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Aymeric Neyret

Researcher at University of Montpellier

Publications -  19
Citations -  1266

Aymeric Neyret is an academic researcher from University of Montpellier. The author has contributed to research in topics: Virus & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 12 publications receiving 1046 citations. Previous affiliations of Aymeric Neyret include Centre national de la recherche scientifique.

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Biology of Zika Virus Infection in Human Skin Cells

TL;DR: It is shown that human dermal fibroblasts, epidermal keratinocytes, and immature dendritic cells are permissive to the most recent ZikV isolate, responsible for the epidemic in French Polynesia, and a major role is shown for the phosphatidylserine receptor AXL as a ZIKV entry receptor and for cellular autophagy in enhancing ZIKv replication in permissive cells.
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Coxiella burnetii effector CvpB modulates phosphoinositide metabolism for optimal vacuole development

TL;DR: Coxiella vacuolar protein B (CvpB) is described as a Coxiella effector that interacts with phosphoinositides on host cell membranes and manipulates phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate [PI(3)P] metabolism for optimalcoxiella-containing vacuole (CCV) development.
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CFTR Protects against Mycobacterium abscessus Infection by Fine-Tuning Host Oxidative Defenses

TL;DR: A CFTR-depleted zebrafish model is exploited, recapitulating CF immuno-pathogenesis, to study the contribution of CFTR in innate immunity against M. abscessus by mounting effective oxidative responses.
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Human keratinocytes restrict chikungunya virus replication at a post-fusion step

TL;DR: It is reported that chikungunya virus rapidly elicits an innate immune response in these cells leading to the enhanced transcription of type I/II and type III interferon genes, and keratinocytes behave as an antiviral defense against CHIKV infection rather than as a primary targets for initial replication.
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HIV-1 nucleocapsid and ESCRT-component Tsg101 interplay prevents HIV from turning into a DNA-containing virus

TL;DR: The results highlight the role of GagNC in the spatiotemporal control of RTion, via an ESCRT-I-dependent mechanism and reveal that DNA virus production is the consequence of budding defects associated with Gag aggregation at the plasma membrane and deficiency in the recruitment of Tsg101, a key ESC RT-I component.