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Dive into the research topics where Benjamin Richard is active.

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Featured researches published by Benjamin Richard.


Angiogenesis | 2012

RANTES/CCL5-induced pro-angiogenic effects depend on CCR1, CCR5 and glycosaminoglycans.

Nadine Suffee; Hanna Hlawaty; Anne Meddahi-Pellé; L. Maillard; Liliane Louedec; Oualid Haddad; L. Martin; C. Laguillier; Benjamin Richard; Olivier Oudar; Didier Letourneur; Nathalie Charnaux; Angela Sutton

Atherosclerosis involves angiogenesis and inflammation with the ability of endothelial cells and monocytes to respond to chemokines. We addressed here by in vitro and in vivo approaches, the role of the chemokine Regulated on Activation, Normal T Cell Expressed and Secreted (RANTES)/CCL5 on angiogenesis through its receptors CCR1, CCR5, syndecan-1 (SDC-1), syndecan-4 (SDC-4) and CD-44. Our data demonstrate that RANTES/CCL5 is pro-angiogenic in a rat subcutaneous model. This RANTES/CCL5-activity may be related to the in vitro promotion of endothelial cell migration, spreading and neo-vessel formation. RANTES/CCL5-mediated angiogenesis depends at least partly on Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VEGF) secretion by endothelial cells, since this effect is decreased when endothelial cells are incubated with anti-VEGF receptor antibodies. RANTES/CCL5-induced chemotaxis is mediated by matrix metalloproteinase-9. We demonstrate that specific receptors of RANTES/CCL5 such as G protein-coupled receptors CCR1 and CCR5, and heparan sulfate proteoglycans, SDC-1, SDC-4 or CD-44, play a major role in RANTES/CCL5-induced angiogenic effects. By the use of two RANTES/CCL5 mutants, [E66A]-RANTES/CCL5 with impaired ability to oligomerize, and [44AANA47]-RANTES/CCL5 mutated in the main RANTES/CCL5-glycosaminoglycan (GAG) binding site, we demonstrate that chemokine oligomerization and binding to GAGs are essential in RANTES/CCL5-induced angiogenic effects. According to these results, new therapeutic strategies based on RANTES/CCL5 can be proposed for neo-angiogenesis after vascular injury. Mutants of RANTES/CCL5 may also represent an innovative approach to prevent the angiogenesis associated with the formation of atherosclerotic plaque.


Blood | 2012

Emerging role of serpinE2/protease nexin-1 in hemostasis and vascular biology

Marie-Christine Bouton; Yacine Boulaftali; Benjamin Richard; Véronique Arocas; Jean-Baptiste Michel; Martine Jandrot-Perrus

Serine protease inhibitors, termed serpins, are key regulators in many biologic events. Protease nexin-1 (PN-1) is a serpin that is barely detectable in plasma but found in many organs and produced by most cell types, including monocytes, platelets, and vascular cells. It has a large inhibition spectrum because it is the most efficient tissue inhibitor of thrombin but also a powerful inhibitor of plasminogen activators and plasmin. It has a high affinity for glycosaminoglycans, such as heparan sulfates, which potentiate its activity toward thrombin and target it to the pericellular space. PN-1 has been previously largely described as a crucial regulator of the proteolytic activity in nerves and of central and peripheral nervous system function. In contrast, little was known about its involvement in hemostasis and vascular biology. This article reviews recent data underlining its emerging role as a key factor in the responses of vessels to injury. Indeed, studies of PN-1-deficient mice have established important antithrombotic and antifibrinolytic properties of this serpin that have heretofore gone unrecognized. The roles of PN-1 in the areas of hemostasis and thrombosis summarized here provide insights that may allow the development of drugs and treatment strategies to prevent or limit thrombotic disorders.


Biochemical Society Transactions | 2011

Angiogenic properties of the chemokine RANTES/CCL5

Nadine Suffee; Benjamin Richard; Hanna Hlawaty; Olivier Oudar; Nathalie Charnaux; Angela Sutton

