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journal article
Stockis J, Fink W, François V, Connerotte T, de Smet C, Knoops L, van der Bruggen P, Boon T, Coulie PG, Lucas S.
Eur J Immunol. 2009 Mar;39(3):869-82.
From cancerous and non-cancerous patients, we derived stable clones of CD4(+) Treg, defined as clones that expressed high CD25 at rest, were anergic in vitro, and suppressed the proliferation of co-cultured CD4(+) cells. A conserved region of FOXP3 intron 1 was demethylated in all Treg clones, whereas it was methylated in non-regulatory Th and CTL clones. In our panel of human clones, this stable epigenetic mark correlated better with suppressive activity than did FOXP3 mRNA or protein expression. We used expression microarrays to compare Treg and Th clones after
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journal article
El Hage F, Stroobant V, Vergnon I, Baurain JF, Echchakir H, Lazar V, Chouaib S, Coulie PG, Mami-Chouaib F.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008 Jul 22;105(29):10119-24. Epub 2008 Jul 14.
We identified an antigen recognized on a human non-small-cell lung carcinoma by a cytotoxic T lymphocyte clone derived from autologous tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes. The antigenic peptide is presented by HLA-A2 and is encoded by the CALCA gene, which codes for calcitonin and for the alpha-calcitonin gene-related peptide. The peptide is derived from the carboxy-terminal region of the preprocalcitonin signal peptide and is processed independently of proteasomes and the transporter associated with antigen processing. Processing occurs within the endoplasmic reticul
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journal article
Kurimoto K, Yabuta Y, Ohinata Y, Saitou M.
Nat Protoc. 2007;2(3):739-52.
We describe here a protocol for the representative amplification of global mRNAs from typical single mammalian cells to provide a template for high-density oligonucleotide microarray analysis. A single cell is lysed in a tube without purification and first-strand cDNAs are synthesized using a poly(dT)-tailed primer. Unreacted primer is specifically eliminated by exonuclease treatment and second strands are generated with a second poly(dT)-tailed primer after poly(dA) tailing of the first-strand cDNAs. The cDNAs are split into four tubes, which are independently d
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journal article
Paolo Romano and Andrea Splendiani
Reasoning Web, LNCS Lecture Notes in Computer Science
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journal article
Tufi R, Panaretakis T, Bianchi K, Criollo A, Fazi B, Di Sano F, Tesniere A, Kepp O, Paterlini-Brechot P, Zitvogel L, Piacentini M, Szabadkai G, Kroemer G.
Cell Death Differ. 2008 Feb;15(2):274-82. Epub 2007 Nov 23
Some chemotherapeutic agents can elicit apoptotic cancer cell death, thereby activating an anticancer immune response that influences therapeutic outcome. We previously reported that anthracyclins are particularly efficient in inducing immunogenic cell death, correlating with the pre-apoptotic exposure of calreticulin (CRT) on the plasma membrane surface of anthracyclin-treated tumor cells. Here, we investigated the role of cellular Ca(2+) homeostasis on CRT exposure. A neuroblastoma cell line (SH-SY5Y) failed to expose CRT in response to anthracyclin treatment.
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journal article
Zitvogel L, Kroemer G.
Cell Death Differ. 2008 Jan;15(1):1-2.
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journal article
Roux S, Bernat C, Al-Sakere B, Ghiringhelli F, Opolon P, Carpentier AF, Zitvogel L, Mir LM, Robert C.
Cancer Immunol Immunother. 2008 Sep;57(9):1291-300. Epub 2008 Feb 8.
PURPOSE: Electrochemotherapy (ECT) is an effective local therapy of human cutaneous cancers but has no effect on distant untreated tumors. We addressed whether tumor-associated antigens released after ECT could induce an efficient systemic immunity when associated with an appropriate immunoadjuvant. METHODS AND RESULTS: We first studied the nature of the cellular recruitment and the expression of various toll-like receptors (TLRs) in tumors treated by ECT. We found that ECT induced a massive recruitment of CD11c and CD11b positive cells in the tumors and a strong
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journal article
Apetoh L, Mignot G, Panaretakis T, Kroemer G, Zitvogel L.
