Anne Vessières
University of Paris
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Featured researches published by Anne Vessières.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2014
Sylvain Clède; François Lambert; Rénette Saint-Fort; Marie-Aude Plamont; Hélène Bertrand; Anne Vessières; Clotilde Policar
Rhenium triscarbonyl complexes fac-[Re(CO)3 (N^N)] with appropriate ancillary N^N ligands are relevant for fluorescent bio-imaging. Recently, we have shown that [Re(CO)3 ] cores can also be efficiently mapped inside cells using their IR signature and that they can thus be used in a bimodal approach. To describe them we have coined the term SCoMPIs for single-core multimodal probes for imaging. In the context of the use of these SCoMPIs in bio-imaging, the questions of their cellular uptake and cytotoxicity are critical. We report here a series of compounds derived from the [Re(CO)3 Cl(pyta)] core (pyta=4-(2-pyridyl)-1,2,3-triazole). The pyta ligand is of interest because it can be easily functionalized. Aliphatic side chains (C4 , C8 , and C12 ) were appended to this core. A correlative study involving IR and luminescence was performed to monitor and quantify their cellular internalization. We studied the relationship between lipophilicity (log P(o/w)), cytotoxicity (IC50 ), and cellular uptake, and we showed that both uptake and cytotoxicity increase with the length of the side chain, with a higher uptake for the C12 derivative. This study stresses the distinction that has to be made between apparent toxicity, determined as an incubation concentration IC50 , and intrinsic toxicity. Indeed, the intrinsic toxicity of a compound can remain hidden if it is not cell permeable. Therefore it must be kept in mind that IC50 values are composite values, reflecting both cellular uptake and intrinsic toxicity.
ChemMedChem | 2014
Cong Lu; Jan‐Martin Heldt; Manon Guille-Collignon; Frédéric Lemaître; Gérard Jaouen; Anne Vessières; Christian Amatore
Ferrocifens are an original class of ferrocifen‐type breast cancer drugs. They possess anti‐proliferative effects due to the association of the ferrocene moiety and the tamoxifen skeleton. In this work, fluorescence measurements indicated the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) if hormone‐dependent or ‐independent breast cancer cells were incubated with three hit ferrocifen compounds. Additionally, amperometry at ultramicroelectrodes was carried out to identify and quantify ROS and reactive nitrogen species (RNS) under stress conditions. Videomicroscopy was used to optimize the conditions employed for electrochemical investigations. Amperometry was then performed on two cell lines pre‐incubated with each of the three ferrocifens. Interestingly, these results demonstrate that the presence of an aminoalkyl chain in the ferrocifen structure may confer a unique behavior toward both cell lines, in comparison with the two other compounds that lack this feature.
ChemMedChem | 2015
Marie-Aude Richard; Didier Hamels; Pascal Pigeon; Siden Top; Patrick M. Dansette; Hui Zhi Shirley Lee; Anne Vessières; Daniel Mansuy; Gérard Jaouen
Ferrociphenols have been found to have high antiproliferative activity against estrogen‐independent breast cancer cells. The rat and human liver microsome‐mediated metabolism of three compounds of the ferrocifen (FC) family, 1,1‐bis(4‐hydroxyphenyl)‐2‐ferrocenyl‐but‐1‐ene (FC1), 1‐(4‐hydroxyphenyl)‐1‐(phenyl)‐2‐ferrocenyl‐but‐1‐ene (FC2), and 1‐[4‐(3‐dimethylaminopropoxy)phenyl]‐1‐(4‐hydroxyphenyl)‐2‐ferrocenyl‐but‐1‐ene (FC3), was studied. Three main metabolite classes were identified: quinone methides (QMs) deriving from two‐electron oxidation of FCs, cyclic indene products (CPs) deriving from acid‐catalyzed cyclization of QMs, and allylic alcohols (AAs) deriving from hydroxylation of FCs. These metabolites are generated by cytochromes P450 (P450s), as shown by experiments with either N‐benzylimidazole as a P450 inhibitor or recombinant human P450s. Such P450‐dependent oxidation of the phenol function and hydroxylation of the allylic CH2 group of FCs leads to the formation of QM and AA metabolites, respectively. Some of the new ferrociphenols obtained in this study were found to exhibit remarkable antiproliferative effects toward MDA‐MB‐231 hormone‐independent breast cancer cells.
Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry | 2016
Valeria Scalcon; Siden Top; Hui Zhi Shirley Lee; Anna Citta; Alessandra Folda; Alberto Bindoli; Weng Kee Leong; Michèle Salmain; Anne Vessières; Gérard Jaouen; Maria Pia Rigobello
The synthesis and the biological effects of two ferrocifen analogs in the osmium series, namely the monophenolic complex 1, the tamoxifen-like complex 2 and their oxidized quinone methide (QM) derivatives, 1-QM and 2-QM, are reported. Inhibition of purified thioredoxin reductase (TrxR) is observed with 1 and 2 only after their enzymatic oxidation by the hydrogen peroxide/horseradish peroxidase (H2O2/HRP) system with IC50 of 2.4 and 1.2μM respectively. However, this inhibition is larger than that obtained with the corresponding quinone methides (IC50=5.4μM for 1-QM and 3.6μM for 2-QM). The UV-Vis spectra of 1 or 2 incubated in the presence of H2O2/HRP show that the species generated is not a quinone methide, but probably the corresponding cation. In Jurkat cells, 2 shows high toxicity (IC50=7.4μM), while 1 is less effective (IC50=42μM). Interestingly, a significant inhibition of TrxR activity is observed in cells incubated with 2 (about 70% inhibition with 15μM) while the inhibition induced by 1 is much weaker (about 30% inhibition with 50μM). This strong inhibition of TrxR by 2 leads to accumulation of thioredoxin and peroxiredoxin 3 in oxidized form and to a decrease of the mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP). These results show that cytotoxicity of the osmocifens depends on their oxidation within the cell and that inhibition of thioredoxin reductase by oxidized species is a key factor in rationalizing the cytotoxicity of these complexes on Jurkat cells.
Angewandte Chemie | 2016
Yong Wang; Marie-Aude Richard; Siden Top; Patrick M. Dansette; Pascal Pigeon; Anne Vessières; Daniel Mansuy; Gérard Jaouen
Ferrociphenols (FCs) and their oxidized, electrophilic quinone methide metabolites (FC-QMs) are organometallic compounds related to tamoxifen that exhibit strong antiproliferative properties. To evaluate the reactivity of FC-QMs toward cellular nucleophiles, we studied their reaction with selected thiols. A series of new compounds resulting from the addition of these nucleophiles, the FC-SR adducts, were thus synthesized and completely characterized. Such conjugates are formed upon metabolism of FCs by liver microsomes in the presence of NADPH and thiols. Some of the FC-SR adducts exhibit antiproliferative properties comparable to those of their FC precursors. Under oxidizing conditions they either revert to their FC-QM precursors or transform into new quinone methides (QMs) containing the SR moiety, FC-SR-QM. These results provide interesting data about the reactivity and mechanism of antiproliferative effects of FCs, and also open the way to a new series of organometallic antitumor compounds.
Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry | 2016
Valeria Scalcon; Anna Citta; Alessandra Folda; Alberto Bindoli; Michèle Salmain; Ilaria Ciofini; Sébastien Blanchard; José de Jésús Cázares-Marinero; Yong Wang; Pascal Pigeon; Gérard Jaouen; Anne Vessières; Maria Pia Rigobello
This paper reports the inhibitory effect on the cytosolic thioredoxin reductase (TrxR1) in vitro by the ansa-ferrocifen derivative (ansa-FcdiOH, 1). We found that 1 decreased only slightly enzyme activity (IC50=8μM), while 1*, the species generated by enzymatic oxidation by the HRP (horseradish peroxidase)/H2O2 mixture, strongly inhibited TrxR1 (IC50=0.15μM). At the same concentrations, neither 1 nor 1* had effect on glutathione reductase (GR). The most potent TrxR1 inhibitor did not appear to be the corresponding quinone methide as it was the case for ferrocifens of the acyclic series, or the stabilized carbocation as in the osmocifen series, but rather the quinone methide radical. This hypothesis was confirmed by ab-initio calculations of the species generated by oxidation of 1 and by EPR spectroscopy. BIAM (biotin-conjugated iodoacetamide) assay showed that 1* targeted both cysteine and selenocysteine of the C-terminal redox center of TrxR1.
Chemical Society Reviews | 2015
Gérard Jaouen; Anne Vessières; Siden Top
Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry | 2014
Céline Bruyère; Véronique Mathieu; Anne Vessières; Pascal Pigeon; Siden Top; Gérard Jaouen; Robert Kiss
European Journal of Inorganic Chemistry | 2015
Hui Zhi Shirley Lee; Olivier Buriez; François Chau; Eric Labbé; Rakesh Ganguly; Christian Amatore; Gérard Jaouen; Anne Vessières; Weng Kee Leong; Siden Top
Metallomics | 2017
Valeria Scalcon; Michèle Salmain; Alessandra Folda; Siden Top; Pascal Pigeon; Hui Zhi Shirley Lee; Gérard Jaouen; Alberto Bindoli; Anne Vessières; Maria Pia Rigobello