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Dive into the research topics where Thomas Ruby is active.

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Featured researches published by Thomas Ruby.


Nature | 2012

Caspase-11 increases susceptibility to Salmonella infection in the absence of caspase-1

Petr Broz; Thomas Ruby; Kamila Belhocine; Donna M. Bouley; Nobuhiko Kayagaki; Vishva M. Dixit; Denise M. Monack

Inflammasomes are cytosolic multiprotein complexes assembled by intracellular nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain (NOD)-like receptors (NLRs) and they initiate innate immune responses to invading pathogens and danger signals by activating caspase-1 (ref. 1). Caspase-1 activation leads to the maturation and release of the pro-inflammatory cytokines interleukin (IL)-1β and IL-18, as well as lytic inflammatory cell death known as pyroptosis. Recently, a new non-canonical inflammasome was described that activates caspase-11, a pro-inflammatory caspase required for lipopolysaccharide-induced lethality. This study also highlighted that previously generated caspase-1 knockout mice lack a functional allele of Casp11 (also known as Casp4), making them functionally Casp1 Casp11 double knockouts. Previous studies have shown that these mice are more susceptible to infections with microbial pathogens, including the bacterial pathogen Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (S. typhimurium), but the individual contributions of caspase-1 and caspase-11 to this phenotype are not known. Here we show that non-canonical caspase-11 activation contributes to macrophage death during S. typhimurium infection. Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4)-dependent and TIR-domain-containing adaptor-inducing interferon-β (TRIF)-dependent interferon-β production is crucial for caspase-11 activation in macrophages, but is only partially required for pro-caspase-11 expression, consistent with the existence of an interferon-inducible activator of caspase-11. Furthermore, Casp1−/− mice were significantly more susceptible to infection with S. typhimurium than mice lacking both pro-inflammatory caspases (Casp1−/− Casp11−/−). This phenotype was accompanied by higher bacterial counts, the formation of extracellular bacterial microcolonies in the infected tissue and a defect in neutrophil-mediated clearance. These results indicate that caspase-11-dependent cell death is detrimental to the host in the absence of caspase-1-mediated innate immunity, resulting in extracellular replication of a facultative intracellular bacterial pathogen.


Journal of Immunology | 2010

Type I IFN Signaling Constrains IL-17A/F Secretion by γδ T Cells during Bacterial Infections

Thomas Henry; Girish S. Kirimanjeswara; Thomas Ruby; Jonathan W. Jones; Kaitian Peng; Magali Perret; Lena Ho; John-Demian Sauer; Yoichiro Iwakura; Dennis W. Metzger; Denise M. Monack

Recognition of intracellular bacteria by macrophages leads to secretion of type I IFNs. However, the role of type I IFN during bacterial infection is still poorly understood. Francisella tularensis, the causative agent of tularemia, is a pathogenic bacterium that replicates in the cytosol of macrophages leading to secretion of type I IFN. In this study, we investigated the role of type I IFNs in a mouse model of tularemia. Mice deficient for type I IFN receptor (IFNAR1−/−) are more resistant to intradermal infection with F. tularensis subspecies novicida (F. novicida). Increased resistance to infection was associated with a specific increase in IL-17A/F and a corresponding expansion of an IL-17A+ γδ T cell population, indicating that type I IFNs negatively regulate the number of IL-17A+ γδ T cells during infection. Furthermore, IL-17A–deficient mice contained fewer neutrophils compared with wild-type mice during infection, indicating that IL-17A contributes to neutrophil expansion during F. novicida infection. Accordingly, an increase in IL-17A in IFNAR1−/− mice correlated with an increase in splenic neutrophil numbers. Similar results were obtained in a mouse model of pneumonic tularemia using the highly virulent F. tularensis subspecies tularensis SchuS4 strain and in a mouse model of systemic Listeria monocytogenes infection. Our results indicate that the type I IFN-mediated negative regulation of IL-17A+ γδ T cell expansion is conserved during bacterial infections. We propose that this newly described activity of type I IFN signaling might participate in the resistance of the IFNAR1−/− mice to infection with F. novicida and other intracellular bacteria.


Fems Microbiology Reviews | 2012

Salmonella's long-term relationship with its host

Thomas Ruby; Laura M. McLaughlin; Smita Gopinath; Denise M. Monack

Host-adapted strains of Salmonella enterica cause systemic infections and have the ability to persist systemically for long periods of time and pose significant public-health problems. Multidrug-resistant S. enterica serovar Typhi (S. Typhi) and nontyphoidal Salmonella (NTS) are on the increase and are often associated with HIV infection. Chronically infected hosts are often asymptomatic and transmit disease to naïve hosts via fecal shedding of bacteria, thereby serving as a critical reservoir for disease. Salmonella utilizes multiple ways to evade and modulate host innate and adaptive immune responses in order to persist in the presence of a robust immune response. Survival in macrophages and modulation of immune cells migration allow Salmonella to evade various immune responses. The ability of Salmonella to persist depends on a balance between immune responses that lead to the clearance of the pathogen and avoidance of damage to host tissues.


Journal of Virology | 2006

Transcriptional profiling reveals a possible role for the timing of the inflammatory response in determining susceptibility to a viral infection.