Atherosclerosis is an inflammatory disease that is one of the leading causes of death in developed countries. This disease is defined by the formation of an atherosclerotic plaque, which is responsible for artery obstruction and affects the heart by causing myocardial infarction. The vascular wall is composed of three cell types and includes a monolayer of endothelial cells and is irrigated by a vasa vasorum. The formation of the vascular network from the vasa vasorum is a process involved in the destabilization of this plaque. Cellular and molecular approaches are studied by in vitro assay of activated endothelial cells and in in vivo models of neovascularization. Chemokines are a large family of small secreted proteins that have been shown to play a critical role in the regulation of angiogenesis during several pathophysiological processes such as ischaemia. Chemokines may exert their regulatory activity on angiogenesis directly by activating the vasa vasorum, or as a consequence of leucocyte infiltration through the endothelium, and/or by the induction of growth factor expression such as that of VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor). The present review focuses on the angiogenic activity of the chemokines RANTES (regulated upon activation, normal T-cell expressed and secreted)/CCL5 (CC chemokine ligand 5). RANTES/CCL5 is released by many cell types such as platelets or smooth muscle cells. This chemokine interacts with GPCRs (G-protein-coupled receptors) and GAG (glycosaminoglycan) chains bound to HSPGs (heparan sulfate proteoglycans). Many studies have demonstrated, using RANTES/CCL5 mutated on their GAG or GPCR-binding sites, the involvement of these chemokines in angiogenic process. In the present review, we discuss two controversial roles of RANTES/CCL5 in the angiogenic process.


Blood | 2010

Anticoagulant and antithrombotic properties of platelet protease nexin-1

Yacine Boulaftali; Frédéric Adam; Laurence Venisse; Véronique Ollivier; Benjamin Richard; Sabrina Taieb; Denis Monard; Rémi Favier; Marie-Christine Alessi; Marijke Bryckaert; Véronique Arocas; Martine Jandrot-Perrus; Marie-Christine Bouton

Protease nexin-1 (PN-1) is a serpin that inhibits plasminogen activators, plasmin, and thrombin. PN-1 is barely detectable in plasma but is expressed by platelets. Here, we studied platelet PN-1 in resting and activated conditions and its function in thrombosis. Studies on human platelets from healthy donors and from patients with a Gray platelet syndrome demonstrate that PN-1 is present both at the platelet surface and in alpha-granules. The role of PN-1 was investigated in vitro using human platelets incubated with a blocking antibody and using platelets from PN-1-deficient mice. Both approaches indicate that platelet PN-1 is active on thrombin and urokinase-type plasminogen activator. Blockade and deficiency of platelet PN-1 result in accelerated and increased tissue factor-induced thrombin generation as indicated by calibrated automated thrombography. Moreover, platelets from PN-1-deficient mice respond to subthreshold doses of thrombin, as assessed by P-selectin expression and platelet aggregation. Thrombus formation, induced ex vivo by collagen in blood flow conditions and in vivo by FeCl(3)-induced injury, is significantly increased in PN-1-deficient mice, demonstrating the antithrombotic properties of platelet PN-1. Platelet PN-1 is thus a key player in the thrombotic process, whose negative regulatory role has been, up to now, markedly underestimated.


Circulation | 2011

Platelet protease nexin-1, a serpin that strongly influences fibrinolysis and thrombolysis.

Yacine Boulaftali; Benoît Ho-Tin-Noé; Ana Pena; Stéphane Loyau; Laurence Venisse; Déborah François; Benjamin Richard; Véronique Arocas; Jean-Philippe Collet; Martine Jandrot-Perrus; Marie-Christine Bouton

Background— Protease nexin-1 (PN-1) is a serpin that inhibits plasminogen activators, plasmin, and thrombin. PN-1 is barely detectable in plasma, but we have shown recently that PN-1 is present within the &agr;-granules of platelets. Methods and Results— In this study, the role of platelet PN-1 in fibrinolysis was investigated with the use of human platelets incubated with a blocking antibody and platelets from PN-1–deficient mice. We showed by using fibrin-agar zymography and fibrin matrix that platelet PN-1 inhibited both the generation of plasmin by fibrin-bound tissue plasminogen activator and the activity of fibrin-bound plasmin itself. Rotational thromboelastometry and laser scanning confocal microscopy were used to demonstrate that PN-1 blockade or deficiency resulted in increased clot lysis and in an acceleration of the lysis front. Protease nexin-1 is thus a major determinant of the lysis resistance of platelet-rich clots. Moreover, in an original murine model in which thrombolysis induced by tissue plasminogen activator can be measured directly in situ, we observed that vascular recanalization was significantly increased in PN-1–deficient mice. Surprisingly, general physical health, after tissue plasminogen activator–induced thrombolysis, was much better in PN-1–deficient than in wild-type mice. Conclusions— Our results reveal that platelet PN-1 can be considered as a new important regulator of thrombolysis in vivo. Inhibition of PN-1 is thus predicted to promote endogenous and exogenous tissue plasminogen activator–mediated fibrinolysis and may enhance the therapeutic efficacy of thrombolytic agents.


