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Dive into the research topics where Catherine Coquard is active.

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Featured researches published by Catherine Coquard.


Molecular Cancer | 2009

The sonic hedgehog signaling pathway is reactivated in human renal cell carcinoma and plays orchestral role in tumor growth

Valérian Dormoy; Sabrina Danilin; Véronique Lindner; Lionel Thomas; Sylvie Rothhut; Catherine Coquard; Jean-Jacques Helwig; Didier Jacqmin; H. Lang; Thierry Massfelder

BackgroundHuman clear cell renal cell carcinoma (CRCC) remains resistant to therapies. Recent advances in Hypoxia Inducible Factors (HIF) molecular network led to targeted therapies, but unfortunately with only limited clinical significance. Elucidating the molecular processes involved in kidney tumorigenesis and resistance is central to the development of improved therapies, not only for kidney cancer but for many, if not all, cancer types. The oncogenic PI3K/Akt, NF-kB and MAPK pathways are critical for tumorigenesis. The sonic hedgehog (SHH) signaling pathway is crucial to normal development.ResultsBy quantitative RT-PCR and immunoblot, we report that the SHH signaling pathway is constitutively reactivated in tumors independently of the von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) tumor suppressor gene expression which is inactivated in the majority of CRCC. The inhibition of the SHH signaling pathway by the specific inhibitor cyclopamine abolished CRCC cell growth as assessed by cell counting, BrdU incorporation studies, fluorescence-activated cell sorting and β-galactosidase staining. Importantly, inhibition of the SHH pathway induced tumor regression in nude mice through inhibition of cell proliferation and neo-vascularization, and induction of apoptosis but not senescence assessed by in vivo studies, immunoblot and immunohistochemistry. Gli1, cyclin D1, Pax2, Lim1, VEGF, and TGF-β were exclusively expressed in tumors and were shown to be regulated by SHH, as evidenced by immunoblot after SHH inhibition. Using specific inhibitors and immunoblot, the activation of the oncogenic PI3K/Akt, NF-kB and MAPK pathways was decreased by SHH inhibition.ConclusionsThese findings support targeting SHH for the treatment of CRCC and pave the way for innovative and additional investigations in a broad range of cancers.


Carcinogenesis | 2012

Vitamin D3 triggers antitumor activity through targeting hedgehog signaling in human renal cell carcinoma

Valérian Dormoy; Claire Béraud; Véronique Lindner; Catherine Coquard; Mariette Barthelmebs; David Brasse; Didier Jacqmin; H. Lang; Thierry Massfelder

Human clear cell renal cell carcinoma (CCC) remains resistant to treatments despite the progress in targeted therapies. Several signaling pathways acting during renal development are reactivated during kidney tumorigenesis; this is the case of the sonic hedgehog (SHH)-Gli. Interestingly, the precursor of active vitamin D3 (VD3), cholecalciferol, has been demonstrated to be a strong inhibitor of SHH-Gli signaling. Here, we show the preclinical efficacy of cholecalciferol in CCC both in vitro and in vivo. A panel of CCC cell lines, tumors and normal corresponding tissues from CCC patients were used to evaluate the expression of the VD3 receptor and metabolizing enzymes and the effects of cholecalciferol treatment. Subsequently, xenografted mice were treated with cholecalciferol in a prophylactic or therapeutic manner; their response and the adverse effects were evaluated on the basis of weekly monitoring, followed by blood collection procedures and X-ray micro-computed tomography. VD3 receptor and metabolizing enzymes are dramatically decreased in human cell lines and tumors. Cholecalciferol decreases cell proliferation and increases cell death by inhibition of the SHH-Gli pathway. Xenografted mice treated with cholecalciferol exhibit absence of tumor development or substantial growth inhibition. The treatment was shown to be safe; it did not induce calcification or calcium reabsorption. These findings establish that, although VD3 receptors and metabolizing enzymes are absent in CCC, cholecalciferol supplementation is a strong tool to block the reactivation of SHH-Gli pathway in this pathology, leading ultimately to tumor regression. Cholecalciferol may have highly therapeutic potential in CCC.


