Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Stephen E. Girardin is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Stephen E. Girardin.


Nature Immunology | 2010

Nod1 and Nod2 direct autophagy by recruiting ATG16L1 to the plasma membrane at the site of bacterial entry

Leonardo H. Travassos; Leticia A. Carneiro; Mahendrasingh Ramjeet; Séamus Hussey; Yun-Gi Kim; Joao G. Magalhaes; Linda Yuan; Fraser Soares; Evelyn Chea; Lionel Le Bourhis; Ivo Gomperts Boneca; Abdelmounaaïm Allaoui; Nicola L. Jones; Gabriel Núñez; Stephen E. Girardin; Dana J. Philpott

Autophagy is emerging as a crucial defense mechanism against bacteria, but the host intracellular sensors responsible for inducing autophagy in response to bacterial infection remain unknown. Here we demonstrated that the intracellular sensors Nod1 and Nod2 are critical for the autophagic response to invasive bacteria. By a mechanism independent of the adaptor RIP2 and transcription factor NF-κB, Nod1 and Nod2 recruited the autophagy protein ATG16L1 to the plasma membrane at the bacterial entry site. In cells homozygous for the Crohns disease–associated NOD2 frameshift mutation, mutant Nod2 failed to recruit ATG16L1 to the plasma membrane and wrapping of invading bacteria by autophagosomes was impaired. Our results link bacterial sensing by Nod proteins to the induction of autophagy and provide a functional link between Nod2 and ATG16L1, which are encoded by two of the most important genes associated with Crohns disease.


EMBO Reports | 2001

CARD4/Nod1 mediates NF‐κB and JNK activation by invasive Shigella flexneri

Stephen E. Girardin; Régis Tournebize; Maria Mavris; Anne Laure Page; Xiaoxia Li; George R. Stark; John Bertin; Peter S. DiStefano; Moshe Yaniv; Philippe J. Sansonetti; Dana J. Philpott

Epithelial cells are refractory to extracellular lipopolysaccharide (LPS), yet when presented inside the cell, it is capable of initiating an inflammatory response. Using invasive Shigella flexneri to deliver LPS into the cytosol, we examined how this factor, once intracellular, activates both NF‐κB and c‐Jun N‐terminal kinase (JNK). Surprisingly, the mode of activation is distinct from that induced by toll‐like receptors (TLRs), which mediate LPS responsiveness from the outside‐in. Instead, our findings demonstrate that this response is mediated by a cytosolic, plant disease resistance‐like protein called CARD4/Nod1. Biochemical studies reveal enhanced oligomerization of CARD4 upon S. flexneri infection, an event necessary for NF‐κB induction. Dominant‐negative versions of CARD4 block activation of NF‐κB and JNK by S. flexneri as well as microinjected LPS. Finally, we showed that invasive S. flexneri triggers the formation of a transient complex involving CARD4, RICK and the IKK complex. This study demonstrates that in addition to the extracellular LPS sensing system mediated by TLRs, mammalian cells also possess a cytoplasmic means of LPS detection via a molecule that is related to plant disease‐resistance proteins.


Immunity | 2008

The NLR gene family: a standard nomenclature.

Jenny P.-Y. Ting; Ruth C. Lovering; Emad S. Alnemri; John Bertin; Jeremy M. Boss; Beckley K. Davis; Richard A. Flavell; Stephen E. Girardin; Adam Godzik; Jonathan A. Harton; Hal M. Hoffman; Jean Pierre Hugot; Naohiro Inohara; Alex MacKenzie; Lois J. Maltais; Gabriel Núñez; Yasunori Ogura; Luc A. Otten; Dana J. Philpott; John C. Reed; Walter Reith; Stefan Schreiber; Viktor Steimle; Peter A. Ward