Angiogenesis | 2013

NEW PROSPECTS IN THE ROLES OF THE C-TERMINAL DOMAINS OF VEGF-A AND THEIR COOPERATION FOR LIGAND BINDING, CELLULAR SIGNALING AND VESSELS FORMATION

Romain Delcombel; Lauriane Janssen; Roger Vassy; Melissa Gammons; Oualid Haddad; Benjamin Richard; Didier Letourneur; David O. Bates; Céline Hendricks; Johannes Waltenberger; Anna Starzec; Nor Eddine Sounni; Agnès Noël; Christophe Deroanne; Charles Lambert; Alain Colige

VEGF-A is a crucial growth factor for blood vessel homeostasis and pathological angiogenesis. Due to alternative splicing of its pre-mRNA, VEGF-A is produced under several isoforms characterized by the combination of their C-terminal domains, which determines their respective structure, availability and affinity for co-receptors. As controversies still exist about the specific roles of these exon-encoded domains, we systematically compared the properties of eight natural and artificial variants containing the domains encoded by exons 1–4 and various combinations of the domains encoded by exons 5, 7 and 8a or 8b. All the variants (VEGF111a, VEGF111b, VEGF121a, VEGF121b, VEGF155a, VEGF155b, VEGF165a, VEGF165b) have a similar affinity for VEGF-R2, as determined by Surface plasmon resonance analyses. They strongly differ however in terms of binding to neuropilin-1 and heparin/heparan sulfate proteoglycans. Data indicate that the 6 amino acids encoded by exon 8a must be present and cooperate with those of exons 5 or 7 for efficient binding, which was confirmed in cell culture models. We further showed that VEGF165b has inhibitory effects in vitro, as previously reported, but that the shortest VEGF variant possessing also the 6 amino acids encoded by exon 8b (VEGF111b) is remarkably proangiogenic, demonstrating the critical importance of domain interactions for defining the VEGF properties. The number, size and localization of newly formed blood vessels in a model of tumour angiogenesis strongly depend also on the C-terminal domain composition, suggesting that association of several VEGF isoforms may be more efficient for treating ischemic diseases than the use of any single variant.


Circulation Research | 2007

Protease Nexin-1 Interacts With Thrombomodulin and Modulates Its Anticoagulant Effect

Marie-Christine Bouton; Laurence Venisse; Benjamin Richard; Cécile Pouzet; Véronique Arocas; Martine Jandrot-Perrus

The endothelial cell membrane glycoprotein thrombomodulin (TM) plays a critical role in the regulation of coagulation. TM is an essential cofactor in protein C activation by thrombin, and a direct inhibitor of thrombin-induced platelet activation and fibrinogen clotting. Protease nexin-1 (PN-1) is a serpin synthesized and secreted by a variety of cells including endothelial cells. PN-1 bound to the cell surface through interactions with glycosaminoglycans, is an efficient inhibitor of thrombin and controls thrombin-induced cell responses. An investigation of the interaction of PN-1 with TM using purified proteins and cultured human aortic endothelial cells was performed. Purified PN-1 was observed to bind to purified TM in a concentration-dependent manner. Double immunofluorescence studies indicated that PN-1 and TM were colocalized at the endothelial cell surface from which they were coprecipitated. Pretreatment of the cells with chondroitinase ABC greatly decreased the amount of the PN-1 associated to TM at the cell surface demonstrating the involvement of the TM chondroitin-sulfate chain in the formation of complexes. The inhibitory activity of the PN-1/TM complexes on the catalytic activity of thrombin, and on thrombin-induced fibrinogen clotting, was markedly enhanced when compared with the inhibitory activity of each partner. PN-1–overexpressing human aortic endothelial cells and PN-1–underexpressing human aortic endothelial cells exhibited respectively a significantly reduced ability and enhanced capacity to activate protein C. Furthermore, PN-1 decreased the cofactor activity of TM on thrombin activable fibrinolysis inhibitor activation by thrombin. These data show for the first time that PN-1 forms complexes with TM and modulates its anticoagulant activity.


Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2006

Modulation of protease nexin-1 activity by polysaccharides

Benjamin Richard; Marie-Christine Bouton; Stéphane Loyau; Damien Lavigne; Didier Letourneur; Martine Jandrot-Perrus; Véronique Arocas