Endocrinology | 2013

Parathyroid Hormone-Related Protein Is a Mitogenic and a Survival Factor of Mesangial Cells from Male Mice: Role of Intracrine and Paracrine Pathways

Mazène Hochane; Denis Raison; Catherine Coquard; Olivier Imhoff; Thierry Massfelder; Bruno Moulin; Jean-Jacques Helwig; Mariette Barthelmebs

Glomerulonephritis is characterized by the proliferation and apoptosis of mesangial cells (MC). The parathyroid-hormone related protein (PTHrP) is a locally active cytokine that affects these phenomena in many cell types, through either paracrine or intracrine pathways. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of both PTHrP pathways on MC proliferation and apoptosis. In vitro studies were based on MC from male transgenic mice allowing PTHrP-gene excision by a CreLoxP system. MC were also transfected with different PTHrP constructs: wild type PTHrP, PTHrP devoid of its signal peptide, or of its nuclear localization sequence. The results showed that PTHrP deletion in MC reduced their proliferation even in the presence of serum and increased their apoptosis when serum-deprived. PTH1R activation by PTHrP(1-36) or PTH(1-34) had no effect on proliferation but improved MC survival. Transfection of MC with PTHrP devoid of its signal peptide significantly increased their proliferation and minimally reduced their apoptosis. Overexpression of PTHrP devoid of its nuclear localization sequence protected cells from apoptosis without changing their proliferation. Wild type PTHrP transfection conferred both mitogenic and survival effects, which seem independent of midregion and C-terminal PTHrP fragments. PTHrP-induced MC proliferation was associated with p27(Kip1) down-regulation and c-Myc/E2F1 up-regulation. PTHrP increased MC survival through the activation of cAMP/protein kinase A and PI3-K/Akt pathways. These results reveal that PTHrP is a cytokine of multiple roles in MC, acting as a mitogenic factor only through an intracrine pathway, and reducing apoptosis mainly through the paracrine pathway. Thus, PTHrP appears as a probable actor in MC injuries.


Oncogene | 2011

LIM-class homeobox gene Lim1 , a novel oncogene in human renal cell carcinoma

Valérian Dormoy; Claire Béraud; Véronique Lindner; L Thomas; Catherine Coquard; Mariette Barthelmebs; D Jacqmin; H. Lang; Thierry Massfelder

Human clear cell renal cell carcinoma (CCC) remains resistant to therapies. The transcription factor LIM-class homeobox gene Lim1 is required for normal organogenesis, including nephrogenesis, by regulating cell movements, differentiation and growth. Its expression is controlled partly by the sonic hedgehog-Gli signaling pathway, which we have recently shown to be reactivated in human CCC. So far, no study has assessed whether Lim1 may be associated with tumorigenesis. Using a panel of human CCC cell lines expressing or not the von Hippel-Lindau tumor suppressor gene and 44 tumor/normal tissues pairs, we found that Lim1 is constitutively and exclusively reexpressed in tumors. Through Lim1 silencing or overexpressing, we show that Lim1 is a growth and survival factor in human CCC, at least through the activation of oncogenic pathways including the phosphoinositide kinase-3/Akt and nuclear factor-kappaB pathways. More importantly, in nude mice bearing human CCC tumors, Lim1 silencing abolished tumor growth through the same mechanism as in vitro. In Lim1-depleted cells and tumors, cell movements were substantially impaired because of the inhibition of expression of various proteins involved in metastatic spread, such as paxillin or tenascin-C. These findings establish that the developmental marker Lim1 acts as an oncogene in cancer cells and targeting Lim1 may constitute an innovative therapeutic intervention in human CCC.


