Publications by authors named "Claire Seror"

Extracellular adenosine triphosphate (ATP) can activate purinergic receptors of the plasma membrane and modulate multiple cellular functions. We report that ATP is released from HIV-1 target cells through pannexin-1 channels upon interaction between the HIV-1 envelope protein and specific target cell receptors. Extracellular ATP then acts on purinergic receptors, including P2Y2, to activate proline-rich tyrosine kinase 2 (Pyk2) kinase and transient plasma membrane depolarization, which in turn stimulate fusion between Env-expressing membranes and membranes containing CD4 plus appropriate chemokine co-receptors.

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Chemotherapy can induce anticancer immune responses. In contrast to a widely extended prejudice, apoptotic cell death is often more efficient in eliciting a protective anticancer immune response than necrotic cell death. Recently, we have found that purinergic receptors of the P2X7 type are required for the anticancer immune response induced by chemotherapy.

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Fusogenic HIV-1 isolates induce the fusion of infected and bystander cells. Such syncytia can be found as "multinucleated giant cells" in the brain from HIV-1-infected individuals, as well as in lymphoid tissues. Syncytia elicited by the HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein (Env) manifest the aggregation of PML in discrete nuclear bodies and the recruitment of TopBP1, NBS1 and ATM to DNA damage foci containing phosphorylated ATM and histone H2AX ("-H2AX).

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In several paradigms of cell death, mitochondrial membrane permeabilization (MMP) delimits the frontier between life and death. Mitochondria control the intrinsic pathway of apoptosis and participate in the extrinsic pathway. Moreover, they have been implicated in nonapoptotic cell death modalities.

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DNA damage can activate the oncosuppressor protein ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM), which phosphorylates the histone H2AX within characteristic DNA damage foci. Here, we show that ATM undergoes an activating phosphorylation in syncytia elicited by the envelope glycoprotein complex (Env) of human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) in vitro. This was accompanied by aggregation of ATM in discrete nuclear foci that also contained phospho-histone H2AX.

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