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Blood, 1 March 2004, Vol. 103, No. 5, pp. 1838-1845. Prepublished online as a Blood First Edition Paper on October 30, 2003; DOI 10.1182/blood-2003-07-2440.
NEOPLASIA A neutralizing monoclonal antibody (mAb A24) directed against the transferrin receptor induces apoptosis of tumor T lymphocytes from ATL patientsFrom the Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM) E-0225, Faculté deMédecine Xavier Bichat, Paris, France; Centre National de Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) FRE-2444, Hôpital Necker, Paris, France; Plateforme de Biophysique des Macromolécules et de leurs Interactions, Institut Pasteur, Paris, France; INSERM U-409, Faculté de Médecine Xavier Bichat, Paris, France; Departments of Internal Medicine and Biochemistry, American University of Beirut, Beirut, Lebanon; and Department of Clinical Hematology, Hôpital Necker, Paris, France
Adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma (ATL) is an aggressive lymphoid proliferative disease that exists under diverse clinical forms ranging from chronic to acute. Although leukemic cells from patients with ATL exhibit an intrinsic resistance to chemotherapy, monoclonal antibodies directed against CD25 (interleukin 2 receptor [IL-2R ] antibody) have been used as specific therapeutic agents. However, significant clinical results with these antibodies have been demonstrated only in chronic forms of ATL. In contrast to resting T cells, human T-cell lymphotropic virus type 1 (HTLV-1)infected cells constitutively express high levels of surface transferrin receptor (TfR). Herein, we report the characterization of a new monoclonal antibody (mAb A24) directed against the human TfR and the evaluation of its capacity to block the proliferation of ATL cells ex vivo. We determined that A24 binds TfR with an equilibrium constant (K'd) of 2.7 nM and competes with transferrin for binding to TfR. A24 also inhibited [55Fe]-transferrin uptake in activated T cells and blocked T-cell proliferation. Moreover, A24 reduced and impaired TfR expression and recycling, respectively. Most important, we showed that A24 blocked the ex vivo proliferation of malignant T cells from both acute and chronic forms of ATL, through induction of programmed cell death. Therefore efficient therapeutic tools to treat acute forms of ATL might be derived from A24.
Adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma (ATL) is an aggressive lymphoproliferative disorder associated with the human T-cell lymphotropic virus type 1 (HTLV-1).1 HTLV-1 infection is endemic mainly in Japan and in the Caribbean, affecting 20 to 30 million individuals worldwide. HTLV-1 was the first human retrovirus in which monoclonal provirus integration in the host cellular DNA was observed. ATL occurs in only 2% to 4% of people infected with HTLV-1. The tumor syndrome comprises a proliferation of tumor CD4+ T cells in peripheral blood, lytic bone lesions, and multiple visceral lesions with skin and lung infiltration.2 It exhibits diverse clinical features ranging from chronic to acute forms.
Smoldering and chronic forms exhibit a relatively good prognosis with an indefinite or 36-month median survival time, respectively. In these forms it is not yet demonstrated that treatment may improve prognosis and reduce the risk of evolution toward an acute form. In contrast, acute leukemic and lymphomatous forms of ATL have a very bad prognosis with a median survival of only 6 and 10 months, respectively, and a projected 4-year survival of about 5%. This is principally due to a severe immunodeficiency associated in some cases with opportunistic infections3 and to an intrinsic resistance to high doses of chemotherapy. Novel treatments, such as the association of interferon
HTLV-1infected T cells overexpress markers of T-cell activation such as interleukin 2 receptor The transferrin receptor (TfR) is another inducible receptor that is overexpressed in ATL cells,13 whereas its background level in resting cells is very low. TfR is a disulfide-linked homodimeric transmembrane glycoprotein consisting of two 760amino acid monomers of approximately 90 kDa each. TfR plays a crucial role in the regulation of iron uptake and cell growth.14,15 When diferric transferrin binds to its cell surface receptor, it is internalized via clathrin-coated pits to acidic vesicles where the iron-transferrin complex is dissociated.16,17 After release, the receptor and apotransferrin recycle back to the cell surface. TfR is constitutively expressed in cells of tissues that are constantly renewed, such as precursors of blood cells in the bone marrow, hepatocytes in the liver, keratinocytes in the epidermis, and enterocytes in crypts of intestinal epithelium.17-20 More importantly, several studies have shown that TfR is expressed more abundantly in malignant tissues than in their healthy counterparts.20-22 Therefore, TfR could be a relevant target for new antibody-based therapies against tumors. Several authors have reported therapeutic approaches based on this idea using anti-TfR antibodies or transferrin itself conjugated to drugs to kill malignant cells.23-25 It has been shown that neutralizing anti-TfR antibodies can block the interaction between transferrin and TfR, and consequently iron uptake, leading to iron deprivation and negative regulation of cell growth. In this work, we have investigated the level of expression of TfR in tumor cells from acute and chronic ATL forms and the in vitro impact of a new neutralizing anti-TfR monoclonal antibody (mAb), A24,26 on cell proliferation and survival. We show that TfR is expressed on ATL lymphocytes, both in acute and chronic ATL forms. More importantly, we demonstrate that A24 is efficient in promoting the death of malignant cells from chronic and acute forms of ATL through induction of apoptosis.