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2013

Knockdown of parathyroid hormone related protein in smooth muscle cells alters renal hemodynamics but not blood pressure

Denis Raison; Catherine Coquard; Mazène Hochane; Jacques Steger; Thierry Massfelder; Bruno Moulin; Andrew C. Karaplis; Daniel Metzger; Pierre Chambon; Jean-Jacques Helwig; Mariette Barthelmebs

Parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP) belongs to vasoactive factors that regulate blood pressure and renal hemodynamics both by reducing vascular tone and raising renin release. PTHrP is expressed in systemic and renal vasculature. Here, we wanted to assess the contribution of vascular smooth muscle cell endogenous PTHrP to the regulation of cardiovascular and renal functions. We generated a mouse strain (SMA-CreERT2/PTHrPL2/L2 or premutant PTHrPSM-/-), which allows temporally controlled, smooth muscle-targeted PTHrP knockdown in adult mice. Tamoxifen treatment induced efficient recombination of PTHrP-floxed alleles and decreased PTHrP expression in vascular and visceral smooth muscle cells of PTHrPSM-/- mice. Blood pressure remained unchanged in PTHrPSM-/- mice, but plasma renin concentration and creatinine clearance were reduced. Renal hemodynamics were further analyzed during clearance measurements in anesthetized mice. Conditional knockdown of PTHrP decreased renal plasma flow and glomerular filtration rate with concomitant reduction in filtration fraction. Similar measurements were repeated during acute saline volume expansion. Saline volume expansion induced a rise in renal plasma flow and reduced filtration fraction; both were blunted in PTHrPSM-/- mice leading to impaired diuresis. These findings show that endogenous vascular smooth muscle PTHrP controls renal hemodynamics under basal conditions, and it is an essential factor in renal vasodilation elicited by saline volume expansion.


International Journal of Cancer | 2015

Targeting FAK scaffold functions inhibits human renal cell carcinoma growth.

Claire Béraud; Valérian Dormoy; Sabrina Danilin; Véronique Lindner; Audrey Bethry; Mazène Hochane; Catherine Coquard; Mariette Barthelmebs; Didier Jacqmin; H. Lang; Thierry Massfelder

Human conventional renal cell carcinoma (CCC) remains resistant to current therapies. Focal Adhesion Kinase (FAK) is upregulated in many epithelial tumors and clearly implicated in nearly all facets of cancer. However, only few reports have assessed whether FAK may be associated with renal tumorigenesis. In this study, we investigated the potential role of FAK in the growth of human CCC using a panel of CCC cell lines expressing or not the von Hippel‐Lindau (VHL) tumor suppressor gene as well as normal/tumoral renal tissue pairs. FAK was found constitutively expressed in human CCC both in culture cells and freshly harvested tumors obtained from patients. We showed that CCC cell growth was dramatically reduced in FAK‐depleted cells or after FAK inhibition with various inhibitors and this effect was obtained through inhibition of cell proliferation and induction of cell apoptosis. Additionally, our results indicated that FAK knockdown decreased CCC cell migration and invasion. More importantly, depletion or pharmacological inhibition of FAK substantially inhibited tumor growth in vivo. Interestingly, investigations of the molecular mechanism revealed loss of FAK phosphorylation during renal tumorigenesis impacting multiple signaling pathways. Taken together, our findings reveal a previously uncharacterized role of FAK in CCC whereby FAK exerts oncogenic properties through a non canonical signaling pathway involving its scaffolding kinase‐independent properties. Therefore, targeting the FAK scaffold may represent a promising approach for developing innovative and highly specific therapies in human CCC.


American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2018

Parathyroid hormone-related protein modulates mice mesangial cells inflammation and blunts apoptosis by enhancing Cox-2 expression

Mazène Hochane; Denis Raison; Catherine Coquard; Claire Béraud; Audrey Bethry; Sabrina Danilin; Thierry Massfelder; Mariette Barthelmebs

