2,325 results on '"Volant A"'
Search Results
2. Dynamic microfluidic single-cell screening identifies pheno-tuning compounds to potentiate tuberculosis therapy
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Mistretta, Maxime, Cimino, Mena, Campagne, Pascal, Volant, Stevenn, Kornobis, Etienne, Hebert, Olivier, Rochais, Christophe, Dallemagne, Patrick, Lecoutey, Cédric, Tisnerat, Camille, Lepailleur, Alban, Ayotte, Yann, LaPlante, Steven R., Gangneux, Nicolas, Záhorszká, Monika, Korduláková, Jana, Vichier-Guerre, Sophie, Bonhomme, Frédéric, Pokorny, Laura, Albert, Marvin, Tinevez, Jean-Yves, and Manina, Giulia
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- 2024
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3. Dynamic microfluidic single-cell screening identifies pheno-tuning compounds to potentiate tuberculosis therapy
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Maxime Mistretta, Mena Cimino, Pascal Campagne, Stevenn Volant, Etienne Kornobis, Olivier Hebert, Christophe Rochais, Patrick Dallemagne, Cédric Lecoutey, Camille Tisnerat, Alban Lepailleur, Yann Ayotte, Steven R. LaPlante, Nicolas Gangneux, Monika Záhorszká, Jana Korduláková, Sophie Vichier-Guerre, Frédéric Bonhomme, Laura Pokorny, Marvin Albert, Jean-Yves Tinevez, and Giulia Manina
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Science - Abstract
Abstract Drug-recalcitrant infections are a leading global-health concern. Bacterial cells benefit from phenotypic variation, which can suggest effective antimicrobial strategies. However, probing phenotypic variation entails spatiotemporal analysis of individual cells that is technically challenging, and hard to integrate into drug discovery. In this work, we develop a multi-condition microfluidic platform suitable for imaging two-dimensional growth of bacterial cells during transitions between separate environmental conditions. With this platform, we implement a dynamic single-cell screening for pheno-tuning compounds, which induce a phenotypic change and decrease cell-to-cell variation, aiming to undermine the entire bacterial population and make it more vulnerable to other drugs. We apply this strategy to mycobacteria, as tuberculosis poses a major public-health threat. Our lead compound impairs Mycobacterium tuberculosis via a peculiar mode of action and enhances other anti-tubercular drugs. This work proves that harnessing phenotypic variation represents a successful approach to tackle pathogens that are increasingly difficult to treat.
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- 2024
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4. Corporate managers’ perspectives on forward-looking guidance: Survey evidence
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Call, Andrew C., Hribar, Paul, Skinner, Douglas J., and Volant, David
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- 2024
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5. Association between pertactin-producing Bordetella pertussis and fulminant pertussis in infants: a multicentre study in France, 2008–2019
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Leroux, Pauline, Matczak, Soraya, Bouchez, Valérie, Volant, Stevenn, Ouziel, Antoine, Launay, Elise, Faye, Albert, Rabier, Valérie, Sarlangue, Jean, Jeziorski, Eric, Maakaroun-Vermesse, Zoha, Madhi, Fouad, Pinquier, Didier, Lorrot, Mathie, Pouletty, Marie, Cantais, Aymeric, Javouhey, Etienne, Aït Belghiti, Fatima, Guillot, Sophie, Rodrigues, Carla, Brisse, Sylvain, Cohen, Jérémie F., and Toubiana, Julie
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- 2024
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6. CD8+ T-cell priming is quantitatively but not qualitatively impaired in people with HIV-1 on antiretroviral therapy
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Cabral-Piccin, Mariela P., Briceño, Olivia, Papagno, Laura, Liouville, Benjamin, White, Eoghann, Perdomo-Celis, Federico, Autaa, Gaëlle, Volant, Stevenn, Llewellyn-Lacey, Sian, Fromentin, Rémi, Chomont, Nicolas, Price, David A., Sáez-Cirión, Asier, Lambotte, Olivier, Katlama, Christine, and Appay, Victor
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- 2024
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7. Parvimonas micra, an oral pathobiont associated with colorectal cancer, epigenetically reprograms human colonocytes
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Emma Bergsten, Denis Mestivier, Francoise Donnadieu, Thierry Pedron, Caroline Barau, Landry Tsoumtsa Meda, Amel Mettouchi, Emmanuel Lemichez, Olivier Gorgette, Mathias Chamaillard, Amaury Vaysse, Stevenn Volant, Abiba Doukani, Philippe J. Sansonetti, Iradj Sobhani, and Giulia Nigro
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Colorectal cancer ,colonic epithelial primary cells ,pathobionts ,Parvimonas micra ,DNA methylation ,Diseases of the digestive system. Gastroenterology ,RC799-869 - Abstract
ABSTRACTRecently, an intestinal dysbiotic microbiota with enrichment in oral cavity bacteria has been described in colorectal cancer (CRC) patients. Here, we characterize and investigate one of these oral pathobionts, the Gram-positive anaerobic coccus Parvimonas micra. We identified two phylotypes (A and B) exhibiting different phenotypes and adhesion capabilities. We observed a strong association of phylotype A with CRC, with its higher abundance in feces and in tumoral tissue compared with the normal homologous colonic mucosa, which was associated with a distinct methylation status of patients. By developing an in vitro hypoxic co-culture system of human primary colonic cells with anaerobic bacteria, we show that P. micra phylotype A alters the DNA methylation profile promoters of key tumor-suppressor genes, oncogenes, and genes involved in epithelial–mesenchymal transition. In colonic mucosa of CRC patients carrying P. micra phylotype A, we found similar DNA methylation alterations, together with significant enrichment of differentially expressed genes in pathways involved in inflammation, cell adhesion, and regulation of actin cytoskeleton, providing evidence of P. micra’s possible role in the carcinogenic process.