Reagents and antibodies
IL-2 and phytohemagglutinin (PHA) were both from Roche Diagnostics (Meylan, France). AntiCD25-fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC), antiCD3-allophycocyanin (APC), antiTfR-phycoerythrin (PE), irrelevant mouse IgG-FITC, mouse IgG-APC, and mouse IgG-PE isotype controls were all from Immunotech (Marseille, France). Chemotherapeutic agents were used at the following concentrations: zidovudine (AZT; Wellcome Research Labs, Beckenham, United Kingdom) at 0.2 µM, antiIL-2R Isolation and culture of cells Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) were isolated as described28 earlier by the standard Ficoll-Paque method (Amersham Life Science, Buckinghamshire, United Kingdom). Healthy volunteers and 4 patients with acute ATL and 3 with chronic ATL (classified following Shirono criteria)29 had all given their informed consent. The study was approved by the ethics committee of Hôpital Pitié Salpetrière (Paris, France). ATL tumor cells represented between 60% and 90% of the T-cell population. Each cell type was freshly cultured in conditioned RPMI 1640 medium supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum (FCS; Gibco, Grand Island, NY) and a mixture of IL-2 (20 U/mL) and PHA (4 µg/mL). Mixed leukocyte reaction (MLR) was performed as described earlier.30 CIB tropical spastic paraparesis (HAM/TSP) cell line was cultured in RPMI 1640 medium supplemented with 10% FCS. Flow cytometry For single-, double-, and 3-color flow cytometry, cells were incubated for 15 minutes at 4°C in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), 2% FCS, and 0.1% NaN3, with FITC-, APC- and PE-conjugated anti-CD25, anti-CD3, and anti-CD71specific antibodies or with control isotype-matched irrelevant antibodies at the appropriate concentration (Immunotech, Marseille, France). After washing, 2 x 104 events were analyzed with a FACScan (Becton Dickinson, Heidelberg, Germany). Confocal microscopy CIB cells were plated on slides coated with poly-L-lysine (Sigma) and incubated for 30 minutes at 4°C. Cells were then labeled with the mAb A24 at 10 µg/mL during 30 minutes at 4°C. After 2 washes in PBS/2% FCS, cells were plated in RPMI 1640 with 10% FCS for various times at 37°C or kept on ice. Cells were then fixed in 1% paraformaldehyde, quenched with 0.1 M glycine, and permeabilized with 1% saponin in PBS containing 1% bovine serum albumin. Primary antibodies were revealed by a goat antimouse IgG conjugated to Cy-5 (Jackson ImmunoResearch, West Grove, PA). After 2 additional washes in PBS/2% FCS, cells were incubated for 5 minutes with 2 µg/mL wheat-germ agglutinin (WGA) conjugated to Alexa-488 to delineate the plasma membrane and washed again. Mounted slides were examined with a confocal laser microscope system (LSM 510; Carl Zeiss, Göttingen, Germany). Proliferation assay
PBMCs were resuspended in RPMI 1640 with 10% FCS and added in triplicate at the concentration of 105 cells/well in 96-well tissue culture plates (Falcon, Oxnard, CA). Proliferation was measured over 18 hours, using pulses with 1 µCi/well (0.037 MBq/well) [3H]-thymidine (Amersham Life Science). Cells were then harvested with a 96-well Harvester (Pharmacia, St Quentin, France) and collected on filters (Pharmacia); and the incorporation of [3H]-thymidine was measured with Assay for apoptosis Two million PBMCs from patients with HTLV-1 were treated for 96 hours with IL-2 and PHA in the presence or absence of A24 (10 µg/mL), 30.9 (10 µg/mL), or the apoptosis-inducing agent VP16 (100 ng/mL). Cells were then washed with ice-cold PBS and incubated with a combination of annexin VFITC and propidium iodide (PI; Beckman Coulter), according to the manufacturer's recommendations. Alternatively, the apoptosis was evaluated through mitochondrial membrane depolarization with DIOC (3,3'-dihexyloxacarbocyanine) staining (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) as described earlier.31 [55Fe]-transferrin uptake studies
