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Dive into the research topics where Christine Feillet-Coudray is active.

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Featured researches published by Christine Feillet-Coudray.


Clinica Chimica Acta | 1999

Lipid peroxidation and antioxidant status in experimental diabetes

Christine Feillet-Coudray; Edmond Rock; Charles Coudray; K Grzelkowska; V Azais-Braesco; Dominique Dardevet; Andrzej Mazur

Oxidative stress is currently suggested as a mechanism underlying diabetes. The present study was designed to evaluate the oxidative stress related parameters in streptozotocin-induced diabetes in rats using different complementary approaches: susceptibility to in vitro oxidation (lipid peroxidation induction in liver homogenate, red blood cells hemolysis), blood antioxidant status (total antioxidant capacity by two approaches), and plasma isoprostane measurement, a new marker of lipid peroxidation in vivo. We have shown that induced liver thiobarbituric acid reactive substances increased after 4 weeks of diabetes, in spite of increased liver vitamin E content. Red blood cells hemolysis was significantly delayed after 4 weeks of diabetes. Plasma antioxidant capacity (AOC) tended to increase after 4 weeks of diabetes and was correlated with plasma vitamin E levels. Total antioxidant activity (TAA) significantly decreased after 1 week and a significant correlation was observed with plasma albumin levels. Plasma isoprostane (8-epiprostaglandinF2alpha) concentrations were not modified significantly 1 week or 4 weeks after the induction of diabetes. Levels of vitamin E in the diet and changes in its distribution among the body seems to play an important role in the development of oxidative stress during diabetes and its consequences.


Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry | 2000

Fructooligosaccharides enhance mineral apparent absorption and counteract the deleterious effects of phytic acid on mineral homeostasis in rats

Hubert W. Lopez; Charles Coudray; Marie-Anne Levrat-Verny; Christine Feillet-Coudray; Christian Demigné; Christian Rémésy

Phytic acid (PA) and fructooligosaccharides (FOS) such as inulin are two food components that are able to modify mineral absorption negatively or positively. The influence of PA and FOS on the cecal and apparent mineral absorption as well as on the mineral status (plasma, hepatic, and bone) were investigated in four groups of rats fed one of the experimental diets: a fiber-free (FF) diet, a FF diet containing 7 g/kg PA (FF + PA), a diet containing 100 g/kg inulin (FOS), or a FOS diet containing 7 g/kg PA (FOS + PA). The cecal enlargement together with the acidification of cecal pH in rats adapted to FOS diets led to an improved Ca and Mg cecal absorption. Mineral apparent absorption was significantly enhanced by FOS ingestion (Ca, +20%; Mg, +50%; Fe, +23%; Cu, +45%), whereas PA decreased this factor only for trace elements (Fe, -48%; Zn, -62%; Cu, -31%). These inhibitory effects of a FF + PA diet have repercussions on blood (Mg, -15%; Fe, -12%; transferrin saturation -31%), liver (Mg, -18%; Fe, -42%; Zn, -25%), and bone (Zn, -25%) variables. However, the introduction of FOS into a PA diet counteracted these observed deleterious effects by stimulating bacterial hydrolysis of PA (+60% in rats adapted to FOS + PA compared to those fed the FF + PA diet) and by improving cecal absorption of minerals.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2009

Oxidative stress in rats fed a high-fat high-sucrose diet and preventive effect of polyphenols: Involvement of mitochondrial and NAD(P)H oxidase systems

Christine Feillet-Coudray; T. Sutra; Gilles Fouret; J. Ramos; Chantal Wrutniak-Cabello; Gérard Cabello; Jean-Paul Cristol; Charles Coudray

Mitochondrial and NADPH oxidase systems and oxidative stress were investigated in 12 week high-fat high-sucrose (HFHS) diet-fed rats. A protective effect of wine polyphenol (PP) extract was also examined. In liver, maximal activities of CII and CII+III mitochondrial complexes were decreased but NADPH oxidase expression (p22(phox) and p47(phox)) and NADPH oxidase-dependent superoxide anion production were not modified, whereas oxidative stress (lipid and protein oxidation products and antioxidant systems) was increased with HFHS diet. In muscle, anion superoxide production was slightly increased while mitochondrial complex activities and lipid and protein oxidation products were not modified with HFHS diet. In heart, NADPH oxidase expression and superoxide anion production were increased, and maximal activity of mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes or oxidative stress parameters were not modified. Wine polyphenol extract had an inhibiting effect on liver oxidative stress and on heart NADPH oxidase expression and superoxide anion production, and on induction of hepatic steatosis with HFHS diet. Induction of mitochondrial dysfunction could be a primary event in the development of oxidative stress in liver, while in skeletal muscle and in heart the NADPH oxidase system seems to be mainly involved in oxidative stress. Wine polyphenol extract was shown to partially prevent oxidative stress in liver and heart tissues and to nearly completely prevent steatosis development in liver.


Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2001

Five‐Week Intake of Short‐Chain Fructo‐Oligosaccharides Increases Intestinal Absorption and Status of Magnesium in Postmenopausal Women

Maha Tahiri; Jean Claude Tressol; Josiane Arnaud; Francis Robert Joseph Bornet; Corinne Bouteloup-Demange; Christine Feillet-Coudray; Véronique Ducros; Denise Pépin; Fred Brouns; Anne Marie Roussel; Yves Rayssiguier; Charles Coudray

Fermentable carbohydrates have been shown to be nondigestible by human enzymes in the small intestine but are fermented extensively in the large bowel to short‐chain fatty acids (SCFAs), which can increase mineral absorption. It has been shown that feeding such carbohydrates including short‐chain fructo‐oligosaccharides (sc‐FOSs) increases intestinal magnesium (Mg) absorption in animals, but their beneficial impact on Mg absorption in humans still remains to be established. Therefore, this work aimed to investigate the effect of moderate daily doses of sc‐FOSs (10 g/day) on the intestinal absorption and status of Mg in postmenopausal women without hormone replacement therapy (HRT). Eleven healthy postmenopausal women aged 59 ± 6 years (mean ± SD) received for 5 weeks sc‐FOS or sucrose (placebo) treatments according to a randomized, double‐blind, crossover design separated by a washout period of at least 3 weeks. Subjects ingested 87.5 mg of stable isotope25Mg together with a fecal marker. Subsequently, feces were collected for 5–7 days. An inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer (ICP/MS) was used for25Mg stable isotope measurements in feces, urine, and blood. Mg levels were assessed also at the beginning and at the end of each treatment in plasma, erythrocytes, and urine. These measurements allowed for the determination of net intestinal Mg absorption and Mg status. The results show that the addition of 10 g sc‐FOS to the diet increased Mg absorption by 12.3%, from 30.2 ± 5.0% (placebo treatment) to 33.9 ± 7.2% (sc‐FOS treatment; mean ± SD; p < 0.02). This increase in intestinal Mg absorption was accompanied by an increase in plasma25Mg level and led to a higher urinary25Mg excretion. This is the first time that such an effect is shown in humans. The overall conclusion of this work is that the ingestion of moderate doses of sc‐FOS did improve intestinal Mg absorption and status in postmenopausal women. Because of the important role of Mg in many cellular functions, such Mg absorption improvement may be particularly interesting when the dietary intake of Mg is limited.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 1999

Plasma levels of 8-epiPGF2α, an in vivo marker of oxidative stress, are not affected by aging or Alzheimer’s disease

Christine Feillet-Coudray; R. Tourtauchaux; Michel Niculescu; Edmond Rock; Igor Tauveron; Marie-Cécile Alexandre-Gouabau; Yves Rayssiguier; Isabelle Jalenques; Andrzej Mazur

Free radicals are likely involved in the aging process and there is a growing body of evidence that free radical damage to cellular function is associated with a number of age-related diseases such as atherosclerosis, cancer, and neurologic disorders. The present study was designed to evaluate in a healthy population the evolution with age of 8-epiPGF2alpha plasma levels, a recently proposed marker of in vivo lipid peroxidation. Moreover we investigated this marker of oxidative stress in patients with Alzheimers disease (AD), an age-related neurodegenerative disorder in the development of which free radicals have been involved. Our results show that in the healthy population studied, despite decreased antioxidant defenses with increasing age as monitored by antioxidant capacity measurement, plasma 8-epiPGF2alpha levels were not correlated with age. Moreover, we have demonstrated that AD patients presented no modification of plasma 8-epiPGF2alpha level and no major alteration of the antioxidant status. In conclusion, the measurement of plasma 8-epiPGF2alpha did not allow us to detect alterations in oxidative stress with aging or in AD.


