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Dive into the research topics where Daniella Checchin is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniella Checchin.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Modulation of Pro-inflammatory Gene Expression by Nuclear Lysophosphatidic Acid Receptor Type-1

Sylvie G. Bernier; Alejandro Vazquez-Tello; Sonia Brault; Martin Beauchamp; Christiane Quiniou; Anne Marilise Marrache; Daniella Checchin; Florian Sennlaub; Xin Hou; Mony Nader; Ghassan Bkaily; Alfredo Ribeiro-da-Silva; Edward J. Goetzl; Sylvain Chemtob

Lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) is a bioactive molecule involved in inflammation, immunity, wound healing, and neoplasia. Its pleiotropic actions arise presumably by interaction with their cell surface G protein-coupled receptors. Herein, the presence of the specific nuclear lysophosphatidic acid receptor-1 (LPA1R) was revealed in unstimulated porcine cerebral microvascular endothelial cells (pCMVECs), LPA1R stably transfected HTC4 rat hepatoma cells, and rat liver tissue using complementary approaches, including radioligand binding experiments, electron- and cryomicroscopy, cell fractionation, and immunoblotting with three distinct antibodies. Coimmunoprecipitation studies in enriched plasmalemmal fractions of unstimulated pCMVEC showed that LPA1Rs are dually sequestrated in caveolin-1 and clathrin subcompartments, whereas in nuclear fractions LPA1R appeared primarily in caveolae. Immunofluorescent assays using a cell-free isolated nuclear system confirmed LPA1R and caveolin-1 co-localization. In pCMVEC, LPA-stimulated increases in cyclooxygenase-2 and inducible nitric-oxide synthase RNA and protein expression were insensitive to caveolea-disrupting agents but sensitive to LPA-generating phospholipase A2 enzyme and tyrosine kinase inhibitors. Moreover, LPA-induced increases in Ca2+ transients and/or iNOS expression in highly purified rat liver nuclei were prevented by pertussis toxin, phosphoinositide 3-kinase/Akt inhibitor wortmannin and Ca2+ chelator and channel blockers EGTA and SK&F96365, respectively. This study describes for the first time the nucleus as a potential organelle for LPA intracrine signaling in the regulation of pro-inflammatory gene expression.


Circulation | 2003

Cyclooxygenase-2 in Human and Experimental Ischemic Proliferative Retinopathy

Florian Sennlaub; F. Valamanesh; Alejandro Vazquez-Tello; Ahmed M. Abu El-Asrar; Daniella Checchin; Sonia Brault; Martin Beauchamp; Bupe R. Mwaikambo; Yves Courtois; Karel Geboes; Daya R. Varma; Pierre Lachapelle; Huy Ong; Francine Behar-Cohen; Sylvain Chemtob

Background—Intravitreal neovascular diseases, as in ischemic retinopathies, are a major cause of blindness. Because inflammatory mechanisms influence vitreal neovascularization and cyclooxygenase (COX)–2 promotes tumor angiogenesis, we investigated the role of COX-2 in ischemic proliferative retinopathy. Methods and Results—We describe here that COX-2 is induced in retinal astrocytes in human diabetic retinopathy, in the murine and rat model of ischemic proliferative retinopathy in vivo, and in hypoxic astrocytes in vitro. Specific COX-2 but not COX-1 inhibitors prevented intravitreal neovascularization, whereas prostaglandin E2, mainly via its prostaglandin E receptor 3 (EP3), exacerbated neovascularization. COX-2 inhibition induced an upregulation of thrombospondin-1 and its CD36 receptor, consistent with the observed antiangiogenic effects of COX-2 inhibition; EP3 stimulation reversed effects of COX-2 inhibitors on thrombospondin-1 and CD36. Conclusion—These findings point to an important role for COX-2 in ischemic proliferative retinopathy, as in diabetes.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Nitric Oxide Signaling via Nuclearized Endothelial Nitric-oxide Synthase Modulates Expression of the Immediate Early Genes iNOS and mPGES-1

