Antonis Myridakis
University of Crete
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Featured researches published by Antonis Myridakis.
Nature Medicine | 2017
Hubert Plovier; Amandine Everard; Céline Druart; Clara Depommier; Matthias Van Hul; Lucie Geurts; Julien Chilloux; Noora Ottman; Thibaut Duparc; Laeticia Lichtenstein; Antonis Myridakis; Nathalie M. Delzenne; Judith Klievink; Arnab Bhattacharjee; Kees C. H. van der Ark; Steven Aalvink; Laurent O. Martinez; Marc-Emmanuel Dumas; Dominique Maiter; Audrey Loumaye; Michel Hermans; Jean-Paul Thissen; Clara Belzer; Willem M. de Vos; Patrice D. Cani
Obesity and type 2 diabetes are associated with low-grade inflammation and specific changes in gut microbiota composition. We previously demonstrated that administration of Akkermansia muciniphila to mice prevents the development of obesity and associated complications. However, the underlying mechanisms of this protective effect remain unclear. Moreover, the sensitivity of A. muciniphila to oxygen and the presence of animal-derived compounds in its growth medium currently limit the development of translational approaches for human medicine. We have addressed these issues here by showing that A. muciniphila retains its efficacy when grown on a synthetic medium compatible with human administration. Unexpectedly, we discovered that pasteurization of A. muciniphila enhanced its capacity to reduce fat mass development, insulin resistance and dyslipidemia in mice. These improvements were notably associated with a modulation of the host urinary metabolomics profile and intestinal energy absorption. We demonstrated that Amuc_1100, a specific protein isolated from the outer membrane of A. muciniphila, interacts with Toll-like receptor 2, is stable at temperatures used for pasteurization, improves the gut barrier and partly recapitulates the beneficial effects of the bacterium. Finally, we showed that administration of live or pasteurized A. muciniphila grown on the synthetic medium is safe in humans. These findings provide support for the use of different preparations of A. muciniphila as therapeutic options to target human obesity and associated disorders.
Insect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2014
Maria Riga; Dimitra Tsakireli; Aris Ilias; Evangelia Morou; Antonis Myridakis; Euripides G. Stephanou; Ralf Nauen; Wannes Dermauw; T. G. van Leeuwen; Mark J. I. Paine; John Vontas
Abamectin is one of the most important insecticides worldwide. It is used against major agricultural pests and insects of public health importance, as well as against endoparasites in animal health. Abamectin has been used successfully for the control of the spider mite Tetranychus urticae, a major agricultural pest with global distribution, an extremely diverse host range, and a remarkable ability to develop resistance against insecticides including abamectin. Target site resistance mutations may explain a large part of resistance, although genetic evidence and transcriptomic data indicated that additional mechanisms may also be implicated in the abamectin resistant phenotype. To investigate a functional link between cytochrome P450-mediated metabolism and abamectin resistance, we recombinantly expressed three cytochrome P450s (CYP392A16, CYP392D8 and CYP392D10) that have been associated with high levels of abamectin resistance in a resistant T. urticae strain isolated from Greece. CYP392A16 was expressed predominately in its P450 form however, both CYP392D8 and CYP392D10 were expressed predominately as P420, despite optimization efforts on expression conditions. CYP392A16 catalyses the hydroxylation of abamectin (Kcat=0.54 pmol/min/pmol P450; Km=45.9 μM), resulting in a substantially less toxic compound as confirmed by bioassays with the partially purified metabolite. However, CYP392A16 did not metabolize hexythiazox, clofentezine and bifenthrin, active ingredients that also showed reduced toxicity in the abamectin resistant strain. Among a number of fluorescent and luminescent substrates screened, Luciferin-ME EGE was preferentially metabolized by CYP392A16, and it may be a potential diagnostic probe for metabolic resistance detection and monitoring.
