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Dive into the research topics where Cedric Bouzigues is active.

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Featured researches published by Cedric Bouzigues.


ACS Nano | 2011

Biological Applications of Rare-Earth Based Nanoparticles

Cedric Bouzigues; Thierry Gacoin; Antigoni Alexandrou

Biomedicine and cell and molecular biology require powerful imaging techniques of the single molecule scale to the whole organism, either for fundamental science or diagnosis. These applications are however often limited by the optical properties of the available probes. Moreover, in cell biology, the measurement of the cell response with spatial and temporal resolution is a central instrumental problem. This has been one of the main motivations for the development of new probes and imaging techniques either for biomolecule labeling or detection of an intracellular signaling species. The weak photostability of genetically encoded probes or organic dyes has motivated the interest for different types of nanoparticles for imaging such as quantum dots, nanodiamonds, dye-doped silica particles, or metallic nanoparticles. One of the most active fields of research in the past decade has thus been the development of rare-earth based nanoparticles, whose optical properties and low cytotoxicity are promising for biological applications. Attractive properties of rare-earth based nanoparticles include high photostability, absence of blinking, extremely narrow emission lines, large Stokes shifts, long lifetimes that can be exploited for retarded detection schemes, and facile functionalization strategies. The use of specific ions in their compositions can be moreover exploited for oxidant detection or for implementing potent contrast agents for magnetic resonance imaging. In this review, we present these different applications of rare-earth nanoparticles for biomolecule detection and imaging in vitro, in living cells or in small animals. We highlight how chemical composition tuning and surface functionalization lead to specific properties, which can be used for different imaging modalities. We discuss their performances for imaging in comparison with other probes and to what extent they could constitute a central tool in the future of molecular and cell biology.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2009

Single europium-doped nanoparticles measure temporal pattern of reactive oxygen species production inside cells

Didier Casanova; Cedric Bouzigues; Thanh-Liêm Nguyên; Rivo Ramodiharilafy; Latifa Bouzhir-Sima; Thierry Gacoin; Jean-Pierre Boilot; Pierre-Louis Tharaux; Antigoni Alexandrou

Low concentrations of reactive oxygen species, notably hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)), mediate various signalling processes in the cell. Production of these signals is highly regulated and a suitable probe is needed to measure these events. Here, we show that a probe based on a single nanoparticle can quantitatively measure transient H(2)O(2) generation in living cells. The Y(0.6)Eu(0.4)VO(4) nanoparticles undergo photoreduction under laser irradiation but re-oxidize in the presence of oxidants, leading to a recovery in luminescence. Our probe can be regenerated and reliably detects intracellular H(2)O(2) with a 30-s temporal resolution and a dynamic range of 1-45 microM. The differences in the timing of intracellular H(2)O(2) production triggered by different signals were also measured using these nanoparticles. Although the probe is not selective towards H(2)O(2), in many signalling processes H(2)O(2) is, however, the dominant oxidant. In conjunction with appropriate controls, this probe is a powerful tool for unravelling pathways that involve reactive oxygen species.


ACS Nano | 2014

Multifunctional Rare-Earth Vanadate Nanoparticles: Luminescent Labels, Oxidant Sensors, and MRI Contrast Agents

Mouna Abdesselem; Markus Schoeffel; Isabelle Maurin; Rivo Ramodiharilafy; Gwennhael Autret; Olivier Clément; Pierre-Louis Tharaux; Jean-Pierre Boilot; Thierry Gacoin; Cedric Bouzigues; Antigoni Alexandrou

Collecting information on multiple pathophysiological parameters is essential for understanding complex pathologies, especially given the large interindividual variability. We report here multifunctional nanoparticles which are luminescent probes, oxidant sensors, and contrast agents in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Eu(3+) ions in an yttrium vanadate matrix have been demonstrated to emit strong, nonblinking, and stable luminescence. Time- and space-resolved optical oxidant detection is feasible after reversible photoreduction of Eu(3+) to Eu(2+) and reoxidation by oxidants, such as H2O2, leading to a modulation of the luminescence emission. The incorporation of paramagnetic Gd(3+) confers in addition proton relaxation enhancing properties to the system. We synthesized and characterized nanoparticles of either 5 or 30 nm diameter with compositions of GdVO4 and Gd0.6Eu0.4VO4. These particles retain the luminescence and oxidant detection properties of YVO4:Eu. Moreover, the proton relaxivity of GdVO4 and Gd0.6Eu0.4VO4 nanoparticles of 5 nm diameter is higher than that of the commercial Gd(3+) chelate compound Dotarem at 20 MHz. Nuclear magnetic resonance dispersion spectroscopy showed a relaxivity increase above 10 MHz. Complexometric titration indicated that rare-earth leaching is negligible. The 5 nm nanoparticles injected in mice were observed with MRI to concentrate in the liver and the bladder after 30 min. Thus, these multifunctional rare-earth vanadate nanoparticles pave the way for simultaneous optical and magnetic resonance detection, in particular, for in vivo localization evolution and reactive oxygen species detection in a broad range of physiological and pathophysiological conditions.


