Alain Boom
Université libre de Bruxelles
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Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology | 1999
Philippe Golstein; Alain Boom; J. van Geffel; Paul Jacobs; B. Masereel; Renaud Beauwens
Abstract Glibenclamide is well known to interact with the sulphonylurea receptor (SUR) and has been shown more recently to inhibit the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator protein (CFTR), both proteins that are members of the ABC [adenosine 5′-triphosphate (ATP)-binding cassette] transporters. The effect of glibenclamide and two synthetic sulphonylcyanoguanidine derivatives (dubbed BM-208 and BM-223) was examined on P-glycoprotein, the major ABC transporter responsible for multidrug resistance (MDR) in cancer cells. To this end, we employed different cell lines that do or do not express P-glycoprotein, as confirmed by Western blotting: first, a tumour cell line (VBL600) selected from a human T-cell line (CEM) derived from an acute leukaemia; second, an epithelial cell line derived from a rat colonic adenocarcinoma (CC531mdr+) and finally, a non tumour epithelial cell line derived from the proximal tubule of the opossum kidney (OK). Glibenclamide and the two related derivatives inhibited P-glycoprotein because firstly, they acutely increased [3H]colchicine accumulation in P-glycoprotein-expressing cell lines only; secondly BM-223 reversed the MDR phenomenon, quite similarly to verapamil, by enhancing the cytotoxicity of colchicine, taxol and vinblastine and thirdly, BM-208 and BM-223 blocked the photoaffinity-labelling of P-glycoprotein by [3H]azidopine. Furthermore, glibenclamide is itself a substrate for P-glycoprotein, since the cellular accumulation of [3H]glibenclamide was low and substantially increased by addition of P-glycoprotein substrates (e.g., vinblastine and cyclosporine) only in the P-glycoprotein-expressing cell lines. We conclude that glibenclamide and two sulphonylcyanoguanidine derivatives inhibit P-glycoprotein and that sulphonylurea drugs would appear to be general inhibitors of ABC transporters, suggesting an interaction with some conserved motif.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001
Cédric Blanpain; Valérie Wittamer; Jean-Marie Vanderwinden; Alain Boom; Benoı̂t Renneboog; Benhur Lee; Emmanuel Le Poul; Laı̈la El Asmar; Cédric Govaerts; Gilbert Vassart; Robert W. Doms; Marc Parmentier
CCR5 is a CC chemokine receptor expressed on memory lymphocytes, macrophages, and dendritic cells and also constitutes the main coreceptor for macrophage-tropic (or R5) strains of human immunodeficiency viruses. In the present study, we investigated whether CCR5 was palmitoylated in its carboxyl-terminal domain by generating alanine substitution mutants for the three cysteine residues present in this region, individually or in combination. We found that wild-type CCR5 was palmitoylated, but a mutant lacking all three Cys residues was not. Through the use of green fluorescent fusion proteins and immunofluorescence studies, we found that the absence of receptor palmitoylation resulted in sequestration of CCR5 in intracellular biosynthetic compartments. By using the fluorescence recovery after photobleaching technique, we showed that the non-palmitoylated mutant had impaired diffusion properties within the endoplasmic reticulum. We next studied the ability of the mutants to bind and signal in response to chemokines. Chemokines binding and activation of Gi-mediated signaling pathways, such as calcium mobilization and inhibition of adenylate cyclase, were not affected. However, the duration of the functional response, as measured by a microphysiometer, and the ability to increase [35S]guanosine 5′-3-O-(thio)triphosphate binding to membranes were severely affected for the non-palmitoylated mutant. The ability of RANTES (regulated on activation normal T cell expressed and secreted) and aminooxypentane-RANTES to promote CCR5 endocytosis was not altered by cysteine replacements. Finally, we found that the absence of receptor palmitoylation reduced the human immunodeficiency viruses coreceptor function of CCR5, but this effect was secondary to the reduction in surface expression. In conclusion, we found that palmitoylated cysteines play an important role in the intracellular trafficking of CCR5 and are likely necessary for efficient coupling of the receptor to part of its repertoire of signaling cascades.