Environmental Research | 2016
Marina Vafeiadi; Theano Roumeliotaki; Antonis Myridakis; Georgia Chalkiadaki; Eleni Fthenou; Eirini Dermitzaki; Marianna Karachaliou; Katerina Sarri; Maria Vassilaki; Euripides G. Stephanou; Manolis Kogevinas; Leda Chatzi
BACKGROUND Bisphenol A (BPA) is a chemical used extensively worldwide in the manufacture of plastic polymers. The environmental obesogen hypothesis suggests that early life exposure to endocrine disrupting chemicals such as BPA may increase the risk for wt gain later in childhood but few prospective epidemiological studies have investigated this relationship. OBJECTIVES We examined the association of early life BPA exposure with offspring obesity and cardiometabolic risk factors in 500 mother-child pairs from the RHEA pregnancy cohort in Crete, Greece. METHODS BPA concentrations were measured in spot urine samples collected at the 1st trimester of pregnancy) and from children at 2.5 and 4 years of age. We measured birth wt, body mass index (BMI) from 6 months to 4 years of age, waist circumference, skinfold thickness, blood pressure, serum lipids, C-reactive protein, and adipokines at 4 years of age. BMI growth trajectories from birth to 4 years were estimated by mixed effects models with fractional polynomials of age. Adjusted associations were obtained via multivariable regression analyses. RESULTS The prevalence of overweight/obesity was 9% at 2, 13% at 3% and 17% at 4 years of age. Geometric mean BPA concentrations were 1.2μg/g creatinine±7.9 in 1st trimester, 5.1μg/g±13.3 in 2.5 years and 1.9μg/g±4.9 in 4 years. After confounder adjustment, each 10-fold increase in BPA at 4 years was associated with a higher BMI z-score (adj. β=0.2; 95% CI: 0.01, 0.4), waist circumference (adj. β=1.2; 95% CI: 0.1, 2.2) and sum of skinfold thickness (adj. β=3.7mm; 95% CI: 0.7, 6.7) at 4 years. Prenatal BPA was negatively associated with BMI and adiposity measures in girls and positively in boys. We found no associations of early life exposure to BPA with other offspring cardiometabolic risk factors. CONCLUSIONS Prenatal BPA exposure was not consistently associated with offspring growth and adiposity measures but higher early childhood BPA was associated with excess child adiposity.
Journal of Separation Science | 2013
Eftichia G. Karageorgou; Antonis Myridakis; Euripides G. Stephanou; Victoria F. Samanidou
A sensitive and selective confirmatory method for milk-residue analysis of ten quinolones and eight cephalosporins by LC-MS/MS has been developed herein. For the chromatographic separation of target analytes, a Perfectsil ODS-2 (250 × 4 mm, 5 μm) analytical column was used and gradient elution was applied, using a mobile phase of 0.1% w/w TFA in water and 0.1% w/w TFA in ACN. Ultrasound-assisted matrix solid-phase dispersion procedure was applied for the extraction and clean-up procedure of antimicrobials agents from milk matrix using a mixture of Bond Elut Plexa sorbent and QuEChERS. The method was validated meeting the European Legislation determining selectivity, linearity response, trueness, precision (repeatability and between-day reproducibility), decision limit, detection capability, and ruggedness following the Youden approach. Recoveries of all antibiotics ranged from 81.7 to 117.9%, while RSD values were lower than 13.7%. Limits of quantification for all examined compounds ranged from 2.4 to 15.0 μg/kg, substantially lower than the maximum residue limits established by the European Union (30-100 μg/kg).
Pesticide Biochemistry and Physiology | 2015
Ralf Nauen; Katharina Wölfel; Bettina Lueke; Antonis Myridakis; Dimitra Tsakireli; Emmanouil Roditakis; Anastasia Tsagkarakou; Euripides G. Stephanou; John Vontas
Cotton whitefly, Bemisia tabaci (Genn.) (Homoptera: Aleyrodidae) is a major sucking pest in many agricultural and horticultural cropping systems globally. The frequent use of insecticides of different mode of action classes resulted in populations resisting treatments used to keep numbers under economic damage thresholds. Recently it was shown that resistance to neonicotinoids such as imidacloprid is linked to the over-expression of CYP6CM1, a cytochrome P450 monooxygenase detoxifying imidacloprid and other neonicotinoid insecticides when recombinantly expressed in insect cells. However over-expression of CYP6CM1 is also known to confer cross-resistance to pymetrozine, an insecticide not belonging to the chemical class of neonicotinoids. In addition we were able to demonstrate by LC-MS/MS analysis the metabolisation of pyriproxyfen by recombinantly expressed CYP6CM1. Based on our results CYP6CM1 is one of the most versatile detoxification enzymes yet identified in a pest of agricultural importance, as it detoxifies a diverse range of chemical classes used to control whiteflies. Therefore we developed a field-diagnostic antibody-based lateral flow assay which detects CYP6CM1 protein at levels providing resistance to neonicotinoids and other insecticides. The ELISA based test kit can be used as a diagnostic tool to support resistance management strategies based on the alternation of different modes of action of insecticides.
