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Dive into the research topics where Bérengère Gobin is active.

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Featured researches published by Bérengère Gobin.


Cancer Letters | 2014

NVP-BEZ235, a dual PI3K/mTOR inhibitor, inhibits osteosarcoma cell proliferation and tumor development in vivo with an improved survival rate.

Bérengère Gobin; Séverine Battaglia; Rachel Lanel; Julie Chesneau; Jérôme Amiaud; Françoise Rédini; Benjamin Ory; Dominique Heymann

Despite recent improvements in chemotherapy and surgery, the problem of non-response osteosarcoma to chemotherapy remains, and is a parameter that is critical for prognosis. The present work investigated the therapeutic value of NVP-BEZ235, a dual class I PI3K/mTOR inhibitor. NVP-BEZ235 inhibited osteosarcoma cell proliferation by inducing G0/G1 cell cycle arrest with no caspase activation. In murine pre-clinical models, NVP-BEZ235 significantly slowed down tumor progression and ectopic tumor bone formation with decreased numbers of Ki67(+) cells and reduced tumor vasculature. Finally, NVP-BEZ235 considerably improved the survival rate of mice with osteosarcoma. Taken together, the results of the present work show that NVP-BEZ235 exhibits therapeutic interest in osteosarcoma and may be a promising adjuvant drug for bone sarcomas.


Current Pharmaceutical Design | 2010

Therapeutic approach of primary bone tumours by bisphosphonates.

Gatien Moriceau; Benjamin Ory; Bérengère Gobin; Franck Verrecchia; François Gouin; Frédéric Blanchard; Françoise Rédini; Dominique Heymann

Bone tumours can be dissociated in two main categories: i) primary bone tumours (benign or malignant) including mainly osteosarcoma and other sarcomas.ii)and giant cell tumour and bone metastases originate from others cancer (Breast, prostate, kidney cancer, etc). These tumours are able to destroy or/and induce a new calcified matrix. However, the first step of bone tumour development is associated with an induction of bone resorption and the establishment of a vicious cycle between the osteoclasts and the tumour growth. Indeed, bone resorption contributes to the pathogenesis of bone tumour by the release of cytokines (IL6, TNFα) which govern the bone tumours development and which are trapped into the bone matrix. Bisphosphonates (BPs) are chemical compounds of P-C-P structure with a high affinity for bone hydroxyapatite crystals. Thus, they have been used as a carrier for radio nucleotides to develop novel approaches of bone imaging. BPs exert also indirect anti-tumour activities in vivo. Indeed, BPs directly interfere with the bone microenvironment and target osteoclasts, endothelial cells and immune cells (tumour-associated macrophages, γ9δ2 T cells). BPs induce tumour cell death in vitro and same activity is suspected in vivo. The present review summarizes the mechanisms of actions of BPs as well as their clinical interests in bone primary tumours.


International Journal of Cancer | 2015

BYL719, a new α‐specific PI3K inhibitor: Single administration and in combination with conventional chemotherapy for the treatment of osteosarcoma

Bérengère Gobin; Marc Baud’huin; Francois Lamoureux; Benjamin Ory; Céline Charrier; Rachel Lanel; Séverine Battaglia; Françoise Rédini; Frédéric Lézot; Frédéric Blanchard; Dominique Heymann

It has been established that disturbances in intracellular signaling pathways play a considerable part in the oncologic process. Phosphatidylinositol‐3‐kinase (PI3K) has become of key interest in cancer therapy because of its high mutation frequency and/or gain in function of its catalytic subunits in cancer cells. We investigated the therapeutic value of BYL719, a new specific PI3Kα inhibitor that blocks the ATP site, on osteosarcoma and bone cells. The in vitro effects of BYL719 on proliferation, apoptosis, and cell cycle were assessed in human and murine osteosarcoma cell. Its impact on bone cells was determined using human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSC) and human CD14+ osteoclast precursors. Two different murine preclinical models of osteosarcoma were used to analyze the in vivo biological activities of BYL719. BYL719 decreased cell proliferation by blocking cell cycle in G0/G1 phase with no outstanding effects on apoptosis cell death in HOS and MOS‐J tumor cells. BYL719 inhibited cell migration and can thus be considered as a cytostatic drug for osteosarcoma. In murine preclinical models of osteosarcoma, BYL719 significantly decreased tumor progression and tumor ectopic bone formation as shown by a decrease of Ki67+ cells and tumor vascularization. To explore the maximum therapeutic potential of BYL719, the drug was studied in combination with conventional chemotherapeutic drugs, revealing promising efficacy with ifosfamide. BYL719 also exhibited dual activities on osteoblast and osteoclast differentiation. Overall, the present work shows that BYL719 is a promising drug in either a single or multidrug approach to curing bone sarcoma.


Clinical Science | 2014

Orthopaedic implant failure: aseptic implant loosening–the contribution and future challenges of mouse models in translational research

Luis A. Córdova; Verena Stresing; Bérengère Gobin; Philippe Rosset; Norbert Passuti; François Gouin; Valérie Trichet; Pierre Layrolle; Dominique Heymann

Aseptic loosening as a result of wear debris is considered to be the main cause of long-term implant failure in orthopaedic surgery and improved biomaterials for bearing surfaces decreases significantly the release of micrometric wear particles. Increasingly, in-depth knowledge of osteoimmunology highlights the role of nanoparticles and ions released from some of these new bearing couples, opening up a new era in the comprehension of aseptic loosening. Mouse models have been essential in the progress made in the early comprehension of pathophysiology and in testing new therapeutic agents for particle-induced osteolysis. However, despite this encouraging progress, there is still no valid clinical alternative to revision surgery. The present review provides an update of the most commonly used bearing couples, the current concepts regarding particle-cell interactions and the approaches used to study the biology of periprosthetic osteolysis. It also discusses the contribution and future challenges of mouse models for successful translation of the preclinical progress into clinical applications.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Imatinib Mesylate Exerts Anti-Proliferative Effects on Osteosarcoma Cells and Inhibits the Tumour Growth in Immunocompetent Murine Models