Iimmune regulatory proteins such as CIITA, NAIP, IPAF, NOD1, NOD2, NALP1, cryopyrin/NALP3 are members of a family characterized by the presence of a nucleotide-binding domain (NBD) and leucine-rich repeats (LRR). Members of this gene family encode a protein structure similar to the NB-LRR subgroup of disease-resistance genes in plants and are involved in the sensing of pathogenic products and the regulation of cell signaling and apoptosis. Several members of this family have been associated with immunologic disorders. NOD2 for instance is associated with both Crohns disease and Blau syndrome. A variety of different names are currently used to describe this gene family, its subfamilies and individual genes, including CATERPILLER (CLR), NOD-LRR, NACHT-LRR, CARD, NALP, NOD, PAN and PYPAF, and this lack of consistency has led to a pressing need to unify the nomenclature. Consequently, we collectively propose the family designation NLR (nucleotide-binding domain and leucine-rich repeat containing) and provide unique and standardized gene designations for all family members.


EMBO Reports | 2004

Toll-like receptor 2-dependent bacterial sensing does not occur via peptidoglycan recognition

Leonardo H. Travassos; Stephen E. Girardin; Dana J. Philpott; Didier Blanot; Marie-Anne Nahori; Catherine Werts; Ivo G. Boneca

Toll‐like receptor 2 (TLR2) has been shown to recognize several classes of pathogen‐associated molecular patterns including peptidoglycan (PG). However, studies linking PG with TLR2 recognition have relied mainly on the use of commercial Staphylococcus aureus PG and have not addressed TLR2 recognition of other PG types. Using highly purified PGs from eight bacteria (Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Yersinia pseudotuberculosis, Helicobacter pylori, Bacillus subtilis, Listeria monocytogenes, Streptococcus pneumoniae and S. aureus), we show that these PGs are not sensed through TLR2, TLR2/1 or TLR2/6. PG sensing is lost after removal of lipoproteins or lipoteichoic acids (LTAs) from Gram‐negative and Gram‐positive cell walls, respectively. Accordingly, purified LTAs are sensed synergistically through TLR2/1. Finally, we show that elicited peritoneal murine macrophages do not produce tumour necrosis factor‐α or interleukin‐6 in response to purified PGs, suggesting that PG detection is more likely to occur intracellularly (through Nod1/Nod2) rather than from the extracellular compartment.


Cell | 2006

Caspase-1 Activation of Lipid Metabolic Pathways in Response to Bacterial Pore-Forming Toxins Promotes Cell Survival

Laure Gurcel; Laurence Abrami; Stephen E. Girardin; Jürg Tschopp; F. Gisou van der Goot

Many pathogenic organisms produce pore-forming toxins as virulence factors. Target cells however mount a response to such membrane damage. Here we show that toxin-induced membrane permeabilization leads to a decrease in cytoplasmic potassium, which promotes the formation of a multiprotein oligomeric innate immune complex, called the inflammasome, and the activation of caspase-1. Further, we find that when rendered proteolytic in this context caspase-1 induces the activation of the central regulators of membrane biogenesis, the Sterol Regulatory Element Binding Proteins (SREBPs), which in turn promote cell survival upon toxin challenge possibly by facilitating membrane repair. This study highlights that, in addition to its well-established role in triggering inflammation via the processing of the precursor forms of interleukins, caspase-1 has a broader role, in particular linking the intracellular ion composition to lipid metabolic pathways, membrane biogenesis, and survival.


Immunity | 2008

CorrespondenceThe NLR Gene Family: A Standard Nomenclature

Jenny P.-Y. Ting; Ruth C. Lovering; Emad S. Alnemri; John Bertin; Jeremy M. Boss; Beckley K. Davis; Richard A. Flavell; Stephen E. Girardin; Adam Godzik; Jonathan A. Harton; Hal M. Hoffman; Jean-Pierre Hugot; Naohiro Inohara; Alex MacKenzie; Lois J. Maltais; Gabriel Núñez; Yasunori Ogura; Luc A. Otten; Peter A. Ward

