Childerick Severac
University of Toulouse
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Publication
Featured researches published by Childerick Severac.
Micron | 2016
Georges Smolyakov; Cécile Formosa-Dague; Childerick Severac; Raphaël E. Duval; Etienne Dague
Structural and mechanical mapping at the nanoscale by novel high-speed multiparametric Quantitative Imaging (QI) and PeakForce Quantitative Nanomechanical Mapping (PF-QNM) AFM modes was compared to the classical Force Volume (FV) mapping for the case of living Pseudomonas aeruginosa bacterial cells. QI and PF-QNM modes give results consistent with FV for the whole cells in terms of morphology and elastic modulus, while providing higher resolution and shorter acquisition time. As an important complement, the influence of scanning parameters on elastic modulus values was explored for small 0.2(2)μm(2) central area on top of cells. The modulus decreases with the indentation depth due to the effect of the hard cell wall, while it increases vs. tip oscillation frequency, displaying viscoelastic behaviour of the living bacterial cells. The ability of different AFM modes to follow correctly the bacteria viscoelastic behaviour at high oscillation frequency was tested.
Blood | 2015
Colin Valet; Gaëtan Chicanne; Childerick Severac; Claire Chaussade; Maria A. Whitehead; Cendrine Cabou; Marie-Pierre Gratacap; Frédérique Gaits-Iacovoni; Bart Vanhaesebroeck; Bernard Payrastre; Sonia Severin
The physiologic roles of the class II phosphoinositide 3-kinases (PI3Ks) and their contributions to phosphatidylinositol 3-monophosphate (PI3P) and PI(3,4)P2 production remain elusive. Here we report that mice heterozygous for a constitutively kinase-dead PI3K-C2α display aberrant platelet morphology with an elevated number of barbell-shaped proplatelets, a recently discovered intermediate stage in the final process of platelet production. Platelets with heterozygous PI3K-C2α inactivation have critical defects in α-granules and membrane structure that are associated with modifications in megakaryocytes. These platelets are more rigid and unable to form filopodia after stimulation. Heterozygous PI3K-C2α inactivation in platelets led to a significant reduction in the basal pool of PI3P and a mislocalization of several membrane skeleton proteins known to control the interactions between the plasma membrane and cytoskeleton. These alterations had repercussions on the performance of platelet responses with delay in the time of arterial occlusion in an in vivo model of thrombosis and defect in thrombus formation in an ex vivo blood flow system. These data uncover a key role for PI3K-C2α activity in the generation of a basal housekeeping PI3P pool and in the control of membrane remodeling, critical for megakaryocytopoiesis and normal platelet production and function.
Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2014
Etienne Dague; Gael Genet; Véronique Lachaize; Céline Guilbeau-Frugier; Jérémy Fauconnier; Céline Mias; Bruno Payré; Louise Chopinet; David Alsteens; Sandor Kasas; Childerick Severac; Jérôme Thireau; Christophe Heymes; Benjamin Honton; Alain Lacampagne; Atul Pathak; Jean-Michel Senard; Céline Galés
Loss of T-tubules (TT), sarcolemmal invaginations of cardiomyocytes (CMs), was recently identified as a general heart failure (HF) hallmark. However, whether TT per se or the overall sarcolemma is altered during HF process is still unknown. In this study, we directly examined sarcolemmal surface topography and physical properties using Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) in living CMs from healthy and failing mice hearts. We confirmed the presence of highly organized crests and hollows along myofilaments in isolated healthy CMs. Sarcolemma topography was tightly correlated with elasticity, with crests stiffer than hollows and related to the presence of few packed subsarcolemmal mitochondria (SSM) as evidenced by electron microscopy. Three days after myocardial infarction (MI), CMs already exhibit an overall sarcolemma disorganization with general loss of crests topography thus becoming smooth and correlating with a decreased elasticity while interfibrillar mitochondria (IFM), myofilaments alignment and TT network were unaltered. End-stage post-ischemic condition (15days post-MI) exacerbates overall sarcolemma disorganization with, in addition to general loss of crest/hollow periodicity, a significant increase of cell surface stiffness. Strikingly, electron microscopy revealed the total depletion of SSM while some IFM heaps could be visualized beneath the membrane. Accordingly, mitochondrial Ca(2+) studies showed a heterogeneous pattern between SSM and IFM in healthy CMs which disappeared in HF. In vitro, formamide-induced sarcolemmal stress on healthy CMs phenocopied post-ischemic kinetics abnormalities and revealed initial SSM death and crest/hollow disorganization followed by IFM later disarray which moved toward the cell surface and structured heaps correlating with TT loss. This study demonstrates that the loss of crest/hollow organization of CM surface in HF occurs early and precedes disruption of the TT network. It also highlights a general stiffness increased of the CM surface most likely related to atypical IFM heaps while SSM died during HF process. Overall, these results indicate that initial sarcolemmal stress leading to SSM death could underlie subsequent TT disarray and HF setting.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2016
Georges Smolyakov; Bénédicte Thiébot; Clément C. Campillo; Sid Labdi; Childerick Severac; Etienne Dague
We use single-cell force spectroscopy to compare elasticity, adhesion, and tether extrusion on four breast cancer cell lines with an increasing invasive potential. We perform cell attachment/detachment experiments either on fibronectin or on another cell using an atomic force microscope. Our study on the membrane tether formation from cancer cells show that they are easier to extrude from aggressive invasive cells. Measured elastic modulus values confirm that more invasive cells are softer. Moreover, the adhesion force increases with the invasive potential. Our results provide a mechanical signature of breast cancer cells that correlates with their invasivity.
