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Dive into the research topics where Didier Morin is active.

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Featured researches published by Didier Morin.


The FASEB Journal | 2009

A carbon monoxide-releasing molecule (CORM-3) exerts bactericidal activity against Pseudomonas aeruginosa and improves survival in an animal model of bacteraemia

Mathieu Desmard; Kelly S. Davidge; Odile Bouvet; Didier Morin; Damien Roux; Roberta Foresti; Jean D. Ricard; Erick Denamur; Robert K. Poole; Philippe Montravers; Roberto Motterlini; Jorge Boczkowski

The search for new molecules to fight Pseudomonas aeruginosa is of paramount importance. Carbon monoxide (CO) is known to act as an effective inhibitor of the respiratory chain in P. aeruginosa, but the practical use of this gas as an antibacterial molecule is hampered by its toxicity and difficulty to manipulate. Here, we show that a water‐soluble CO releaser (CORM‐3) possesses bactericidal properties against laboratory and antibiotic‐resistant P. aeruginosa. CORM‐3 reduced the bacterial count by 4 logs 180 min after in vitro treatment. CORM‐3‐treated bacteria had a lower O2 consumption than vehicle‐treated bacteria, and the decrease in O2 consumption temporally preceded the bactericidal action of CORM‐3. These results support the hypothesis that the antimicrobial effect of CORM‐3 is mediated by an interaction of CO liberated by the carrier with the bacterial respiratory chain. The antibacterial effect occurred at concentrations of CORM‐3 that are 50fold lower than toxic concentrations for eukaryotic cells. CORM‐3 treatment compared to vehicle treatment decreased bacterial counts in the spleen and increased survival in immunocompetent and immunosuppressed mice following P. aeruginosa bacteremia. Our results suggest that CORMs could form the basis for developing a new therapeutic strategy against P. aeruginosa‐induced infection.—Desmard, M., Davidge, K. S., Bouvet, O., Morin, D., Roux, D., Foresti, R., Ricard, J. D., Denamur, E., Poole, R. K., Montravers, P., Motterlini, R., Boczkowski, J. A carbon monoxide‐releasing molecule (CORM‐3) exerts bactericidal activity against Pseudomonas aeruginosa and improves survival in an animal model of bacteraemia. FASEB J. 23, 1023–1031 (2009)


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2010

TRO40303, a New Cardioprotective Compound, Inhibits Mitochondrial Permeability Transition

Sophie Schaller; Stéphanie Paradis; Gladys A. Ngoh; Rana Assaly; Bruno Buisson; Cyrille Drouot; Mariano A. Ostuni; Jean-Jacques Lacapère; Firas Bassissi; Thierry Bordet; Alain Berdeaux; Steven P. Jones; Didier Morin; Rebecca M. Pruss

3,5-Seco-4-nor-cholestan-5-one oxime-3-ol (TRO40303) is a new cardioprotective compound coming from a chemical series identified initially for neuroprotective properties. TRO40303 binds specifically to the mitochondrial translocator protein 18 kDa (TSPO) at the cholesterol site. After intravenous administration, TRO40303 tissue distribution was comparable to that of TSPO, and, in particular, the drug accumulated rapidly in the heart. In a model of 35 min of myocardial ischemia/24 h of reperfusion in rats, TRO40303 (2.5 mg/kg) reduced infarct size by 38% (p < 0.01 versus control), when administered 10 min before reperfusion, which was correlated with reduced release of apoptosis-inducing factor from mitochondria to the cytoplasm in the ischemic area at risk. Although TRO40303 had no effect on the calcium retention capacity of isolated mitochondria, unlike cyclosporine A, the drug delayed mitochondrial permeability transition pore (mPTP) opening and cell death in isolated adult rat cardiomyocytes subjected to 2 h of hypoxia followed by 2 h of reoxygenation and inhibited mPTP opening in neonatal rat cardiomyocytes treated with hydrogen peroxide. The effects of TRO40303 on mPTP in cell models of oxidative stress are correlated with a significant reduction in reactive oxygen species production and subsequent calcium overload. TRO40303 is a new mitochondrial-targeted drug and inhibits mPTP triggered by oxidative stress. Its mode of action differs from that of other mPTP inhibitors such as cyclosporine A, thus providing a new pharmacological approach to study mPTP regulation. Its efficacy in an animal model of myocardial infarctions makes TRO40303 a promising new drug for the reduction of cardiac ischemia-reperfusion injury.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2011

A carbon monoxide-releasing molecule (CORM-3) uncouples mitochondrial respiration and modulates the production of reactive oxygen species

Luisa Lo Iacono; Jorge Boczkowski; Roland Zini; Issam Salouage; Alain Berdeaux; Roberto Motterlini; Didier Morin

Carbon monoxide (CO), produced during the degradation of heme by the enzyme heme oxygenase, is an important signaling mediator in mammalian cells. Here we show that precise delivery of CO to isolated heart mitochondria using a water-soluble CO-releasing molecule (CORM-3) uncouples respiration. Addition of low-micromolar concentrations of CORM-3 (1-20 μM), but not an inactive compound that does not release CO, significantly increased mitochondrial oxygen consumption rate (State 2 respiration) in a concentration-dependent manner. In contrast, higher concentrations of CORM-3 (100 μM) suppressed ADP-dependent respiration through inhibition of cytochrome c oxidase. The uncoupling effect mediated by CORM-3 was inhibited in the presence of the CO scavenger myoglobin. Moreover, this effect was associated with a gradual decrease in membrane potential (ψ) over time and was partially reversed by malonate, an inhibitor of complex II activity. Similarly, inhibition of uncoupling proteins or blockade of adenine nucleotide transporter attenuated the effect of CORM-3 on both State 2 respiration and Δψ. Hydrogen peroxide (H₂O₂) produced by mitochondria respiring from complex I-linked substrates (pyruvate/malate) was increased by CORM-3. However, respiration initiated via complex II using succinate resulted in a fivefold increase in H₂O₂ production and this effect was significantly inhibited by CORM-3. These findings disclose a counterintuitive action of CORM-3 suggesting that CO at low levels acts as an important regulator of mitochondrial respiration.


Circulation | 2011

H11 Kinase/Heat Shock Protein 22 Deletion Impairs Both Nuclear and Mitochondrial Functions of STAT3 and Accelerates the Transition Into Heart Failure on Cardiac Overload

Hongyu Qiu; Paulo Lizano; Lydie Laure; Xiangzhen Sui; Eman Rashed; Ji Yeon Park; Chull Hong; Shumin Gao; Eric Holle; Didier Morin; Sunil K. Dhar; Thomas E. Wagner; Alain Berdeaux; Bin Tian; Stephen F. Vatner; Christophe Depre

Background— Cardiac overload, a major cause of heart failure, induces the expression of the heat shock protein H11 kinase/Hsp22 (Hsp22). Methods and Results— To determine the specific function of Hsp22 in that context, a knockout mouse model of Hsp22 deletion was generated. Although comparable to wild-type mice in basal conditions, knockout mice exposed to pressure overload developed less hypertrophy and showed ventricular dilation, impaired contractile function, increased myocyte length and accumulation of interstitial collagen, faster transition into heart failure, and increased mortality. Microarrays revealed that hearts from knockout mice failed to transactivate genes regulated by the transcription factor STAT3. Accordingly, nuclear STAT3 tyrosine phosphorylation was decreased in knockout mice. Silencing and overexpression experiments in isolated neonatal rat cardiomyocytes showed that Hsp22 activates STAT3 via production of interleukin-6 by the transcription factor nuclear factor-&kgr;B. In addition to its transcriptional function, STAT3 translocates to the mitochondria where it increases oxidative phosphorylation. Both mitochondrial STAT3 translocation and respiration were also significantly decreased in knockout mice. Conclusions— This study found that Hsp22 represents a previously undescribed activator of both nuclear and mitochondrial functions of STAT3, and its deletion in the context of pressure overload in vivo accelerates the transition into heart failure and increases mortality.


European Journal of Pharmacology | 2012

Oxidative stress, mitochondrial permeability transition pore opening and cell death during hypoxia–reoxygenation in adult cardiomyocytes

Rana Assaly; Alexandra d'Anglemont de Tassigny; Stéphanie Paradis; Sophie Jacquin; Alain Berdeaux; Didier Morin

Reactive oxygen species production is necessary to induce cell death following hypoxia/reoxygenation but the effect of reactive oxygen species produced during hypoxia on mitochondrial permeability transition pore (mPTP) opening and cell death is not established. Here we designed a model of hypoxia/reoxygenation in isolated cardiomyocytes measuring simultaneously reactive oxygen species production, mPTP opening and cell death in order (i) to establish a causal relationship between them, and (ii) to investigate the roles of various reactive oxygen species in mPTP opening. The percentage of cardiomyocytes exhibiting mPTP opening during reoxygenation increased with the duration of hypoxia. Antioxidants increased the time to mPTP opening when present during hypoxia but not at reoxygenation. This was associated with a drop in hydroxyl radical and hydrogen peroxide during hypoxia and the first minutes of reoxygenation. The increase in time to mPTP opening was accompanied by an improvement in cell viability reflected by maintenance of superoxide production at reoxygenation. Cyclosporin A delayed both the time to mPTP opening and cell death despite maintenance of reactive oxygen species production during hypoxia. These findings demonstrate that reactive oxygen species production precedes mPTP opening and that reactive oxygen species produced during hypoxia, particularly hydroxyl radicals and hydrogen peroxide, are necessary to induce mPTP opening which depends on hypoxia duration.


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2013

Regular treadmill exercise restores cardioprotective signaling pathways in obese mice independently from improvement in associated co-morbidities

Sandrine Pons; Valérie Martin; Lolita Portal; Roland Zini; Didier Morin; Alain Berdeaux; Bijan Ghaleh

Obesity is a major health issue that impedes the ability of preconditioning and postconditioning to protect the myocardium against infarction secondary to dysregulation of kinase signaling pathways. Moreover, exercise decreases cardiovascular mortality in obese patients but the mechanism remains to be established. Wild-type (WT) and obese (ob/ob) mice were assigned to sedentary conditions or regular treadmill exercise (1h/day, 5 days/7, 4 weeks, 4° slope, 10-30 cm/s) and underwent 30 min of coronary artery occlusion followed by 24h of reperfusion for infarct size measurement. In WT, exercise reduced infarct size by 60% and increased phosphorylation of kinases such as Akt, ERK 1/2, p70S6K, AMPK and GSK3β. Importantly, the level of corresponding phosphatases PTEN, MKP-3 and PP2C was decreased. Calcium concentration inducing the opening of mitochondrial permeability transition pore (mPTP) was increased by exercise. In ob/ob, regular exercise induced a robust cardioprotection by reducing infarct size (-67%), increasing kinase phosphorylation, decreasing phosphatase levels and improving the resistance to mPTP opening. However exercise did not modify hyperglycemia, hypercholesterolemia, hyperinsulinemia, fat mass and body weight in obese mice. In conclusion, regular exercise induces cardioprotection against myocardial infarction despite obesity and restores pro-survival signaling pathways with simultaneous increase in kinase phosphorylations, decreased levels of phosphatases and increased resistance of mPTP opening, independently from improvement in associated co-morbidities.


Fundamental & Clinical Pharmacology | 1988

Blood binding and tissue uptake of drugs. Recent advances and perspectives

Jean-Paul Tillement; Saïk Urien; P. Chaumet-Riffaud; P. Riant; Françoise Brée; Didier Morin; Edith Albengres; J. Barré

Summary— The free drug hypothesis, which states that only the unbound moiety of drug in blood is available for tissue diffusion, is discussed according to recent investigations. In some experimental conditions, it must be assumed that part of the protein‐bound drug in plasma is extracted during a single passage through the organ studied. The mechanisms underlying these observations are not unequivocal and remain hypothetical. In the liver, high‐affinity binding sites for serum albumin have been demonstrated, and they would explain the high extraction by liver of endogenous and exogenous compounds.


Resuscitation | 2013

Mild hypothermia reduces per-ischemic reactive oxygen species production and preserves mitochondrial respiratory complexes

Renaud Tissier; Mourad Chenoune; Sandrine Pons; Roland Zini; Lys Darbera; Fanny Lidouren; Bijan Ghaleh; Alain Berdeaux; Didier Morin

BACKGROUND Mitochondrial dysfunction is critical following ischemic disorders. Our goal was to determine whether mild hypothermia could limit this dysfunction through per-ischemic inhibition of reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation. METHODS First, ROS production was evaluated during simulated ischemia in an vitro model of isolated rat cardiomyocytes at hypothermic (32°C) vs. normothermic (38°C) temperatures. Second, we deciphered the direct effect of hypothermia on mitochondrial respiration and ROS production in oxygenated mitochondria isolated from rabbit hearts. Third, we investigated these parameters in cardiac mitochondria extracted after 30-min of coronary artery occlusion (CAO) under normothermic conditions (CAO-N) or with hypothermia induced by liquid ventilation (CAO-H; target temperature: 32°C). RESULTS In isolated rat cardiomyocytes, per-ischemic ROS generation was dramatically decreased at 32 vs. 38°C (e.g., -55±8% after 140min of hypoxia). In oxygenated mitochondria isolated from intact rabbit hearts, hypothermia also improved respiratory control ratio (+22±3%) and reduced H2O2 production (-41±1%). Decreased oxidative stress was further observed in rabbit hearts submitted to hypothermic vs. normothermic ischemia (CAO-H vs. CAO-N), using thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances as a marker. This was accompanied by a preservation of the respiratory control ratio as well as the activity of complexes I, II and III in cardiac mitochondria. CONCLUSION The cardioprotective effect of mild hypothermia involves a direct effect on per-ischemic ROS generation and results in preservation of mitochondrial function. This might explain why the benefit afforded by hypothermia during regional myocardial ischemia depends on how fast it is instituted during the ischemic process.


