43 research outputs found

    Immuno-modulatory effects of yeast cell wall compounds on murine macrophages and their stakes in bacterial infections of mammary gland

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    Les ß-glucanes (BG) sont les polysaccharides les plus abondants de la paroi de Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Depuis des millénaires, ils sont utilisés pour leurs propriétés immunostimulantes et leurs potentiels thérapeutiques. L'objectif de ce travail était de caractériser la réponse immunitaire induite par les BG et de comprendre leurs modes d'action sur les macrophages murins en contexte infectieux. Nous avons montré que (i) les extraits de paroi enrichis en BG n'induisent qu'une faible production de cytokines par les macrophages contrairement aux extraits bruts, (ii) la réponse inflammatoire médiée par les extraits bruts résulte de la signalisation des TLRs et non de Dectin-1 et (iii) les BG stimulent la synthèse tardive de GM-CSF via Dectin-1. En conditions infectieuses, les BG enrichis confèrent une forte signature inflammatoire aux macrophages prétraités conduisant à l'amplification de la production cytokinique, à la synthèse de ROS et l'optimisation de la clairance bactérienne. En conclusion, cette étude souligne les enjeux de l'utilisation des BG enrichis comme adjuvants dans l'amélioration de la résistance des individus aux infections.ß-glucans (BG) are the most abundant polysaccharides of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae cell wall. For decades, they have been extensively used because of their immuno-modulatory properties and their potential therapeutic effects. The aim of this study was to characterize the immune response induced by BG and to understand their mechanisms of action on murine macrophages occurring upon bacterial infections. We demonstrated that (i) BG-enriched extracts trigger low amounts of cytokine production in contrast with crude products, (ii) the immune response mediated by crude extracts results from TLRs and not from Dectin-1 signaling and (iii) BG-enriched compounds stimulate the late and strong induction of GM-CSF in a Dectin-1-dependent manner. Upon bacteria exposure, BG-enriched extracts confer a strong inflammatory to pretreated macrophages leading to synergistic increase of cytokine release, ROS production and better clearance of pathogens. Altogether, our findings emphasize the relevancy of using BG-enriched extracts for the design of novel adjuvant formulations contributing to individuals' resistance to infections

    Etude des propriétés immunostimulantes de composés pariétaux de levure sur les macrophages murins et évaluation dans des modèles infectieux

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    ß-glucans (BG) are the most abundant polysaccharides of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae cell wall. For decades, they have been extensively used because of their immuno-modulatory properties and their potential therapeutic effects. The aim of this study was to characterize the immune response induced by BG and to understand their mechanisms of action on murine macrophages occurring upon bacterial infections. We demonstrated that (i) BG-enriched extracts trigger low amounts of cytokine production in contrast with crude products, (ii) the immune response mediated by crude extracts results from TLRs and not from Dectin-1 signaling and (iii) BG-enriched compounds stimulate the late and strong induction of GM-CSF in a Dectin-1-dependent manner. Upon bacteria exposure, BG-enriched extracts confer a strong inflammatory to pretreated macrophages leading to synergistic increase of cytokine release, ROS production and better clearance of pathogens. Altogether, our findings emphasize the relevancy of using BG-enriched extracts for the design of novel adjuvant formulations contributing to individuals' resistance to infections.Les ß-glucanes (BG) sont les polysaccharides les plus abondants de la paroi de Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Depuis des millénaires, ils sont utilisés pour leurs propriétés immunostimulantes et leurs potentiels thérapeutiques. L'objectif de ce travail était de caractériser la réponse immunitaire induite par les BG et de comprendre leurs modes d'action sur les macrophages murins en contexte infectieux. Nous avons montré que (i) les extraits de paroi enrichis en BG n'induisent qu'une faible production de cytokines par les macrophages contrairement aux extraits bruts, (ii) la réponse inflammatoire médiée par les extraits bruts résulte de la signalisation des TLRs et non de Dectin-1 et (iii) les BG stimulent la synthèse tardive de GM-CSF via Dectin-1. En conditions infectieuses, les BG enrichis confèrent une forte signature inflammatoire aux macrophages prétraités conduisant à l'amplification de la production cytokinique, à la synthèse de ROS et l'optimisation de la clairance bactérienne. En conclusion, cette étude souligne les enjeux de l'utilisation des BG enrichis comme adjuvants dans l'amélioration de la résistance des individus aux infections

    Testing for jumps in face of the financial crisis : Application of Barndorff-Nielsen - Shephard test and the Kou model

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    The purpose of this study is to identify an impact on an option pricing within NASDAQ OMX Stockholm Market, if the underlying asset prices include jumps. The current financial crisis, when jumps are much more evident than ever, makes this issue very actual and important in the global sense for the portfolio hedging and other risk management applications for example for the banking sector. Therefore, an investigation is based on OMXS30 Index and SEB A Bank. To detect jumps the Barndorff-Nielsen and Shephard non-parametric bipower variation test is used. First it is examined on simulations, to be finally implemented on the real data. An affirmation of a jumps occurrence requires to apply an appropriate model for the option pricing. For this purpose the Kou model, a double exponential jump-diffusion one, is proposed, as it incorporates essential stylized facts not available for another models. Th parameters in the model are estimated by a new approach - a combined cumulant matching with lambda taken from the Barrndorff-Nielsen and Shephard test. To evaluate how the Kou model manages on the option pricing, it is compared to the Black-Scholes model and to the real prices of European call options from the Stockholm Stock Exchange. The results show that the Kou model outperforms the latter

    A discontinuous functional Cauchy problem

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    Triggering Dectin-1-Pathway Alone Is Not Sufficient to Induce Cytokine Production by Murine Macrophages.