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- 2023
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8. Approche toxidromique des intoxications par les agents du risque chimique agressif
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Delacour, Hervé, Belot de Saint Léger, Frederik, Lequitte-Charransol, Lucie, Volant, Marine, and Caré, Weniko
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- 2023
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9. Primary role of type I interferons for the induction of functionally optimal antigen-specific CD8+ T cells in HIV infection
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Cabral-Piccin, Mariela P., Papagno, Laura, Lahaye, Xavier, Perdomo-Celis, Federico, Volant, Stevenn, White, Eoghann, Monceaux, Valérie, Llewellyn-Lacey, Sian, Fromentin, Rémi, Price, David A., Chomont, Nicolas, Manel, Nicolas, Saez-Cirion, Asier, and Appay, Victor
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- 2023
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10. The role of glycosylphosphatidylinositol (gpi) anchored proteins in Cryptococcusneoformans
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Snelders, Eveline, Moyrand, Frédérique, Sturny-Leclère, Aude, Vernel-Pauillac, Frédérique, Volant, Stevenn, Janbon, Guilhem, and Alanio, Alexandre
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- 2022
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11. Primary role of type I interferons for the induction of functionally optimal antigen-specific CD8+ T cells in HIV infectionResearch in context
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Mariela P. Cabral-Piccin, Laura Papagno, Xavier Lahaye, Federico Perdomo-Celis, Stevenn Volant, Eoghann White, Valérie Monceaux, Sian Llewellyn-Lacey, Rémi Fromentin, David A. Price, Nicolas Chomont, Nicolas Manel, Asier Saez-Cirion, and Victor Appay
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CD8+ T cells ,HIV-1 ,HIV-2 ,STING ,Type I IFN ,Medicine ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Summary: Background: CD8+ T cells equipped with a full arsenal of antiviral effector functions are critical for effective immune control of HIV-1. It has nonetheless remained unclear how best to elicit such potent cellular immune responses in the context of immunotherapy or vaccination. HIV-2 has been associated with milder disease manifestations and more commonly elicits functionally replete virus-specific CD8+ T cell responses compared with HIV-1. We aimed to learn from this immunological dichotomy and to develop informed strategies that could enhance the induction of robust CD8+ T cell responses against HIV-1. Methods: We developed an unbiased in vitro system to compare the de novo induction of antigen-specific CD8+ T cell responses after exposure to HIV-1 or HIV-2. The functional properties of primed CD8+ T cells were assessed using flow cytometry and molecular analyses of gene transcription. Findings: HIV-2 primed functionally optimal antigen-specific CD8+ T cells with enhanced survival properties more effectively than HIV-1. This superior induction process was dependent on type I interferons (IFNs) and could be mimicked via the adjuvant delivery of cyclic GMP-AMP (cGAMP), a known agonist of the stimulator of interferon genes (STING). CD8+ T cells elicited in the presence of cGAMP were polyfunctional and highly sensitive to antigen stimulation, even after priming from people living with HIV-1. Interpretation: HIV-2 primes CD8+ T cells with potent antiviral functionality by activating the cyclic GMP-AMP synthase (cGAS)/STING pathway, which results in the production of type I IFNs. This process may be amenable to therapeutic development via the use of cGAMP or other STING agonists to bolster CD8+ T cell-mediated immunity against HIV-1. Funding: This work was funded by INSERM, the Institut Curie, and the University of Bordeaux (Senior IdEx Chair) and by grants from Sidaction (17-1-AAE-11097, 17-1-FJC-11199, VIH2016126002, 20-2-AEQ-12822-2, and 22-2-AEQ-13411), the Agence Nationale de la Recherche sur le SIDA (ECTZ36691, ECTZ25472, ECTZ71745, and ECTZ118797), and the Fondation pour la Recherche Médicale (EQ U202103012774). D.A.P. was supported by a Wellcome Trust Senior Investigator Award (100326/Z/12/Z).
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- 2023
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12. Estimation of Genetic Parameters of Biomass Production and Composition Traits in Miscanthus sinensis Using a Staggered-Start Design
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Raverdy, Raphaël, Mignot, Emilie, Arnoult, Stéphanie, Fingar, Laura, Bodineau, Guillaume, Griveau, Yves, Volant, Solenne, and Brancourt-Hulmel, Maryse
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- 2022
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13. Design of Polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA) Microbeads with Tunable Functional Properties and High Biodegradability in Seawater
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Volant, Chloé, Balnois, Eric, Vignaud, Guillaume, Magueresse, Anthony, and Bruzaud, Stéphane
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- 2022
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14. Antagonism of ALAS1 by the Measles Virus V protein contributes to degradation of the mitochondrial network and promotes interferon response.
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Pierre Khalfi, Rodolphe Suspène, Kyle A Raymond, Vincent Caval, Grégory Caignard, Noémie Berry, Valérie Thiers, Chantal Combredet, Claude Rufie, Stéphane Rigaud, Amine Ghozlane, Stevenn Volant, Anastassia V Komarova, Frédéric Tangy, and Jean-Pierre Vartanian
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Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Viruses have evolved countless mechanisms to subvert and impair the host innate immune response. Measles virus (MeV), an enveloped, non-segmented, negative-strand RNA virus, alters the interferon response through different mechanisms, yet no viral protein has been described as directly targeting mitochondria. Among the crucial mitochondrial enzymes, 5'-aminolevulinate synthase (ALAS) is an enzyme that catalyzes the first step in heme biosynthesis, generating 5'-aminolevulinate from glycine and succinyl-CoA. In this work, we demonstrate that MeV impairs the mitochondrial network through the V protein, which antagonizes the mitochondrial enzyme ALAS1 and sequesters it to the cytosol. This re-localization of ALAS1 leads to a decrease in mitochondrial volume and impairment of its metabolic potential, a phenomenon not observed in MeV deficient for the V gene. This perturbation of the mitochondrial dynamics demonstrated both in culture and in infected IFNAR-/- hCD46 transgenic mice, causes the release of mitochondrial double-stranded DNA (mtDNA) in the cytosol. By performing subcellular fractionation post infection, we demonstrate that the most significant source of DNA in the cytosol is of mitochondrial origin. Released mtDNA is then recognized and transcribed by the DNA-dependent RNA polymerase III. The resulting double-stranded RNA intermediates will be captured by RIG-I, ultimately initiating type I interferon production. Deep sequencing analysis of cytosolic mtDNA editing divulged an APOBEC3A signature, primarily analyzed in the 5'TpCpG context. Finally, in a negative feedback loop, APOBEC3A an interferon inducible enzyme will orchestrate the catabolism of mitochondrial DNA, decrease cellular inflammation, and dampen the innate immune response.
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- 2023
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15. Low CCR5 expression protects HIV-specific CD4+ T cells of elite controllers from viral entry
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Claireaux, Mathieu, Robinot, Rémy, Kervevan, Jérôme, Patgaonkar, Mandar, Staropoli, Isabelle, Brelot, Anne, Nouël, Alexandre, Gellenoncourt, Stacy, Tang, Xian, Héry, Mélanie, Volant, Stevenn, Perthame, Emeline, Avettand-Fenoël, Véronique, Buchrieser, Julian, Cokelaer, Thomas, Bouchier, Christiane, Ma, Laurence, Boufassa, Faroudy, Hendou, Samia, Libri, Valentina, Hasan, Milena, Zucman, David, de Truchis, Pierre, Schwartz, Olivier, Lambotte, Olivier, and Chakrabarti, Lisa A.
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- 2022
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16. Low CCR5 expression protects HIV-specific CD4+ T cells of elite controllers from viral entry
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Mathieu Claireaux, Rémy Robinot, Jérôme Kervevan, Mandar Patgaonkar, Isabelle Staropoli, Anne Brelot, Alexandre Nouël, Stacy Gellenoncourt, Xian Tang, Mélanie Héry, Stevenn Volant, Emeline Perthame, Véronique Avettand-Fenoël, Julian Buchrieser, Thomas Cokelaer, Christiane Bouchier, Laurence Ma, Faroudy Boufassa, Samia Hendou, Valentina Libri, Milena Hasan, David Zucman, Pierre de Truchis, Olivier Schwartz, Olivier Lambotte, and Lisa A. Chakrabarti
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Science - Abstract
Here, Claireaux et al. show that people who naturally control HIV infection express lower levels of the viral co-receptor CCR5 in specific CD4+ T cells, and that this results from mutations or receptor internalization by CD4+ T cell-produced chemokines.
