Stéphanie Hugues
University of Geneva
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Publication
Featured researches published by Stéphanie Hugues.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2007
Alexandre Boissonnas; Luc Fetler; Ingrid S. Zeelenberg; Stéphanie Hugues; Sebastian Amigorena
Although the immune system evolved to fight infections, it may also attack and destroy solid tumors. In most cases, tumor rejection is initiated by CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs), which infiltrate solid tumors, recognize tumor antigens, and kill tumor cells. We use a combination of two-photon intravital microscopy and immunofluorescence on ordered sequential sections to analyze the infiltration and destruction of solid tumors by CTLs. We show that in the periphery of a thymoma growing subcutaneously, activated CTLs migrate with high instantaneous velocities. The CTLs arrest in close contact to tumor cells expressing their cognate antigen. In regions where most tumor cells are dead, CTLs resume migration, sometimes following collagen fibers or blood vessels. CTLs migrating along blood vessels preferentially adopt an elongated morphology. CTLs also infiltrate tumors in depth, but only when the tumor cells express the cognate CTL antigen. In tumors that do not express the cognate antigen, CTL infiltration is restricted to peripheral regions, and lymphocytes neither stop moving nor kill tumor cells. Antigen expression by tumor cells therefore determines both CTL motility within the tumor and profound tumor infiltration.
Science | 2008
Gabrielle Faure-André; Pablo Vargas; Maria-Isabel Yuseff; Mélina L. Heuzé; Jheimmy Diaz; Danielle Lankar; Veronica Steri; Jeremy Manry; Stéphanie Hugues; Fulvia Vascotto; Jérôme Boulanger; Graça Raposo; Maria-Rosa Bono; Mario Rosemblatt; Matthieu Piel; Ana-Maria Lennon-Duménil
Dendritic cells (DCs) sample peripheral tissues of the body in search of antigens to present to T cells. This requires two processes, antigen processing and cell motility, originally thought to occur independently. We found that the major histocompatibility complex II–associated invariant chain (Ii or CD74), a known regulator of antigen processing, negatively regulates DC motility in vivo. By using microfabricated channels to mimic the confined environment of peripheral tissues, we found that wild-type DCs alternate between high and low motility, whereas Ii-deficient cells moved in a faster and more uniform manner. The regulation of cell motility by Ii depended on the actin-based motor protein myosin II. Coupling antigen processing and cell motility may enable DCs to more efficiently detect and process antigens within a defined space.
Immunity | 2008
Alix Scholer; Stéphanie Hugues; Alexandre Boissonnas; Luc Fetler; Sebastian Amigorena
The initiation of cytotoxic immune responses requires the direct interaction between naive CD8+ T lymphocytes and dendritic cells (DCs). Multiphoton imaging in intact lymph nodes (LNs) showed that during priming, naive T cells and DCs establish sequentially brief (i.e., minutes) and long (hours) antigen-specific contacts. We show here that the expression of the Intercellular Adhesion Molecule-1 (ICAM-1) by mature DCs is critical for long-lasting contacts with CD8+ T cells but dispensable for short-lived antigen-specific interactions. Serial brief DC-T cell contacts induced early CD8+ T cell activation, proliferation, and differentiation into effector cytotoxic T lymphocytes in the first few days after immunization. ICAM-1-deficient mature DCs, however, failed to induce fully effective priming, because CD8+ T cells produced reduced amounts of interferon gamma and were clonally depleted after 2 weeks. In addition, Icam1(-/-) mice failed to respond to rechallenge. We conclude that ICAM-1-dependent long-lasting interactions between mature DCs and naive CD8+ T cells determine the survival of activated CD8+ T cells and the establishment of effective memory.