Nature Medicine | 2018
Lesley Hoyles; José-Manuel Fernández-Real; Massimo Federici; Matteo Serino; James Abbott; Julie Charpentier; Christophe Heymes; Luque Jl; Anthony E; Richard H. Barton; Julien Chilloux; Antonis Myridakis; Laura Martinez-Gili; José María Moreno-Navarrete; Fadila Benhamed; Azalbert; Blasco-Baque; Josep Puig; Wifredo Ricart; Christopher Tomlinson; Mark Woodbridge; Marina Cardellini; Francesca Davato; Iris Cardolini; Ottavia Porzio; Paolo Gentileschi; Frédéric Lopez; Fabienne Foufelle; Sarah Butcher; Elaine Holmes
Hepatic steatosis is a multifactorial condition that is often observed in obese patients and is a prelude to non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. Here, we combine shotgun sequencing of fecal metagenomes with molecular phenomics (hepatic transcriptome and plasma and urine metabolomes) in two well-characterized cohorts of morbidly obese women recruited to the FLORINASH study. We reveal molecular networks linking the gut microbiome and the host phenome to hepatic steatosis. Patients with steatosis have low microbial gene richness and increased genetic potential for the processing of dietary lipids and endotoxin biosynthesis (notably from Proteobacteria), hepatic inflammation and dysregulation of aromatic and branched-chain amino acid metabolism. We demonstrated that fecal microbiota transplants and chronic treatment with phenylacetic acid, a microbial product of aromatic amino acid metabolism, successfully trigger steatosis and branched-chain amino acid metabolism. Molecular phenomic signatures were predictive (area under the curve = 87%) and consistent with the gut microbiome having an effect on the steatosis phenome (>75% shared variation) and, therefore, actionable via microbiome-based therapies.Metabolic activity of specific human gut microorganisms contributes to liver steatosis in obese women.
Mbio | 2018
Lesley Hoyles; M.L. Jiménez-Pranteda; Julien Chilloux; François Brial; Antonis Myridakis; Thomas Aranias; Christophe Magnan; Glenn R. Gibson; Jeremy Sanderson; Jeremy K. Nicholson; Dominique Gauguier; Anne L. McCartney; Marc-Emmanuel Dumas
BackgroundThe dietary methylamines choline, carnitine, and phosphatidylcholine are used by the gut microbiota to produce a range of metabolites, including trimethylamine (TMA). However, little is known about the use of trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO) by this consortium of microbes.ResultsA feeding study using deuterated TMAO in C57BL6/J mice demonstrated microbial conversion of TMAO to TMA, with uptake of TMA into the bloodstream and its conversion to TMAO. Microbial activity necessary to convert TMAO to TMA was suppressed in antibiotic-treated mice, with deuterated TMAO being taken up directly into the bloodstream. In batch-culture fermentation systems inoculated with human faeces, growth of Enterobacteriaceae was stimulated in the presence of TMAO. Human-derived faecal and caecal bacteria (n = 66 isolates) were screened on solid and liquid media for their ability to use TMAO, with metabolites in spent media analysed by 1H-NMR. As with the in vitro fermentation experiments, TMAO stimulated the growth of Enterobacteriaceae; these bacteria produced most TMA from TMAO. Caecal/small intestinal isolates of Escherichia coli produced more TMA from TMAO than their faecal counterparts. Lactic acid bacteria produced increased amounts of lactate when grown in the presence of TMAO but did not produce large amounts of TMA. Clostridia (sensu stricto), bifidobacteria, and coriobacteria were significantly correlated with TMA production in the mixed fermentation system but did not produce notable quantities of TMA from TMAO in pure culture.ConclusionsReduction of TMAO by the gut microbiota (predominantly Enterobacteriaceae) to TMA followed by host uptake of TMA into the bloodstream from the intestine and its conversion back to TMAO by host hepatic enzymes is an example of metabolic retroconversion. TMAO influences microbial metabolism depending on isolation source and taxon of gut bacterium. Correlation of metabolomic and abundance data from mixed microbiota fermentation systems did not give a true picture of which members of the gut microbiota were responsible for converting TMAO to TMA; only by supplementing the study with pure culture work and additional metabolomics was it possible to increase our understanding of TMAO bioconversions by the human gut microbiota.