Brain Research | 2009
Charles Nicaise; Dinko Mitrečić; Pieter Demetter; Robert De Decker; Michèle Authelet; Alain Boom; Roland Pochet
Blood-brain barrier (BBB) and blood-spinal cord barrier (BSCB) impairment is an additional accident occurring during the amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) progression. In this work, we aimed to decipher if BBB/BSCB leakage appeared before critical detrimental events and could serve as a marker preceding clinical symptoms. Three different BBB leakage markers: Evans blue, IgG and hemosiderin, were used to look at the SOD1-linked ALS rat model at presymptomatic and symptomatic stages. Although IgG and hemosiderin could be detected at presymptomatic stage, Evans blue extravasation which fits best with BBB/BSCB impairment could only be seen at symptomatic stages. BBB/BSCB impairment was further substantiate by showing at symptomatic stages decreased mRNA expression of ZO-1 and occludin as well as agrin, a basal membrane constituent. Electron microscopic data substantiate a toxic environment around endothelial cell and peri-vascular swollen astrocyte end-feet showing oedema-linked BBB opening.
Neuroscience | 1999
Alain Boom; Catherine Mollereau; Jean-Claude Meunier; Gilbert Vassart; Marc Parmentier; Jean-Jacques Vanderhaeghen; Serge N. Schiffmann
The distribution of prepronociceptin messenger RNA, the recently identified endogenous ligand of the ORL1 receptor (opioid receptor-like-1), has been studied in the adult mouse central nervous system using in situ hybridization. Prepronociceptin is a new peptide precursor that generates, upon maturation, at least three bioactive peptides: nociceptin, noc2 and the recently described nocistatin. Considering both the density of labeled neurons per region and their intensity of labeling, the distribution of prepronociceptin messenger RNA-containing neurons can be summarized as follows: the highest level of prepronociceptin messenger RNA expression was detected in the septohippocampal nucleus, bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, central amygdaloid nucleus, and in selective thalamic nuclei such as the parafascicular, reticular, ventral lateral geniculate and zona incerta. High to moderate levels of prepronociceptin messenger RNA expression were detected in the lateral, ventral and medial septum, and were evident in brainstem structures implicated in descending antinociceptive pathways (e.g., the gigantocellular nucleus, raphe magnus nucleus, periaqueductal gray matter), and also observed in association with auditory relay nuclei such as the inferior colliculi, lateral lemniscus nucleus, medioventral preolivary nucleus and lateral superior nucleus. A moderate level of prepronociceptin messenger RNA expression was observed in the medial preoptic nucleus, ventromedial preoptic nucleus, periventricular nucleus, pedonculopontine tegmental nucleus, solitary tract nucleus and spinal trigeminal nucleus. A weak level of prepronociceptin messenger RNA expression was present in some areas, such as the cerebral cortex, endopiriform cortex, hippocampal formation, medial amygdaloid nucleus, anterior hypothalamic area, medial mammillary hypothalamic nuclei, retrorubral field and substantia nigra pars compacta. No labeled cells could be found in the caudate-putamen, nucleus accumbens and ventral tegmental area. The present data confirm that nociceptin is expressed in a broad array of regions of the central nervous system. In good correlation with the presently known physiological actions of nociceptin, they include, amongst others, brain areas conveying/integrating pain and auditory sensory afferences.
FEBS Letters | 2004
Allal Boutajangout; Alain Boom; Karelle Leroy; Jean Pierre Brion
In Alzheimers disease (AD), selective expression of tau isoforms might underlie the susceptibility of different brain areas to develop neurofibrillary tangles and this pattern might change in the disease. In this study, we have analyzed in control subjects and in sporadic AD patients the pattern of expression of tau mRNA and tau proteins in areas unaffected (cerebellar cortex, white matter), moderately affected (occipital striate cortex, thalamus, caudate nucleus, and putamen) or strongly affected by neurofibrillary tangles (temporal and frontal associative cortex). After RT‐PCR amplification, five products corresponding to the tau mRNAs containing exons 2 and 3, exon 2, without exons 2 or 3, with exon 10 and without exon 10 were identified. In control subjects, these five PCR products were present in all areas except in white matter, where transcripts with exons 2 or exons 2 and 3 were not identified. In AD patients, the same pattern of transcripts was observed in different areas, regardless of the presence of neurofibrillary lesions. After dephosphorylation of soluble tau proteins, the six tau isoforms were identified in the same areas by immunoblotting, including in the white matter, suggesting that most tau isoforms with exons 2 and 3 are transported along axons. The relative expression of 0N3R isoforms was higher in the temporal cortex than in the cerebellar cortex, both in control and AD subjects. The qualitative pattern of expression was identical in subjects with or without an APOE4 allele. Our results suggest that splicing regulation of the tau gene and the relative expression of tau isoforms are not significantly changed in sporadic cases of the disease, although differential expression of tau isoforms in temporal cortex might underlie this brain area susceptibility to neurofibrillary tangles formation.
Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2011
Fabrice Gankam Kengne; Charles Nicaise; Alain Soupart; Alain Boom; Johan Schiettecatte; Roland Pochet; Jean Pierre Brion; Guy Decaux
Abrupt osmotic changes during rapid correction of chronic hyponatremia result in demyelinative brain lesions, but the sequence of events linking rapid osmotic changes to myelin loss is not yet understood. Here, in a rat model of osmotic demyelination syndrome, we found that massive astrocyte death occurred after rapid correction of hyponatremia, delineating the regions of future myelin loss. Astrocyte death caused a disruption of the astrocyte-oligodendrocyte network, rapidly upregulated inflammatory cytokines genes, and increased serum S100B, which predicted clinical manifestations and outcome of osmotic demyelination. These results support a model for the pathophysiology of osmotic brain injury in which rapid correction of hyponatremia triggers apoptosis in astrocytes followed by a loss of trophic communication between astrocytes and oligodendrocytes, secondary inflammation, microglial activation, and finally demyelination.
Biology of Reproduction | 2006
Nathalie Lambot; Pascale Lybaert; Alain Boom; J. Delogne-Desnoeck; Anne-Marie Vanbellinghen; Guy Graff; Philippe Lebrun; Sylvain Meuris
Abstract During human pregnancy, the trophoblast layer is in direct contact with maternal albumin. In contrast to immunoglobulins, albumin does not cross the placental barrier. However, albumin affects the trophoblast placental lactogen and chorionic gonadotroph secretion. The present study investigated the interaction between albumin and syncytiotrophoblast using human term placental explants. Bovine serum albumin, labeled with either 125I or fluorescein isothio-cyanate, was taken up rapidly by placental explants. This process was temperature-sensitive. The internalized labeled BSA quickly outflowed from the tissue at the maternal side, largely without any major modification in molecular weight. Colchicine (1 mM), which disrupts the microtubule network, or cytochalasin B (40 μM), which disassembles filamentous actin, did not interfere with the placental transmembrane movements of labeled BSA. Megalin, clathrin, and caveolin 1 are three membrane proteins associated with albumin endocytosis in other tissues, but only megalin and clathrin were detected in the syncytiotrophoblast layer by immunohistochemistry. The uptake of labeled BSA into placental explants was not modified by 4,4′-diisothiocyanatostilbene-2,2′-disulfonic acid (1 mM) or 5-nitro-2-(3-phenylpropylamino)benzoic acid (100 μM), two pharmacological tools known to disturb megalin-mediated albumin endocytosis. By contrast, methyl-β-cyclodextrin (10 mM) and chlorpromazine (1.4 mM), both of which disrupt the clathrin-mediated endocytotic system, significantly reduced the uptake of labeled BSA. These data suggest, to our knowledge for the first time, that maternal albumin is actively internalized into the human trophoblast according to an apical recycling pathway. This temperature-sensitive process does not depend on an intact cytoskeleton, but it is associated with a clathrin-mediated endocytotic system.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2009
Alain Boom; Michèle Authelet; Robert Dedecker; Christelle Frédérick; Roxane Van Heurck; Valéry Daubie; Karelle Leroy; Roland Pochet; Jean Pierre Brion
Abnormal homeostasis of heavy metals is a well-documented physiopathological mechanism in Alzheimers disease. An exacerbation of these abnormalities is best illustrated in the amyloid plaques in Alzheimers disease brain tissue, in which zinc reaches the enormous concentration of 1000 microM. Zinc in the plaques is thought to originate from impaired glutamatergic neurons distributed in the associative cortex and limbic structures of normal brain. Although the characteristics of zinc binding to Abeta and its role in promotion of Abeta aggregation have been intensively studied, the contribution of zinc to the development of tau pathology remains elusive. To further document the effect of zinc we have investigated the modifications of tau phosphorylation, conformation and association to microtubules induced by zinc in clonal cell lines expressing a human tau isoform. A bimodal dose dependent effect of zinc was observed. At 100 microM zinc induced a tau dephosphorylation on the PHF-1 epitope, and at higher zinc concentrations induced the appearance of the abnormal tau conformational epitope MC1 and reduced the electrophoretic mobility of tau, known to be associated to increased tau phosphorylation. High zinc concentrations also increased glycogen synthase kinase-3beta (GSK-3beta) phosphorylation on tyrosine 216, a phosphorylation associated with increased activity of this tau kinase. Live imaging of tau-EGFP expressing cells demonstrated that high zinc concentrations induced a release of tau from microtubules. These results suggest that zinc plays a significant role in the development of tau pathology associated to Alzheimers disease.