Immunity | 2008
Magali Irla; Stéphanie Hugues; Jason Gill; Takeshi Nitta; Yu Hikosaka; Ifor R. Williams; François-Xavier Hubert; Hamish S. Scott; Yousuke Takahama; Georg A. Holländer; Walter Reith
Medullary thymic epithelial cells (mTECs) are specialized for inducing central immunological tolerance to self-antigens. To accomplish this, mTECs must adopt a mature phenotype characterized by expression of the autoimmune regulator Aire, which activates the transcription of numerous genes encoding tissue-restricted self-antigens. The mechanisms that control mature Aire(+) mTEC development in the postnatal thymus remain poorly understood. We demonstrate here that, although either CD4(+) or CD8(+) thymocytes are sufficient to sustain formation of a well-defined medulla, expansion of the mature mTEC population requires autoantigen-specific interactions between positively selected CD4(+) thymocytes bearing autoreactive T cell receptor (TCR) and mTECs displaying cognate self-peptide-MHC class II complexes. These interactions also involve the engagement of CD40 on mTECs by CD40L induced on the positively selected CD4(+) thymocytes. This antigen-specific TCR-MHC class II-mediated crosstalk between CD4(+) thymocytes and mTECs defines a unique checkpoint in thymic stromal development that is pivotal for generating a mature mTEC population competent for ensuring central T cell tolerance.
Immunity | 2002
Stéphanie Hugues; Evelyne Mougneau; Walter Ferlin; Dirk Jeske; Paul Hofman; Dirk Homann; Lucie Beaudoin; Corinne Schrike; Matthias von Herrath; Agnès Lehuen; Nicolas Glaichenhaus
Crosspresentation of self-antigens by antigen-presenting cells is critical for the induction of peripheral tolerance. As apoptosis facilitates the entry of antigens into the crosspresentation pathway, we sought to prevent the development of autoimmune diabetes by inducing pancreatic beta cell apoptosis before disease onset. Accordingly, young nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice injected with a single low dose of streptozotocin (SZ), a drug cytotoxic for beta cells, exhibited impaired T cell responses to islet antigens and were protected from spontaneous diabetes. Furthermore, beta cell apoptosis was necessary for protection since SZ did not protect RIP-CrmA transgenic NOD mice in which beta cells expressed the caspase inhibitor CrmA. Our results support a model in which apoptosis of pancreatic beta cells induces the development of regulatory cells leading to the tolerization of self-reactive T cells and protection from diabetes.
Science | 2015
Matthew R. Hepworth; Thomas C. Fung; Samuel Masur; Judith R. Kelsen; Fiona M. McConnell; Juan Dubrot; David R. Withers; Stéphanie Hugues; Michael A. Farrar; Walter Reith; Gérard Eberl; Robert N. Baldassano; Terri M. Laufer; Charles O. Elson; Gregory F. Sonnenberg
Innate lymphoid cells keep gut T cells in check Trillions of bacteria inhabit our guts. So do many types of immune cells, including T cells, which might be expected to attack these bacteria. How, then, do our bodies manage to keep the peace? Working in mice, Hepworth et al. report one such mechanism. A population of immune cells, called innate lymphoid cells, directly killed CD4+ T cells that react to commensal gut microbes. Some of the specifics of this process parallel how the immune system keeps developing self-reactive T cells in check in the thymus. Furthermore, this peacekeeping process may be disrupted in children with inflammatory bowel disease. Science, this issue p. 1031 Innate lymphoid cells delete commensal bacteria–specific CD4+ T cells from the intestine in mice. Inflammatory CD4+ T cell responses to self or commensal bacteria underlie the pathogenesis of autoimmunity and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), respectively. Although selection of self-specific T cells in the thymus limits responses to mammalian tissue antigens, the mechanisms that control selection of commensal bacteria–specific T cells remain poorly understood. Here, we demonstrate that group 3 innate lymphoid cell (ILC3)–intrinsic expression of major histocompatibility complex class II (MHCII) is regulated similarly to thymic epithelial cells and that MHCII+ ILC3s directly induce cell death of activated commensal bacteria–specific T cells. Further, MHCII on colonic ILC3s was reduced in pediatric IBD patients. Collectively, these results define a selection pathway for commensal bacteria–specific CD4+ T cells in the intestine and suggest that this process is dysregulated in human IBD.