PLOS ONE | 2010

A mechanism for the polarity formation of chemoreceptors at the growth cone membrane for gradient amplification during directional sensing.

Cedric Bouzigues; David Holcman; Maxime Dahan

Accurate response to external directional signals is essential for many physiological functions such as chemotaxis or axonal guidance. It relies on the detection and amplification of gradients of chemical cues, which, in eukaryotic cells, involves the asymmetric relocalization of signaling molecules. How molecular events coordinate to induce a polarity at the cell level remains however poorly understood, particularly for nerve chemotaxis. Here, we propose a model, inspired by single-molecule experiments, for the membrane dynamics of GABA chemoreceptors in nerve growth cones (GCs) during directional sensing. In our model, transient interactions between the receptors and the microtubules, coupled to GABA-induced signaling, provide a positive-feedback loop that leads to redistribution of the receptors towards the gradient source. Using numerical simulations with parameters derived from experiments, we find that the kinetics of polarization and the steady-state polarized distribution of GABA receptors are in remarkable agreement with experimental observations. Furthermore, we make predictions on the properties of the GC seen as a sensing, amplification and filtering module. In particular, the growth cone acts as a low-pass filter with a time constant ∼10 minutes determined by the Brownian diffusion of chemoreceptors in the membrane. This filtering makes the gradient amplification resistent to rapid fluctuations of the external signals, a beneficial feature to enhance the accuracy of neuronal wiring. Since the model is based on minimal assumptions on the receptor/cytoskeleton interactions, its validity extends to polarity formation beyond the case of GABA gradient sensing. Altogether, it constitutes an original positive-feedback mechanism by which cells can dynamically adapt their internal organization to external signals.


Biophysical Journal | 2012

Amplification and Temporal Filtering during Gradient Sensing by Nerve Growth Cones Probed with a Microfluidic Assay

Mathieu Morel; Vasyl Shynkar; Jean-Christophe Galas; Isabelle Dupin; Cedric Bouzigues; Vincent Studer; Maxime Dahan

Nerve growth cones (GCs) are chemical sensors that convert graded extracellular cues into oriented axonal motion. To ensure a sensitive and robust response to directional signals in complex and dynamic chemical landscapes, GCs are presumably able to amplify and filter external information. How these processing tasks are performed remains however poorly known. Here, we probe the signal-processing capabilities of single GCs during γ-Aminobutyric acid (GABA) directional sensing with a shear-free microfluidic assay that enables systematic measurements of the GC output response to variable input gradients. By measuring at the single molecule level the polarization of GABA(A) chemoreceptors at the GC membrane, as a function of the external GABA gradient, we find that GCs act as i), signal amplifiers over a narrow range of concentrations, and ii), low-pass temporal filters with a cutoff frequency independent of stimuli conditions. With computational modeling, we determine that these systems-level properties arise at a molecular level from the saturable occupancy response and the lateral dynamics of GABA(A) receptors.


Chemistry & Biology | 2014

Regulation of the ROS Response Dynamics and Organization to PDGF Motile Stimuli Revealed by Single Nanoparticle Imaging

Cedric Bouzigues; Thanh-Liêm Nguyên; Rivo Ramodiharilafy; Amy A. Claeson; Pierre-Louis Tharaux; Antigoni Alexandrou

Although reactive oxygen species (ROS) are better known for their harmful effects, more recently, H2O2, one of the ROS, was also found to act as a secondary messenger. However, details of spatiotemporal organization of specific signaling pathways that H2O2 is involved in are currently missing. Here, we use single nanoparticle imaging to measure the local H2O2 concentration and reveal regulation of the ROS response dynamics and organization to platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) signaling. We demonstrate that H2O2 production is controlled by PDGFR kinase activity and EGFR transactivation, requires a persistent stimulation, and is regulated by membrane receptor diffusion. This temporal filtering is impaired in cancer cells, which may determine their pathological migration. H2O2 subcellular mapping reveals that an external PDGF gradient induces an amplification-free asymmetric H2O2 concentration profile. These results support a general model for the control of signal transduction based only on membrane receptor diffusion and second messenger degradation.


