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Dive into the research topics where Dominique Demeyer is active.

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Featured researches published by Dominique Demeyer.


Neurobiology of Disease | 2011

Beneficial effects of exercise in a transgenic mouse model of Alzheimer's disease-like Tau pathology.

Karim Belarbi; Sylvie Burnouf; Francisco-Jose Fernandez-Gomez; Cyril Laurent; Sophie Lestavel; Martin Figeac; Audrey Sultan; Laetitia Troquier; Antoine Leboucher; Raphaëlle Caillierez; Marie-Eve Grosjean; Dominique Demeyer; Hélène Obriot; I. Brion; B. Barbot; Marie-Christine Galas; Bart Staels; Sandrine Humez; Nicolas Sergeant; Susanna Schraen-Maschke; Anne Muhr-Tailleux; Malika Hamdane; Luc Buée; David Blum

Tau pathology is encountered in many neurodegenerative disorders known as tauopathies, including Alzheimers disease. Physical activity is a lifestyle factor affecting processes crucial for memory and synaptic plasticity. Whether long-term voluntary exercise has an impact on Tau pathology and its pathophysiological consequences is currently unknown. To address this question, we investigated the effects of long-term voluntary exercise in the THY-Tau22 transgenic model of Alzheimers disease-like Tau pathology, characterized by the progressive development of Tau pathology, cholinergic alterations and subsequent memory impairments. Three-month-old THY-Tau22 mice and wild-type littermates were assigned to standard housing or housing supplemented with a running wheel. After 9 months of exercise, mice were evaluated for memory performance and examined for hippocampal Tau pathology, cholinergic defects, inflammation and genes related to cholesterol metabolism. Exercise prevented memory alterations in THY-Tau22 mice. This was accompanied by a decrease in hippocampal Tau pathology and a prevention of the loss of expression of choline acetyltransferase within the medial septum. Whereas the expression of most cholesterol-related genes remained unchanged in the hippocampus of running THY-Tau22 mice, we observed a significant upregulation in mRNA levels of NPC1 and NPC2, genes involved in cholesterol trafficking from the lysosomes. Our data support the view that long-term voluntary physical exercise is an effective strategy capable of mitigating Tau pathology and its pathophysiological consequences.


Neurobiology of Aging | 2014

Beneficial effects of caffeine in a transgenic model of Alzheimer's disease-like tau pathology

Cyril Laurent; Sabiha Eddarkaoui; Maxime Derisbourg; Antoine Leboucher; Dominique Demeyer; Sébastien Carrier; Marion Schneider; Malika Hamdane; Christa E. Müller; Luc Buée; David Blum

Tau pathology found in Alzheimers disease (AD) is crucial in cognitive decline. Epidemiologic evidences support that habitual caffeine intake prevents memory decline during aging and reduces the risk to develop Alzheimers disease. So far, experimental studies addressed the impact of caffeine in models mimicking the amyloid pathology of AD. However, in vivo effects of caffeine in a model of AD-like tauopathy remain unknown. Here, we evaluated effects of chronic caffeine intake (0.3 g/L through drinking water), given at an early pathologic stage, in the THY-Tau22 transgenic mouse model of progressive AD-like tau pathology. We found that chronic caffeine intake prevents from the development of spatial memory deficits in tau mice. Improved memory was associated with reduced hippocampal tau phosphorylation and proteolytic fragments. Moreover, caffeine treatment mitigated several proinflammatory and oxidative stress markers found upregulated in the hippocampus of THY-Tau22 animals. Together, our data support that moderate caffeine intake is beneficial in a model of AD-like tau pathology, paving the way for future clinical evaluation in AD patients.


Diabetes | 2013

Detrimental Effects of Diet-Induced Obesity on τ Pathology Are Independent of Insulin Resistance in τ Transgenic Mice

Antoine Leboucher; Cyril Laurent; Francisco-Jose Fernandez-Gomez; Sylvie Burnouf; Laetitia Troquier; Sabiha Eddarkaoui; Dominique Demeyer; Raphaëlle Caillierez; Nadège Zommer; Emmanuelle Vallez; Kadiombo Bantubungi; Christophe Breton; Pascal Pigny; Valérie Buée-Scherrer; Bart Staels; Malika Hamdane; Anne Tailleux; Luc Buée; David Blum

