Publications by authors named "Marine Merandet"

Article Synopsis
  • A deeper understanding of HIV replication and effective drug combinations has led to long-term antiretroviral therapies, but these are not cures and must be maintained for life.
  • Elite controllers (ECs), a small group of HIV-infected individuals who do not need therapy, may provide insights into achieving a functional cure.
  • Research revealed that ECs had undetectable levels of serum IFNα and showed no immune dysfunction, contrasting with untreated non-EC patients who exhibited significant immune impairment, suggesting elevated IFNα plays a crucial role in driving HIV-related immune issues.
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Background: Among people living with HIV, elite controllers (ECs) maintain an undetectable viral load, even without receiving anti-HIV therapy. In non-EC patients, this therapy leads to marked improvement, including in immune parameters, but unlike ECs, non-EC patients still require ongoing treatment and experience co-morbidities. In-depth, comprehensive immune analyses comparing EC and treated non-EC patients may reveal subtle, consistent differences.

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Advances in HIV therapy came from understanding its replication. Further progress toward "functional cure" -no therapy needed as found in Elite Controllers (EC)- may come from insights in pathogenesis and avoidance by EC. Here we show that all immune cells from HIV-infected persons are impaired in non-EC, but not in EC.

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Like EC, we find that ART-treated patients control serum IFNα concentration and show few immune cell alterations enabling a healthy but fragile medical status. However, treatment interruption leads to elevated IFNα reflecting virus production indicating that like EC, ART does not achieve a virological cure. The immune system becomes overwhelmed by multiple immune cell abnormalities as found in untreated patients.

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Article Synopsis
  • * Research involving gene expression profiling of skin biopsies from DI-Pso patients revealed significant activation of the T helper 17/IL-23 pathways, alongside increased IL-36 expression, which is a marker of pustular psoriasis.
  • * The findings indicate a shift in immune response from T helper 2 to T helper 17 in DI-Pso cases, coupled with notable skin barrier dysfunction compared to healthy individuals and those with other skin conditions.
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Previous studies reporting the response to SARS-CoV-2 mRNA vaccination in alloHSCT recipients used serological and/or cellular assays, but no study has evaluated vaccine-induced neutralizing antibodies. We prospectively studied 28 alloHSCT recipients who received two BNT162b2 doses. Two patients groups were defined according to time from alloHSCT and immunosuppressive treatment, and had different baseline immunologic status.

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Cutaneous involvement of chronic graft-versus-host disease (cGVHD) has a wide range of manifestations including a lichenoid form with a currently assumed mixed Th1/Th17 signature and a sclerotic form with Th1 signature. Despite substantial heterogeneity of innate and adaptive immune cells recruited to the skin and of the different clinical manifestations, treatment depends mainly on the severity of the skin involvement and relies on systemic, high-dose glucocorticoids alone or in combination with a calcineurin inhibitor. We performed the first study using RNA sequencing to profile and compare the transcriptome of lichen planus cGVHD (n = 8), morphea cGVHD (n = 5), and healthy controls (n = 6).

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