International Journal of Occupational Medicine and Environmental Health | 2014
Constantine I. Vardavas; Maria Karabela; Israel T. Agaku; Yuko Matsunaga; Antonis Myridakis; Antonis Kouvarakis; Euripides G. Stephanou; Maria Lymperi; Panagiotis Behrakis
ObjectivesSecondhand smoke (SHS) is a defined occupational hazard. The association though between SHS exposure in semi-open air venues and tobacco specific carcinogen uptake is an area of debate.Material and MethodsA cross sectional survey of 49 semi-open air cafes in Athens, Greece was performed during the summer of 2008, prior to the adoption of the national smoke free legislation. All venues had at least 1 entire wall open to allow for free air exchange. Indoor concentrations of particulate matter smaller than 2.5 microns (PM2.5) attributable to SHS were assessed during a work shift, while 1 non-smoking employee responsible for indoor and outdoor table service from each venue provided a post work shift urine sample for analysis of 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanol (NNAL).ResultsPost work shift NNAL concentrations were correlated with work shift PM2.5 concentrations attributable to SHS (r = 0.376, p = 0.0076). Urinary NNAL concentrations among employees increased by 9.5%, per 10 μg/m3 increase in PM2.5 concentrations attributable to SHS after controlling for the time of day and day of week.ConclusionsThese results indicate that the commonly proposed practice of maintaining open sliding walls as a means of free air exchange does not lead to the elimination of employee exposure to tobacco specific carcinogens attributable to workplace SHS.
bioRxiv | 2018
Julien Chilloux; François Brial; Amandine Everard; David Smyth; Liyong Zhang; Hubert Plovier; Antonis Myridakis; Lesley Hoyles; Julian E. Fuchs; Christine Blancher; Selin Gencer; Laura Martinez-Gili; Jane Fearnside; Richard H. Barton; Ana Luísa Neves; Alice R. Rothwell; Christelle Gerard; S. Calderari; Claire L. Boulangé; Saroor Patel; James Scott; Robert C. Glen; Nigel J. Gooderham; Jeremy K. Nicholson; Dominique Gauguier; Peter Liu; Patrice D. Cani; Marc-Emmanuel Dumas
The interaction between high-fat diet (HFD) feeding and the gut microbiome has a strong impact on the onset of insulin resistance (IR)1-3. In particular, bacterial lipopolysaccharides (LPS) and dietary fats trigger low-grade inflammation4 through activation of Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4), a process called metabolic endotoxemia5. However, little is known about how the microbiome can mitigate this process. Here, we investigate longitudinal physiological and metabotypical responses of C57BL/6 mice to HFD feeding. A series of in vivo experiments with choline supplementation, then blocking trimethylamine (TMA) production and administering TMA, demonstrate that this microbiome-associated metabolite decouples inflammation and IR from obesity in HFD. Through in vitro kinome screens and in silico molecular dynamics studies, we reveal TMA specifically inhibits Interleukin-1 Receptor-associated Kinase 4 (IRAK-4), a central kinase integrating signals from various TLRs and cytokine receptors. Consistent with this, genetic ablation and chemical inhibition of IRAK-4 result in similar metabolic and immune improvements in HFD. In summary, TMA appears as a key microbial effector inhibiting IRAK-4 and mediating metabolic and immune effects with benefits upon HFD. Thereby we highlight the critical contribution of the microbial signalling metabolome in homeostatic regulation of host disease and the emerging role of the kinome6 in microbial–mammalian chemical crosstalk.
Nature Medicine | 2018
Lesley Hoyles; José-Manuel Fernández-Real; Massimo Federici; Matteo Serino; James Abbott; Julie Charpentier; Christophe Heymes; Jèssica Latorre Luque; Elodie Anthony; Richard H. Barton; Julien Chilloux; Antonis Myridakis; Laura Martinez-Gili; José María Moreno-Navarrete; Fadila Benhamed; Vincent Azalbert; Vincent Blasco-Baque; Josep Puig; Wifredo Ricart; Christopher Tomlinson; Mark Woodbridge; Marina Cardellini; Francesca Davato; Iris Cardolini; Ottavia Porzio; Paolo Gentileschi; Frédéric Lopez; Fabienne Foufelle; Sarah Butcher; Elaine Holmes
In the version of this article originally published, the received date was missing. It should have been listed as 2 January 2018. The error has been corrected in the HTML and PDF versions of this article.