Caroline Jan
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
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Featured researches published by Caroline Jan.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2008
Sabrina Boulet; Stéphanie Mounayar; Annie Poupard; Anne Bertrand; Caroline Jan; Mathias Pessiglione; Etienne C. Hirsch; Claude Feuerstein; Chantal François; Jean Féger; Marc Savasta; Léon Tremblay
Parkinsons disease (PD) patients express motor symptoms only after 60–80% striatal dopamine (DA) depletion. The presymptomatic phase of the disease may be sustained by biochemical modifications within the striatum. We used an appropriate specific 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP) monkey model (Mounayar et al., 2007) to study the compensatory mechanisms operating in recovery from PD motor symptoms. We assessed the levels of DA and its metabolites (DOPAC, homovanillic acid), GABA, glutamate (Glu), serotonin (5-HT) and its metabolite (5HIAA) by repeated intracerebral microdialysis in awake animals before exposure to MPTP during full expression of the motor symptoms induced by MPTP and after recovery from these symptoms. Measurements were obtained from two functionally and anatomically different striatal areas: the associative-limbic territory and sensorimotor territory. Animals with motor symptoms displayed an extremely large decrease in levels of DA and its metabolites and an increase in Glu and GABA levels, as reported by other studies. However, we show here for the first time that serotonin levels increased in these animals. We found that increases in DA levels in the sensorimotor and/or associative-limbic territory and high levels of 5-HT and of its metabolite, 5HIAA, were associated with recovery from motor symptoms in this model. Determining whether similar changes in DA and 5-HT levels are involved in the compensatory mechanisms delaying the appearance of motor symptoms in the early stages of PD might make it possible to develop new treatment strategies for the disease.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Audrey Kraska; Mathieu Santin; Olene Dorieux; Nelly Joseph-Mathurin; Emmanuel Bourrin; Fanny Petit; Caroline Jan; Marion Chaigneau; Philippe Hantraye; Pierre Lestage; Marc Dhenain
Cerebral aging is often associated with the occurrence of neurodegenerative diseases leading to dementia. Animal models are critical to elucidate mechanisms associated to dementia and to evaluate neuroprotective drugs. Rats that received intracerebroventricular injection of streptozotocin (icv-STZ) have been reported as a model of dementia. In these animals, this drug induces oxidative stress and brain glucose metabolism impairments associated to insulin signal transduction failure. These mechanisms are reported to be involved in the pathogenesis of Alzheimers disease and other dementia. Icv-STZ rats also display memory impairments. However, little is known about the precise location of the lesions induced by STZ administration. In this context, the present study characterized the cerebral lesions induced by two-doses of icv-STZ by using high-field magnetic resonance imaging to easily and longitudinally detect cerebral abnormalities and by using immunohistochemistry to evaluate neuronal loss and neuroinflammation (astrocytosis and microgliosis). We showed that, at high doses, icv-STZ induces severe and acute neurodegenerative lesions in the septum and corpus callosum. The lesions are associated with an inflammation process. They are less severe and more progressive at low doses. The relevance of high and low doses of icv-STZ to mimic dementia and evaluate new drugs is discussed in the final part of this article.
Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2014
Lydie Boussicault; Anne-Sophie Hérard; Noel Y. Calingasan; Fanny Petit; Carole Malgorn; Nicolas Merienne; Caroline Jan; Marie-Claude Gaillard; Rodrigo Lerchundi; Luis Felipe Barros; Carole Escartin; Thierry Delzescaux; Jean Mariani; Philippe Hantraye; M. Flint Beal; Emmanuel Brouillet; Céline Véga; Gilles Bonvento
Huntingtons disease (HD) is caused by cytosine-adenine-guanine (CAG) repeat expansions in the huntingtin (Htt) gene. Although early energy metabolic alterations in HD are likely to contribute to later neurodegenerative processes, the cellular and molecular mechanisms responsible for these metabolic alterations are not well characterized. Using the BACHD mice that express the full-length mutant huntingtin (mHtt) protein with 97 glutamine repeats, we first demonstrated localized in vivo changes in brain glucose use reminiscent of what is observed in premanifest HD carriers. Using biochemical, molecular, and functional analyses on different primary cell culture models from BACHD mice, we observed that mHtt does not directly affect metabolic activity in a cell autonomous manner. However, coculture of neurons with astrocytes from wild-type or BACHD mice identified mutant astrocytes as a source of adverse non-cell autonomous effects on neuron energy metabolism possibly by increasing oxidative stress. These results suggest that astrocyte-to-neuron signaling is involved in early energy metabolic alterations in HD.