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- 2022
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17. Reprogramming dysfunctional CD8+ T cells to promote properties associated with natural HIV control
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Federico Perdomo-Celis, Caroline Passaes, Valérie Monceaux, Stevenn Volant, Faroudy Boufassa, Pierre de Truchis, Morgane Marcou, Katia Bourdic, Laurence Weiss, Corinne Jung, Christine Bourgeois, Cécile Goujard, Laurence Meyer, Michaela Müller-Trutwin, Olivier Lambotte, and Asier Sáez-Cirión
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Medicine - Published
- 2023
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18. A Clinical Study Provides the First Direct Evidence That Interindividual Variations in Fecal β-Lactamase Activity Affect the Gut Mycobiota Dynamics in Response to β-Lactam Antibiotics
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Margot Delavy, Charles Burdet, Natacha Sertour, Savannah Devente, Jean-Denis Docquier, Nathalie Grall, Stevenn Volant, Amine Ghozlane, Xavier Duval, France Mentré, Christophe d’Enfert, and Marie-Elisabeth Bougnoux
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antibiotics ,Candida albicans ,gut mycobiota ,healthy individuals ,beta-lactamases ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
ABSTRACT Antibiotics disturb the intestinal bacterial microbiota, leading to gut dysbiosis and an increased risk for the overgrowth of opportunistic pathogens. It is not fully understood to what extent antibiotics affect the fungal fraction of the intestinal microbiota, the mycobiota. There is no report of the direct role of antibiotics in the overgrowth in healthy humans of the opportunistic pathogenic yeast Candida albicans. Here, we have explored the gut mycobiota of 22 healthy subjects before, during, and up to 6 months after a 3-day regimen of third-generation cephalosporins (3GCs). Using ITS1-targeted metagenomics, we highlighted the strong intra- and interindividual diversity of the healthy gut mycobiota. With a specific quantitative approach, we showed that C. albicans prevalence was much higher than previously reported, with all subjects but one being carriers of C. albicans, although with highly variable burdens. 3GCs significantly altered the mycobiota composition and the fungal load was increased both at short and long term. Both C. albicans relative and absolute abundances were increased but 3GCs did not reduce intersubject variability. Variations in C. albicans burden in response to 3GC treatment could be partly explained by changes in the levels of endogenous fecal β-lactamase activity, with subjects characterized by a high increase of β-lactamase activity displaying a lower increase of C. albicans levels. A same antibiotic treatment might thus affect differentially the gut mycobiota and C. albicans carriage, depending on the treated subject, suggesting a need to adjust the current risk factors for C. albicans overgrowth after a β-lactam treatment. IMPORTANCE Fungal infections are redoubtable healthcare-associated complications in immunocompromised patients. Particularly, the commensal intestinal yeast Candida albicans causes invasive infections in intensive care patients and is, therefore, associated with high mortality. These infections are preceded by an intestinal expansion of C. albicans before its translocation into the bloodstream. Antibiotics are a well-known risk factor for C. albicans overgrowth but the impact of antibiotic-induced dysbiosis on the human gut mycobiota—the fungal microbiota—and the understanding of the mechanisms involved in C. albicans overgrowth in humans are very limited. Our study shows that antibiotics increase the fungal proportion in the gut and disturb the fungal composition, especially C. albicans, in a subject-dependent manner. Indeed, variations across subjects in C. albicans burden in response to β-lactam treatment could be partly explained by changes in the levels of endogenous fecal β-lactamase activity. This highlighted a potential new key factor for C. albicans overgrowth. Thus, the significance of our research is in providing a better understanding of the factors behind C. albicans intestinal overgrowth, which might lead to new means to prevent life-threatening secondary infections.
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- 2022
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19. Longitudinal Study of Viral Diversity Associated with Mosquito Species Circulating in Cambodia
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Souand Mohamed Ali, Antsa Rakotonirina, Kimly Heng, Elise Jacquemet, Stevenn Volant, Sarah Temmam, Sebastien Boyer, and Marc Eloit
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virus discovery ,mosquito ,mosquito virome ,comparative metagenomic ,Cambodia ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
Arthropod-borne viruses (arboviruses) pose a significant global health threat and are primarily transmitted by mosquitoes. In Cambodia, there are currently 290 recorded mosquito species, with at least 17 of them considered potential vectors of arboviruses to humans. Effective surveillance of virome profiles in mosquitoes from Cambodia is vital, as it could help prevent and control arbovirus diseases in a country where epidemics occur frequently. The objective of this study was to identify and characterize the viral diversity in mosquitoes collected during a one-year longitudinal study conducted in various habitats across Cambodia. For this purpose, we used a metatranscriptomics approach and detected the presence of chikungunya virus in the collected mosquitoes. Additionally, we identified viruses categorized into 26 taxa, including those known to harbor arboviruses such as Flaviviridae and Orthomyxoviridae, along with a group of viruses not yet taxonomically identified and provisionally named “unclassified viruses”. Interestingly, the taxa detected varied in abundance and composition depending on the mosquito genus, with no significant influence of the collection season. Furthermore, most of the identified viruses were either closely related to viruses found exclusively in insects or represented new viruses belonging to the Rhabdoviridae and Birnaviridae families. The transmission capabilities of these novel viruses to vertebrates remain unknown.
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- 2023
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20. Comprehensive Characterization of Viral Diversity of Female Mosquitoes in Madagascar
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Amal Bennouna, Michael Luciano Tantely, Vololoniaina Raharinosy, Soa Fy Andriamandimby, Thomas Bigot, Delphine Chrétien, Elise Jacquemet, Stevenn Volant, Sarah Temmam, Philippe Dussart, Vincent Lacoste, Romain Girod, and Marc Eloit
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mosquitoes ,Culex ,Aedes ,Anopheles ,virome ,metatranscriptomics ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
The diversity and circulation of arboviruses are not much studied in Madagascar. The fact is that arboviral emergences are rarely detected. The existing surveillance system primarily relies on serological detection and records only a few human infections annually. The city of Mahajanga, however, experienced a confirmed dengue fever epidemic in 2020 and 2021. This study aimed to characterize and analyze the virome of mosquitoes collected in Mahajanga, near patients with dengue-like syndromes to detect known and unknown viruses as well as investigate the factors contributing to the relative low circulation of arboviruses in the area. A total of 4280 mosquitoes representing at least 12 species from the Aedes, Anopheles, and Culex genera were collected during the dry and the rainy seasons from three sites, following an urbanization gradient. The virome analysis of 2192 female mosquitoes identified a diverse range of viral families and genera and revealed different patterns that are signatures of the influence of the mosquito genus or the season of collection on the composition and abundance of the virome. Despite the absence of known human or veterinary arboviruses, the identification and characterization of viral families, genera, and species in the mosquito virome contribute to our understanding of viral ecology and diversity within mosquito populations in Madagascar. This study serves as a foundation for ongoing surveillance efforts and provides a basis for the development of preventive strategies against various mosquito-borne viral diseases, including known arboviruses.