American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2014
Laure Twyffels; A. Strickaert; Myrna Virreira; Claude Massart; J. Van Sande; C. Wauquier; Renaud Beauwens; Jacques Emile Dumont; Luis J. V. Galietta; Alain Boom; Véronique Kruys
Iodide is captured by thyrocytes through the Na(+)/I(-) symporter (NIS) before being released into the follicular lumen, where it is oxidized and incorporated into thyroglobulin for the production of thyroid hormones. Several reports point to pendrin as a candidate protein for iodide export from thyroid cells into the follicular lumen. Here, we show that a recently discovered Ca(2+)-activated anion channel, TMEM16A or anoctamin-1 (ANO1), also exports iodide from rat thyroid cell lines and from HEK 293T cells expressing human NIS and ANO1. The Ano1 mRNA is expressed in PCCl3 and FRTL-5 rat thyroid cell lines, and this expression is stimulated by thyrotropin (TSH) in rat in vivo, leading to the accumulation of the ANO1 protein at the apical membrane of thyroid follicles. Moreover, ANO1 properties, i.e., activation by intracellular calcium (i.e., by ionomycin or by ATP), low but positive affinity for pertechnetate, and nonrequirement for chloride, better fit with the iodide release characteristics of PCCl3 and FRTL-5 rat thyroid cell lines than the dissimilar properties of pendrin. Most importantly, iodide release by PCCl3 and FRTL-5 cells is efficiently blocked by T16Ainh-A01, an ANO1-specific inhibitor, and upon ANO1 knockdown by RNA interference. Finally, we show that the T16Ainh-A01 inhibitor efficiently blocks ATP-induced iodide efflux from in vitro-cultured human thyrocytes. In conclusion, our data strongly suggest that ANO1 is responsible for most of the iodide efflux across the apical membrane of thyroid cells.
Revue Neurologique | 2011
Sylvain Bohic; Jean-François Ghersi-Egea; Julien Gibon; P. Paoletti; Josiane Arnaud; Stéphane Hunot; Alain Boom; Alexandre Bouron
INTRODUCTION Many metals like iron (Fe), copper (Cu) or zinc (Zn) fulfil various essential biological functions and are thus vital for all living organisms. For instance, they play important roles in nervous tissue, participating in a wide range of processes such as neurotransmitter synthesis, myelination or synaptic transmission. STATE OF THE ART As in other tissues, brain cells tightly control the concentration of metals but any excess or deficit can lead to deleterious responses and alter cognitive functions. Of note, certain metals such as Zn, Fe or Cu accumulate in specific brain structures over lifespan and several neurodegenerative diseases are associated with a dysregulation of the homeostatic mechanisms controlling the concentration of these cations. CONCLUSION AND PERSPECTIVES This review will address some of the cellular and molecular processes controlling the entry and distribution of selected metals (mainly Zn and Fe) in the brain, as well as their roles in synaptic transmission, in the pathogenesis of some neurologic diseases such as Parkinsons disease and Alzheimers disease, and their impact on cognitive functions.