Apo-transferrin was loaded with [55Fe] to 99% saturation as described.32 PBMCs cultured at 1 x 106/mL for 48 hours in PHA/IL-2conditioned medium were exposed to 2.5 µM [55Fe]-transferrin for the times indicated. At the end of the uptake time, cells were washed 4 times in PBS and lysed in 0.1% Triton X-100 in PBS. Radioactivity per gram protein in the lysates was counted in a Surface plasmon resonance assays All the assays were performed on a BIAcore 2000 instrument equilibrated at 25°C with PBS plus 0.005% Tween-20 at a flow rate of 50 µL/min. The Penta-His mAb (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) was covalently immobilized on the carboxymethylated surface of a CM5 sensorchip, using the Amine Coupling Kit (BIAcore, Paris, France). Production and purification of soluble TfR was previously described.33 Recombinant (His)6-tagged TfR1 ectodomain (TfR-(His)6) was captured to a level of 120 resonance units (RU; low density) or 1650 RU (high density) on the anti(His)6 surface. Ten different concentrations of mAb A24 (1-500 nM) or of Fe-transferrin (0.25-150 nM) were then injected across the anti(His)6/TfR-(His)6 surface for 4 minutes, and the dissociation of the complexes was followed for 5 minutes. Control experiments were performed by injecting A24 or Fe-transferrin directly onto the anti(His)6 surface. The association and dissociation profiles were analyzed with a nonlinear least squares algorithm implemented in the BIAevaluation 3.0 software (BIAcore), using single-exponential functions of time. For the competition experiments, saturating A24 or Fe-transferrin (300 nM) was injected onto the low-density anti(His)6/TfR-(His)6 surface, followed 1 minute later by, respectively, Fe-transferrin or A24 (15 nM). The resulting association profiles were compared with those obtained without the preliminary saturation step (control injection of buffer).
A24 inhibits the proliferation of activated T cells
Previously, A24 was characterized as a mAb directed against TfR.26 Because TfR expression is required for T-cell growth, we tested whether TfR targeting by A24 could inhibit cell proliferation. Thus, PBMCs were activated for 72 hours with PHA/IL-2 in the presence of different concentrations of A24 or the isotype-matched control 30.9. A24 efficiently reduced cell proliferation (50% inhibitory concentration [IC50] 0.5 µg/mL or 3 nM, Figure 1A). In contrast, 30.9 did not interfere with PHA/IL-2induced cell proliferation. To test if A24 could also block physiologically activated T-cell proliferation, we examined the effect of A24 in allogeneic MLRs. Coculture of dendritic cells, activated by tumor necrosis factor
ATL cells express TfR, and A24 inhibits the proliferation of cells from chronic and acute forms of ATL and the emergence of HTLV-1infected T-cell clones It was previously shown that the in vitro infection of T cells with HTLV-1 induces the up-regulation of TfR on the cell surface.34 Figure 2A shows the differential expression of TfR in freshly isolated and in vitro cultures of T cells from healthy individuals and from patients suffering from acute and chronic forms of ATL. As reported earlier,35 noninfected and nonstimulated T cells (gated as CD3+ cells) showed a weak expression of TfR, whereas PHA/IL-2activated T cells expressed high levels of TfR. HTLV-1infected T cells from acute forms of ATL expressed TfR at levels higher than those observed in T cells from chronic ATL forms. HUT-102 and MT2 cell lines (HTLV-1transformed cell lines) expressed TfR at lower levels than in the Jurkat T-cell line. TfR expression was correlated to the extent of T-cell activation as assessed by CD25 expression (Figure 2B). Accordingly, T cells from chronic forms of ATL expressed both CD25 and TfR at lower level than T cells from acute forms of ATL (Figure 2B). Cultures of leukemic T cells derived from ATL patients in the presence of PHA/IL-2 retained their activated phenotype (data not shown).
We then looked into the possibility of using A24 as an inhibitor of proliferation in cultures of PBMCs derived from patients with ATL. Although somewhat less efficiently than in PBMCs from healthy individuals (Figure 2C), A24 significantly blocked cell proliferation in cultures of cells from both acute and chronic forms of ATL. HTLV-1infected cells can proliferate in vitro, but the clones that proliferate in culture are generally not the same as those that proliferate in the patient. To verify if A24 could inhibit the emergence of HTLV-1infected T-cell clones, we cultured cells freshly isolated from patients and from healthy individuals in the presence or absence of A24. After 2 weeks of culture, the appearance of proliferating cells was assessed by [3H]-thymidine incorporation. A single dose of A24 added during the first day of culture significantly inhibited the proliferation of infected T-cell clones (Figure 2D). Control antibody 30.9 had no statistically significant effect on HTLV-1 clone proliferation. As a positive control, Ars was more efficient than A24 in blocking tumor T-cell proliferation.
A24 blocks the ex vivo proliferation of cells from acute ATL forms resistant to antiIL-2R
TfR expression is essential for the proliferation of both normal and malignant T cells. Although TfR expression in normal T cells is tightly coupled to IL-2R expression, TfR expression in malignant cells is usually constitutive. It was previously shown that the antiIL-2R
Comparative effect of A24 and chemotherapies on malignant ATL cells
We next examined the effect of the association of A24 with different chemotherapeutic agents on malignant ATL cell proliferation. Figure 4 shows that the association of chemotherapeutic agents with A24 can improve the inhibition of tumor cells' proliferation. The major inhibitory effect is observed when A24 is associated with AZT, IFN-
A24 competes with Fe-Tf for TfR binding To gain insight into the mechanism of inhibition of cell proliferation by A24, a series of surface plasmon resonance experiments was performed to determine the binding properties of mAb A24 and Fe-Tf to the soluble TfR1 ectodomain. A24 interacted with TfR with an equilibrium constant (K'd) of 2.69 nM compared with 0.983 nM for Fe-Tf (Table 1). We then performed competition experiments to determine if the A24-binding sites on TfR overlapped with those of Fe-Tf. The saturation of TfR with A24 partially impaired Fe-Tf binding and, reciprocally, the saturation of TfR with Fe-Tf partially prevented A24 from binding (Figure 5A-B).
The affinity of A24 for a low-density surface of TfR was 3 times lower than that of Fe-Tf. However, unlike the monovalent ligand Tf, A24 possesses 2 binding sites, and therefore the avidity of this bivalent IgG could be dependent on the available density of the receptor on the cell surface. To mimic this situation, we captured different amounts of TfR-(His)6 on an anti(His)6 sensorchip. The dissociation rate (koff) of the A24/TfR complex was 6 times lower when TfR was available at higher densities. In contrast, the koff, and therefore the t1/2, of the Fe-Tf/TfR complex was not influenced by the density of TfR (Table 1; Figure 5C-D). This experiment suggests that A24 could preferentially bind to cells expressing high levels of TfR, that is, malignant cells. A24 inhibits the [55Fe]-Tf uptake by activated T cells These results suggested that by interfering with Fe-Tf association with TfR, A24 could inhibit Fe-Tf uptake. To test this hypothesis, PBMCs from healthy donors were cultured in PHA/IL-2conditioned medium and were incubated with [55Fe]-Tf in the presence of A24 (at 10 µg/mL) or of an irrelevant isotype-matched control (antibody 30.9). As shown in Figure 6A, A24 drastically inhibited [55Fe]-Tf uptake in PHA/IL-2activated T cells, reaching a maximum of 80% inhibition after 2 hours of culture.