Tang Zhu; Sonia Brault; Antoinette Geha; Alejandro Vazquez-Tello; Audrey Fortier; David Barbaz; Daniella Checchin; Xin Hou; Moni Nader; Ghassan Bkaily; Jean-Philippe Gratton; Nikolaus Heveker; Alfredo Ribeiro-da-Silva; Krishna G. Peri; Harry Bard; Alzbeta Chorvatova; Pedro D'Orléans-Juste; Edward J. Goetzl; Sylvain Chemtob

Stimulation of freshly isolated rat hepatocytes with lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) resulted in LPA1 receptor-mediated and nitricoxide-dependent up-regulation of the immediate early genes iNOS (inducible nitric-oxide synthase (NOS)) and mPGES-1 (microsomal prostaglandin E synthase-1). Because LPA is a ligand for both cell surface and intracellular receptor sites and a potent endothelial NOS (eNOS) activator, we hypothesized that NO derived from activated nuclearized eNOS might participate in gene regulation. Herein we show, by confocal microscopy performed on porcine cerebral endothelial cells expressing native LPA1-receptor and eNOS and on HTC4 rat hepatoma cells co-transfected with recombinant human LPA1-receptor and fused eNOS-GFP cDNA, a dynamic eNOS translocation from peripheral to nuclear regions upon stimulation with LPA. Nuclear localization of eNOS and its downstream effector, soluble guanylate cyclase, were demonstrated in situ in rat liver specimens by immunogold labeling using specific antibodies. Stimulation of this nuclear fraction with LPA and the NO donor sodium nitroprusside resulted, respectively, in increased production of nitrite (and eNOS phosphorylation) and cGMP; these separate responses were also correspondingly blocked by NOS inhibitor l-NAME and soluble guanylate cyclase inhibitor ODQ. In addition, sodium nitroprusside evoked a sequential increase in nuclear Ca2+ transients, activation of p42 MAPK, NF-κB binding to DNA consensus sequence, and dependent iNOS RNA. This study describes a hitherto unrecognized molecular mechanism by which nuclear eNOS through ensuing NO modulates nuclear calcium homeostasis involved in gene transcription-associated events. Moreover, our findings strongly support the concept of the nucleus as an autonomous signaling compartment.


Documenta Ophthalmologica | 2010

Understanding ischemic retinopathies: emerging concepts from oxygen-induced retinopathy

Elsa Kermorvant-Duchemin; Przemyslaw Sapieha; Mirna Sirinyan; Martin Beauchamp; Daniella Checchin; Pierre Hardy; Florian Sennlaub; Pierre Lachapelle; Sylvain Chemtob

Ischemic retinopathies, such as retinopathy of prematurity and diabetic retinopathy are characterized by an initial microvascular degeneration, followed by an abnormal hypoxia-induced neovascularization. Oxygen-induced retinopathy (OIR) is a well-established in vivo model of ischemic retinopathies, which, although the triggering insult varies, all share a common end result of capillary loss. Understanding the mechanisms of normal retinal vascular development as well as the pathophysiological processes leading to the primary vascular loss is the key to develop treatments to prevent the sight-threatening neovascularization associated with human ischemic retinopathies. The importance of oxygen-dependant vascular endothelial growth factor in the pathophysiology of both phases of OIR has long been recognized. However, recent studies point out that OIR is a multifactorial disease, resulting from additive effects of an unbalanced expression of pro- and anti-angiogenic factors, interrelated with protective effects of nutritional factors and cytotoxic effects of oxidative and nitro-oxidative stress-dependant mediators. This review summarizes the most recent aspects of the research on OIR conducted in our laboratory and others, with a particular focus on the role of new mediators of nitro-oxidative stress, the trans-arachidonic acids, in microvascular degeneration, and on a novel pathway of metabolic signaling where hypoxia-driven succinate, via receptor GPR91, governs normal and pathological retinal angiogenesis.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2006