Biophysical Journal | 2013

Receptor Displacement in the Cell Membrane by Hydrodynamic Force Amplification through Nanoparticles

Silvan Türkcan; Maximilian U. Richly; Cedric Bouzigues; Jean-Marc Allain; Antigoni Alexandrou

We introduce an intrinsically multiplexed and easy to implement method to apply an external force to a biomolecule and thus probe its interaction with a second biomolecule or, more generally, its environment (for example, the cell membrane). We take advantage of the hydrodynamic interaction with a controlled fluid flow within a microfluidic channel to apply a force. By labeling the biomolecule with a nanoparticle that acts as a kite and increases the hydrodynamic interaction with the fluid, the drag induced by convection becomes important. We use this approach to track the motion of single membrane receptors, the Clostridium perfringens ε-toxin (CPεT) receptors that are confined in lipid raft platforms, and probe their interaction with the environment. Under external force, we observe displacements over distances up to 10 times the confining domain diameter due to elastic deformation of a barrier and return to the initial position after the flow is stopped. Receptors can also jump over such barriers. Analysis of the receptor motion characteristics before, during, and after a force is applied via the flow indicates that the receptors are displaced together with their confining raft platform. Experiments before and after incubation with latrunculin B reveal that the barriers are part of the actin cytoskeleton and have an average spring constant of 2.5 ± 0.6 pN/μm before vs. 0.6 ± 0.2 pN/μm after partial actin depolymerization. Our data, in combination with our previous work demonstrating that the ε-toxin receptor confinement is not influenced by the cytoskeleton, imply that it is the raft platform and its constituents rather than the receptor itself that encounters and deforms the barriers formed by the actin cytoskeleton.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Differential interaction kinetics of a bipolar structure-specific endonuclease with DNA flaps revealed by single-molecule imaging.

Rachid Rezgui; Joëlle Kuhn; Xenia Fave; Lauren McLeod; Hannu Myllykallio; Antigoni Alexandrou; Cedric Bouzigues

As DNA repair enzymes are essential for preserving genome integrity, understanding their substrate interaction dynamics and the regulation of their catalytic mechanisms is crucial. Using single-molecule imaging, we investigated the association and dissociation kinetics of the bipolar endonuclease NucS from Pyrococcus abyssi (Pab) on 5′ and 3′-flap structures under various experimental conditions. We show that association of the PabNucS with ssDNA flaps is largely controlled by diffusion in the NucS-DNA energy landscape and does not require a free 5′ or 3′ extremity. On the other hand, NucS dissociation is independent of the flap length and thus independent of sliding on the single-stranded portion of the flapped DNA substrates. Our kinetic measurements have revealed previously unnoticed asymmetry in dissociation kinetics from these substrates that is markedly modulated by the replication clamp PCNA. We propose that the replication clamp PCNA enhances the cleavage specificity of NucS proteins by accelerating NucS loading at the ssDNA/dsDNA junctions and by minimizing the nuclease interaction time with its DNA substrate. Our data are also consistent with marked reorganization of ssDNA and nuclease domains occurring during NucS catalysis, and indicate that NucS binds its substrate directly at the ssDNA-dsDNA junction and then threads the ssDNA extremity into the catalytic site. The powerful techniques used here for probing the dynamics of DNA-enzyme binding at the single-molecule have provided new insight regarding substrate specificity of NucS nucleases.


M S-medecine Sciences | 2014

Map the intracellular concentration of reactive oxygen species

Cedric Bouzigues; Antigoni Alexandrou

L’organisation dans le temps et l’espace des voies de signalisation est un element essentiel dans le faconnage de la reponse cellulaire. Ceci est vrai notamment dans les processus chimiotactiques, ou l’apparition d’une organisation intracellulaire asymetrique est physiologiquement indispensable. Dans ce contexte, la signalisation par les especes oxygenees reactives, ou ROS, est singuliere. En effet, ces molecules, comme le peroxyde d’hydrogene H2O2, sont connues principalement pour leur activite bactericide et les dommages induits par le stress oxydant. Elles jouent cependant en parallele un role essentiel dans plusieurs voies de signalisation physiologiques controlant des reponses variees – contraction, proliferation, migration – dans de nombreux tissus (systemes nerveux, hepatique, vasculaire, etc.). L’homeostasie locale des ROS est donc un processus vital dans la vie cellulaire pour preserver l’action physiologique sans effet nuisible.


Nanoscale | 2017

Fast quantitative ROS detection based on dual-color single rare-earth nanoparticle imaging reveals signaling pathway kinetics in living cells

Mouna Abdesselem; R. Ramodiharilafy; L. Devys; Thierry Gacoin; Antigoni Alexandrou; Cedric Bouzigues

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Mathieu Morel

École Normale Supérieure

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Vasyl Shynkar

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Vincent Studer

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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