American Journal of Transplantation | 2016
R. Aron Badin; Marta Vadori; Bernard Vanhove; V. Nerriere-Daguin; P. Naveilhan; I. Neveu; Caroline Jan; X. Lévèque; E. Venturi; P. Mermillod; N. Van Camp; Frédéric Dollé; Martine Guillermier; Luca Denaro; R. Manara; V. Citton; Paolo Simioni; P. Zampieri; D. D'avella; D. Rubello; F Fante; M Boldrin; G. M. De Benedictis; Laura Cavicchioli; D. Sgarabotto; Mario Plebani; A. L. Stefani; P. Brachet; Gilles Blancho; J.-P. Soulillou
Neural transplantation is a promising therapeutic approach for neurodegenerative diseases; however, many patients receiving intracerebral fetal allografts exhibit signs of immunization to donor antigens that could compromise the graft. In this context, we intracerebrally transplanted mesencephalic pig xenografts into primates to identify a suitable strategy to enable long‐term cell survival, maturation, and differentiation. Parkinsonian primates received WT or CTLA4‐Ig transgenic porcine xenografts and different durations of peripheral immunosuppression to test whether systemic plus graft‐mediated local immunosuppression might avoid rejection. A striking recovery of spontaneous locomotion was observed in primates receiving systemic plus local immunosuppression for 6 mo. Recovery was associated with restoration of dopaminergic activity detected both by positron emission tomography imaging and histological examination. Local infiltration by T cells and CD80/86+ microglial cells expressing indoleamine 2,3‐dioxigenase were observed only in CTLA4‐Ig recipients. Results suggest that in this primate neurotransplantation model, peripheral immunosuppression is indispensable to achieve the long‐term survival of porcine neuronal xenografts that is required to study the beneficial immunomodulatory effect of local blockade of T cell costimulation.
Neurobiology of Disease | 2016
Anne B. Rocher; Paolo Gubellini; Nicolas Merienne; Lydie Boussicault; Fanny Petit; Pauline Gipchtein; Caroline Jan; Philippe Hantraye; Emmanuel Brouillet; Gilles Bonvento
Huntingtons disease (HD) is an autosomal dominant disease that develops in midlife (~ 40 years-old at onset) and then progresses slowly. It is still unclear how striatal medium spiny neurons (MSNs), the most vulnerable neurons in HD, maintain their function for decades despite the chronic expression of mutant huntingtin (mHTT). In this study, we used aged BACHD mice, a HD model expressing the full-length human mHTT gene, to investigate the molecular, morphological and functional properties of striatal MSNs. We report that the density of dendritic spines in MSNs is substantially lower in aged BACHD mice than in wild-type (WT) mice, in the absence of major dendritic changes and neuronal loss. This spine loss is accompanied by changes in transcription, resulting in a low expression of the striatum-specific G protein-coupled receptor 88 (Gpr88) as well as a reorganization of the composition of AMPAR subunits (high Gria1/Gria2 mRNA ratio). We also detected functional changes in BACHD MSNs. Notably, BACHD MSNs were hyperexcitable and the amplitude of AMPAR-mediated synaptic currents was higher than in WT MSNs. Altogether, these data show that both the intrinsic properties and the strength of the remaining synapses are modified in MSNs with low dendritic spine density in aged BACHD mice. These homeostatic mechanisms may compensate for the substantial loss of synaptic inputs and thus alleviate the deleterious effects of mHTT expression on the activity of MSNs and also possibly on the motor phenotype in aged BACHD.