A24 abrogates the recycling of TfR by HTLV-1infected cells Endocytosis of transferrin via TfR is a well-established phenomenon. Diferric transferrin binds to TfR on the cell surface and is endocytosed in peripheral cytoplasmic sorting endosomes (pH 6.2) and recycling endosomes (pH 6.4). After iron dissociation, apotransferrin and TfR recycle back to the cell surface. It was previously shown that cross-linking of TfR by anti-TfR antibodies could induce the down-regulation of TfR expression36 in tumor cells. To examine whether A24 could affect TfR expression at the cell surface, we cultured nonstimulated or stimulated PBMCs in the presence or absence of A24. A24 drastically down-regulated TfR at the cell surface in normal cells stimulated by PHA/IL-2 (Figure 6B). In addition, A24 down-regulated the expression of TfR in ex vivo cell cultures from chronic and acute forms of ATL by more than 75%, and it did not interfere with CD25 expression (Figure 6B). A24 had no effect on the expression of TfR in normal nonactivated T cells (data not shown). Because ATL cells produce high levels of both IL-2 and IL-15, we also tested the effect of A24 on HTLV-1infected cells from acute ATL donors cultured in IL-15 or IL-2/IL-15conditioned medium. We observed a more than 65% down-regulation of TfR expression in both cases (data not shown). TfR is constantly recycled in the cell with a t1/2 as low as 15 minutes. To test the ability of A24 to interfere with this recycling, malignant activated T cells (CIB cell line, derived from a HTLV-1 patient) were treated with A24 at 4°C to block vesicular trafficking. After 30 minutes of incubation at 4°C, cells were washed and cultured at 37°C for up to 180 minutes; A24 was localized by confocal microscopy. Cells that were only incubated at 4°C expressed the TfR complex in their membrane, as evidenced by the colocalization of A24 and WGA. After 15 minutes of culture, the presence of TfR in submembrane vesicular compartments was consistent with TfR recycling. However, after longer periods of culture, the A24-treated TfRs had not recycled to the cell surface, but instead, they had been directed to polarized intracellular compartments resembling endolysosomal vesicles. (Figure 6C). A24 induces apoptosis of activated ATL tumor cells Iron deprivation induces a variety of consequences, such as the reduction of cell proliferation and the activation of programmed cell death,37 a phenomenon associated with phosphatidylserine exposure and mitochondrial membrane depolarization. To determine whether A24 induced apoptosis, cells treated with A24 were assayed for the translocation of phosphatidylserine from the inner to the outer leaflet of the plasma membrane by using the annexin V affinity assay. Dead cells were stained by PI, which enters cells that have a disrupted plasma membrane and intercalates to DNA. Following treatment with A24, tumor cells derived from patients with acute ATL showed an increase in the number of dead cells (annexin VPI bright) compared with cells treated with the control antibody. VP16 at 100 ng/mL was used as an apoptosis-positive control (Figure 7A). In ATL tumor T cells, a large population that stained brightly with annexin V appeared after treatment with A24 or VP16. Apoptosis induced by A24 in the TSP-derived cell line CIB (a cell model of nonacute ATL) was also analyzed. A24 induced apoptosis of the CIB cell line cultured without PHAIL-2 (Figure 7A). As a control we included an analysis of normal and untreated PBMCs that are not proliferating and that do not undergo spontaneous apoptosis in the absence of activating factors. These cells were not sensitive to A24 (Figure 7A). DIOC was used to examine whether mitochondrial depolarization was involved in A24-dependent apoptosis. The drastic reduction in the DIOC concentration that was observed after exposure to A24 or VP16 showed that apoptosis was induced through the mitochondrial pathway (Figure 7B).