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    β-glucans (BG) are abundant polysaccharides of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae cell wall (Sc CW), an industry byproduct. They have immuno-stimulatory properties upon engagement of dectin-1 (Clec7a), their main receptor on particular immune cells, and they actually become of great interest because of their preventive or therapeutic potentials. Zymosan, a crude extract of Sc CW was studied as a prototypic BG, despite its miscellaneous PAMPs content. Here, we examined the response of murine wild type or Clec7a-/- bone marrow-derived macrophages (BMDM) to products with increasing BG content (15, 65 or 75%) and compared their effects with those of other dectin-1 ligands. The enrichment process removed TLR ligands while preserving dectin-1 activity. The most enriched extracts have very low NFκB activity and triggered low amounts of cytokine production in contrast with crude products like zymosan and BG15. Furthermore, MyD88-/- BMDM did not produce TNFα in response to crude Sc CW extracts, whereas their response to BG-enriched extracts was unaffected, suggesting that BG alone are not able to initiate cytokine secretion. Although Sc CW-derived BG stimulated the late and strong expression of Csf2 in a dectin-1-dependent manner, they remain poor inducers of chemokine and cytokine production in murine macrophages

    Molecular Analysis of a Short-term Model of β-Glucans-Trained Immunity Highlights the Accessory Contribution of GM-CSF in Priming Mouse Macrophages Response.

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    β-Glucans (BGs) are glucose polymers present in the fungal cell wall (CW) and, as such, are recognized by innate immune cells as microbial-associated pattern through Dectin-1 receptor. Recent studies have highlighted the ability of the pathogenic yeast Candida albicans or its CW-derived β(1,3) (1,6)-glucans to increase human monocytes cytokine secretion upon secondary stimulation, a phenomenon now referred as immune training. This ability of monocytes programming confers BGs an undeniable immunotherapeutic potential. Our objective was to determine whether BGs from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, a non-pathogenic yeast, are endowed with such a property. For this purpose, we have developed a short-term training model based on lipopolysaccharide re-stimulation of mouse bone marrow-derived macrophages primed with S. cerevisiae BGs. Through a transcriptome analysis, we demonstrated that BGs induced a specific gene expression signature involving the PI3K/AKT signaling pathway as in human monocytes. Moreover, we showed that over-expression of Csf2 (that encodes for GM-CSF) was a Dectin-1-dependent feature of BG-induced priming of macrophages. Further experiments confirmed that GM-CSF up-regulated Dectin-1 cell surface expression and amplified macrophages response along BG-mediated training. However, the blockade of GM-CSFR demonstrated that GM-CSF was not primarily required for BG-induced training of macrophages although it can substantially improve it. In addition, we found that mouse macrophages trained with BGs upregulated their expression of the four and a half LIM-only protein 2 (Fhl2) in a Dectin-1-dependent manner. Consistently, we observed that intracellular levels of FHL2 increased after stimulation of macrophages with BGs. In conclusion, our experiments provide new insights on GM-CSF contribution to the training of cells from the monocytic lineage and highlights FHL2 as a possible regulator of BG-associated signaling

    Molecular Analysis of a Short-term Model of β-Glucans-Trained Immunity Highlights the Accessory Contribution of GM-CSF in Priming Mouse Macrophages Response.

    No full text
    β-Glucans (BGs) are glucose polymers present in the fungal cell wall (CW) and, as such, are recognized by innate immune cells as microbial-associated pattern through Dectin-1 receptor. Recent studies have highlighted the ability of the pathogenic yeast Candida albicans or its CW-derived β(1,3) (1,6)-glucans to increase human monocytes cytokine secretion upon secondary stimulation, a phenomenon now referred as immune training. This ability of monocytes programming confers BGs an undeniable immunotherapeutic potential. Our objective was to determine whether BGs from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, a non-pathogenic yeast, are endowed with such a property. For this purpose, we have developed a short-term training model based on lipopolysaccharide re-stimulation of mouse bone marrow-derived macrophages primed with S. cerevisiae BGs. Through a transcriptome analysis, we demonstrated that BGs induced a specific gene expression signature involving the PI3K/AKT signaling pathway as in human monocytes. Moreover, we showed that over-expression of Csf2 (that encodes for GM-CSF) was a Dectin-1-dependent feature of BG-induced priming of macrophages. Further experiments confirmed that GM-CSF up-regulated Dectin-1 cell surface expression and amplified macrophages response along BG-mediated training. However, the blockade of GM-CSFR demonstrated that GM-CSF was not primarily required for BG-induced training of macrophages although it can substantially improve it. In addition, we found that mouse macrophages trained with BGs upregulated their expression of the four and a half LIM-only protein 2 (Fhl2) in a Dectin-1-dependent manner. Consistently, we observed that intracellular levels of FHL2 increased after stimulation of macrophages with BGs. In conclusion, our experiments provide new insights on GM-CSF contribution to the training of cells from the monocytic lineage and highlights FHL2 as a possible regulator of BG-associated signaling

    <i>Saccharomyces cerevisiae (Sc)</i> extracts enriched in β-glucan (BG) are much weaker inducers of NFκB/AP-1 activity in RAW-Blue<sup>™</sup> macrophages than other sources of BG.

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    <p>NFκB/AP-1 activity was determined by a colorimetric enzyme assay using RAW-Blue<sup>™</sup> macrophages as reporter cell line. Cells were treated for 16 h with 100 or 10 μg/mL of various <i>Sc</i> BG extracts (BG15, BG65 and BG75) or with zymosan, curdlan, dispersible WGPd and soluble WGPs as controls. Data are expressed as the mean OD 650nm ± SD of three independent experiments performed in triplicate. Mean values not sharing the same letter are significantly different according to the <i>Student’s t-test</i> (<i>p</i> < 0.05). Comparisons are shown for BG compounds used at 100 μg/mL.</p
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