The τ pathology found in Alzheimer disease (AD) is crucial in cognitive decline. Midlife development of obesity, a major risk factor of insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes, increases the risk of dementia and AD later in life. The impact of obesity on AD risk has been suggested to be related to central insulin resistance, secondary to peripheral insulin resistance. The effects of diet-induced obesity (DIO) on τ pathology remain unknown. In this study, we evaluated effects of a high-fat diet, given at an early pathological stage, in the THY-Tau22 transgenic mouse model of progressive AD-like τ pathology. We found that early and progressive obesity potentiated spatial learning deficits as well as hippocampal τ pathology at a later stage. Surprisingly, THY-Tau22 mice did not exhibit peripheral insulin resistance. Further, pathological worsening occurred while hippocampal insulin signaling was upregulated. Together, our data demonstrate that DIO worsens τ phosphorylation and learning abilities in τ transgenic mice independently from peripheral/central insulin resistance.


Biochemical Society Transactions | 2010

From tau phosphorylation to tau aggregation: what about neuronal death?

Luc Buée; Laetitia Troquier; Sylvie Burnouf; Karim Belarbi; Anneke Van der Jeugd; Tariq Ahmed; Francisco José Fernández-Gómez; Raphaëlle Caillierez; Marie-Eve Grosjean; Séverine Bégard; B. Barbot; Dominique Demeyer; Hélène Obriot; I. Brion; Valérie Buée-Scherrer; Claude-Alain Maurage; Detlef Balschun; Rudi D'Hooge; Malika Hamdane; David Blum; Nicolas Sergeant

Tau pathology is characterized by intracellular aggregates of abnormally and hyperphosphorylated tau proteins. It is encountered in many neurodegenerative disorders, but also in aging. These neurodegenerative disorders are referred to as tauopathies. Comparative biochemistry of the tau aggregates shows that they differ in both tau isoform phosphorylation and content, which enables a molecular classification of tauopathies. In conditions of dementia, NFD (neurofibrillary degeneration) severity is correlated to cognitive impairment and is often considered as neuronal death. Using tau animal models, analysis of the kinetics of tau phosphorylation, aggregation and neuronal death in parallel to electrophysiological and behavioural parameters indicates a disconnection between cognition deficits and neuronal cell death. Tau phosphorylation and aggregation are early events followed by cognitive impairment. Neuronal death is not observed before the oldest ages. A sequence of events may be the formation of toxic phosphorylated tau species, their aggregation, the formation of neurofibrillary tangles (from pre-tangles to ghost tangles) and finally neuronal cell death. This sequence will last from 15 to 25 years and one can ask whether the aggregation of toxic phosphorylated tau species is a protection against cell death. Apoptosis takes 24 h, but NFD lasts for 24 years to finally kill the neuron or rather to protect it for more than 20 years. Altogether, these data suggest that NFD is a transient state before neuronal death and that therapeutic interventions are possible at that stage.


Aging Cell | 2013

NMDA receptor dysfunction contributes to impaired brain-derived neurotrophic factor-induced facilitation of hippocampal synaptic transmission in a Tau transgenic model

Sylvie Burnouf; Alberto Martire; Maxime Derisbourg; Cyril Laurent; Karim Belarbi; Antoine Leboucher; Francisco José Fernández-Gómez; Laetitia Troquier; Sabiha Eddarkaoui; Marie-Eve Grosjean; Dominique Demeyer; Anne Muhr-Tailleux; Alain Buisson; Nicolas Sergeant; Malika Hamdane; Sandrine Humez; Patrizia Popoli; Luc Buée; David Blum

While the spatiotemporal development of Tau pathology has been correlated with occurrence of cognitive deficits in Alzheimers patients, mechanisms underlying these deficits remain unclear. Both brain‐derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and its tyrosine kinase receptor TrkB play a critical role in hippocampus‐dependent synaptic plasticity and memory. When applied on hippocampal slices, BDNF is able to enhance AMPA receptor‐dependent hippocampal basal synaptic transmission through a mechanism involving TrkB and N‐methyl‐d‐Aspartate receptors (NMDAR). Using THY‐Tau22 transgenic mice, we demonstrated that hippocampal Tau pathology is associated with loss of synaptic enhancement normally induced by exogenous BDNF. This defective response was concomitant to significant memory impairments. We show here that loss of BDNF response was due to impaired NMDAR function. Indeed, we observed a significant reduction of NMDA‐induced field excitatory postsynaptic potential depression in the hippocampus of Tau mice together with a reduced phosphorylation of NR2B at the Y1472, known to be critical for NMDAR function. Interestingly, we found that both NR2B and Src, one of the NR2B main kinases, interact with Tau and are mislocalized to the insoluble protein fraction rich in pathological Tau species. Defective response to BDNF was thus likely related to abnormal interaction of Src and NR2B with Tau in THY‐Tau22 animals. These are the first data demonstrating a relationship between Tau pathology and synaptic effects of BDNF and supporting a contribution of defective BDNF response and impaired NMDAR function to the cognitive deficits associated with Tauopathies.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Role of the Tau N-terminal region in microtubule stabilization revealed by new endogenous truncated forms

Maxime Derisbourg; Coline Leghay; Giovanni Chiappetta; Francisco-Jose Fernandez-Gomez; Cyril Laurent; Dominique Demeyer; Sébastien Carrier; Valérie Buée-Scherrer; David Blum; Joëlle Vinh; Nicolas Sergeant; Yann Verdier; Luc Buée; Malika Hamdane

Tau is a central player in Alzheimers disease (AD) and related Tauopathies, where it is found as aggregates in degenerating neurons. Abnormal post-translational modifications, such as truncation, are likely involved in the pathological process. A major step forward in understanding the role of Tau truncation would be to identify the precise cleavage sites of the several truncated Tau fragments that are observed until now in AD brains, especially those truncated at the N-terminus, which are less characterized than those truncated at the C-terminus. Here, we optimized a proteomics approach and succeeded in identifying a number of new N-terminally truncated Tau species from the human brain. We initiated cell-based functional studies by analyzing the biochemical characteristics of two N-terminally truncated Tau species starting at residues Met11 and Gln124 respectively. Our results show, interestingly, that the Gln124-Tau fragment displays a stronger ability to bind and stabilize microtubules, suggesting that the Tau N-terminal domain could play a direct role in the regulation of microtubule stabilization. Future studies based on our new N-terminally truncated-Tau species should improve our knowledge of the role of truncation in Tau biology as well as in the AD pathological process.


Brain | 2017

Hippocampal T cell infiltration promotes neuroinflammation and cognitive decline in a mouse model of tauopathy

Cyril Laurent; Guillaume Dorothée; Stéphane Hunot; Elodie Martin; Yann Monnet; Marie Duchamp; Yuan Dong; François-Pierre Légeron; Antoine Leboucher; Sylvie Burnouf; Emilie Faivre; Kévin Carvalho; Raphaëlle Caillierez; Nadège Zommer; Dominique Demeyer; Nathalie Jouy; Véronique Sazdovitch; Susanna Schraen-Maschke; Cécile Delarasse; Luc Buée; David Blum

Alzheimer’s disease is characterized by the combined presence of amyloid plaques and tau pathology, the latter being correlated with the progression of clinical symptoms. Neuroinflammatory changes are thought to be major contributors to Alzheimer’s disease pathophysiology, even if their precise role still remains largely debated. Notably, to what extent immune responses contribute to cognitive impairments promoted by tau pathology remains poorly understood. To address this question, we took advantage of the THY-Tau22 mouse model that progressively develops hippocampal tau pathology paralleling cognitive deficits and reappraised the interrelationship between tau pathology and brain immune responses. In addition to conventional astroglial and microglial responses, we identified a CD8-positive T cell infiltration in the hippocampus of tau transgenic mice associated with an early chemokine response, notably involving CCL3. Interestingly, CD8-positive lymphocyte infiltration was also observed in the cortex of patients exhibiting frontemporal dementia with P301L tau mutation. To gain insights into the functional involvement of T cell infiltration in the pathophysiological development of tauopathy in THY-Tau22 mice, we chronically depleted T cells using anti-CD3 antibody. Such anti-CD3 treatment prevented hippocampal T cell infiltration in tau transgenic animals and reverted spatial memory deficits, in absence of tau pathology modulation. Altogether, these data support an instrumental role of hippocampal T cell infiltration in tau-driven pathophysiology and cognitive impairments in Alzheimer’s disease and other tauopathies.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2017

Tau deletion promotes brain insulin resistance

Elodie Marciniak; Antoine Leboucher; Emilie Caron; Tariq Ahmed; Anne Tailleux; Julie Dumont; Tarik Issad; Ellen Gerhardt; Patrick Pagesy; Margaux Vileno; Clément Bournonville; Malika Hamdane; Kadiombo Bantubungi; Steve Lancel; Dominique Demeyer; Sabiha Eddarkaoui; Emmanuelle Vallez; Didier Vieau; Sandrine Humez; Emilie Faivre; Benjamin Grenier-Boley; Tiago F. Outeiro; Bart Staels; Philippe Amouyel; Detlef Balschun; Luc Buée; David Blum