Cell Reports | 2012
Amanda W. Lund; Fernanda V. Duraes; Sachiko Hirosue; Vidya Raghavan; Chiara Nembrini; Susan N. Thomas; Amine Issa; Stéphanie Hugues; Melody A. Swartz
Tumor expression of the lymphangiogenic factor VEGF-C is correlated with metastasis and poor prognosis, and although VEGF-C enhances transport to the draining lymph node (dLN) and antigen exposure to the adaptive immune system, its role in tumor immunity remains unexplored. Here, we demonstrate that VEGF-C promotes immune tolerance in murine melanoma. In B16 F10 melanomas expressing a foreign antigen (OVA), VEGF-C protected tumors against preexisting antitumor immunity and promoted local deletion of OVA-specific CD8(+) T cells. Naive OVA-specific CD8(+) T cells, transferred into tumor-bearing mice, were dysfunctionally activated and apoptotic. Lymphatic endothelial cells (LECs) in dLNs cross-presented OVA, and naive LECs scavenge and cross-present OVA in vitro. Cross-presenting LECs drove the proliferation and apoptosis of OVA-specific CD8(+) T cells ex vivo. Our findings introduce a tumor-promoting role for lymphatics in the tumor and dLN and suggest that lymphatic endothelium in the local microenvironment may be a target for immunomodulation.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012
Luisa Cervantes-Barragan; Kanako L. Lewis; Sonja Firner; Volker Thiel; Stéphanie Hugues; Walter Reith; Burkhard Ludewig; Boris Reizis
Infections with persistent viruses are a frequent cause of immunosuppression, autoimmune sequelae, and/or neoplastic disease. Plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs) are innate immune cells that produce type I interferon (IFN-I) and other cytokines in response to virus-derived nucleic acids. Persistent viruses often cause depletion or functional impairment of pDCs, but the role of pDCs in the control of these viruses remains unclear. We used conditional targeting of pDC-specific transcription factor E2-2 to generate mice that constitutively lack pDCs in peripheral lymphoid organs and tissues. The profound impact of pDC deficiency on innate antiviral responses was revealed by the failure to control acute infection with the cytopathic mouse hepatitis virus. Furthermore, pDC-deficient animals failed to clear lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) from hematopoietic organs during persistent LCMV infection. This failure was associated with reduced numbers and functionality of LCMV-specific CD4+ helper T cells and impaired antiviral CD8+ T-cell responses. Adoptive transfer of LCMV-specific T cells revealed that both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells required IFN-I for expansion, but only CD4+ T cells required the presence of pDCs. In contrast, mice with pDC-specific loss of MHC class II expression supported normal CD4+ T-cell response to LCMV. These data suggest that pDCs facilitate CD4+ helper T-cell responses to persistent viruses independently of direct antigen presentation. Thus pDCs provide an essential link between innate and adaptive immunity to chronic viral infection, likely through the secretion of IFN-I and other cytokines.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2010
Magali Irla; Natalia Küpfer; Tobias Suter; Rami Lissilaa; Mahdia Benkhoucha; Jonathan Skupsky; Patrice H. Lalive; Adriano Fontana; Walter Reith; Stéphanie Hugues
Although plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs) express major histocompatibility complex class II (MHCII) molecules, and can capture, process, and present antigens (Ags), direct demonstrations that they function as professional Ag-presenting cells (APCs) in vivo during ongoing immune responses remain lacking. We demonstrate that mice exhibiting a selective abrogation of MHCII expression by pDCs develop exacerbated experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) as a consequence of enhanced priming of encephalitogenic CD4+ T cell responses in secondary lymphoid tissues. After EAE induction, pDCs are recruited to lymph nodes and establish MHCII-dependent myelin-Ag–specific contacts with CD4+ T cells. These interactions promote the selective expansion of myelin-Ag–specific natural regulatory T cells that dampen the autoimmune T cell response. pDCs thus function as APCs during the course of EAE and confer a natural protection against autoimmune disease development that is mediated directly by their ability to present of Ags to CD4+ T cells in vivo.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2003
Christophe Filippi; Stéphanie Hugues; Julie Cazareth; Valérie Julia; Nicolas Glaichenhaus; Sophie Ugolini
Resistance and susceptibility to Leishmania major in mice are determined by multiple genes and correlate with the preferential development of Th1 and Th2 responses, respectively. Here, we found that CD11b+ dendritic cells (DCs) prime parasite-specific CD4+ T cells in both susceptible BALB/c (H2-d) and resistant B10.D2 (H2-d) mice. However, BALB/c and B10.D2 DCs from L. major–infected mice differ in their ability to polarize naive T cells into Th1 or Th2 effector cells. This difference is cell-intrinsic, is not restricted to H2-d mice, and is observed with both parasite-specific and allospecific CD4+ T cells. Thus, strain-specific differences within CD11b+ DCs influence the ability of inbred mice to mount polarized CD4+ T cell responses.