Protease nexin-1 (PN-1) is a non-circulating pericellular serpin expressed by vascular cells. PN-1 inhibits different proteases but when associated with glycosaminoglycans, its activity is mainly directed towards thrombin. Fucoidans are sulphated polysaccharides which can interact with several serpins and have antithrombotic and anticoagulant properties in vivo with a lower hemorrhagic risk than heparin. The purpose of this study was to compare the effects of low (LMW) or high molecular weight (HMW) fucoidans to those of standard heparin and LMW heparin on PN-1 properties. Using surface-enhanced laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (SELDI-TOF MS) and affinity coelectrophoresis, we observed that polysaccharides bound to thrombin, PN-1 and the thrombin/PN-1 complex. Progress curve kinetics showed that LMW and HMW fucoidans accelerate thrombin inhibition by PN-1 (111 and 402 fold, respectively) whereas the acceleration by LMW heparin and standard heparin was only of 36- and of 307-fold, respectively. Moreover, the formation of PN-1/(125)I-thrombin complex was increased in the presence of heparin, HMW and LMW fucoidans, but barely by LMW heparin. The dose response followed a bell shape curve, again suggesting the formation of ternary complexes between thrombin, PN-1 and polysaccharides. We also investigated the ability of polysaccharides to remove PN-1 bound to the cell membrane of smooth muscle cells in culture. PN-1 was detached by fucoidans and heparins and was still able to inhibit thrombin. In conclusion, fucoidans reduce cell-associated PN-1 and thrombin/PN-1 complexes and increase the antithrombin activity of PN-1. The capacity of PN-1 to regulate the pericellular activity of thrombin amongst other proteases reinforces the therapeutical interest of fucoidans.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2013

Smad2-Dependent Protease Nexin-1 Overexpression Differentiates Chronic Aneurysms From Acute Dissections of Human Ascending Aorta

Delphine Gomez; Ketty Kessler; Luciano de Figueiredo Borges; Benjamin Richard; Ziad Touat; Véronique Ollivier; Silvana Mansilla; Marie-Christine Bouton; Soleyman Alkoder; Patrick Nataf; Martine Jandrot-Perrus; Guillaume Jondeau; Roger Vranckx; Jean-Baptiste Michel

Objective—Tissue activation of proteolysis is involved in acute intramural rupture (dissections, acute ascending aortic dissection) and in progressive dilation (aneurysms, thoracic aneurysm of the ascending aorta) of human ascending aorta. The translational aim of this study was to characterize the regulation of antiproteolytic serpin expression in normal, aneurysmal, and dissecting aorta. Approach and Results—We explored expression of protease nexin-1 (PN-1) and plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 and their regulation by the Smad2 signaling pathway in human tissue and cultured vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) of aneurysms (thoracic aneurysm of the ascending aorta; n=46) and acute dissections (acute ascending aortic dissection; n=10) of the ascending aorta compared with healthy aortas (n=10). Both PN-1 and plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 mRNA and proteins were overexpressed in medial tissue extracts and primary VSMC cultures from thoracic aneurysm of the ascending aorta compared with acute ascending aortic dissection and controls. Transforming growth factor-&bgr; induced increased PN-1 expression in control but not in aneurysmal VSMCs. PN-1 and plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 overexpression by aneurysmal VSMCs was associated with increased Smad2 binding on their promoters and, functionally, resulted in VSMC self-protection from plasmin-induced detachment and death. This phenomenon was restricted to aneurysms and not observed in acute dissections. Conclusions—These results demonstrate that epigenetically regulated PN-1 overexpression promotes development of an antiproteolytic VSMC phenotype and might favor progressive aneurysmal dilation, whereas absence of this counter-regulation in dissections would lead to acute wall rupture.


European Journal of Environmental and Civil Engineering | 2012

A simplified numerical approach of global behaviour of RC beams degraded by corrosion

Lucas Adelaide; Benjamin Richard; Frédéric Ragueneau; Christian Cremona

One of major causes responsible for the performance loss of reinforced concrete structures is the corrosion phenomenon. Thereby, taking into account the local effects of the steel/concrete interface is of primary importance to predict properly the response of corroded reinforced concrete structures. A multifiber-based model including the steel/concrete interface is proposed. This interface model allows taking into consideration the bond strength variation due to corrosion. Such an approach leads to reasonable computational costs which a powerful feature of the model. A numerical study of beams already studied in the French project « benchmark des poutres de la Rance » is proposed in order to show the efficiency and reliability of the proposed model: Une des causes majeures pouvant conduire à une perte de performance est due au phénomène de corrosion. De ce fait, considérer le comportement de l’interface acier/béton est de première importance pour prédire la réponse de structures en béton armé corrodées. Un modèle simplifié incluant les effets locaux de l’interface acier/béton est proposé. Ce modèle permet de prendre en compte la variation d’adhérence due à la corrosion. Une telle approche conduit à des coûts de calcul raisonnables ce qui est un des points forts du modèle. Pour ce faire, une étude numérique de poutres issues du projet de recherche « Benchmark des poutres de la Rance » est proposée dans le but de montrer l’efficacité et fiabilité de la méthode proposée.

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Cédric Giry

Université Paris-Saclay

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Ejona Kishta

Université Paris-Saclay

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Nicolas Ile

Université Paris-Saclay

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