Publications by authors named "Olivier Mesdjian"

Article Synopsis
  • The immune synapse is the area where special immune cells called lymphocytes connect with other cells to signal and fight off infections.
  • Scientists used cool technology to study how this connection affects how the immune cells work.
  • They found that different things like how much of a signal is present and how strong the surface is can change how the immune cells respond and work together.
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Immune synapse formation is a key step for lymphocyte activation. In B lymphocytes, the immune synapse controls the production of high-affinity antibodies, thereby defining the efficiency of humoral immune responses. While the key roles played by both the actin and microtubule cytoskeletons in the formation and function of the immune synapse have become increasingly clear, how the different events involved in synapse formation are coordinated in space and time by actin-microtubule interactions is not understood.

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Myriads of cilia beat on ciliated epithelia, which are ubiquitous in life. When ciliary beats are synchronized, metachronal waves emerge, whose direction of propagation depends on the living system in an unexplained way. We show on a reconstructed human bronchial epithelium in vitro that the direction of propagation is determined by the ability of mucus to be transported at the epithelial surface.

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