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Dive into the research topics where Christiane Rose is active.

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Featured researches published by Christiane Rose.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Cyclotraxin-B, the first highly potent and selective TrkB inhibitor, has anxiolytic properties in mice.

Maxime Cazorla; A. Jouvenceau; Christiane Rose; Jean-Philippe Guilloux; Catherine Pilon; Alex Dranovsky; Joël Prémont

In the last decades, few mechanistically novel therapeutic agents have been developed to treat mental and neurodegenerative disorders. Numerous studies suggest that targeting BDNF and its TrkB receptor could be a promising therapeutic strategy for the treatment of brain disorders. However, the development of potent small ligands for the TrkB receptor has proven to be difficult. By using a peptidomimetic approach, we developed a highly potent and selective TrkB inhibitor, cyclotraxin-B, capable of altering TrkB-dependent molecular and physiological processes such as synaptic plasticity, neuronal differentiation and BDNF-induced neurotoxicity. Cyclotraxin-B allosterically alters the conformation of TrkB, which leads to the inhibition of both BDNF-dependent and -independent (basal) activities. Finally, systemic administration of cyclotraxin-B to mice results in TrkB inhibition in the brain with specific anxiolytic-like behavioral effects and no antidepressant-like activity. This study demonstrates that cyclotraxin-B might not only be a powerful tool to investigate the role of BDNF and TrkB in physiology and pathology, but also represents a lead compound for the development of new therapeutic strategies to treat brain disorders.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2017

Fluorescent nanodiamond tracking reveals intraneuronal transport abnormalities induced by brain-disease-related genetic risk factors

Simon Haziza; Nitin Mohan; Yann Loe-Mie; Aude-Marie Lepagnol-Bestel; Sophie Massou; Marie-Pierre Adam; Xuan Loc Le; Julia Viard; Christine Plancon; Rachel Daudin; Pascale Koebel; Emilie Dorard; Christiane Rose; Feng-Jen Hsieh; Chih-Che Wu; Brigitte Potier; Yann Herault; Carlo Sala; Aiden Corvin; Bernadette Allinquant; Huan-Cheng Chang; François Treussart; Michel Simonneau

Brain diseases such as autism and Alzheimers disease (each inflicting >1% of the world population) involve a large network of genes displaying subtle changes in their expression. Abnormalities in intraneuronal transport have been linked to genetic risk factors found in patients, suggesting the relevance of measuring this key biological process. However, current techniques are not sensitive enough to detect minor abnormalities. Here we report a sensitive method to measure the changes in intraneuronal transport induced by brain-disease-related genetic risk factors using fluorescent nanodiamonds (FNDs). We show that the high brightness, photostability and absence of cytotoxicity allow FNDs to be tracked inside the branches of dissociated neurons with a spatial resolution of 12 nm and a temporal resolution of 50 ms. As proof of principle, we applied the FND tracking assay on two transgenic mouse lines that mimic the slight changes in protein concentration (∼30%) found in the brains of patients. In both cases, we show that the FND assay is sufficiently sensitive to detect these changes.


Journal of Alzheimer's Disease | 2015

sAβPPα Improves Hippocampal NMDA-Dependent Functional Alterations Linked to Healthy Aging

Laura Moreno; Christiane Rose; Arun Mohanraj; Bernadette Allinquant; Jean-Marie Billard; P. Dutar

This study shows a decrease in soluble amyloid-β protein precursor-α (sAβPPα) levels, but no change in sAβPPβ, in the rat hippocampus during healthy aging, associated with the weaker expression of N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDAR)-dependent long-term potentiation (LTP) in the CA1 area of hippocampal slices. Exogenous application of recombinant sAβPPα increases NMDAR activation in aged animals and could rescue the age-related LTP deficits described. In contrast, it does not affect basal synaptic transmission or glutamate release. These results indicate that improving synaptic sAβPPα availability at synapses helps in reducing the functional NMDAR-related deregulation of hippocampal networks linked to aging.


BMC Neuroscience | 2014

Cytoplasmic SET induces tau hyperphosphorylation through a decrease of methylated phosphatase 2A.

Stéphanie Chasseigneaux; Christine Clamagirand; Léa Huguet; Lucie Gorisse-Hussonnois; Christiane Rose; Bernadette Allinquant

BackgroundThe neuronal cytoplasmic localization of SET, an inhibitor of the phosphatase 2A (PP2A), results in tau hyperphosphorylation in the brains of Alzheimer patients through mechanisms that are still not well defined.ResultsWe used primary neurons and mouse brain slices to show that SET is translocated to the cytoplasm in a manner independent of both its cleavage and over-expression. The localization of SET in the cytoplasm, either by the translocation of endogenous SET or by internalization of the recombinant full-length SET protein, induced tau hyperphosphorylation. Cytoplasmic recombinant full-length SET in mouse brain slices induced a decrease of PP2A activity through a decrease of methylated PP2A levels. The levels of methylated PP2A were negatively correlated with tau hyperphosphorylation at Ser-202 but not with the abnormal phosphorylation of tau at Ser-422.ConclusionsThe presence of full-length SET in the neuronal cytoplasm is sufficient to impair PP2A methylation and activity, leading to tau hyperphosphorylation. In addition, our data suggest that tau hyperphosphorylation is regulated by different mechanisms at distinct sites. The translocation of SET to the neuronal cytoplasm, the low activity of PP2A, and tau hyperphosphorylation are associated in the brains of Alzheimer patients. Our data show a link between the translocation of SET in the cytoplasm and the decrease of methylated PP2A levels leading to a decrease of PP2A activity and tau hyperphosphorylation. This chain of events may contribute to the pathogenesis of Alzheimer disease.