Bérengère Gobin; Gatien Moriceau; Benjamin Ory; Céline Charrier; Régis Brion; Frédéric Blanchard; Françoise Rédini; Dominique Heymann

Osteosarcoma is the most common primary malignant bone tumour characterized by osteoid production and/or osteolytic lesions of bone. A lack of response to chemotherapeutic treatments shows the importance of exploring new therapeutic methods. Imatinib mesylate (Gleevec, Novartis Pharma), a tyrosine kinase inhibitor, was originally developed for the treatment of chronic myeloid leukemia. Several studies revealed that imatinib mesylate inhibits osteoclast differentiation through the M-CSFR pathway and activates osteoblast differentiation through PDGFR pathway, two key cells involved in the vicious cycle controlling the tumour development. The present study investigated the in vitro effects of imatinib mesylate on the proliferation, apoptosis, cell cycle, and migration ability of five osteosarcoma cell lines (human: MG-63, HOS; rat: OSRGA; mice: MOS-J, POS-1). Imatinib mesylate was also assessed as a curative and preventive treatment in two syngenic osteosarcoma models: MOS-J (mixed osteoblastic/osteolytic osteosarcoma) and POS-1 (undifferentiated osteosarcoma). Imatinib mesylate exhibited a dose-dependent anti-proliferative effect in all cell lines studied. The drug induced a G0/G1 cell cycle arrest in most cell lines, except for POS-1 and HOS cells that were blocked in the S phase. In addition, imatinib mesylate induced cell death and strongly inhibited osteosarcoma cell migration. In the MOS-J osteosarcoma model, oral administration of imatinib mesylate significantly inhibited the tumour development in both preventive and curative approaches. A phospho-receptor tyrosine kinase array kit revealed that PDGFRα, among 7 other receptors (PDFGFRβ, Axl, RYK, EGFR, EphA2 and 10, IGF1R), appears as one of the main molecular targets for imatinib mesylate. In the light of the present study and the literature, it would be particularly interesting to revisit therapeutic evaluation of imatinib mesylate in osteosarcoma according to the tyrosine-kinase receptor status of patients.


Bone | 2015

Skeletal consequences of RANKL-blocking antibody (IK22-5) injections during growth: Mouse strain disparities and synergic effect with zoledronic acid☆

Frédéric Lézot; Julie Chesneau; Benjamin Navet; Bérengère Gobin; Jérôme Amiaud; Yongwon Choi; Hideo Yagita; Beatriz Castaneda; Ariane Berdal; Christopher G. Mueller; Françoise Rédini; Dominique Heymann

High doses of bone resorption inhibitors are currently under evaluation in pediatric oncology. Previous works have evidenced transient arrest in long bone and skull bone growth and tooth eruption blockage when mice were treated with zoledronic acid (ZOL). The question of potential similar effects with a RANKL-blocking antibody (IK22.5) was raised. Sensitivity disparities in these inhibitors between mouse strains and synergic effects of zoledronic acid and a RANKL-blocking antibody were subsidiary questions. In order to answer these questions, newborn C57BL/6J and CD1 mice were injected every two or three days (4 injections in total so 7 or 10 days of treatment length) with high doses of a RANKL-blocking antibody. The consequences on the tibia, craniofacial bones and teeth were analyzed by μCT and histology at the end of the treatment and one, two and three months later. The results obtained showed that RANKL-blocking antibody injections induced a transient arrest of tibia and skull bone growth and an irreversible blockage of tooth eruption in C57BL/6J mice. In CD1 mice, tooth eruption defects were also present but only at much higher doses. Similar mouse strain differences were obtained with zoledronic acid. Finally, a synergic effect of the two inhibitors was evidenced. In conclusion as previously observed for bisphosphonates (ZOL), a RANKL-blocking antibody induced a transient arrest in long bone and skull bone growth and a blockage of tooth eruption with however disparities between mouse strains with regard to this last effect. A synergic effect of both bone resorption inhibitors was also demonstrated.


Monoclonal Antibodies in Oncology | 2013

mAbs targeting RANKL in bone metastasis treatment

Fatih M Uckun; Bérengère Gobin; Marc Baud’huin; Bertrand Isidor; Dominique Heymann; Marie-Françoise Heymann


Bone Abstracts | 2013

NVP-BEZ235, a dual PI3K/mTOR inhibitor, inhibits osteosarcoma cell proliferation and the tumor development in vivo

Bérengère Gobin; Séverine Battaglia; Julie Chesneau; Dominique Heymann


Bone Abstracts | 2013

Therapeutic interest of Imatinib Mesylate in osteosarcoma

Bérengère Gobin; Gatien Moriceau; Benjamin Ory; Régis Brion; Françoise Rédini; Dominique Heymann


Bone Abstracts | 2013

Over-expression of Smad7 in osteosarcoma cells inhibits primary tumor growth, the associated bone osteolysis and the development of lung metastasis in murine xenograft model

Audrey Lamora; Julie Talbot; Bérengère Gobin; Marion Leduc; Julien Taurelle; Régis Brion; Dominique Heymann; Françoise Rédini; Franck Verrecchia

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