Iimmune regulatory proteins such as CIITA, NAIP, IPAF, NOD1, NOD2, NALP1, cryopyrin/NALP3 are members of a family characterized by the presence of a nucleotide-binding domain (NBD) and leucine-rich repeats (LRR). Members of this gene family encode a protein structure similar to the NB-LRR subgroup of disease-resistance genes in plants and are involved in the sensing of pathogenic products and the regulation of cell signaling and apoptosis. Several members of this family have been associated with immunologic disorders. NOD2 for instance is associated with both Crohns disease and Blau syndrome. A variety of different names are currently used to describe this gene family, its subfamilies and individual genes, including CATERPILLER (CLR), NOD-LRR, NACHT-LRR, CARD, NALP, NOD, PAN and PYPAF, and this lack of consistency has led to a pressing need to unify the nomenclature. Consequently, we collectively propose the family designation NLR (nucleotide-binding domain and leucine-rich repeat containing) and provide unique and standardized gene designations for all family members.


Cellular Microbiology | 2003

Nods, Nalps and Naip: intracellular regulators of bacterial-induced inflammation.

Mathias Chamaillard; Stephen E. Girardin; Jérôme Viala; Dana J. Philpott

The innate immune system is the most ancestral and ubiquitous system of defence against microbial infection. The microbial sensing proteins involved in innate immunity recognize conserved and often structural components of microorganisms. One class of these pattern‐recognition molecules, the Toll‐like receptors (TLRs), are involved in detection of microbes in the extracellular compartment whereas a newly discovered family of proteins, the NBS‐LRR proteins (for nucleotide‐binding site and leucine‐rich repeat), are involved in intracellular recognition of microbes and their products. NBS‐LRR proteins are characterized by three structural domains: a C‐terminal leucine‐rich repeat (LRR) domain able to sense a microbial motif, an intermediary nucleotide binding site (NBS) essential for the oligomerization of the molecule that is necessary for the signal transduction induced by different N‐terminal effector motifs, such as a pyrin domain (PYD), a caspase‐activating and recruitment domain (CARD) or a baculovirus inhibitor of apoptosis protein repeat (BIR) domain. Two of these family members, Nod1 and Nod2, play a role in the regulation of pro‐inflammatory pathways through NF‐κB induced by bacterial ligands. Recently, it was shown that Nod2 recognizes a specific peptidoglycan motif from bacteria, muramyl dipeptide (MDP). A surprising number of human genetic disorders have been linked to NBS‐LRR proteins. For example, mutations in Nod2, which render the molecule insensitive to MDP and unable to induce NF‐κB activation when stimulated, are associated with susceptibility to a chronic intestinal inflammatory disorder, Crohns disease. Conversely, mutations in the NBS region of Nod2 induce a constitutive activation of NF‐κB and are responsible for Blau syndrome, another auto‐inflammatory disease. Nalp3, which is an NBS‐LRR protein with an N‐terminal Pyrin domain, is also implicated in rare auto‐inflammatory disorders. In conclusion, NBS‐LRR molecules appear as a new family of intracellular receptors of innate immunity able to detect specific bacterial compounds and induce inflammatory response; the dysregulation of these processes due to mutations in the genes encoding these proteins is involved in numerous auto‐inflammatory disorders.


PLOS Pathogens | 2005

NOD2 and toll-like receptors are nonredundant recognition systems of Mycobacterium tuberculosis.

Gerben Ferwerda; Stephen E. Girardin; Bart Jan Kullberg; Lionel Le Bourhis; Dirk J. de Jong; Dennis M. L. Langenberg; Reinout van Crevel; Gosse J. Adema; Tom H. M. Ottenhoff; Jos W. M. van der Meer; Mihai G. Netea

Infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis is one of the leading causes of death worldwide. Recognition of M. tuberculosis by pattern recognition receptors is crucial for activation of both innate and adaptive immune responses. In the present study, we demonstrate that nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain 2 (NOD2) and Toll-like receptors (TLRs) are two nonredundant recognition mechanisms of M. tuberculosis. CHO cell lines transfected with human TLR2 or TLR4 were responsive to M. tuberculosis. TLR2 knock-out mice displayed more than 50% defective cytokine production after stimulation with mycobacteria, whereas TLR4-defective mice also released 30% less cytokines compared to controls. Similarly, HEK293T cells transfected with NOD2 responded to stimulation with M. tuberculosis. The important role of NOD2 for the recognition of M. tuberculosis was demonstrated in mononuclear cells of individuals homozygous for the 3020insC NOD2 mutation, who showed an 80% defective cytokine response after stimulation with M. tuberculosis. Finally, the mycobacterial TLR2 ligand 19-kDa lipoprotein and the NOD2 ligand muramyl dipeptide synergized for the induction of cytokines, and this synergism was lost in cells defective in either TLR2 or NOD2. Together, these results demonstrate that NOD2 and TLR pathways are nonredundant recognition mechanisms of M. tuberculosis that synergize for the induction of proinflammatory cytokines.


European Journal of Immunology | 2005

Synergistic stimulation of human monocytes and dendritic cells by Toll-like receptor 4 and NOD1- and NOD2-activating agonists

Jörg Fritz; Stephen E. Girardin; Catherine Fitting; Catherine Werts; Dominique Mengin-Lecreulx; Martine Caroff; Jean-Marc Cavaillon; Dana J. Philpott

Muropeptides are degradation products of bacterial peptidoglycan (PG) sensed by nucleotide‐binding oligomerization domain 1 (NOD1) and NOD2, members of a recently discovered family of pattern recognition molecules (PRM). One of these muropeptides, muramyl dipeptide (MDP) mediates cell signaling by NOD2, exerts adjuvant activity and synergizes with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) to induce pro‐inflammatory responses in vitro and in vivo. In contrast, few and contradictory results exist about the stimulatory capacity of NOD1 agonists. Thus, the ability of NOD1 (MurNAc‐L‐Ala‐γ‐D‐Glu‐meso‐diaminopimelic acid, MtriDAP) and NOD2 (MurNAc‐L‐Ala‐D‐isoGln, MDP; MurNAc‐L‐Ala‐γ‐D‐Glu‐L‐Lys, MtriLYS) agonists to activate primary human myeloid cells was examined. We show that both CD14+ monocytes and CD1a+ immature dendritic cells (DC) express NOD1 and NOD2 mRNA. Stimulation of primary human monocytes and DC with highly purified muropeptides (MtriDAP, MDP and MtriLYS) induces release of pro‐inflammatory cytokines. We reveal here that NOD1 as well as NOD2 agonists act cooperatively with LPS to stimulate the release of both pro‐ and anti‐inflammatory cytokines in these myeloid cell subsets. Finally, we report that NOD1 as well as NOD2 agonists synergize with sub‐active doses of LPS to induce DC maturation, demonstrating that NOD agonists act cooperatively with molecules sensed by Toll‐like receptor 4 to instruct the onset of adaptive immune responses.


Nature Reviews Immunology | 2014

NOD proteins: regulators of inflammation in health and disease

Dana J. Philpott; Matthew T. Sorbara; Susan J. Robertson; Kenneth Croitoru; Stephen E. Girardin

Entry of bacteria into host cells is an important virulence mechanism. Through peptidoglycan recognition, the nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain (NOD) proteins NOD1 and NOD2 enable detection of intracellular bacteria and promote their clearance through initiation of a pro-inflammatory transcriptional programme and other host defence pathways, including autophagy. Recent findings have expanded the scope of the cellular compartments monitored by NOD1 and NOD2 and have elucidated the signalling pathways that are triggered downstream of NOD activation. In vivo, NOD1 and NOD2 have complex roles, both during bacterial infection and at homeostasis. The association of alleles that encode constitutively active or constitutively inactive forms of NOD2 with different diseases highlights this complexity and indicates that a balanced level of NOD signalling is crucial for the maintenance of immune homeostasis.

Collaboration


Dive into the Stephen E. Girardin's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge