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Dive into the research topics where David Ledieu is active.

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Featured researches published by David Ledieu.


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2010

Potent and Selective Inhibition of Polycythemia by the Quinoxaline JAK2 Inhibitor NVP-BSK805

Fabienne Baffert; Catherine H. Regnier; Alain De Pover; Carole Pissot-Soldermann; Gisele A. Tavares; Francesca Blasco; Josef Brueggen; Patrick Chène; Peter Drueckes; Dirk Erdmann; Pascal Furet; Marc Gerspacher; Marc Lang; David Ledieu; Lynda Nolan; Stephan Ruetz; Joerg Trappe; Eric Vangrevelinghe; Markus Wartmann; Lorenza Wyder; Francesco Hofmann; Thomas Radimerski

The recent discovery of an acquired activating point mutation in JAK2, substituting valine at amino acid position 617 for phenylalanine, has greatly improved our understanding of the molecular mechanism underlying chronic myeloproliferative neoplasms. Strikingly, the JAK2V617F mutation is found in nearly all patients suffering from polycythemia vera and in roughly every second patient suffering from essential thrombocythemia and primary myelofibrosis. Thus, JAK2 represents a promising target for the treatment of myeloproliferative neoplasms and considerable efforts are ongoing to discover and develop inhibitors of the kinase. Here, we report potent inhibition of JAK2V617F and JAK2 wild-type enzymes by a novel substituted quinoxaline, NVP-BSK805, which acts in an ATP-competitive manner. Within the JAK family, NVP-BSK805 displays more than 20-fold selectivity towards JAK2 in vitro, as well as excellent selectivity in broader kinase profiling. The compound blunts constitutive STAT5 phosphorylation in JAK2V617F-bearing cells, with concomitant suppression of cell proliferation and induction of apoptosis. In vivo, NVP-BSK805 exhibited good oral bioavailability and a long half-life. The inhibitor was efficacious in suppressing leukemic cell spreading and splenomegaly in a Ba/F3 JAK2V617F cell-driven mouse mechanistic model. Furthermore, NVP-BSK805 potently suppressed recombinant human erythropoietin-induced polycythemia and extramedullary erythropoiesis in mice and rats. Mol Cancer Ther; 9(7); 1945–55. ©2010 AACR.


Toxicologic Pathology | 2010

Effects of Hepatic Drug-metabolizing Enzyme Induction on Clinical Pathology Parameters in Animals and Man

Daniela Ennulat; Dana Walker; Frances A.S. Clemo; Michal Magid-Slav; David Ledieu; Mark Graham; Suzanne Botts; Laura Boone

Hepatic drug-metabolizing enzyme (DME) induction is an adaptive response associated with changes in preclinical species; this response can include increases in liver weight, hepatocellular hyperplasia and hypertrophy, and upregulated tissue expression of DMEs. Effects of DME induction on clinical pathology markers of hepatobiliary injury and function in animals as well as humans are not well established. This component of a multipart review of the comparative pathology of xenobiotically mediated induction of hepatic metabolizing enzymes reviews pertinent data from retrospective and prospective preclinical and clinical studies. Particular attention is given to studies with confirmation of DME induction and concurrent evaluation of liver and/or serum hepatobiliary marker enzyme activities and histopathology. These results collectively indicate that in the rat, when histologic findings are limited to hepatocellular hypertrophy, DME induction is not expected to be associated with consistent or substantive changes in serum or plasma activity of hepatobiliary marker enzymes such as alanine aminotransferase, alkaline phosphatase, and gamma glutamyltransferase. In the dog and the monkey, published studies also do not demonstrate a consistent relationship across DME-inducing agents and changes in these clinical pathology parameters. However, increased liver alkaline phosphatase or gamma glutamyltransferase activity in dogs treated with phenobarbital or corticosteroids suggests that direct or indirect induction of select hepatobiliary injury markers can occur both in the absence of liver injury and independently of induction of DME activity. Although correlations between tissue and serum levels of these hepatobiliary markers are limited and inconsistent, increases in serum/plasma activities that are substantial or involve changes in other markers generally reflect hepatobiliary insult rather than DME induction. Extrahepatic effects, including disruption of the hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid axis, can also occur as a direct outcome of hepatic DME induction in humans and animals. Importantly, hepatic DME induction and associated changes in preclinical species are not necessarily predictive of the occurrence, magnitude, or enzyme induction profile in humans.