Human Molecular Genetics | 2015
Laetitia Francelle; Laurie Galvan; Marie-Claude Gaillard; Martine Guillermier; Diane Houitte; Gilles Bonvento; Fanny Petit; Caroline Jan; Noelle Dufour; Philippe Hantraye; Jean-Marc Elalouf; Michel de Chaldée; Nicole Déglon; Emmanuel Brouillet
The mechanisms underlying preferential atrophy of the striatum in Huntingtons disease (HD) are unknown. One hypothesis is that a set of gene products preferentially expressed in the striatum could determine the particular vulnerability of this brain region to mutant huntingtin (mHtt). Here, we studied the striatal protein µ-crystallin (Crym). Crym is the NADPH-dependent p38 cytosolic T3-binding protein (p38CTBP), a key regulator of thyroid hormone (TH) T3 (3,5,3′-triiodo-l-thyronine) transportation. It has been also recently identified as the enzyme that reduces the sulfur-containing cyclic ketimines, which are potential neurotransmitters. Here, we confirm the preferential expression of the Crym protein in the rodent and macaque striatum. Crym expression was found to be higher in the macaque caudate than in the putamen. Expression of Crym was reduced in the BACHD and Knock-in 140CAG mouse models of HD before onset of striatal atrophy. We show that overexpression of Crym in striatal medium-size spiny neurons using a lentiviral-based strategy in mice is neuroprotective against the neurotoxicity of an N-terminal fragment of mHtt in vivo. Thus, reduction of Crym expression in HD could render striatal neurons more susceptible to mHtt suggesting that Crym may be a key determinant of the vulnerability of the striatum. In addition our work points to Crym as a potential molecular link between striatal degeneration and the THs deregulation reported in HD patients.
Neurobiology of Aging | 2011
Masahiro Shin; Caroline Jan; Carine Jacquard; Bechir Jarraya; Jacques Callebert; Jean-Marie Launay; Philippe Hantraye; Philippe Remy; Stéphane Palfi; Emmanuel Brouillet
Supporting the hypothesis that proteasome dysfunction is involved in Parkinsons disease (PD), McNaught et al. (2004) reported that the systemic administration of the proteasome inhibitor Z-Ile-Glu(OtBu)-Ala-Leu-aldehyde (PSI) in rats led to the degeneration of the nigrostriatal pathway. However, several groups could not reproduce this finding. We herein attempted to improve the reliability of the PSI model by chronically delivering the inhibitor using osmotic minipumps in aged mice. We also tested whether PSI co-administered with 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP) could act synergistically to induce toxicity. We found that PSI produced a significant reduction in locomotor activity that was mildly exacerbated by MPTP. However, PSI alone produced no sign of degeneration of the nigrostriatal dopaminergic pathway and did not exacerbate MPTP toxicity. To conclude, PSI administration does not provide a reliable phenotypic model of PD.