ATL is a rapidly progressive and usually fatal malignancy of HTLV-1infected mature T cells, which remains a challenge for clinicians. Until now, proposed therapies for this disease have not significantly increased the survival of patients.38 Thus, the development of alternative therapies against ATL lymphoma is essential. HTLV-1infected T cells are characterized by their activated phenotype. This characteristic provides a specific rationale for anti-ATL therapies. Herein, we demonstrate that a new anti-TfR neutralizing antibody (A24) induces the apoptosis of highly proliferating ATL malignant T cells. We have demonstrated that A24 competes with Fe-Tf for binding to TfR. This competition has 2 consequences: first, a decrease in Fe-Tf uptake, and second, a redirection of TfR to endolysosomal-like compartments, which impairs TfR recycling. The combined result of these 2 effects is a dramatic iron deprivation for the target cells. This leads to inhibition of the cell proliferation and to apoptosis. It was recently shown that a nonblocking antirat TfR engineered with avidin (anti-TfR-Av) also triggers TfR endocytosis, inhibits cell proliferation, and induces apoptosis against myeloma cell line Y3-Ag1.2.3 and rat T-cell lymphoma cell line C58 (NT) D1.G.OVAR.1 cells, but only when aggregated.25 Interestingly, A24 did not require aggregation to induce apoptosis. A24 is highly efficient, although its affinity for TfR is lower than that of Tf. Interestingly, we demonstrated that, in contrast to Tf, the apparent affinity (avidity) of A24 for TfR significantly increased with the density of the receptor, a consequence of the bivalency of the mAb. This could explain why A24 is more efficient against malignant T cells than against their normal counterparts in a physiologic environment. A24 appears to be at least 5 times more efficient than the previously described mAb 42/6 (a murine antihuman TfR IgA) in inhibiting proliferation of T-cell lines.23 Importantly, the TfR epitope recognized by both antibodies does not seem to be identical. Indeed, 42/6 appears to inhibit Tf binding to TfR by a noncompetitive mechanism.39 In contrast, our surface plasmon resonance results demonstrate that A24 prevents Tf from binding to TfR in a competitive manner, suggesting that A24 and Tf bind to the same, or overlapping, sites. Physiologic consequences of the interaction of A24 and 42/6 with the target cell are also different. Although 42/6 has a profound effect on the S phase of the cell cycle,23,40 A24 acts by inducing the apoptosis of target cells.
These results suggest that A24 could be efficient in killing tumor cells by itself. Hege et al have shown that anti-TfR antibodies can be used to target liposomes specifically to ATL malignant cell lines MT-1 and HUT-102. The authors studied the capacity of the liposome-conjugated antibodies for specific binding, internalization, and intracellular drug delivery.41 Interestingly, drug-containing anti-TfR liposomes were 40 to 60 times more effective in inhibiting the growth of the ATL cell lines than antiIL-2R
The establishment of an in vivo model of ATL using NOD/SCID mice provided a fundamental step for the evaluation of new ATL immunotherapies.42,43 Anti-CD2 and antiIL-2R
Treatment of HTLV-1associated myelopathy/tropical spastic paraparesis (HAM/TSP) with antiIL-2R Aggressive forms of ATL are often accompanied by an important tumoral syndrome characterized by massive lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, lytic bone lesions, multiple visceral lesions, and skin and lung infiltration. Acute ATL forms have a poor prognosis with a median survival of 6 months.
Here, we have shown that A24 can specifically bind highly proliferating T cells, inhibit cell proliferation, and induce apoptosis even in antiIL-2R
We also showed that the association of A24 with ATL chemotherapies including VP16, or the combination of both AZT and IFN- Taken together, our results suggest that A24 immunotherapy may represent a novel and efficient tool in the treatment of HTLV-1related diseases.
We thank Pamela J Bjorkman for providing us with the lytic baculovirus/insect cell recombinant soluble version of human TfR.
Submitted July 18, 2003; accepted October 16, 2003.
Prepublished online as Blood First Edition Paper, October 30, 2003; DOI 10.1182/blood-2003-07-2440.
Supported by grants from Arecca and la Ligue contre le Cancer. I.C.M. and Y.L. were both recipients of la Ligue contre le Cancer fellowship.
I.C.M. and Y.L. contributed equally to this work.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge payment. Therefore, and solely to indicate this fact, this article is hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. section 1734.
Reprints: Olivier Hermine, Hôpital Necker, 161 rue de Sèvres, 75743 Paris Cedex 15, France; e-mail: hermine{at}necker.fr; or Renato C. Monteiro, Faculté de Médecine Xavier Bichat, 16, rue Henri Huchard 75018 Paris Cedex 15, France; e-mail: monteiro{at}bichat.inserm.fr.
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