Injury of mesangial cells (MC) is a prominent feature of glomerulonephritis. Activated MC secrete inflammatory mediators that induce cell apoptosis. Parathyroid hormone-related peptide (PTHrP) is a locally active cytokine that enhances cell survival and is upregulated by proinflammatory factors in many cell types. The aim of this study was to analyze the regulation of PTHrP expression by inflammatory cytokines and to evaluate whether PTHrP itself acts as a proinflammatory and/or survival factor on male murine MC in primary culture. Our results showed that IL-1β (10 ng/ml) and TNF-α (10 ng/ml) rapidly and transiently upregulated PTHrP expression in MC. The effects of IL-1β were both transcriptional and posttranscriptional, with stabilization of the PTHrP mRNA by human antigen R (HuR). Proteome profiler arrays showed that PTHrP itself enhanced cytokines within 2 h in cell lysates, mainly IL-17, IL-16, IL-1α, and IL-6. PTHrP also stimulated sustained expression (2-4 h) of chemokines, mainly regulated upon activation normal T cell expressed and secreted (RANTES)/C-C motif chemokine 5 (CCL5) and macrophage inflammatory protein-2 (MIP-2)/C-X-C motif chemokine 2 (CXCL2), thymus and activation-regulated chemokine (TARC)/CCL17, and interferon-inducible T cell α-chemoattractant (I-TAC)/CXCL11. Moreover, PTHrP markedly enhanced cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) expression and elicited its autoinduction through the activation of the NF-κB pathway. PTHrP induced MC survival via the COX-2 products, and PTHrP overexpression in MC blunted the apoptotic effects of IL-1β and TNF-α. Altogether, these findings suggest that PTHrP functions as a booster of glomerular inflammatory processes and may be a negative feedback loop preserving MC survival.


Oncogene | 2018

The Lim1 oncogene as a new therapeutic target for metastatic human renal cell carcinoma

Imène Hamaidi; Catherine Coquard; Sabrina Danilin; Valérian Dormoy; Claire Béraud; Sylvie Rothhut; Mariette Barthelmebs; Nadia Benkirane-Jessel; Véronique Lindner; H. Lang; Thierry Massfelder

Metastatic clear cell renal cell carcinoma (CCC) remains incurable despite advances in the development of anti-angiogenic targeted therapies and the emergence of immune checkpoint inhibitors. We have previously shown that the sonic hedgehog-Gli signaling pathway is oncogenic in CCC allowing us to identify the developmental Lim1 transcription factor as a Gli target and as a new oncogene in CCC regulating cell proliferation and apoptosis, and promoting tumor growth. In this previous study, preliminary in vitro results also suggested that Lim1 may be implicated in metastatic spread. Here we investigated the potential pro-metastatic role of Lim1 in advanced CCC (1) in vitro using a panel of CCC cell lines expressing or not the von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) tumor suppressor gene either naturally or by gene transfer and (2) ex vivo in 30 CCC metastatic tissues, including lymph nodes, lung, skin, bone, and adrenal metastases, and (3) in vivo, using a metastatic model by intravenous injection of siRNA-transfected cells into Balb/c nude. Our in vitro results reveal that Lim1 knockdown time-dependently decreased CCC cell motility, migration, invasion, and clonogenicity by up to 50% regardless of their VHL status. Investigating the molecular machinery involved in these processes, we identified a large panel of Lim1 targets known to be involved in cell adhesion (paxillin and fibronectin), epithelial-mesenchymal transition (Twist1/2 and snail), invasion (MMP1/2/3/8/9), and metastatic progression (CXCR4, SDF-1, and ANG-1). Importantly, Lim1 was found constitutively expressed in all metastatic tissues. The H-score in metastatic tissues being significantly superior to the score in the corresponding primary tumor tissues (P valueu2009=u20090.009). Furthermore, we showed that Lim1 silencing decreases pulmonary metastasis development in terms of number and size in the in vivo metastatic model of human CCC. Taken together, these experiments strengthen the potential therapeutic value of Lim1 targeting as a promising novel approach for treating metastatic human CCC.


American Journal of Pathology | 2018

Parathyroid hormone–related protein contributes to early healing of Habu-SnakeVenom–induced glomerulonephritis in mice

Mazène Hochane; Denis Raison; Catherine Coquard; Claire Béraud; Sabrina Danilin; Audrey Bethry; Thierry Massfelder; Mariette Barthelmebs