Neurobiology of Disease | 2018

Targeting demyelination via α-secretases promoting sAPPα release to enhance remyelination in central nervous system.

Gemma Llufriu-Dabén; Alex Carrete; Elena Chierto; Jo Mailleux; Emeline Camand; Anne Simon; Tim Vanmierlo; Christiane Rose; Bernadette Allinquant; Jerome J. A. Hendriks; Charbel Massaad; Delphine Meffre; Mehrnaz Jafarian-Tehrani

Remyelination is an endogenous regenerative process of myelin repair in the central nervous system (CNS) with limited efficacy in demyelinating disorders. As strategies enhancing endogenous remyelination become a therapeutic challenge, we have focused our study on α-secretase-induced sAPPα release, a soluble endogenous protein with neuroprotective and neurotrophic properties. However, the role of sAPPα in remyelination is not known. Therefore, we investigated the remyelination potential of α-secretase-induced sAPPα release following CNS demyelination in mice. Acute demyelination was induced by feeding mice with cuprizone (CPZ) for 5weeks. To test the protective effect and the remyelination potential of etazolate, an α-secretase activator, we designed two treatment protocols. Etazolate was administrated either during the last two weeks or at the end of the CPZ intoxication. In both protocols, etazolate restored the number of myelinated axons in corpus callosum with a corresponding increase in the amount of MBP, one of the major myelin proteins in the brain. We also performed ex vivo studies to decipher etazolates mechanism of action in a lysolecithin-induced demyelination model using organotypic culture of cerebellar slices. Etazolate treatment was able to i) enhance the release of sAPPα in the culture media of demyelinated slices, ii) protect myelinated axons from demyelination, iii) increase the number of mature oligodendrocytes, iv) promote the reappearance of the paired Caspr+ adjacent to the nodes of Ranvier and v) increase the percentage of myelinated axons with short internodes, an indicator of remyelination. Etazolate failed to promote all the aforementioned effects in the presence of GI254023X, an α-secretase inhibitor. Moreover, the protective effects of etazolate in demyelinated slices were mimicked by sAPPα treatment in a dose-dependent manner. In conclusion, etazolate-induced sAPPα release protects myelinated axons from demyelination while also promoting remyelination. This work, thus, highlights the therapeutic potential of strategies that enhance sAPPα release in demyelinating disorders.


Alzheimers & Dementia | 2011

A new function for the amyloid precursor protein partner PAT1

Aysegul Dilsizoglu; Patricia Facchinetti; Vincent Contremoulins; Stéphanie Chasseigneaux; Christiane Rose; Bernadette Allinquant

ptosis following C. pneumoniae infection in neuronal cells that could lead to the pathologies observed in AD. Methods: Neuronal cells (SKNMC obtained from ATCC) were infected with AR39 strain of C. pneumoniae at an MOI 1⁄4 1 for 24 to 72hrs and analyzed using Realtime PCR microarrays (SABiosciences) specific for autophagy and apoptosis markers. Results: Neuronal cells infected from 24 to 72hrs with C. pneumoniae upregulated the expression of several genes associated with autophagy. In contrast, genes integral to the initiation of apoptosis were down regulated. For example, Beclin (BECN1) and several ATG’s (ATG4B, ATG4C), both prominent genes in the autophagy pathway where > 30 400 fold up-regulated at 24hrs and diminished tow5 fold up-regulated at 72hrs post infection. In contrast, apoptosis gene expression such as that for Caspase 3 (CASP3) and AKT (AKT1) were downregulated from 1.3 fold at 24hrs to 7 16 fold at 72hrs post infection. Conclusions: Our data suggest that C. pneumoniae exerts a control over changes in gene regulation affecting the apoptotic and the autophagic process in neuronal cells. Both autophagic and apoptosis dysfunction have been observed in AD. The impairment of these normal cellular processes by a pathogen such as C. pneumoniae may contribute to the neuropathology seen in AD.


Psychopharmacology | 2010

Modulation of prepulse inhibition and stereotypies in rodents: no evidence for antipsychotic-like properties of histamine H3-receptor inverse agonists.

Aude Burban; Chit Sadakhom; Dominique Dumoulin; Christiane Rose; Gwenaëlle Le Pen; Henriette Frances; Jean-Michel Arrang


Archive | 1999

Novel nep ii membrane metalloprotease and its use for screening inhibitors useful in therapy

Tanja Ouimet; Claude Gros; Christiane Rose; Marie-Chantal Bonhomme; Patricia Facchinetti; Jean-Charles Schwartz


Neurobiology of Aging | 2018

Transient increase in sAPPα secretion in response to Aβ1–42 oligomers: an attempt of neuronal self-defense?

Christiane Rose; Emilie Dorard; Mickael Audrain; Lucie Gorisse-Hussonnois; Nathalie Cartier; Jérôme Braudeau; Bernadette Allinquant


Alzheimers & Dementia | 2011

Soluble amyloid precursor protein in cerebrospinal fluid as a potential biomarker of Alzheimer's disease using a new sensitive test

Stéphanie Chasseigneaux; Claire Paquet; Bernadette Allinquant; Jean Louis Laplanche; Katell Peoc'h; Christiane Rose

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Emilie Dorard

Paris Descartes University

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A. Jouvenceau

Paris Descartes University

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Alex Carrete

Paris Descartes University

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Anne Simon

Paris Descartes University

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Aude Burban

Paris Descartes University

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