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- 2023
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21. Optimal combination of early biomarkers for infection and sepsis diagnosis in the emergency department: The BIPS study
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Velly, Laetitia, Volant, Steven, Fitting, Catherine, Ghazali, Daniel Aiham, Salipante, Florian, Mayaux, Julien, Monsel, Gentiane, Cavaillon, Jean-Marc, and Hausfater, Pierre
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- 2021
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22. Reprogramming dysfunctional CD8+ T cells to promote properties associated with natural HIV control
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Federico Perdomo-Celis, Caroline Passaes, Valérie Monceaux, Stevenn Volant, Faroudy Boufassa, Pierre de Truchis, Morgane Marcou, Katia Bourdic, Laurence Weiss, Corinne Jung, Christine Bourgeois, Cécile Goujard, Laurence Meyer, Michaela Müller-Trutwin, Olivier Lambotte, and Asier Sáez-Cirión
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AIDS/HIV ,Immunology ,Medicine - Abstract
Virus-specific CD8+ T cells play a central role in HIV-1 natural controllers to maintain suppressed viremia in the absence of antiretroviral therapy. These cells display a memory program that confers them stemness properties, high survival, polyfunctionality, proliferative capacity, metabolic plasticity, and antiviral potential. The development and maintenance of such qualities by memory CD8+ T cells appear crucial to achieving natural HIV-1 control. Here, we show that targeting the signaling pathways Wnt/transcription factor T cell factor 1 (Wnt/TCF-1) and mTORC through GSK3 inhibition to reprogram HIV-specific CD8+ T cells from noncontrollers promoted functional capacities associated with natural control of infection. Features of such reprogrammed cells included enrichment in TCF-1+ less-differentiated subsets, a superior response to antigen, enhanced survival, polyfunctionality, metabolic plasticity, less mTORC1 dependency, an improved response to γ-chain cytokines, and a stronger HIV-suppressive capacity. Thus, such CD8+ T cell reprogramming, combined with other available immunomodulators, might represent a promising strategy for adoptive cell therapy in the search for an HIV-1 cure.
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- 2022
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23. Tucatinib Combination Treatment After Trastuzumab-Deruxtecan in Patients With ERBB2-Positive Metastatic Breast Cancer
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Frenel, Jean-Sebastien, primary, Zeghondy, Jean, additional, Guérin-Charbonnel, Catherine, additional, Mailliez, Audrey, additional, Volant, Elsa, additional, Poumeaud, François, additional, Patsouris, Anne, additional, Arnedos, Monica, additional, Bailleux, Caroline, additional, Cabal, Julie, additional, Galland, Loick, additional, de Nonneville, Alexandre, additional, Guiu, Séverine, additional, Dalenc, Florence, additional, Pistilli, Barbara, additional, Bachelot, Thomas, additional, Pierga, Jean-Yves, additional, Le Du, Fanny, additional, Bocquet, François, additional, Larrouquere, Louis, additional, and Loirat, Delphine, additional
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- 2024
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24. Édito
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Volant, Stéphane, primary and Darmon, Marc, additional
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- 2024
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25. Mining zebrafish microbiota reveals key community-level resistance against fish pathogen infection
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Stressmann, Franziska A., Bernal-Bayard, Joaquín, Perez-Pascual, David, Audrain, Bianca, Rendueles, Olaya, Briolat, Valérie, Bruchmann, Sebastian, Volant, Stevenn, Ghozlane, Amine, Häussler, Susanne, Duchaud, Eric, Levraud, Jean-Pierre, and Ghigo, Jean-Marc
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- 2021
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26. Corrigendum
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Perdomo-Celis, Pederico, Passaes, Caroline, Monceaux, Valerie, Volant, Stevenn, Boufassa, Faroudy, de Truchis, Pierre, Marcou, Morgane, Bourdic, Katia, Weiss, Laurence, Jung, Corinne, Bourgeois, Christine, Goujard, Cecile, Meyer, Laurence, Muller- Trutwin, Michaela, Lambotte, Olivier, and Saez-Cirion, Asier
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Health care industry - Abstract
Original citation: J Clin Invest. 2022;132(11):e157549. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI157549. Citation for this corrigendum: J Clin Invest. 2023;133(2):e167843. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI167843. In Figure 1E, the data for BCL-6 was inadvertently omitted, with a duplicate of [...]
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- 2023
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27. SHAMAN: a user-friendly website for metataxonomic analysis from raw reads to statistical analysis
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Stevenn Volant, Pierre Lechat, Perrine Woringer, Laurence Motreff, Pascal Campagne, Christophe Malabat, Sean Kennedy, and Amine Ghozlane
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Metagenomics ,Differential analysis ,Visualization ,Web application ,Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Abstract Background Comparing the composition of microbial communities among groups of interest (e.g., patients vs healthy individuals) is a central aspect in microbiome research. It typically involves sequencing, data processing, statistical analysis and graphical display. Such an analysis is normally obtained by using a set of different applications that require specific expertise for installation, data processing and in some cases, programming skills. Results Here, we present SHAMAN, an interactive web application we developed in order to facilitate the use of (i) a bioinformatic workflow for metataxonomic analysis, (ii) a reliable statistical modelling and (iii) to provide the largest panel of interactive visualizations among the applications that are currently available. SHAMAN is specifically designed for non-expert users. A strong benefit is to use an integrated version of the different analytic steps underlying a proper metagenomic analysis. The application is freely accessible at http://shaman.pasteur.fr/ , and may also work as a standalone application with a Docker container (aghozlane/shaman), conda and R. The source code is written in R and is available at https://github.com/aghozlane/shaman . Using two different datasets (a mock community sequencing and a published 16S rRNA metagenomic data), we illustrate the strengths of SHAMAN in quickly performing a complete metataxonomic analysis. Conclusions With SHAMAN, we aim at providing the scientific community with a platform that simplifies reproducible quantitative analysis of metagenomic data.
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- 2020
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28. Choosing fruit trees for agroforestry
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WARLOP, FRANCOIS, Paut, Raphaël, Volant, Anthony, WARLOP, FRANCOIS, Paut, Raphaël, and Volant, Anthony
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Deciduous is a tool for selecting fruit trees in agroforestry systems. It includes factors such as soil properties, irrigation options, desired tree height and time for maintenance. Based on a farm's individual characteristics, the tool displays suitable fruit tree species and varieties.
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- 2024
29. Monitoring Compositional Changes in Black Soldier Fly Larvae (BSFL) Sourced from Different Waste Stream Diets Using Attenuated Total Reflectance Mid Infrared Spectroscopy and Chemometrics
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Louwrens C. Hoffman, Shuxin Zhang, Shanmugam Alagappan, Volant Wills, Olympia Yarger, and Daniel Cozzolino
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black solider fly ,infrared ,instar ,waste ,chemometrics ,Organic chemistry ,QD241-441 - Abstract
Black soldier fly (Hermetia illucens, L.) larvae are characterized by their ability to convert a variety of organic matter from food waste into a sustainable source of food (e.g., protein). This study aimed to evaluate the use of attenuated total reflectance (ATR) mid-infrared (MIR) spectroscopy to monitor changes in the composition as well as to classify black soldier fly larvae (BSFL) samples collected from two growth stages (fifth and sixth instar) and two waste stream diets (bread and vegetables, soy waste). The BSFL samples were fed on either a soy or bread-vegetable mix waste in a control environment (temperature 25 °C, and humidity 70%). The frass and BSFL samples harvested as fifth and sixth instar samples were analyzed using an ATR-MIR instrument where frequencies at specific wavenumbers were compared and evaluated using different chemometric techniques. The PLS regression models yield a coefficient of determination in cross-validation (R2) > 0.80 for the prediction of the type of waste used as diet. The results of this study also indicated that the ratio between the absorbances corresponding to the amide group (1635 cm−1) and lipids (2921 + 2849 cm−1) region was higher in diets containing a high proportion of carbohydrates (e.g., bread-vegetable mix) compared with the soy waste diet. This study demonstrated the ability of MIR spectroscopy to classify BSFL instar samples according to the type of waste stream used as a diet. Overall, ATR-MIR spectroscopy has shown potential to be used as tool to evaluate and monitor the development and growth of BSFL. The utilization of MIR spectroscopy will allow for the development of traceability systems for BSFL. These tools will aid in risk evaluation and the identification of hazards associated with the process, thereby assisting in improving the safety and quality of BSFL intended to be used by the animal feed industry.