Leukemia Research | 2010

Imatinib does not induce cardiotoxicity at clinically relevant concentrations in preclinical studies

Armin Wolf; Philippe Couttet; Min Dong; Olivier Grenet; Marcia Heron; Ursula Junker; Ulrich Wilhelm Laengle; David Ledieu; Estelle Marrer; Anja Nussher; Elke Persohn; Francois Pognan; Gilles-Jacques Riviere; Daniel Robert Roth; Christian Trendelenburg; Jeffrey Tsao; Danielle Roman

Cytotoxic concentrations of imatinib mesylate (10-50 microM) were required to trigger markers of apoptosis and endoplasmic reticulum stress response in neonatal rat ventricular myocytes and fibroblasts, with no significant differences observed between c-Abl silenced and nonsilenced cells. In mice, oral or intraperitoneal imatinib treatment did not induce cardiovascular pathology or heart failure. In rats, high doses of oral imatinib did result in some cardiac hypertrophy. Multi-organ toxicities may have increased the cardiac workload and contributed to the cardiac hypertrophy observed in rats only. These data suggest that imatinib is not cardiotoxic at clinically relevant concentrations (5 microM).


Circulation Research | 2015

Sphingosine 1-Phosphate Produced by Sphingosine Kinase 2 Intrinsically Controls Platelet Aggregation In Vitro and In Vivo

Nicole Urtz; Florian Gaertner; Marie-Luise von Bruehl; Sue Chandraratne; Faridun Rahimi; Lingli Zhang; Mathias Orban; Verena Barocke; Johannes Beil; Irene Schubert; Michael Lorenz; Kyle R. Legate; Andrea Huwiler; Josef Pfeilschifter; Christian Beerli; David Ledieu; Elke Persohn; Andreas Billich; Thomas Baumruker; Michael Mederos y Schnitzler; Steffen Massberg

RATIONALE Platelets are known to play a crucial role in hemostasis. Sphingosine kinases (Sphk) 1 and 2 catalyze the conversion of sphingosine to the bioactive metabolite sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P). Although platelets are able to secrete S1P on activation, little is known about a potential intrinsic effect of S1P on platelet function. OBJECTIVE To investigate the role of Sphk1- and Sphk2-derived S1P in the regulation of platelet function. METHODS AND RESULTS We found a 100-fold reduction in intracellular S1P levels in platelets derived from Sphk2(-/-) mutants compared with Sphk1(-/-) or wild-type mice, as analyzed by mass spectrometry. Sphk2(-/-) platelets also failed to secrete S1P on stimulation. Blood from Sphk2-deficient mice showed decreased aggregation after protease-activated receptor 4-peptide and adenosine diphosphate stimulation in vitro, as assessed by whole blood impedance aggregometry. We revealed that S1P controls platelet aggregation via the sphingosine 1-phosphate receptor 1 through modulation of protease-activated receptor 4-peptide and adenosine diphosphate-induced platelet activation. Finally, we show by intravital microscopy that defective platelet aggregation in Sphk2-deficient mice translates into reduced arterial thrombus stability in vivo. CONCLUSIONS We demonstrate that Sphk2 is the major Sphk isoform responsible for the generation of S1P in platelets and plays a pivotal intrinsic role in the control of platelet activation. Correspondingly, Sphk2-deficient mice are protected from arterial thrombosis after vascular injury, but have normal bleeding times. Targeting this pathway could therefore present a new therapeutic strategy to prevent thrombosis.


Toxicologic Pathology | 2010

International recommendations for training future toxicologic pathologists participating in regulatory-type, nonclinical toxicity studies.

Brad Bolon; Erio Barale-Thomas; Alys Bradley; Robert A. Ettlin; Carla Adriene da Silva Franchi; Catherine George; Anna Maria Giusti; Robert L. Hall; Matthew Jacobsen; Yoichi Konishi; David Ledieu; Daniel Morton; Jae-Hak Park; Cheryl L. Scudamore; Hiroykuki Tsuda; S. K. Vijayasarathi; Marcel V. W. Wijnands

The International Federation of Societies of Toxicologic Pathologists (IFSTP) proposes a common global framework for training future toxicologic pathologists who will support regulatory-type, nonclinical toxicology studies. Optimally, trainees should undertake a scientific curriculum of at least five years at an accredited institution leading to a clinical degree (veterinary medicine or medicine). Trainees should then obtain four or more years of intensive pathology practice during a residency and/or on-the-job “apprenticeship,” at least two years of which must be focused on regulatory-type toxicologic pathology topics. Possession of a recognized pathology qualification (i.e., certification) is highly recommended. A nonclinical pathway (e.g., a graduate degree in medical biology or pathology) may be possible if medically trained pathologists are scarce, but this option is not optimal. Regular, lifelong continuing education (peer review of nonclinical studies, professional meetings, reading, short courses) will be necessary to maintain and enhance one’s understanding of current toxicologic pathology knowledge, skills, and tools. This framework should provide a rigorous yet flexible way to reliably train future toxicologic pathologists to generate, interpret, integrate, and communicate data in regulatory-type, nonclinical toxicology studies.


Experimental and Toxicologic Pathology | 2013

Optimization of Multiplate® whole blood platelet aggregometry in the Beagle dog and Wistar rat for ex vivo drug toxicity testing

Myriam Defontis; Serge Côté; Martina Stirn; David Ledieu

This study was performed to optimize and standardize the use of the Multiplate(®) whole blood impedance aggregometer in the Beagle dog and Wistar rat for use in a research laboratory environment. The anticoagulants citrate, heparin and hirudin were compared and platelet aggregation responses to ADP, collagen, arachidonic acid and Par-4 agonist were evaluated to determine their half maximal effective concentrations (EC(50)) in blood containing low concentrations of a drug solvent (0.1% DMSO). The results indicate that citrate anticoagulation is not suitable for Multiplate(®) whole blood aggregometry because of the presence of spontaneous aggregation. ADP and collagen were found to be appropriate agonists for both species, whereas in the Beagle dog Par-4 agonist failed to induce aggregation and arachidonic acid induced platelet aggregation showed a high interindividual variability. The agonists EC(50) calculated in hirudin blood were 2.70 μM ADP, 0.85 μg/ml collagen, 0.03 mM arachidonic acid and 165.7 μM Par-4 agonist in the Wistar rat, and 0.95 μM ADP and 0.23 μg/ml collagen in the Beagle dog.


Leukemia Research | 2011

Preclinical evaluation of potential nilotinib cardiotoxicity

Armin Wolf; Philippe Couttet; Min Dong; Olivier Grenet; Marcia Heron; Ursula Junker; David Ledieu; Andreas Mahl; Estelle Marrer; Elke Persohn; Francois Pognan; Wei Zhou; Jeffrey Tsao; Danielle Roman

In vitro, concentrations ≥ 10 μM of nilotinib were needed to induce markers of cytotoxicity, apoptosis, and endoplasmic reticulum stress in both neonatal rat ventricular myocytes, a putative target tissue, and non-target heart fibroblasts, indicating a lack of cardiomyocyte-specific nilotinib toxicity in vitro. In rats, oral nilotinib treatment at 80 mg/kg for 4 weeks induced increased heart weight; however, this was not associated with relevant histopathological changes or effects on heart function. Thus, nilotinib at and above clinically relevant concentrations (4.27 μM) did not induce overt cardiovascular pathologies or heart failure in vitro or in vivo under study conditions.


Laboratory Animals | 2010

Sublingual and submandibular blood collection in mice: a comparison of effects on body weight, food consumption and tissue damage