Trends Mol Med. 2008 Apr;14(4):141-51. Epub 2008 Mar 18.
The current method of cancer management takes into account tumor-related factors to predict therapeutic outcome. However, recent evidence indicates that the host immune system also contributes to therapeutic outcome. Here, we highlight anthracyclines, which have been used to treat a broad range of cancers since the 1960s, as an example of an anticancer treatment that can boost the host's immune system to improve the efficacy of chemotherapy. It has recently been revealed that the translocation of calreticulin to the plasma membrane in tumor cells and the release
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journal article
Bonmort M, Dalod M, Mignot G, Ullrich E, Chaput N, Zitvogel L.
Curr Opin Immunol. 2008 Oct;20(5):558-65. Epub 2008 Jun 12.
Tumors can regress as a result of invading myeloid and lymphoid cells that act in concert. Although the myeloid cells are widely recognized as antigen presenters and lymphoid cells as classical effectors, recent evidence revealed the capacity of dendritic cells (DC) to kill tumor cells. The functional concept of 'natural killer (NK) myeloid DC' is supported by mouse and human in vitro data that may be clinically relevant because human killer DC can contribute to tumor shrinking during topical therapy with toll-like receptor (TLR) agonists. Whether tumor killing b
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journal article
Magali Terme, Evelyn Ullrich, Laetitia Aymeric , Cédric Ménard, François Ghiringhelli, Lionel Apetoh, Ruben Elisee, Bernard Ryffel, Graça Raposo, Joachim Schultze, Hideo Yagita, Miyuki Azuma, Gilles Kaplanski, Nathalie Chaput, Laurence Zitvogel.
Submitted Nat Med.
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journal article
Terme M, Mignot G, Ullrich E, Bonmort M, Minard-Colin V, Jacquet A, Schultze JL, Kroemer G, Leclerc C, Chaput N, Zitvogel L.
Cancer Res. 2009 Aug 15;69(16):6590-7.
IFN producing killer dendritic cells (IKDC) were originally defined as CD11c(int) B220(+)NK1.1(+) (or CD49b(+)) cells that exert a potent tumoricidal activity in animals lacking B, T, and conventional natural killer effectors. MHC class II expression on tumor infiltrating IKDC prompted us to investigate their putative antigen presenting function. Here, we show that tumor cells license IKDC to acquire the properties of antigen presenting cells, i.e., expression of MHC class II and costimulatory CD86 molecules. We show that the CD11b(+) subset of IKDC are able to p
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journal article
Ullrich E, Ménard C, Flament C, Terme M, Mignot G, Bonmort M, Plumas J, Chaperot L, Chaput N, Zitvogel L.
Cytokine Growth Factor Rev. 2008 Feb;19(1):79-92. Epub 2007 Dec 26.
Tumor growth results from a delicate balance between intrinsic dysregulation of oncogenes, tumor suppressor and stability genes counteracted by extrinsic defenses composed of immune cells shaping tumor immunogenicity. Although immune subversion might be the ultimate outcome of this process, a complex network of cellular interactions take place eventually leading to tumor specific cognate immune responses. The links between innate and cognate antitumor immunity eliciting protective T cell responses are instigated by cytokines, chemokines and damage associated mole
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journal article
Ullrich E, Chaput N, Zitvogel L.
Horm Metab Res. 2008 Feb;40(2):75-81.
Tumor immunosurveillance is mediated by innate and adaptive components of cellular immunity. A complex network of cellular interactions is needed to elicit protective antitumoral CD4+and CD8+T cell responses. Thereby dendritic cells (DCs) play a central role as professional antigen presenting cells (APCs) that take up antigens, process, and present them to prime naïve T cells. Recognition and lysis of tumor cells has been attributed to innate effectors such as natural killer (NK), NKT and gammadeltaT cells. Recently, novel subsets of cytotoxic DCs, called "kille
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journal article
Zitvogel L, Mignot G, Bonmort M, Ullrich E, Chaput N.
Med Sci (Paris). 2008 May;24(5):525-8.