Biochemical Pharmacology | 2016

Mitochondrial translocator protein (TSPO): From physiology to cardioprotection.

Didier Morin; Julien Musman; Sandrine Pons; Alain Berdeaux; Bijan Ghaleh

The mitochondrial translocator protein (TSPO) is a high affinity cholesterol binding protein which is primarily located in the outer mitochondrial membrane where it has been shown to interact with proteins implicated in mitochondrial permeability transition pore (mPTP) formation. TSPO is found in different species and is expressed at high levels in tissues that synthesize steroids but is also present in other peripheral tissues especially in the heart. TSPO has been involved in the import of cholesterol into mitochondria, a key step in steroidogenesis. This constitutes the main established function of the protein which was recently challenged by genetic studies. TSPO has also been associated directly or indirectly with a wide range of cellular functions such as apoptosis, cell proliferation, differentiation, regulation of mitochondrial function or porphyrin transport. In the heart the role of TSPO remains undefined but a growing body of evidence suggests that TSPO plays a critical role in regulating physiological cardiac function and that TSPO ligands may represent interesting drugs to protect the heart under pathological conditions. This article briefly reviews current knowledge regarding TSPO and discusses its role in the cardiovascular system under physiological and pathologic conditions. More particularly, it provides evidence that TSPO can represent an alternative strategy to develop new pharmacological agents to protect the myocardium against ischemia-reperfusion injury.


Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience | 2015

Mitochondrial protection by the mixed muscarinic/σ1 ligand ANAVEX2-73, a tetrahydrofuran derivative, in Aβ25-35 peptide-injected mice, a nontransgenic Alzheimer's disease model.

Valentine Lahmy; Romain Long; Didier Morin; Tangui Maurice

Alzheimer’s disease (AD), the most prevalent dementia in the elderly, is characterized by progressive synaptic and neuronal loss. Mitochondrial dysfunctions have been consistently reported as an early event in AD and appear before Aβ deposition and memory decline. In order to define a new neuroprotectant strategy in AD targeting mitochondrial alterations, we develop tetrahydro-N,N-dimethyl-2,2-diphenyl-3-furanmethanamine (ANAVEX2-73, AE37), a mixed muscarinic receptor ligand and a sigma-1 receptor (σ1R) agonist. We previously reported that ANAVEX2-73 shows anti-amnesic and neuroprotective activities in mice injected intracerebroventricular (ICV) with oligomeric amyloid-β25–35 peptide (Aβ25–35). The σ1R is present at mitochondria-associated endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membranes, where it acts as a sensor/modulator of ER stress responses and local Ca2+ exchanges with the mitochondria. We therefore evaluated the effect of ANAVEX2-73 and PRE-084, a reference σ1R agonist, on preservation of mitochondrial integrity in Aβ25–35-injected mice. In isolated mitochondria from hippocampus preparations of Aβ25–35 injected animals, we measured respiration rates, complex activities, lipid peroxidation, Bax/Bcl-2 ratios and cytochrome c release into the cytosol. Five days after Aβ25–35 injection, mitochondrial respiration in mouse hippocampus was altered. ANAVEX2-73 (0.01–1 mg/kg IP) restored normal respiration and PRE-084 (0.5–1 mg/kg IP) increased respiration rates. Both compounds prevented Aβ25–35-induced increases in lipid peroxidation levels, Bax/Bcl-2 ratio and cytochrome c release into the cytosol, all indicators of increased toxicity. ANAVEX2-73 and PRE-084 efficiently prevented the mitochondrial respiratory dysfunction and resulting oxidative stress and apoptosis. The σ1R, targeted selectively or non-selectively, therefore appears as a valuable target for protection against mitochondrial damages in AD.

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