael Saitakis; Stéphanie Dogniaux; Oscar Buschinger; Armelle Bohineust; Alain Richert; Mathieu Maurin; Claire Hivroz; Atef Asnacios
Biophysical Journal | 2014
Nathalie Bufi; Armelle Bohineust; Stéphanie Dogniaux; Alain Richert; Michael Saitakis; Claire Hivroz; Atef Asnacios