Proangiogenic Effects of Protease-Activated Receptor 2 Are Tumor Necrosis Factor-α and Consecutively Tie2 Dependent

Tang Zhu; Florian Sennlaub; Martin Beauchamp; Li Fan; Jean Sebastian Joyal; Daniella Checchin; Satra Nim; Pierre Lachapelle; Mirna Sirinyan; Xin Hou; Michela BossolascoM. Bossolasco; Georges-Etienne Rivard; Nikolaus Heveker; Sylvain Chemtob

Objective—Angiogenesis is essential physiologically in growth and pathologically in tumor development, chronic inflammatory disorders, and proliferative retinopathies. Activation of protease-activated receptor 2 (PAR2) leads to a proangiogenic response, but its mechanisms have yet to be specifically described. Here, we investigated the mode of action of PAR2 in retinal angiogenesis. Methods and Results—PAR2-activating peptide, SLIGRL, increased retinal angiogenesis associated with an induction of vascular endothelial growth factor and angiopoetin-2 and most notably tie2 in the retina in vivo as well as in cultured neuroretinal endothelial cells. SLIGRL also induced release of the proinflammatory and angiogenic mediator tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) via the MEK/extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) (MEK/ERK) pathway in these endothelial cells. TNF-α, in turn, elicited tie2 expression by activating the MEK/ERK pathway. PAR2-evoked tie2 expression, endothelium proliferation (in vitro), and retinal neovascularization (in vivo) were abrogated by selective TNF-α blockers (neutralizing antibody infliximab and soluble TNF-α receptor-Fc fusion protein etanercept) as well as the MEK inhibitor PD98059. Conclusion—The proangiogenic properties of PAR2 are intertwined with its proinflammatory effects, such that in retinal vasculature, they depend on TNF-α and subsequent induction of tie2 via the MEK/ERK pathway.


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2006

Potential role of microglia in retinal blood vessel formation.

Daniella Checchin; Florian Sennlaub; Etienne Levavasseur; Martin Leduc; Sylvain Chemtob


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2005

Microvascular rarefaction and decreased angiogenesis in rats with fetal programming of hypertension associated with exposure to a low-protein diet in utero

Patrick Pladys; Florian Sennlaub; Sonia Brault; Daniella Checchin; Isabelle Lahaie; Ngoc Loan Oanh Lê; K. Bibeau; Gilles Cambonie; Daniel Abran; M. Brochu; G. Thibault; Pierre Hardy; Sylvain Chemtob; Anne Monique Nuyt


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2004

Redox-dependent effects of nitric oxide on microvascular integrity in oxygen-induced retinopathy

Martin Beauchamp; Florian Sennlaub; Giovanna Speranza; Fernand Gobeil; Daniella Checchin; Elsa Kermorvant-Duchemin; Daniel Abran; Pierre Hardy; Pierre Lachapelle; Daya R. Varma; Sylvain Chemtob


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2004

ISOMER-SPECIFIC CONTRACTILE EFFECTS OF A SERIES OF SYNTHETIC F2-ISOPROSTANES ON RETINAL AND CEREBRAL MICROVASCULATURE

Xin Hou; L. Jackson Roberts; Douglas F. Taber; Kazuo Kanai; Daniel Abran; Sonia Brault; Daniella Checchin; Florian Sennlaub; Pierre Lachapelle; Daya R. Varma; Sylvain Chemtob


Canadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology | 2003

Nuclear prostaglandin signaling system: biogenesis and actions via heptahelical receptors

Alejandro Vazquez-Tello; Anne Marilise Marrache; Mosumi Bhattacharya; Daniella Checchin; Ghassan Bkaily; Pierre Lachapelle; Alfredo Ribeiro-da-Silva; Sylvain Chemtob

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Pierre Lachapelle

McGill University Health Centre

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Pierre Hardy

Université de Montréal

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Xin Hou

Université de Montréal

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Daniel Abran

Université de Montréal

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