Thomas Ruby; Catherine Whittaker; David R. Withers; Mounira K. Chelbi-Alix; Véronique Morin; Anne Oudin; John R. Young; Rima Zoorob

ABSTRACT Using a novel cDNA microarray prepared from sources of actively responding immune system cells, we have investigated the changes in gene expression in the target tissue during the early stages of infection of neonatal chickens with infectious bursal disease virus. Infections of two lines of chickens previously documented as genetically resistant and sensitive to infection were compared in order to ascertain early differences in the response to infection that might provide clues to the mechanism of differential genetic resistance. In addition to major changes that could be explained by previously described changes in infected tissue, some differences in gene expression on infection, and differences between the two chicken lines, were observed that led to a model for resistance in which a more rapid inflammatory response and more-extensive p53-related induction of apoptosis in the target B cells might limit viral replication and consequent pathology. Ironically, the effect in the asymptomatic neonatal infection is that more-severe B-cell depletion is seen in the more genetically resistant chicken. Changes of expression of many chicken genes of unknown function, indicating possible roles in the response to infection, may aid in the functional annotation of these genes.


Immunogenetics | 2005

Characterisation of a cluster of TRIM-B30.2 genes in the chicken MHC B locus

Thomas Ruby; Bertrand Bed’hom; Håkan Wittzell; Véronique Morin; Anne Oudin; Rima Zoorob

We have identified and characterised a cluster of six TRIM-B30.2 genes flanking the chicken BF/BL region of the B complex. The TRIM-B30.2 proteins are a subgroup of the TRIM protein family containing the tripartite motif (TRIM), consisting of a RING domain, a B-box and a coiled coil region, and a B30.2-like domain. In humans, a cluster of seven TRIM-B30.2 genes has been characterised within the MHC on Chromosome 6p21.33. Among the six chicken TRIM-B30.2 genes two are orthologous to those of the human MHC, and two (TRIM41 and TRIM7) are orthologous to human genes located on Chromosome 5. In humans, these last two genes are adjacent to GNB2L1, a guanine nucleotide-binding protein gene, the ortholog of the chicken c12.3 gene situated in the vicinity of the TRIM-B30.2 genes. This suggests that breakpoints specific to mammals have occurred and led to the remodelling of their MHC structure. In terms of structure, like their mammalian counterparts, each chicken gene consists of five coding exons; exon 1 encodes the RING domain and the B-box, exons 2, 3 and 4 form the coiled-coil region, and the last exon represents the B30.2-like domain. Phylogenetic analysis led us to assume that this extended BF/BL region may be similar to the human extended class I region, because it contains a cluster of BG genes sharing an Ig-V like domain with the BTN genes (Henry et al. 1997a) and six TRIM-B30.2 genes containing the B30.2-like domain, shared with the TRIM-B30.2 members and the BTN genes.


Immunogenetics | 2009

Non-coding RNAs revealed during identification of genes involved in chicken immune responses

Marie-Laure Endale Ahanda; Thomas Ruby; Håkan Wittzell; Bertrand Bed’hom; Anne-Marie Chaussé; Véronique Morin; Anne Oudin; Catherine Chevalier; John R. Young; Rima Zoorob

Recent large-scale cDNA cloning studies have shown that a significant proportion of the transcripts expressed from vertebrate genomes do not appear to encode protein. Moreover, it was reported in mammals (human and mice) that these non-coding transcripts are expressed and regulated by mechanisms similar to those involved in the control of protein-coding genes. We have produced a collection of cDNA sequences from immunologically active tissues with the aim of discovering chicken genes involved in immune mechanisms, and we decided to explore the non-coding component of these immune-related libraries. After finding known non-coding RNAs (miRNA, snRNA, snoRNA), we identified new putative mRNA-like non-coding RNAs. We characterised their expression profiles in immune-related samples. Some of them showed changes in expression following viral infections. As they exhibit patterns of expression that parallel the behaviour of protein-coding RNAs in immune tissues, our study suggests that they could play an active role in the immune response.


F1000 Medicine Reports | 2011

At home with hostility: How do pathogenic bacteria evade mammalian immune surveillance to establish persistent infection?

Thomas Ruby; Denise M. Monack

Bacterial persistence is of major concern as persistent bacterial infections involving bacteria such as Helicobacter pylori, Salmonella enterica serotype Typhi, and Mycobacterium tuberculosis pose significant public health problems worldwide. This report discusses the recent advances in understanding the strategies used by bacteria during persistent infection that allow them to colonize specific sites in the host and evade immune surveillance.


Archive | 2011

Surgical device and methods

Kevin Chao; John Avi Roop; Greg Magee; Ronald Jou; Reuben D. Brewer; Christopher Steven Pell; Bryan J. Duggan; Zhi Chen Dong; Thomas Ruby


Cell Host & Microbe | 2013

Salmonella Require the Fatty Acid Regulator PPARδ for the Establishment of a Metabolic Environment Essential for Long-Term Persistence

Nicholas A. Eisele; Thomas Ruby; Amanda Jacobson; Paolo Manzanillo; Jeffery S. Cox; Lilian H. Lam; Lata Mukundan; Ajay Chawla; Denise M. Monack


Archive | 2012

Apparatus, systems, and methods for performing laparoscopic surgery

Christopher Steven Pell; Bryan J. Duggan; Hattie Zhi Chen Dong; Thomas Ruby; John Avi Roop; Jonathan B. Ticker; James N. Lau; Kevin Chao

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Anne Oudin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Rima Zoorob

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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