V
Valérie Julia
Researcher at University of Nice Sophia Antipolis
Publications - 36
Citations - 2649
Valérie Julia is an academic researcher from University of Nice Sophia Antipolis. The author has contributed to research in topics: Antigen & Immune system. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 36 publications receiving 2358 citations. Previous affiliations of Valérie Julia include Nestlé & French Institute of Health and Medical Research.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Breast milk-mediated transfer of an antigen induces tolerance and protection from allergic asthma.
Valérie Verhasselt,Valérie Verhasselt,Valerie Milcent,Valerie Milcent,Julie Cazareth,Julie Cazareth,Akira Kanda,Akira Kanda,Akira Kanda,Sébastien Fleury,Sébastien Fleury,Sébastien Fleury,David Dombrowicz,David Dombrowicz,David Dombrowicz,Nicolas Glaichenhaus,Nicolas Glaichenhaus,Valérie Julia,Valérie Julia +18 more
TL;DR: It is found that airborne antigens were efficiently transferred from the mother to the neonate through milk and that tolerance induction did not require the transfer of immunoglobulins, paving the way for the design of new strategies to prevent the development of allergic diseases.
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Resistance to Leishmania major Induced by Tolerance to a Single Antigen
TL;DR: Mice made tolerant to LACK by the transgenic expression of the antigen in the thymus exhibited both a diminished TH2 response and a healing phenotype, suggesting that T cells that are activated early and are reactive to a single antigen play a pivotal role in directing the immune response to the entire parasite.
Journal ArticleDOI
A Restricted Subset of Dendritic Cells Captures Airborne Antigens and Remains Able to Activate Specific T Cells Long after Antigen Exposure
Valérie Julia,Edith M. Hessel,Laurent Malherbe,Nicolas Glaichenhaus,Anne O'Garra,Robert L. Coffman +5 more
TL;DR: The migration of LACK-specific Th2 cells to the airways was tracked using multimers of I-A(d) molecules bound to a LACK peptide as probes to explain the chronic Th2 airway inflammation characteristic of allergic asthma.
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Breast milk immune complexes are potent inducers of oral tolerance in neonates and prevent asthma development
Eric Mosconi,Eric Mosconi,Akila Rekima,Akila Rekima,Barbara Seitz-Polski,Barbara Seitz-Polski,Akira Kanda,Akira Kanda,Akira Kanda,Sébastien Fleury,Sébastien Fleury,Sébastien Fleury,Emilie Tissandie,Emilie Tissandie,Renato C. Monteiro,Renato C. Monteiro,David Dombrowicz,David Dombrowicz,David Dombrowicz,Valérie Julia,Valérie Julia,Nicolas Glaichenhaus,Nicolas Glaichenhaus,Valérie Verhasselt,Valérie Verhasselt +24 more
TL;DR: It is found that breastfeeding by antigen-sensitized mothers exposed to antigen aerosols during lactation induced a robust and long-lasting antigen-specific protection from asthma.
Journal ArticleDOI
The impact of diet on asthma and allergic diseases
TL;DR: Recent evidence is discussed that highlights the role of diet as a key factor influencing immune homeostasis and the development of allergic diseases through a complex interplay between nutrients, their metabolites and immune cell populations.