Journal of Neurosurgery | 2016
Suhan Senova; Koichi Hosomi; Jean-Marc Gurruchaga; Gaëtane Gouello; Naoufel Ouerchefani; Yara Beaugendre; Hélène Lepetit; Jean-Pascal Lefaucheur; Romina Aron Badin; Julien Dauguet; Caroline Jan; Philippe Hantraye; Pierre Brugières; Stéphane Palfi
OBJECTIVE Deep brain stimulation (DBS) of the subthalamic nucleus (STN) is a well-established therapy for motor symptoms in patients with pharmacoresistant Parkinsons disease (PD). However, the procedure, which requires multimodal perioperative exploration such as imaging, electrophysiology, or clinical examination during macrostimulation to secure lead positioning, remains challenging because the STN cannot be reliably visualized using the gold standard, T2-weighted imaging (T2WI) at 1.5 T. Thus, there is a need to improve imaging tools to better visualize the STN, optimize DBS lead implantation, and enlarge DBS diffusion. METHODS Gradient-echo sequences such as those used in T2WI suffer from higher distortions at higher magnetic fields than spin-echo sequences. First, a spin-echo 3D SPACE (sampling perfection with application-optimized contrasts using different flip angle evolutions) FLAIR sequence at 3 T was designed, validated histologically in 2 nonhuman primates, and applied to 10 patients with PD; their data were clinically compared in a double-blind manner with those of a control group of 10 other patients with PD in whom STN targeting was performed using T2WI. RESULTS Overlap between the nonhuman primate STNs segmented on 3D-histological and on 3D-SPACE-FLAIR volumes was high for the 3 most anterior quarters (mean [± SD] Dice scores 0.73 ± 0.11, 0.74 ± 0.06, and 0.60 ± 0.09). STN limits determined by the 3D-SPACE-FLAIR sequence were more consistent with electrophysiological edges than those determined by T2WI (0.9 vs 1.4 mm, respectively). The imaging contrast of the STN on the 3D-SPACE-FLAIR sequence was 4 times higher (p < 0.05). Improvement in the Unified Parkinsons Disease Rating Scale Part III score (off medication, on stimulation) 12 months after the operation was higher for patients who underwent 3D-SPACE-FLAIR-guided implantation than for those in whom T2WI was used (62.2% vs 43.6%, respectively; p < 0.05). The total electrical energy delivered decreased by 36.3% with the 3D-SPACE-FLAIR sequence (p < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS 3D-SPACE-FLAIR sequences at 3 T improved STN lead placement under stereotactic conditions, improved the clinical outcome of patients with PD, and increased the benefit/risk ratio of STN-DBS surgery.
international conference on image processing | 2016
Zhenzhen You; Michel E. Vandenberghe; Yaël Balbastre; Nicolas Souedet; Philippe Hantraye; Caroline Jan; Anne-Sophie Hérard; Thierry Delzescaux
In biomedical research, cell counting is important to assess physiological and pathophysiological information. However, the automated analysis of microscopic images of tissues remains extremely challenging. We propose an automated processing protocol for proper segmentation of individual cells in microscopic images. A Gaussian filter is applied to improve signal to noise ratio (SNR) then an original minmax method is proposed to produce an image in which information describing both cell centers (minima) and boundaries are enhanced. Finally, a contour-based model initialized from minima in the min-max cartography is carried out to achieve cell individualization. This method is evaluated on a NeuN-stained macaque brain section in sub-regions presenting various levels of fraction of neuron surface occupation. Comparison with several methods of reference demonstrates that the performances of our method are superior. A first application to the segmentation of neurons in the hippocampus illustrates the ability of our approach to deal with massive and complex data.
Brain | 2018
Laurie Galvan; Laetitia Francelle; Marie-Claude Gaillard; Lucie de Longprez; Maria-Angeles Carrillo-de Sauvage; Géraldine Liot; Karine Cambon; Lev Stimmer; Sophie Luccantoni; Julien Flament; Julien Valette; Michel de Chaldée; Gwenaelle Auregan; Martine Guillermier; Charlène Joséphine; Fanny Petit; Caroline Jan; Margot Jarrige; Noelle Dufour; Gilles Bonvento; Sandrine Humbert; Frédéric Saudou; Philippe Hantraye; Karine Merienne; Alexis-Pierre Bemelmans; Anselme L. Perrier; Nicole Déglon; Emmanuel Brouillet
Expression of the neuronal kinase DCLK3 is reduced in Huntington’s disease. Galvan et al. report that DCLK3 silencing in the mouse striatum exacerbates the toxicity of mutant huntingtin, whereas DCLK3 overexpression is neuroprotective, and show that DCLK3 regulates the expression of many genes involved in transcription regulation and chromatin remodelling.