Nutrition | 2003

Making bread with sourdough improves mineral bioavailability from reconstituted whole wheat flour in rats

Hubert W. Lopez; Virgile Duclos; Charles Coudray; Virginie Krespine; Christine Feillet-Coudray; Arnaud Messager; Christian Demigné; Christian Rémésy

OBJECTIVE We compared the effects of different kinds of bread fermentation on mineral bioavailability. METHODS Wistar rats were fed one of the following experimental diets for 21 d: control, reconstituted whole wheat flour (white flour plus bran), yeast bread, and sourdough bread. The apparent mineral absorption and intestinal fermentation were measured in each animal. RESULTS Phytate contents in yeast and sourdough bread were lower than in reconstituted whole wheat flour (-52% and -71%, respectively). Total cecal pool of short-chain fatty acids, in particular the butyrate pool, was significantly increased by the ingestion of unrefined products. Calcium homeostasis was not modified by these nutritional conditions, whereas magnesium absorption was significantly greater in rats fed the control and sourdough diets than in those consuming whole wheat flour and yeast bread. Magnesium kidney excretion was slightly stimulated by sourdough bread. Compared with the control diet, iron balance was significantly reduced by reconstituted whole wheat flour diet. Yeast bread making counteracted the deleterious effects of whole wheat on iron absorption, whereas sourdough bread making enhanced iron absorption. Further, liver and plasma iron and transferrin saturation levels were lower in rats adapted to the flour diet than in other groups. Zinc absorption was strongly depressed in the presence of unprocessed reconstituted whole wheat flour in the diet, but yeast fermentation afforded a zinc assimilation comparable to the control diet, whereas the sourdough bread led to maximal zinc absorption. Copper absorption increased significantly when rats were fed the sourdough bread, whereas unprocessed whole flour depressed copper absorption (-41% versus control diet). CONCLUSION Mineral bioavailability from reconstituted whole wheat flour can be improved by bread making. Although yeast fermentation minimizes the unfavorable effects of phytic acid, sourdough bread is a better source of available minerals, especially magnesium, iron, and zinc.


Diabetes Care | 2013

Grape Polyphenols Prevent Fructose- Induced Oxidative Stress and Insulin Resistance in First-Degree Relatives of Type 2 Diabetic Patients

Marie Hokayem; Emilie Blond; Hubert Vidal; Karen Lambert; Christine Feillet-Coudray; Charles Coudray; Sandra Pesenti; Cedric Luyton; Stéphanie Lambert-Porcheron; Valérie Sauvinet; Christine Fedou; J.-F. Brun; Jennifer Rieusset; Catherine Bisbal; Ariane Sultan; Jacques Mercier; Joelle Goudable; Anne-Marie Dupuy; Jean-Paul Cristol; M. Laville; A. Avignon

OBJECTIVE To assess the clinical efficacy of nutritional amounts of grape polyphenols (PPs) in counteracting the metabolic alterations of high-fructose diet, including oxidative stress and insulin resistance (IR), in healthy volunteers with high metabolic risk. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS Thirty-eight healthy overweight/obese first-degree relatives of type 2 diabetic patients (18 men and 20 women) were randomized in a double-blind controlled trial between a grape PP (2 g/day) and a placebo (PCB) group. Subjects were investigated at baseline and after 8 and 9 weeks of supplementation, the last 6 days of which they all received 3 g/kg fat-free mass/day of fructose. The primary end point was the protective effect of grape PPs on fructose-induced IR. RESULTS In the PCB group, fructose induced 1) a 20% decrease in hepatic insulin sensitivity index (P < 0.05) and an 11% decrease in glucose infusion rate (P < 0.05) as evaluated during a two-step hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp, 2) an increase in systemic (urinary F2-isoprostanes) and muscle (thiobarbituric acid–reactive substances and protein carbonylation) oxidative stress (P < 0.05), and 3) a downregulation of mitochondrial genes and decreased mitochondrial respiration (P < 0.05). All the deleterious effects of fructose were fully blunted by grape PP supplementation. Antioxidative defenses, inflammatory markers, and main adipokines were affected neither by fructose nor by grape PPs. CONCLUSIONS A natural mixture of grape PPs at nutritional doses efficiently prevents fructose-induced oxidative stress and IR. The current interest in grape PP ingredients and products by the global food and nutrition industries could well make them a stepping-stone of preventive nutrition.