Oncologie | 2009
Jean-Christophe Cau; H. Lalo; Childerick Severac; Jean-Pierre Peyrade; Emmanuelle Trévisiol; Véronique Anton Leberre; Jean François; Christophe Vieu
RésuméDans ce travail nous montrons que la structuration à l’échelle nanométrique de biomolécules sondes par lithographie douce permet de fabriquer des puces à protéines à un coût de production suffisamment réduit pour entrevoir leur utilisation dans le domaine de l’analysemoléculaire médicale. La combinaison d’un procédé d’impression moléculaire et d’une détection optique sans marquage fondée sur le principe de la diffraction de la lumière est mise en oeuvre afin de produire des supports d’analyse en verre comportant des motifs nanométriques et un scanner de diffraction qui permet la lecture d’un test biologique multiplexé.AbstractIn this article, we show that by biopatterning probe molecules at the nanoscale using soft lithography, protein biochips can be produced at a significantly lower cost for their use as a systematic method of molecular analysis for medical diagnosis purposes. The combination of multiplexed nanoscale microcontact printing and label-free optical detection using the principle of light diffraction is implemented for generating engineered glass slides for analysis, and a dedicated diffractive scanner for reading the multiplexed results of an assay.
Journal of Structural Biology | 2017
Georges Smolyakov; Marie Cauquil; Childerick Severac; Véronique Lachaize; Céline Guilbeau-Frugier; Jean-Michel Sénard; Céline Galés; Etienne Dague
PeakForce Quantitative Nanomechanical Mapping (PeakForce QNM) multiparametric AFM mode was adapted to qualitative and quantitative study of the lateral membrane of cardiomyocytes (CMs), extending this powerful mode to the study of soft cells. On living CM, PeakForce QNM depicted the crests and hollows periodic alternation of cell surface architecture previously described using AFM Force Volume (FV) mode. PeakForce QNM analysis provided better resolution in terms of pixel number compared to FV mode and reduced acquisition time, thus limiting the consequences of spontaneous living adult CM dedifferentiation once isolated from the cardiac tissue. PeakForce QNM mode on fixed CMs clearly visualized subsarcolemmal mitochondria (SSM) and their loss following formamide treatment, concomitant with the interfibrillar mitochondria climbing up and forming heaps at the cell surface. Interestingly, formamide-promoted SSM loss allowed visualization of the sarcomeric apparatus ultrastructure below the plasma membrane. High PeakForce QNM resolution led to better contrasted mechanical maps than FV mode and provided correlation between adhesion, dissipation, mechanical and topographical maps. Modified hydrophobic AFM tip enhanced contrast on adhesion and dissipation maps and suggested that CM surface crests and hollows exhibit distinct chemical properties. Finally, two-dimensional Fast Fourier Transform to objectively quantify AFM maps allowed characterization of periodicity of both sarcomeric Z-line and M-band. Overall, this study validated PeakForce QNM as a valuable and innovative mode for the exploration of living and fixed CMs. In the future, it could be applied to depict cell membrane architectural, mechanical and chemical defects as well as sarcomeric abnormalities associated with cardiac diseases.
Microelectronic Engineering | 2009
Helene Lalo; Jean-Christophe Cau; Christophe Thibault; Nathalie Marsaud; Childerick Severac; Christophe Vieu
Microelectronic Engineering | 2007
Jérôme Chalmeau; Laurence Salomé; Christophe Thibault; Childerick Severac; Christophe Vieu
Microelectronic Engineering | 2008
Jean-Christophe Cau; Aline Cerf; Christophe Thibault; Mike Geneviève; Childerick Severac; Jean-Pierre Peyrade; Christophe Vieu
Microelectronic Engineering | 2013
Julie Foncy; Jean-Christophe Cau; Carlos Bartual-Murgui; Jean François; Emmanuelle Trévisiol; Childerick Severac