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- 2022
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30. Cellular Metabolism Is a Major Determinant of HIV-1 Reservoir Seeding in CD4+ T Cells and Offers an Opportunity to Tackle Infection
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Valle-Casuso, José Carlos, Angin, Mathieu, Volant, Stevenn, Passaes, Caroline, Monceaux, Valérie, Mikhailova, Anastassia, Bourdic, Katia, Avettand-Fenoel, Véronique, Boufassa, Faroudy, Sitbon, Marc, Lambotte, Olivier, Thoulouze, Maria-Isabel, Müller-Trutwin, Michaela, Chomont, Nicolas, and Sáez-Cirión, Asier
- Published
- 2019
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31. Hidden Markov Models with mixtures as emission distributions
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Volant, Stevenn, Bérard, Caroline, Martin-Magniette, Marie-Laure, and Robin, Stéphane
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Statistics - Machine Learning ,Computer Science - Learning ,Statistics - Computation - Abstract
In unsupervised classification, Hidden Markov Models (HMM) are used to account for a neighborhood structure between observations. The emission distributions are often supposed to belong to some parametric family. In this paper, a semiparametric modeling where the emission distributions are a mixture of parametric distributions is proposed to get a higher flexibility. We show that the classical EM algorithm can be adapted to infer the model parameters. For the initialisation step, starting from a large number of components, a hierarchical method to combine them into the hidden states is proposed. Three likelihood-based criteria to select the components to be combined are discussed. To estimate the number of hidden states, BIC-like criteria are derived. A simulation study is carried out both to determine the best combination between the merging criteria and the model selection criteria and to evaluate the accuracy of classification. The proposed method is also illustrated using a biological dataset from the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana. A R package HMMmix is freely available on the CRAN.
- Published
- 2012
32. Neutron recognition in the LAND detector for large neutron multiplicity
- Author
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Pawłowski, P., Brzychczyk, J., Leifels, Y., Trautmann, W., Adrich, P., Aumann, T., Bacri, C. O., Barczyk, T., Bassini, R., Bianchin, S., Boiano, C., Boretzky, K., Boudard, A., Chbihi, A., Cibor, J., Czech, B., De Napoli, M., Ducret, J. -E., Emling, H., Frankland, J. D., Gorbinet, T., Hellström, M., Henzlova, D., Hlavac, S., Immè, J., Iori, I., Johansson, H., Kezzar, K., Kupny, S., Lafriakh, A., Fèvre, A. Le, Gentil, E. Le, Leray, S., Łukasik, J., Lühning, J., Lynch, W. G., Lynen, U., Majka, Z., Mocko, M., Müller, W. F. J., Mykulyak, A., Orth, H., Otte, A. N., Palit, R., Panebianco, S., Pullia, A., Raciti, G., Rapisarda, E., Rossi, D., Salsac, M. -D., Sann, H., Schwarz, C., Simon, H., Sfienti, C., Sümmerer, K., Tsang, M. B., Verde, G., Veselsky, M., Volant, C., Wallace, M., Weick, H., Wiechula, J., Wieloch, A., and Zwiegliński, B.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The performance of the LAND neutron detector is studied. Using an event-mixing technique based on one-neutron data obtained in the S107 experiment at the GSI laboratory, we test the efficiency of various analytic tools used to determine the multiplicity and kinematic properties of detected neutrons. A new algorithm developed recently for recognizing neutron showers from spectator decays in the ALADIN experiment S254 is described in detail. Its performance is assessed in comparison with other methods. The properties of the observed neutron events are used to estimate the detection efficiency of LAND in this experiment., Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures
- Published
- 2012
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33. Variational Bayes approach for model aggregation in unsupervised classification with Markovian dependency
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Volant, Stevenn, Magniette, Marie-Laure Martin, and Robin, Stéphane
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Statistics - Machine Learning ,Statistics - Methodology - Abstract
We consider a binary unsupervised classification problem where each observation is associated with an unobserved label that we want to retrieve. More precisely, we assume that there are two groups of observation: normal and abnormal. The `normal' observations are coming from a known distribution whereas the distribution of the `abnormal' observations is unknown. Several models have been developed to fit this unknown distribution. In this paper, we propose an alternative based on a mixture of Gaussian distributions. The inference is done within a variational Bayesian framework and our aim is to infer the posterior probability of belonging to the class of interest. To this end, it makes no sense to estimate the mixture component number since each mixture model provides more or less relevant information to the posterior probability estimation. By computing a weighted average (named aggregated estimator) over the model collection, Bayesian Model Averaging (BMA) is one way of combining models in order to account for information provided by each model. The aim is then the estimation of the weights and the posterior probability for one specific model. In this work, we derive optimal approximations of these quantities from the variational theory and propose other approximations of the weights. To perform our method, we consider that the data are dependent (Markovian dependency) and hence we consider a Hidden Markov Model. A simulation study is carried out to evaluate the accuracy of the estimates in terms of classification. We also present an application to the analysis of public health surveillance systems.
- Published
- 2011
34. Isospin dependent multifragmentation of relativistic projectiles
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Ogul, R., Botvina, A. S., Atav, U., Buyukcizmeci, N., Mishustin, I. N., Adrich, P., Aumann, T., Bacri, C. O., Barczyk, T., Bassini, R., Bianchin, S., Boiano, C., Boudard, A., Brzychczyk, J., Chbihi, A., Cibor, J., Czech, B., De Napoli, M., Ducret, J. -E., Emling, H., Frankland, J. D., Hellstrom, M., Henzlova, D., Imme, G., Iori, I., Johansson, H., Kezzar, K., Lafriakh, A., Fevre, A. Le, Gentil, E. Le, Leifels, Y., Luhning, J., Lukasik, J., Lynch, W. G., Lynen, U., Majka, Z., Mocko, M., Muller, W. F. J., Mykulyak, A., Orth, H., Otte, A. N., Palit, R., Pawlowski, P., Pullia, A., Raciti, G., Rapisarda, E., Sann, H., Schwarz, C., Sfienti, C., Simon, H., Summerer, K., Trautmann, W., Tsang, M. B., Verde, G., Volant, C., Wallace, M., Weick, H., Wiechula, J., Wieloch, A., and Zwieglinski, B.