Journal of Bioenergetics and Biomembranes | 2012

Dietary fatty acids modulate liver mitochondrial cardiolipin content and its fatty acid composition in rats with non alcoholic fatty liver disease

Manar Aoun; Gilles Fouret; Françoise Michel; Béatrice Bonafos; Jean-Paul Cristol; Marie-Annette Carbonneau; Charles Coudray; Christine Feillet-Coudray

No data are reported on changes in mitochondrial membrane phospholipids in non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. We determined the content of mitochondrial membrane phospholipids from rats with non alcoholic liver steatosis, with a particular attention for cardiolipin (CL) content and its fatty acid composition, and their relation with the activity of the mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes. Different dietary fatty acid patterns leading to steatosis were explored. With high-fat diet, moderate macrosteatosis was observed and the liver mitochondrial phospholipid class distribution and CL fatty acids composition were modified. Indeed, both CL content and its C18:2n-6 content were increased with liver steatosis. Moreover, mitochondrial ATP synthase activity was positively correlated to the total CL content in liver phospholipid and to CL C18:2n-6 content while other complexes activity were negatively correlated to total CL content and/or CL C18:2n-6 content of liver mitochondria. The lard-rich diet increased liver CL synthase gene expression while the fish oil-rich diet increased the (n-3) polyunsaturated fatty acids content in CL. Thus, the diet may be a significant determinant of both the phospholipid class content and the fatty acid composition of liver mitochondrial membrane, and the activities of some of the respiratory chain complex enzymes may be influenced by dietary lipid amount in particular via modification of the CL content and fatty acid composition in phospholipid.


Metabolism-clinical and Experimental | 2003

Dietary iron regulates hepatic hepcidin 1 and 2 mRNAs in mice

Andrzej Mazur; Christine Feillet-Coudray; Béatrice Romier; Dominique Bayle; Elyett Gueux; Marc Ruivard; Charles Coudray; Yves Rayssiguier

Recently discovered peptide-hepcidin (Hepc) may be a central player in the communication of iron body stores to the intestinal absorptive cells and thus involved in the maintenance of iron homeostasis. The aim of this study was to determine the effects of the level of dietary iron on Hepc gene expression in the liver. OF1 male mice were fed for 3 weeks either control diet (35 mg iron/kg diet), low-iron diet (1 mg iron/kg diet), or high-iron diet (500 mg iron/kg diet), and Hepc 1 and 2 mRNA abundance in the liver was assessed by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). Results clearly showed that Hepc gene expression is upregulated by high dietary iron and downregulated when the dietary iron level is low. Both Hepc 1 and Hepc 2 expression responds coordinately to dietary iron. This work provides additional evidence of the key role of Hepc in the regulation of iron homeostasis.


Clinica Chimica Acta | 2002

Divergence in plasmatic and urinary isoprostane levels in type 2 diabetes

Christine Feillet-Coudray; F Choné; F Michel; Edmond Rock; P Thiéblot; Yves Rayssiguier; I Tauveron; Andrzej Mazur

BACKGROUND Oxidative stress is currently suggested as a mechanism underlying diabetes. The present study was designed to evaluate isoprostane levels in plasma and in urine in type 2 diabetic patients, and to compare them to other currently used biomarkers of oxidative stress. METHODS The work was performed in a control group (n = 10) and in a type 2 diabetic group (n = 10). Besides the traditional biochemical parameters, we evaluated the plasma and urine levels of isoprostanes and malondialdehyde (MDA) as markers of oxidative stress. RESULTS We found increased plasma and urine MDA in the diabetic patients and almost significantly decreased plasma vitamin E. Urinary isoprostane levels in diabetic patients were increased but they presented a strong tendency to a decrease in plasma isoprostanes. It is therefore suggested that, in the studied diabetic patients, although the production of isoprostanes in the body was increased (as other plasma oxidative stress biomarkers were altered) it did not lead to an increase in plasma isoprostane levels. It could be hypothesised that this results from an increased elimination of this metabolite and therefore an increased excretion in urine. CONCLUSION Our results showed that the measurement of same oxidative stress biomarker, isoprostane, in two different biologic fluids, plasma and urine, led to divergent results and emphasised the importance to measure a biomarker both in the circulation fluid (plasma) and in the elimination fluid (urine), to have a general idea of what is occurring in the organism.

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Charles Coudray

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Gilles Fouret

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Yves Rayssiguier

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Andrzej Mazur

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Béatrice Bonafos

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Chantal Wrutniak-Cabello

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Elyett Gueux

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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François Casas

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Béatrice Chabi

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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