The molecular pathways underlying tau pathology–induced synaptic/cognitive deficits and neurodegeneration are poorly understood. One prevalent hypothesis is that hyperphosphorylation, misfolding, and fibrillization of tau impair synaptic plasticity and cause degeneration. However, tau pathology may also result in the loss of specific physiological tau functions, which are largely unknown but could contribute to neuronal dysfunction. In the present study, we uncovered a novel function of tau in its ability to regulate brain insulin signaling. We found that tau deletion leads to an impaired hippocampal response to insulin, caused by altered IRS-1 and PTEN (phosphatase and tensin homologue on chromosome 10) activities. Our data also demonstrate that tau knockout mice exhibit an impaired hypothalamic anorexigenic effect of insulin that is associated with energy metabolism alterations. Consistently, we found that tau haplotypes are associated with glycemic traits in humans. The present data have far-reaching clinical implications and raise the hypothesis that pathophysiological tau loss-of-function favors brain insulin resistance, which is instrumental for cognitive and metabolic impairments in Alzheimer’s disease patients.


Current Alzheimer Research | 2009

Early Tau pathology involving the septo-hippocampal pathway in a Tau transgenic model: relevance to Alzheimer's disease.

Karim Belarbi; Katharina Schindowski; Sylvie Burnouf; Raphaëlle Caillierez; Marie-Eve Grosjean; Dominique Demeyer; Malika Hamdane; Nicolas Sergeant; David Blum; Luc Buée

Alzheimers disease is a neurodegenerative disorder characterized by amyloid deposits and neurofibrillary tangles. Cholinergic dysfunction is also a main pathological feature of the disease. Nevertheless, the links between cholinergic dysfunction and neuropathological hallmarks of Alzheimers are still unknown. In the present study, we aimed to further investigate Tau aggregation in cholinergic systems, in a Tau transgenic mouse model. THY-Tau22 mice have recently been described as a novel model of Alzheimer-like Tau pathology without motor deficits. This strain presents an age-dependent development of Tau pathology leading to synaptic dysfunctions as well as learning and memory impairments. In the present work, we observed that Tau pathology differentially affects cerebral structures. Interestingly, early Tau pathology was observed in both hippocampus and basal forebrain. Moreover, some morphological as well as functional alterations of the septohippocampal pathway suggest a disconnection between these two key brain regions in Alzheimers disease. Finally, these data suggest that Tau pathology may participate in cholinergic degeneration.


Respiratory Research | 2007

Dietary n-3 fatty acids have suppressive effects on mucin upregulation in mice infected with Pseudomonas aeruginosa.

Daniel Tetaert; Maud Pierre; Dominique Demeyer; Marie-Odile Husson; Laurent Béghin; Claude Galabert; Frédéric Gottrand; Christopher Beermann; Benoit Guery; Jean-Luc Desseyn

BackgroundMucin hypersecretion and mucus plugging in the airways are characteristic features of chronic respiratory diseases like cystic fibrosis (CF) and contribute to morbidity and mortality. In CF, Pseudomonas aeruginosa superinfections in the lung exacerbate inflammation and alter mucus properties. There is increasing evidence that n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) exhibit anti-inflammatory properties in many inflammatory diseases while n-6 PUFA arachidonic acid (AA) favors inflammatory mediators such as eicosanoids prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) and leukotriene B4 (LTB4) that may enhance inflammatory reactions. This suggests that n-3 PUFAs may have a protective effect against mucus over-production in airway diseases. Therefore, we hypothesized that n-3 PUFAs may downregulate mucins expression.MethodsWe designed an absolute real-time PCR assay to assess the effect of a 5-week diet enriched either with n-3 or n-6 PUFAs on the expression of large mucins in the lungs of mice infected by P. aeruginosa.ResultsDietary fatty acids did not influence mucin gene expression in healthy mice. Lung infection induced an increase of the secreted gel-forming mucin Muc5b and a decrease of the membrane bound mucin Muc4. These deregulations are modulated by dietary fatty acids with a suppressive effect of n-3 PUFAs on mucin (increase of Muc5b from 19-fold up to 3.6 × 105-fold for the n-3 PUFAs treated group and the control groups, respectively, 4 days post-infection and decrease of Muc4 from 15-fold up to 3.2 × 104-fold for the control and the n-3 PUFAs treated groups, respectively, 4 days post-infection).ConclusionOur data suggest that n-3 PUFAs enriched diet represents an inexpensive strategy to prevent or treat mucin overproduction in pulmonary bacterial colonization.

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