Publications by authors named "M Chesneau"

Human granzyme B (hGzmB), which is present in various immune cells, has attracted much attention due to its role in various pathophysiological conditions. The hGzmB activity is triggered at a catalytic triad (His59, Asp103, Ser198), cleaving its specific substrates. To date, the drug design strategy against hGzmB mainly targets the catalytic triad, which causes the non-specificity problem of inhibitors due to the highly conserved active site in serine proteases.

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Background: Operational tolerance is the holy grail in solid organ transplantation. Previous reports showed that the urinary compartment of operationally tolerant recipients harbor a specific and unique profile. We hypothesized that spontaneous tolerant kidney transplanted recipients (KTR) would have a specific urinary metabolomic profile associated to operational tolerance.

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The gut microbiota is influenced by environmental factors such as food. Maternal diet during pregnancy modifies the gut microbiota composition and function, leading to the production of specific compounds that are transferred to the fetus and enhance the ontogeny and maturation of the immune system. Prebiotics are fermented by gut bacteria, leading to the release of short-chain fatty acids that can specifically interact with the immune system, inducing a switch toward tolerogenic populations and therefore conferring health benefits.

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BANK1 transcript is upregulated in whole blood after kidney transplantation in tolerant patients. In comparison to patients with rejection, tolerant patients display higher level of regulatory B cells (Bregs) expressing granzyme B (GZMB) that have the capability to prevent effector T cells proliferation. However, BANK1 was found to be decreased in these GZMB Bregs.

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Granzyme B (GZMB)-expressing B cells inhibit CD4 T-lymphocyte proliferation in a contact- and GZMB-dependent manner, through degradation of TCR zeta or induction of T-cell apoptosis. This regulatory B-cell population is present in human healthy individuals and represents about 1% of circulating B cells. Their small proportion requires the development of expansion methods to enable their study and envision clinical applications.

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