- Subjects
Nuclear Experiment ,Nuclear Theory - Abstract
The N/Z dependence of projectile fragmentation at relativistic energies has been studied with the ALADIN forward spectrometer at the GSI Schwerionen Synchrotron (SIS). Stable and radioactive Sn and La beams with an incident energy of 600 MeV per nucleon have been used in order to explore a wide range of isotopic compositions. For the interpretation of the data, calculations with the statistical multifragmentation model for a properly chosen ensemble of excited sources were performed. The parameters of the ensemble, representing the variety of excited spectator nuclei expected in a participant-spectator scenario, are determined empirically by searching for an optimum reproduction of the measured fragment-charge distributions and correlations. An overall very good agreement is obtained. The possible modification of the liquid-drop parameters of the fragment description in the hot freeze-out environment is studied, and a significant reduction of the symmetry-term coefficient is found necessary to reproduce the mean neutron-to-proton ratios
/Z and the isoscaling parameters of Z<=10 fragments. The calculations are, furthermore, used to address open questions regarding the modification of the surface-term coefficient at freeze-out, the N/Z dependence of the nuclear caloric curve, and the isotopic evolution of the spectator system between its formation during the initial cascade stage of the reaction and its subsequent breakup., Comment: 23 pages, 29 figures, published in Physical Review C - Published
- 2010
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35. Tracing a phase transition with fluctuations of the largest fragment size: Statistical multifragmentation models and the ALADIN S254 data
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Pietrzak, T., Adrich, P., Aumann, T., Bacri, C. O., Barczyk, T., Bassini, R., Bianchin, S., Boiano, C., Botvina, A. S., Boudard, A., Brzychczyk, J., Chbihi, A., Cibor, J., Czech, B., De Napoli, M., Ducret, J. -E., Emling, H., Frankland, J. D., Hellstrom, M., Henzlova, D., Imme, G., Iori, I., Johansson, H., Kezzar, K., Lafriakh, A., Fevre, A. Le, Gentil, E. Le, Leifels, Y., Luhning, J., Lukasik, J., Lynch, W. G., Lynen, U., Majka, Z., Mocko, M., Muller, W. F. J., Mykulyak, A., Orth, H., Otte, A. N., Palit, R., Pawlowski, P., Pullia, A., Raciti, G., Rapisarda, E., Sann, H., Schwarz, C., Sfienti, C., Simon, H., Summerer, K., Trautmann, W., Tsang, M. B., Verde, G., Volant, C., Wallace, M., Weick, H., Wiechula, J., Wieloch, A., and Zwieglinski, B.
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Nuclear Experiment ,Nuclear Theory - Abstract
A phase transition signature associated with cumulants of the largest fragment size distribution has been identified in statistical multifragmentation models and examined in analysis of the ALADIN S254 data on fragmentation of neutron-poor and neutron-rich projectiles. Characteristics of the transition point indicated by this signature are weakly dependent on the A/Z ratio of the fragmenting spectator source. In particular, chemical freeze-out temperatures are estimated within the range 5.9 to 6.5 MeV. The experimental results are well reproduced by the SMM model., Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, Proceedings of the International Workshop on Multifragmentation and Related Topics (IWM2009), Catania, Italy, November 2009.
- Published
- 2010
36. Isospin Diffusion in $^{58}$Ni-Induced Reactions at Intermediate Energies
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Galichet, E., Rivet, Marie-France, Borderie, B., Colonna, M., Bougault, R., Durand, D., Neindre, N. Le, Lopez, O., Manduci, L., Vient, E., Chbihi, A., Frankland, J. D., Wieleczko, J. P., Dayras, R., Volant, C., Guinet, D. C. R., Lautesse, P., Parlog, M., Rosato, E., and Vigilante, M.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
Isospin diffusion is probed as a function of the dissipated energy by studying two systems $^{58}$Ni+$^{58}$Ni and $^{58}$Ni+$^{197}$Au, over the incident energy range 52-74\AM. Experimental data are compared with the results of a microscopic transport model with two different parameterizations of the symmetry energy term. A better overall agreement between data and simulations is obtained when using a symmetry term with a potential part linearly increasing with nuclear density. The isospin equilibration time at 52 \AM{} is estimated to 130$\pm$10 fm/$c$.
- Published
- 2010
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37. Clustering based on Random Graph Model embedding Vertex Features
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Zanghi, Hugo, Volant, Stevenn, and Ambroise, Christophe
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Statistics - Applications - Abstract
Large datasets with interactions between objects are common to numerous scientific fields (i.e. social science, internet, biology...). The interactions naturally define a graph and a common way to explore or summarize such dataset is graph clustering. Most techniques for clustering graph vertices just use the topology of connections ignoring informations in the vertices features. In this paper, we provide a clustering algorithm exploiting both types of data based on a statistical model with latent structure characterizing each vertex both by a vector of features as well as by its connectivity. We perform simulations to compare our algorithm with existing approaches, and also evaluate our method with real datasets based on hyper-textual documents. We find that our algorithm successfully exploits whatever information is found both in the connectivity pattern and in the features.
- Published
- 2009
38. Isotopic Dependence of the Caloric Curve
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The ALADIN2000 Collaboration, Trautmann, W., Adrich, P., Aumann, T., Bacri, C. O., Barczyk, T., Bassini, R., Bianchin, S., Boiano, C., Botvina, A. S., Boudard, A., Brzychczyk, J., Chbihi, A., Cibor, J., Czech, B., De Napoli, M., Ducret, J. -E., Emling, H., Frankland, J. D., Hellstroem, M., Henzlova, D., Imme, G., Iori, I., Johansson, H., Kezzar, K., Lafriakh, A., Fevre, A. Le, Gentil, E. Le, Leifels, Y., Luehning, J., Lukasik, J., Lynch, W. G., Lynen, U., Majka, Z., Mocko, M., Mueller, W. F. J., Mykulyak, A., Orth, H., Otte, A. N., Palit, R., Pawlowski, P., Pullia, A., Raciti, G., Rapisarda, E., Sann, H., Schwarz, C., Sfienti, C., Simon, H., Suemmerer, K., Tsang, M. B., Verde, G., Volant, C., Wallace, M., Weick, H., Wiechula, J., Wieloch, A., and Zwieglinski, B.
- Subjects
Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
Isotopic effects in projectile fragmentation at relativistic energies have been studied with the ALADIN forward spectrometer at SIS. Stable and radioactive Sn and La beams with an incident energy of 600 MeV per nucleon have been used in order to explore a wide range of isotopic compositions. Chemical freeze-out temperatures are found to be nearly invariant with respect to the A/Z ratio of the produced spectator sources, consistent with predictions for expanded systems. Consequences for the proposed interpretation of chemical breakup temperatures as representing the limiting temperatures predicted by microscopic models are discussed., Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, contribution to proceedings of International School of Nuclear Physics, 30th Course, Heavy-Ion Collisions from the Coulomb Barrier to the Quark-Gluon Plasma, Erice-Sicily: 16 - 24 September 2008
- Published
- 2009
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39. Isotopic Dependence of the Nuclear Caloric Curve
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The ALADIN2000 Collaboration, Sfienti, C., Adrich, P., Aumann, T., Bacri, C. O., Barczyk, T., Bassini, R., Bianchin, S., Boiano, C., Botvina, A. S., Boudard, A., Brzychczyk, J., Chbihi, A., Cibor, J., Czech, B., De Napoli, M., Ducret, J. -E., Emling, H., Frankland, J. D., Hellstroem, M., Henzlova, D., Imme, G., Iori, I., Johansson, H., Kezzar, K., Lafriakh, A., Fevre, A. Le, Gentil, E. Le, Leifels, Y., Luehning, J., Lukasik, J., Lynch, W. G., Lynen, U., Majka, Z., Mocko, M., Mueller, W. F. J., Mykulyak, A., Orth, H., Otte, A. N., Palit, R., Pawlowski, P., Pullia, A., Raciti, G., Rapisarda, E., Sann, H., Schwarz, C., Simon, H., Suemmerer, K., Trautmann, W., Tsang, M. B., Verde, G., Volant, C., Wallace, M., Weick, H., Wiechula, J., Wieloch, A., and Zwieglinski, B.