[Article in French]
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journal article
Viaud S, Ullrich E, Zitvogel L, Chaput N.
Horm Metab Res. 2008 Feb;40(2):82-8.
Exosomes are nanometer particles (50-100 nm) secreted by most living cells. The first description of exosomes was made in 1987 by Rose Johnstone, who described a vesicle formation during the maturation process of reticulocytes. At this time it has been suggested that exosome release could represent a major route for the externalization of obsolete membrane proteins. A renewed vision of exosome function was raised when Graça Raposo demonstrated in 1996 that exosomes derived from B cells could have immunogenic capacities. Since then, exosomes have been described i
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journal article
Terme M, Chaput N, Combadiere B, Ma A, Ohteki T, Zitvogel L.
J Immunol. 2008 Apr 1;180(7):4679-86.
The CD4(+)CD25(+)Foxp3(+) regulatory T cells (Treg) play an important role in the control of peripheral tolerance by directly inhibiting conventional T cell proliferative and effector functions. However, the mechanisms by which Treg regulate the homeostasis of lymph nodes remain unclear. In this study, we show in a mouse model that Treg control two major checkpoints dictated by the interaction between self-reactive CD4(+) T cells and resident dendritic cell (DC) in secondary lymphoid organs. First, Treg inhibit the production of CCR5 ligands, limiting the CCR5-de
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journal article
Ménard C, Blay JY, Borg C, Michiels S, Ghiringhelli F, Robert C, Nonn C, Chaput N, Taïeb J, Delahaye NF, Flament C, Emile JF, Le Cesne A, Zitvogel L.
Cancer Res. 2009 Apr 15;69(8):3563-9. Epub 2009 Apr 7.
Clinical outcomes of gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST)-bearing patients treated with imatinib mesylate (IM) are variable. Other than the site of mutation within the c-kit gene, prognostic features of GIST remain undefined. IM can exhibit off-target effects such as triggering natural killer (NK) cell activity. We addressed whether NK cell functions could predict long term survival with IM. NK cell functions were followed up in 77 GIST patients enrolled onto two phase III trials. "Immunologic responders" were defined as patients whose NK cell IFN-gamma values a
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journal article
Zitvogel L, Tesniere A, Kroemer G.
Nat Rev Immunol. 2006 Oct;6(10):715-27. Epub 2006 Sep 15.
Numerous innate and adaptive immune effector cells and molecules participate in the recognition and destruction of cancer cells, a process that is known as cancer immunosurveillance. But cancer cells avoid such immunosurveillance through the outgrowth of poorly immunogenic tumour-cell variants (immunoselection) and through subversion of the immune system (immunosubversion). At the early stages of carcinogenesis, cell-intrinsic barriers to tumour development seem to be associated with stimulation of an active antitumour immune response, whereas overt tumour develo
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journal article
Zitvogel L, Tesniere A, Apetoh L, Ghiringhelli F, Kroemer G.
Bull Acad Natl Med. 2008 Oct;192(7):1469-87; discussion 1487-9.
[Article in French]
For over 40 years, four therapeutic modalities, namely surgery, radiotherapy, chemotherapy and hormone therapy have formed the core of anticancer treatments. Their mode of action is thought to involve a direct cytotoxic action on tumor cells. Recently, the discovery of tumor-associated immunosuppression and tumor immunosurveillance has led to cancer being reconsidered not only as an organ disease but also as a host disease. This new concept is supported by the recent discovery of the immunogenic effects of tumor cell death induced by a variet
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journal article
Zitvogel L, Apetoh L, Ghiringhelli F, André F, Tesniere A, Kroemer G.
J Clin Invest. 2008 Jun;118(6):1991-2001.
Although the impact of tumor immunology on the clinical management of most cancers is still negligible, there is increasing evidence that anticancer immune responses may contribute to the control of cancer after conventional chemotherapy. Thus, radiotherapy and some chemotherapeutic agents, in particular anthracyclines, can induce specific immune responses that result either in immunogenic cancer cell death or in immunostimulatory side effects. This anticancer immune response then helps to eliminate residual cancer cells (those that fail to be killed by chemother
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