Proliferative glomerulonephritis is characterized by local inflammation and mesangial cell deterioration, followed by mesangial proliferation and glomerular healing. Parathyroid hormone-related peptide (PTHrP) is a mesangial cytokine-like growth factor implicated in mesangial proliferation and survival. No data are available about its role in glomerulonephritis. Herein, we analyzed the expression and role of PTHrP in glomerular inflammation and healing in an experimental model of glomerulonephritis induced by i.v. injection of Habu snake venom in mice. The temporal analysis showed marked renal damage in the first days after venom injection and the beginning of recovery within 7 days. Glomerular expression of PTHrP (transcript and protein) was observed in the early phase after venom injection (from day 1 to day 3), along with an inflammatory environment. The inactivation of secreted PTHrP with PTHrP-neutralizing antibody (PTH2E11; 120 μg i.p. daily) reduced the markers of local inflammation (expression of macrophage chemotactic protein-1; regulated upon activation, normal T cell expressed and secreted; cyclooxygenase 2; IL-6; and macrophage infiltration) and abolished the expression of PTHrP itself. Moreover, the glomerular cell proliferation was hampered, and the healing process was prevented on day 7 after venom injection. These results show that PTHrP has antinomic actions in glomerulonephritis, participating in both the proinflammatory condition and the healing process. Our work reveals the essential role of PTHrP in early glomerular repair in an experimental model of glomerulonephritis.


Cancer Research | 2016

Abstract 635: Establishment of a large panel of patient-derived tumor xenograft models of prostate, bladder and kidney cancers

H. Lang; Claire Béraud; Audrey Bethry; Sabrina Danilin; Véronique Lindner; Catherine Coquard; Sylvie Rothhut; Thierry Massfelder

Prostate, bladder and kidney cancers represent 1 900 000 new cases and 620 000 deaths per year worldwide with an incidence increasing by 1-10% each year. Surgery is curative at localized stages; however, current therapies are inefficient at advanced stages. One of the major needs in new drugs development is the availability of clinically pertinent models faithfully reproducing the heterogeneity of patient tumors. Patient-derived tumor xenografts (PDX) are thus developed as essential tools for drug testing and identification of predictive biomarkers for a better clinical response, the first step for personalized medicine. Prostate, bladder and kidney tumors were obtained from patients undergoing surgery, subcutaneously (and some orthopically) xenografted in nude mice and serially passaged up to passage (P) 12. Normal corresponding tissues were also harvested. Tissues were conserved at all passages for characterization and grafting. For all patients, informed consent and clinical history are available. For the 3 cancers, primary tumor and tumors grown in mice were characterized for growth behavior, histopathology, genetic stability (short tandem repeat fingerprinting), mRNA expression profiling and response to current therapies. For each cancer type, we also investigated more specific features: expression of the androgen receptor, PSA and pan-cytokeratin for prostate PDXs, expression and status of hotspot mutations including FGFR3, PIK3CA, HRAS, RXRa and p53 for bladder PDXs, and von Hippel-Lindau gene mutation status for kidney PDXs. Metastatic models were followed by infrared imagery (IR780 dye). So far and since 9 years, we have collected 230 prostate tumors, 130 bladder tumors and 336 kidney tumors at all stages, and established 5, 25 and 31 models (> P3 in mice) respectively (8.8% success rate). Tumor take rate was positively correlated to advanced stage and high grade and for kidney cancer, to sarcomatoid component. Tumor growth evaluation reveals that PDXs were stable from mouse to mouse and throughout passages. Histopathologic and genetic characteristics were preserved between original tumors and case-matched PDXs. Molecular characteristics were also stable with less than 5% of genes differentially expressed between the primary tumors and the PDXs. In bladder PDXs, this analysis and mutation status of the selected genes allowed to define molecular subtypes. The comparison with patient therapeutic response, when available, showed the clinical predictivity of the models. Orthotopic models developed metastases at classical sites. In conclusion, we developed here a unique platform of preclinical PDXs models for urologic cancers with stable biological characteristics and clinically predictive. This is an invaluable tool for the clinical design of efficient therapies, the identification of predictive biomarkers and translational research. Citation Format: Herve Lang, Claire Beraud, Audrey Bethry, Sabrina Danilin, Veronique Lindner, Catherine Coquard, Sylvie Rothhut, Thierry Massfelder. Establishment of a large panel of patient-derived tumor xenograft models of prostate, bladder and kidney cancers. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 107th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2016 Apr 16-20; New Orleans, LA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2016;76(14 Suppl):Abstract nr 635.

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Denis Raison

University of Strasbourg

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Claire Béraud

University of Strasbourg

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H. Lang

University of Strasbourg

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Bruno Moulin

University of Strasbourg

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