- Subjects
Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The A/Z dependence of projectile fragmentation at relativistic energies has been studied with the ALADIN forward spectrometer at SIS. A stable beam of 124Sn and radioactive beams of 124La and 107Sn at 600 MeV per nucleon have been used in order to explore a wide range of isotopic compositions. Chemical freeze-out temperatures are found to be nearly invariant with respect to the A/Z of the produced spectator sources, consistent with predictions for expanded systems. Small Coulomb effects (\Delta T \approx 0.6 MeV) appear for residue production near the onset of multifragmentation., Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publ. in Phys. Rev. Lett
- Published
- 2009
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40. Design and Production of Full-Length, Biologically Inactive Botulinum Neurotoxin Serotypes to Serve as Natively Folded Antigens for Antitoxin Generation
- Author
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Modenbach, Jana Marielle, primary, Klepka, Carmen, additional, Weisemann, Jasmin, additional, Przykopanski, Adina, additional, Josuran, Roland, additional, Hobi, Patrizia, additional, Koller, Angelika, additional, Marechal, Maud, additional, Nahori, Marie-Anne, additional, Stevenn, Volant, additional, Gerber, Sabina M., additional, Lemichez, Emmanuel, additional, and Rummel, Andreas, additional
- Published
- 2024
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41. Do Firms Get “Stuck” Issuing Quarterly Earnings Guidance?
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Call, Andrew C., primary, Melessa, Sam, additional, and Volant, David, additional
- Published
- 2024
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42. Activation Levels, Cardiovascular Risk, and Functional Impairment in Remitted Bipolar Patients : Clinical Relevance of a Dimensional Approach
- Author
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FACE-BD collaborators, Dargél, Aroldo A., Volant, Stevenn, Saha, Soham, Etain, Bruno, Grant, Rebecca, Azorin, Jean-Michel, Gard, Sebastian, Bellivier, Frank, Bougerol, Thierry, Kahn, Jean-Pierre, Roux, Paul, Aubin, Valerie, Courtet, Philippe, Leboyer, Marion, Scott, Jan, and Henry, Chantal
- Published
- 2019
43. Isospin diffusion in semi-peripheral $^{58}Ni$ + $^{197}Au$ collisions at intermediate energies (I): Experimental results
- Author
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Galichet, E., Rivet, M. F., Borderie, B., Colonna, M., Bougault, R., Chbihi, A., Dayras, R., Durand, D., Frankland, J. D., Guinet, D. C. R., Lautesse, P., Neindre, N. Le, Lopez, O., Manduci, L., Parlog, M., Rosato, E., Tamain, B., Vient, E., Volant, C., and Wieleczko, J. P.
- Subjects
Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
Isospin diffusion in semi-peripheral collisions is probed as a function of the dissipated energy by studying two systems $^{58}Ni$ + $^{58}Ni$ and $^{58}Ni$ + $^{197}Au$, over the incident energy range 52-74\AM. A close examination of the multiplicities of light products in the forward part of phase space clearly shows an influence of the isospin of the target on the neutron richness of these products. A progressive isospin diffusion is observed when collisions become more central, in connection with the interaction time.
- Published
- 2008
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44. Production of medium-mass neutron-rich nuclei in reactions induced by 136Xe projectiles at 1 A GeV on a beryllium target
- Author
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Benlliure, J., Fernandez-Ordonez, M., Audouin, L., Boudard, A., Casarejos, E., Ducret, J. E., Enqvist, T., Heinz, A., Henzlova, D., Henzl, V., Kelic, A., Leray, S., Napolitani, P., Pereira, J., Rejmund, F., Ricciardi, M. V., Schmidt, K. -H., Schmitt, C., Stephan, C., Tassan-Got, L., Volant, C., Villagrasa, C., and Yordanov, O.
- Subjects
Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
Production cross sections of medium-mass neutron-rich nuclei obtained in the fragmentation of 136Xe projectiles at 1 A GeV have been measured with the FRagment Separator (FRS) at GSI. 125Pd was identified for the first time. The measured cross sections are compared to 238U fission yields and model calculations in order to determine the optimum reaction mechanism to extend the limits of the chart of the nuclides around the r-process waiting point at N=82., Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures
- Published
- 2008
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45. Experimental investigation of the residues produced in the 136Xe+Pb and 124Xe+Pb fragmentation reactions at 1 A GeV
- Author
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Henzlova, D., Schmidt, K. -H., Ricciardi, M. V., Kelic, A., Henzl, V., Napolitani, P., Audouin, L., Benlliure, J., Boudard, A., Casarejos, E., Ducret, J. E., Enqvist, T., Heinz, A., Junghans, A., Jurado, B., Krasa, A., Kurtukian, T., Leray, S., Ordonez, M. F., Pereira, J., Pleskac, R., Rejmund, F., Schmitt, C., Stephan, C., Tassan-Got, L., Villagrasa, C., Volant, C., Wagner, A., and Yordanov, O.
- Subjects
Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
This paper presents the nuclide cross sections and the longitudinal velocity distributions of residues produced in the reactions of 136Xe and 124Xe at 1 A GeV in a lead target, measured at the high-resolution magnetic spectrometer, the Fragment Separator (FRS) of GSI. The data cover a broad range of isotopes of the elements between Z = 3 and Z = 56 for 136Xe and between Z = 5 and Z = 55 for 124Xe, reaching down to cross sections of a few microbarns. The velocity distributions exhibit a Gaussian shape for masses above A = 20, while more complex behaviour is observed for lighter masses. The isotopic distributions for both reactions preserve a memory on the projectile N/Z ratio over the whole residue mass range., Comment: 31 pages, 9 figures, 1 table, background information on http://www.gsi.de/charms
- Published
- 2008
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46. N/Z Dependence of Projectile Fragmentation
- Author
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Trautmann, W., Adrich, P., Aumann, T., Bacri, C. O., Barczyk, T., Bassini, R., Bianchin, S., Boiano, C., Botvina, A. S., Boudard, A., Brzychczyk, J., Chbihi, A., Cibor, J., Czech, B., De Napoli, M., Ducret, J. -E., Emling, H., Frankland, J. D., Hellstroem, M., Henzlova, D., Imme, G., Iori, I., Johansson, H., Kezzar, K., Lafriakh, A., Fevre, A. Le, Gentil, E. Le, Leifels, Y., Luehning, J., Lukasik, J., Lynch, W. G., Lynen, U., Majka, Z., Mocko, M., Mueller, W. F. J., Mykulyak, A., Orth, H., Otte, A. N., Palit, R., Pawlowski, P., Pullia, A., Raciti, G., Rapisarda, E., Sann, H., Schwarz, C., Sfienti, C., Simon, H., Suemmerer, K., Tsang, M. B., Verde, G., Volant, C., Wallace, M., Weick, H., Wiechula, J., Wieloch, A., and Zwieglinski, B.