Maike Heimann; Daniel Robert Roth; David Ledieu; Rudolf Pfister; Werner Classen

In a large number of animal experiments, blood collection is crucial for achieving the study aim. Requirements on sampling techniques used include their practicability, their effectiveness in terms of obtaining the desired blood volume, sample quality and low impact on animals wellbeing. Numerous methods for blood collection from mice have been published. For large blood volumes, submandibular and sublingual bleeding was developed as alternatives to the retrobulbar bleeding method, which is considered controversial as it results in severe tissue damage. Only a few studies report the use of submandibular and sublingual techniques in mice. In particular, the degree of tissue damage or influence on animals wellbeing due to submandibular bleeding in conscious mice has not yet been clearly assessed. This gap in the knowledge base has been filled by our exploratory study that revealed clear differences between both techniques. Defence movements during submandibular blood collection in conscious mice resulted in more complications and revealed insufficient blood sample quality due to the prolonged duration of blood collection. In addition, it is likely that these movements may have caused lesions to be more pronounced. Changes in red blood cell parameters (red blood cell count, haemoglobin and haematocrit), in glucose and in total protein concentrations observed in anaesthetized animals were most likely related to anaesthesia. Sublingually punctured mice gained significantly more body weight than submandibularly punctured mice, likely due to less severe tissue lesions and improved healing processes. Based on these results, we recommend the sublingual blood collection technique to be used in mice. However, if the submandibular bleeding technique is used, it should be performed in anaesthetized mice only.


Journal of Toxicologic Pathology | 2010

International Recommendations for Training Future Toxicologic Pathologists Participating in Regulatory-Type, Nonclinical Toxicity Studies

Brad Bolon; Erio Barale-Thomas; Alys Bradley; Robert A. Ettlin; Carla Adriene da Silva Franchi; Catherine George; Anna Maria Giusti; Robert L. Hall; Matthew Jacobsen; Yoichi Konishi; David Ledieu; Daniel Morton; Jae-Hak Park; Cheryl L. Scudamore; Hiroyuki Tsuda; S. K. Vijayasarathi; Marcel V. W. Wijnands

The International Federation of Societies of Toxicologic Pathologists (IFSTP) proposes a common global framework for training future toxicologic pathologists who will support regulatory-type nonclinical toxicology studies. Trainees optimally should undertake a scientific curriculum of at least 5 years at an accredited institution leading to a clinical degree (veterinary medicine or medicine). Trainees should then obtain 4 or more years of intensive pathology practice during a residency and/or on-the-job “apprenticeship,” at least 2 years of which must be focused on regulatory-type toxicologic pathology topics. Possession of a recognized pathology qualification (i.e., certification) is highly recommended. A non-clinical pathway (e.g., a graduate degree in medical biology or pathology) may be possible if medically trained pathologists are scarce, but this option is not optimal. Regular, lifelong continuing education (peer review of nonclinical studies, professional meetings, reading, short courses) will be necessary to maintain and enhance one’s understanding of current toxicologic pathology knowledge, skills, and tools. This framework should provide a rigorous yet flexible way to reliably train future toxicologic pathologists to generate, interpret, integrate, and communicate data in regulatory-type, nonclinical toxicology studies.


Toxicologic Pathology | 2015

Reduced Activity of Sphingosine-1-Phosphate Lyase Induces Podocyte-related Glomerular Proteinuria, Skin Irritation, and Platelet Activation

Jens Schümann; Armelle Grevot; David Ledieu; Armin Wolf; Anna Schubart; Alessandro Piaia; Esther Sutter; Serge Côté; Christian Beerli; Francois Pognan; Andreas Billich; Pierre Moulin; Ursula Junker Walker

Sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) lyase is considered as a drug target in autoimmune diseases based on the protective effect of reducing activity of the enzyme in animal models of inflammation. Since S1P lyase deficiency in mice causes a severe, lethal phenotype, it was of interest to investigate any pathological alterations associated with only partially reduced activity of S1P lyase as may be encountered upon pharmacological inhibition. Both genetic reduction of S1P lyase activity in mice and inhibition of S1P lyase with a low-molecular-weight compound in rats consistently resulted in podocyte-based kidney toxicity, which is the most severe finding. In addition, skin irritation and platelet activation were observed in both instances. The similarity of the findings in both the genetic model and the pharmacological study supports the value of analyzing inducible partially target-deficient mice for safety assessment. If the findings described in rodents translate to humans, target-related toxicity, particularly podocyte dysfunction, may limit chronic systemic treatment of autoimmune diseases with S1P lyase inhibitors. Furthermore, partial deficiency or inhibition of S1P lyase appears to provide an in vivo rodent model to enable studies on the mechanism of podocyte dysfunction.

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Alys Bradley

Charles River Laboratories

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