Alain Lesimple
McGill University
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Featured researches published by Alain Lesimple.
Applied Physics Letters | 2008
Nicholas Karpowicz; Jianming Dai; Xiaofei Lu; Yunqing Chen; Masashi Yamaguchi; Hongwei Zhao; X.-C. Zhang; Liang-liang Zhang; Cunlin Zhang; Matthew Price-Gallagher; Clark Fletcher; Orval Mamer; Alain Lesimple; Keith H. Johnson
Terahertz waves, electromagnetic radiation in the spectral region commonly defined between 0.3 and 10THz, allow innovative sensing and imaging techniques that can provide spectroscopic information unavailable at other wavelengths. However, simultaneously intense, broadband, and coherent spectroscopic measurement remains challenging. We report spectrometry using gases ionized by femtosecond pulses to generate and sense broadband terahertz pulses. Using a coherent heterodyne technique, the measurements span the “terahertz gap” with ⩾10% of the maximum signal from 0.3to10THz. This spectrometer, using a recycled optical probe beam and coherent detection, offers a high field strength and time-resolved measurement.
Molecular Genetics and Metabolism | 2008
Grant A. Mitchell; Nicolas Gauthier; Alain Lesimple; Shu Pei Wang; Orval Mamer; Ijaz A. Qureshi
Coenzyme A (CoA) sequestration, toxicity or redistribution (CASTOR) is predicted to occur in many hereditary and acquired conditions in which the degradation of organic acyl esters of CoA is impaired. The resulting accumulation of CoA esters and reduction of acetyl-CoA and free CoA (CoASH) will then trigger a cascade of reactions leading to clinical disease. Most conditions detected by expanded neonatal screening are CASTOR diseases. We review acyl-CoA metabolism, including CoASH synthesis, transesterification of acyl-CoAs to glycine, glutamate or l-carnitine and hydrolysis of CoA esters. Because acyl-CoAs do not cross biological membranes, their main toxicity is intracellular, primarily within mitochondria. Treatment measures directed towards removal of circulating metabolites do not address this central problem of intracellular acyl-CoA accumulation. Treatments usually involve the restriction of dietary precursors and administration of agents like l-carnitine and glycine, which can accept the transfer of acyl groups from acyl-CoA, liberating CoASH. Many hereditary CASTOR patients are chronically ill, with persistent symptoms and continuously abnormal metabolites in blood and urine despite good compliance with treatment. Conversely, asymptomatic patients are also common in hereditary CASTOR conditions. Future challenges include the understanding of pathophysiologic mechanisms in CASTOR diseases, the discovery of reliable predictors of outcome in individual patients and the establishment of therapeutic trials with sufficient numbers of patients to permit solid therapeutic conclusions.
Journal of Lipid Research | 2006
Ching Yin Lee; Alain Lesimple; Maxime Denis; Jérôme Vincent; Åsmund Larsen; Orval Mamer; Larbi Krimbou; Jacques Genest; Michel Marcil
We previously reported that human Niemann-Pick Disease type B (NPD-B) is associated with low HDL. In this study, we investigated the pathophysiology of this HDL deficiency by examining both HDL samples from NPD-B patients and nascent high density lipoprotein (LpA-I) generated by incubation of lipid-free apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I) with NPD-B fibroblasts. Interestingly, both LpA-I and HDL isolated from patient plasma had a significant increase in sphingomyelin (SM) mass (∼50–100%). Analysis of LCAT kinetics parameters (Vmax and Km) revealed that either LpA-I or plasma HDL from NPD-B, as well as reconstituted HDL enriched with SM, exhibited severely decreased LCAT-mediated cholesterol esterification. Importantly, we documented that SM enrichment of NPD-B LpA-I was not attributable to increased cellular mass transfer of SM or unesterified cholesterol to lipid-free apoA-I. Finally, we obtained evidence that the conditioned medium from HUVEC, THP-1, and normal fibroblasts, but not NPD-B fibroblasts, contained active secretory sphingomyelinase (S-SMase) that mediated the hydrolysis of [3H]SM-labeled LpA-I and HDL3. Furthermore, expression of mutant SMase (ΔR608) in CHO cells revealed that ΔR608 was synthesized normally but had defective secretion and activity. Our data suggest that defective S-SMase in NPD leads to SM enrichment of HDL that impairs LCAT-mediated nascent HDL maturation and contributes to HDL deficiency. Thus, S-SMase and LCAT may act in concert and play a crucial role in the biogenesis and maturation of nascent HDL particles.
Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2008
Pranav Patel; Chantal Cossette; Jaganmohan R. Anumolu; Sylvie Gravel; Alain Lesimple; Orval Mamer; Joshua Rokach; William S. Powell
The 5-lipoxygenase product 5-oxo-6E,8Z,11Z,14Z-eicosatetraenoic acid (5-oxo-ETE) is a potent chemoattractant for neutrophils and eosinophils, and its actions are mediated by the oxoeicosanoid (OXE) receptor, a member of the G protein-coupled receptor family. To define the requirements for activation of the OXE receptor, we have synthesized a series of 5-oxo-6E,8Z-dienoic acids with chain lengths between 12 and 20 carbons, as well as a series of 20-carbon 5-oxo fatty acids, either fully saturated or containing between one and five double bonds. The effects of these compounds on neutrophils (calcium mobilization, CD11b expression, and cell migration) and eosinophils (actin polymerization) were compared with those of 5-oxo-ETE. The C12 and C14 analogs were without appreciable activity, whereas the C16 5-oxo-dienoic acid was a weak partial agonist. In contrast, the corresponding C18 analog (5-oxo-18:2) was nearly as potent as 5-oxo-ETE. Among the C20 analogs, the fully saturated compound had virtually no activity, whereas 5-oxo-6E-eicosenoic acid had only weak agonist activity. In contrast, 5-oxo-6E,8Z,11Z-eicosatrienoic acid (5-oxo-20:3) and its 8-trans isomer were approximately equipotent with 5-oxo-ETE in activating granulocytes. Because of the potent effects of 5-oxo-20:3, we investigated its formation from Mead acid (5Z,8Z,11Z-eicosatrienoic acid), which accumulates in dietary essential fatty acid deficiency, by neutrophils. The main Mead acid metabolite identified was 5-hydroxy-6,8,11-eicosatrienoic acid, followed by 5-oxo-20:3 and two 6-trans isomers of leukotriene B3. We conclude that optimal activation of the OXE receptor is achieved with 5-oxo-ETE, 5-oxo-18:2, and 5-oxo-20:3, and that the latter compound could potentially be formed under conditions of essential fatty acid deficiency.
Biological Chemistry | 2007
François Lépine; Valérie Dekimpe; Biliana Lesic; Sylvain Milot; Alain Lesimple; Orval Mamer; Laurence G. Rahme; Eric Déziel
Abstract A new metabolite, 2,4-dihydroxyquinoline (DHQ), was identified in cultures of the bacteria Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Burkholderia thailandensis. We found that the biosynthesis of DHQ correlates with the presence of a functional PqsA, which is a product of the pqsABCDE operon responsible for the synthesis of 4-hydroxy-2-alkylquinolines (HAQs) in P. aeruginosa. However, DHQ is not a degradation product or precursor of HAQs. This finding sheds some light on the poorly understood biosynthesis pathway of HAQs, which includes important communication signals regulating the expression of virulence factors.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008
Chantal Cossette; Pranav Patel; Jaganmohan R. Anumolu; Sashikala Sivendran; Gue Jae Lee; Sylvie Gravel; François D. Graham; Alain Lesimple; Orval Mamer; Joshua Rokach; William S. Powell
Sebaleic acid (5,8-octadecadienoic acid) is the major polyunsaturated fatty acid in human sebum and skin surface lipids. The objective of the present study was to investigate the metabolism of this fatty acid by human neutrophils and to determine whether its metabolites are biologically active. Neutrophils converted sebaleic acid to four major products, which were identified by their chromatographic properties, UV absorbance, and mass spectra as 5-hydroxy-(6E,8Z)-octadecadienoic acid (5-HODE), 5-oxo-(6E,8Z)-octadecadienoic acid (5-oxo-ODE), 5S,18-dihydroxy-(6E,8Z)-octadecadienoic acid, and 5-oxo-18-hydroxy-(6E,8Z)-octadecadienoic acid. The identities of these metabolites were confirmed by comparison of their properties with those of authentic chemically synthesized standards. Both neutrophils and human keratinocytes converted 5-HODE to 5-oxo-ODE. This reaction was stimulated in neutrophils by phorbol myristate acetate and in keratinocytes by oxidative stress (t-butyl-hydroperoxide). Both treatments dramatically elevated intracellular levels of NADP+, the cofactor required by 5-hydroxyeicosanoid dehydrogenase. In keratinocytes, this was accompanied by a rapid increase in intracellular GSSG levels, consistent with the involvement of glutathione peroxidase. 5-Oxo-ODE stimulated calcium mobilization in human neutrophils and induced desensitization to 5-oxo-6,8,11,14-eicosatetraenoic acid but not leukotriene B4, indicating that this effect was mediated by the OXE receptor. 5-Oxo-ODE and its 8-trans isomer were equipotent with 5-oxo-6,8,11,14-eicosatetraenoic acid in stimulating actin polymerization and chemotaxis in human neutrophils, whereas 5-HODE, 5-oxo-18-hydroxy-(6E,8Z)-octadecadienoic acid, and 5S,18-dihydroxy-(6E,8Z)-octadecadienoic acid were much less active. We conclude that neutrophil 5-lipoxygenase converts sebaleic acid to 5-HODE, which can be further metabolized to 5-oxo-ODE by 5-hydroxyeicosanoid dehydrogenase in neutrophils and keratinocytes. Because of its chemoattractant properties, sebum-derived 5-oxo-ODE could be involved in neutrophil infiltration in inflammatory skin diseases.