- Subjects
Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The N/Z dependence of projectile fragmentation at relativistic energies has been studied in a recent experiment at the GSI laboratory with the ALADiN forward spectrometer coupled to the LAND neutron detector. Besides a primary beam of 124Sn, also secondary beams of 124La and 107Sn delivered by the FRS fragment separator have been used in order to extend the range of isotopic compositions of the produced spectator sources. With the achieved mass resolution of \Delta A/A \approx 1.5%, lighter isotopes with atomic numbers Z \le 10 are individually resolved. The presently ongoing analyses of the measured isotope yields focus on isoscaling and its relation to the properties of hot fragments at freeze-out and on the derivation of chemical freeze-out temperatures which are found to be independent of the isotopic composition of the studied systems. The latter result is at variance with the predictions for limiting temperatures as obtained with finite-temperature Hartree-Fock calculations., Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, Proceedings of International Workshop on Nuclear Dynamics in Heavy-Ion Reactions and Neutron Stars, Beijing, July 10-14, 2007, to appear in International Journal of Modern Physics E
- Published
- 2007
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47. Source shape determination with directional fragment-fragment velocity correlations
- Author
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Fevre, A. Le, Schwarz, C., Auger, G., Begemann-Blaich, M. L., Bellaize, N., Bittiger, R., Bocage, F., Borderie, B., Bougault, R., Bouriquet, B., Charvet, J. L., Chbihi, A., Dayras, R., Durand, D., Frankland, J. D., Galichet, E., Gourio, D., Guinet, D., Hudan, S., Lautesse, P., Lavaud, F., Legrain, R., Lopez, O., Lukasik, J., Lynen, U., Mueller, W. F. J., Nalpas, L., Orth, H., Plagnol, E., Rosato, E., Saija, A., Sfienti, C., Tamain, B., Trautmann, W., Trzcinski, A., Turzo, K., Vient, E., Vigilante, M., Volant, C., and Zwieglinski, B.
- Subjects
Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
Correlation functions, constructed from directional projections of the relative velocities of fragments, are used to determine the shape of the breakup volume in coordinate space. For central collisions of 129Xe + natSn at 50 MeV per nucleon incident energy, measured with the 4pi multi-detector INDRA at GSI, a prolate shape aligned along the beam direction with an axis ratio of 1:0.7 is deduced. The sensitivity of the method is discussed in comparison with conventional fragment-fragment velocity correlations., Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, subm. to Phys. Lett. B
- Published
- 2007
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48. Coincidence measurement of residues and light particles in the reaction 56Fe+p at 1 GeV per nucleon with SPALADIN
- Author
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Gentil, E. Le, Aumann, T., Bacri, C. O., Benlliure, J., Bianchin, S., Böhmer, M., Boudard, A., Brzychczyk, J., Casarejos, E., Combet, M., Donadille, L., Ducret, J. E., Fernandez-Ordoñez, M., Gernhäuser, R., Johansson, H., Kezzar, K., Kurtukian-Nieto, T., Lafriakh, A., Lavaud, F., Fèvre, A. Le, Leray, S., Lühning, J., Lukasik, J., Lynen, U., Müller, W. F., Pawlowski, P., Pietri, S., Rejmund, F., Schwarz, C., Sfienti, C., Simon, H., Trautmann, W., Volant, C., and Yordanov, O.
- Subjects
Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The spallation of $^{56}$Fe in collisions with hydrogen at 1 A GeV has been studied in inverse kinematics with the large-aperture setup SPALADIN at GSI. Coincidences of residues with low-center-of-mass kinetic energy light particles and fragments have been measured allowing the decomposition of the total reaction cross-section into the different possible de-excitation channels. Detailed information on the evolution of these de-excitation channels with excitation energy has also been obtained. The comparison of the data with predictions of several de-excitation models coupled to the INCL4 intra-nuclear cascade model shows that only GEMINI can reasonably account for the bulk of collected results, indicating that in a light system with no compression and little angular momentum, multifragmentation might not be necessary to explain the data., Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, revised version accepted in Phys. Rev. Lett
- Published
- 2007
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49. Discriminant Analysis and Secondary-Beam Charge Recognition
- Author
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Lukasik, J., Adrich, P., Aumann, T., Bacri, C. O., Barczyk, T., Bassini, R., Bianchin, S., Boiano, C., Botvina, A. S., Boudard, A., Brzychczyk, J., Chbihi, A., Cibor, J., Czech, B., Ducret, J. -E., Emling, H., Frankland, J., Hellstroem, M., Henzlova, D., Imme, G., Iori, I., Johansson, H., Kezzar, K., Lafriakh, A., Fevre, A. Le, Gentil, E. Le, Leifels, Y., Luehning, J., Lynch, W. G., Lynen, U., Majka, Z., Mocko, M., Mueller, W. F. J., Mykulyak, A., De Napoli, M., Orth, H., Otte, A. N., Palit, R., Pawlowski, P., Pullia, A., Raciti, G., Rapisarda, E., Sann, H., Schwarz, C., Sfienti, C., Simon, H., Summerer, K., Trautmann, W., Tsang, M. B., Verde, G., Volant, C., Wallace, M., Weick, H., Wiechula, J., Wieloch, A., and Zwieglinski, B.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The discriminant-analysis method has been applied to optimize the exotic-beam charge recognition in a projectile fragmentation experiment. The experiment was carried out at the GSI using the fragment separator (FRS) to produce and select the relativistic secondary beams, and the ALADIN setup to measure their fragmentation products following collisions with Sn target nuclei. The beams of neutron poor isotopes around 124La and 107Sn were selected to study the isospin dependence of the limiting temperature of heavy nuclei by comparing with results for stable 124Sn projectiles. A dedicated detector to measure the projectile charge upstream of the reaction target was not used, and alternative methods had to be developed. The presented method, based on the multivariate discriminant analysis, allowed to increase the efficacy of charge recognition up to about 90%, which was about 20% more than achieved with the simple scalar methods., Comment: 6 pages, 7 eps figures, elsart, submitted to Nucl. Instr. and Meth. A
- Published
- 2007
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50. Measurement of the complete nuclide production and kinetic energies of the system 136Xe + hydrogen at 1 GeV per nucleon
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Napolitani, P., Schmidt, K. -H., Tassan-Got, L., Armbruster, P., Enqvist, T., Heinz, A., Henzl, V., Henzlova, D., Kelic, A., Pleskac, R., Ricciardi, M. V., Schmitt, C., Yordanov, O., Audouin, L., Bernas, M., Lafriaskh, A., Rejmund, F., Stephan, C., Benlliure, J., Casarejos, E., Ordonez, M. Fernandez, Pereira, J., Boudard, A., Fernandez, B., Leray, S., Villagrasa, C., and Volant, C.
- Subjects
Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
We present an extensive overview of production cross sections and kinetic energies for the complete set of nuclides formed in the spallation of 136Xe by protons at the incident energy of 1 GeV per nucleon. The measurement was performed in inverse kinematics at the FRagment Separator (GSI, Darmstadt). Slightly below the Businaro-Gallone point, 136Xe is the stable nuclide with the largest neutron excess. The kinematic data and cross sections collected in this work for the full nuclide production are a general benchmark for modelling the spallation process in a neutron-rich nuclear system, where fission is characterised by predominantly mass-asymmetric splits., Comment: 18 pages, 14 figures
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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