Publications by authors named "Nicolas Thiault"

Ligation of retinoic acid receptor alpha (RARα) by RA promotes varied transcriptional programs associated with immune activation and tolerance, but genetic deletion approaches suggest the impact of RARα on TCR signaling. Here, we examined whether RARα would exert roles beyond transcriptional regulation. Specific deletion of the nuclear isoform of RARα revealed an RARα isoform in the cytoplasm of T cells.

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Double-positive CD4CD8αβ (DP) cells are thought to reside as T cell progenitors exclusively within the thymus. We recently discovered an unexpected CD4 and CD8αβ immune cell population in healthy and atherosclerotic mice by single-cell RNA sequencing. Transcriptomically, these cells resembled thymic DPs.

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Cytomegalovirus (CMV) establishes a lifelong infection facilitated, in part, by circumventing immune defenses mediated by tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-family cytokines. An example of this is the mouse CMV (MCMV) m166 protein, which restricts expression of the TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) death receptors, promoting early-phase replication. We show here that replication of an MCMV mutant lacking m166 is also severely attenuated during viral persistence in the salivary glands (SG).

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The thymus plays a central role in self-tolerance, partly by eliminating precursors with a T cell receptor (TCR) that binds strongly to self-antigens. However, the generation of self-agonist-selected lineages also relies on strong TCR signaling. How thymocytes discriminate between these opposite outcomes remains elusive.

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Article Synopsis
  • Most T lymphocytes, like regulatory T cells (Treg cells), are made in a special part of the body called the thymus.
  • As we get older, the thymus gets smaller and doesn't produce as many T cells, especially Treg cells.
  • Some Treg cells travel back to the thymus and help control how many new Treg cells are made by stopping their production.
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Regulatory T (Treg) lymphocytes play a central role in the control of autoimmune pathology. Any alteration in Treg-cell biology in mouse strains used for the study of these disorders therefore raises the question of its direct link with disease susceptibility. Paradoxically, in non-obese diabetic (NOD) mice increased numbers of Treg cells develop in the thymus.

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