Physics Letters A | 2008
Keith H. Johnson; Matthew Price-Gallagher; Orval Mamer; Alain Lesimple; Clark Fletcher; Yunqing Chen; Xiaofei Lu; Masashi Yamaguchi; Xiang Zhang
Abstract In modern terahertz (THz) sensing and imaging spectroscopy, water is considered a nemesis to be avoided due to strong absorption in the THz frequency range. Here we report the first experimental demonstration and theoretical implications of using femtosecond laser pulses to generate intense broadband THz emission from water vapor. When we focused an intense laser pulse in water vapor contained in a gas cell or injected from a gas jet nozzle, an extraordinarily strong THz field from optically excited water vapor is observed. Water vapor has more than 50% greater THz generation efficiency than dry nitrogen. It had previously been assumed that the nonlinear generation of THz waves in this manner primarily involves a free-electron plasma, but we show that the molecular structure plays an essential role in the process. In particular, we found that THz wave generation from H 2 O vapor is significantly stronger than that from D 2 O vapor. Vibronic activities of water cluster ions, occurring naturally in water vapor, may possibly contribute to the observed isotope effect along with rovibrational contributions from the predominant monomers.
Chemical Communications | 2004
Qing-Wen Shi; Franoise Sauriol; Alain Lesimple; Lolita O. Zamir
The first three examples of taxane-derived [3.3.3][3.4.5] di-propellanes isolated from the needles of a yew tree are reported. They differ in their acetylation pattern and their biogenesis from a putative taxane precursor is proposed.
Analytical Biochemistry | 2010
Orval Mamer; Luc Choinière; Alain Lesimple
Urinary trimethylamine (TMA) and its oxide (TMAOx) are measured separately and as a mixture using (15)N-labeled internal standards and direct infusion electrospray with a quadrupole time-of-flight (Q-ToF) instrument. TMA is quaternized with trideuteromethyl iodide to avoid inclusion of endogenous tetramethylammonium ion in the TMA measurement, whereas TMAOx is measured as the protonated molecule. Measurements reported as percentage TMA made with separate and combined samples agree within 6% of the measured values and demonstrate that both TMA and TMAOx can be measured simultaneously in a single analysis. Moreover, the analysis is simpler and less tedious and time-consuming than some earlier methods.
Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2006
Alain Lesimple; Orval Mamer; Weishi Miao; Tak Hang Chan
The tandem positive electrospray mass spectrometry (ESMSn) fragmentation of ionic liquids incorporating the 1-methyl-imidazolium ring substituted on NII with an alkyl chain functionalized with an alcohol, carboxylic acid, or an iodobenzyl or iodobenzoyl ester is presented for the first time. The influence of chain length and function is studied. Esterified structures led to intense CID fragments lacking the imidazolium ring allowing full characterization of the ester moiety. Fragment ion compositions for this interesting and newly important class of compounds are established through accurate mass data and deuterium labeling. The presence of the cationic ring system produces intense even electron molecular cations in electrospray that undergo multiple stages of CID to yield fragments which often are radical cations. Unusual losses of methyl and hydrogen radicals are frequently noted.