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Dive into the research topics where E. Payan is active.

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Featured researches published by E. Payan.


Biomaterials | 2003

Endothelial cells grown on thin polyelectrolyte mutlilayered films: an evaluation of a new versatile surface modification

Cédric Boura; Patrick Menu; E. Payan; Catherine Picart; Jean-Claude Voegel; S. Muller; Jean-François Stoltz

Endothelial cell seeding constitutes an appreciated method to improve blood compatibility of small-diameter vascular grafts. In this study, we report the development of a simple innovative technique based on multilayered polyelectrolyte films as cell adhesive substrates. Polyelectrolyte multilayered films ending by poly(sodium-4-styrenesulfonate)/poly(allylamine hydrochloride) (PSS/PAH) or poly(L-glutamic acid)/poly(D-lysine) (PGA/PDL) could enhance cell adhesion by modification of the physico-chemical properties of the surface. The biological responses of human umbilical vein endothelial cells seeded on the polyelectrolyte multilayer films, on PDL or PAH monolayers, and on control surfaces, were evaluated in terms of initial attachment, growth, cellular metabolic activity, endothelial phenotype, and adhesion. The results showed that polyelectrolyte multilayers neither induce cytotoxic effects nor alter the phenotype of the endothelial cells. The polyelectrolyte multilayered films enhanced initial cell attachment as compared to the polyelectrolyte monolayer. Cell growth observed on the films was similar to that on TCPS. Among the different coating tested, the film ending by PSS/PAH exhibited an excellent cellular biocompatibility and appeared to be the most interesting surface in terms of cellular adhesion and growth. Such films could be used to cover hydrophobic (cell resistant) substrates in order to promote cell colonization, thereby constituting an excellent material for endothelial cell seeding.


Biomaterials | 1996

Cytocompatibility of Ti-6Al-4V and Ti-5Al-2.5Fe alloys according to three surface treatments, using human fibroblasts and osteoblasts.

K. Bordji; Jean-Yves Jouzeau; Didier Mainard; E. Payan; Patrick Netter; K.-T. Rie; T. Stucky; M. Hage-Ali

Titanium alloys are well known for their superior mechanical properties as well as for their good biocompatibility, making them desirable as surgical implant materials. However, these alloys have been proven to behave poorly in friction since wear particles were often detected in tissues and organs associated with titanium implants. In this paper, three surface treatments were investigated in order to improve the wear resistance and the hardness of Ti-6Al-4V and Ti-5Al-2.5Fe: (a) glow discharge nitrogen implantation (10(17) atoms cm-2), (b) plasma nitriding by plasma diffusion treatment (PDT) and (c) deposition of TiN layer by plasma-assisted chemical vapour deposition (PACVD) additionally to PDT. Surface characterization after the different treatments showed considerable improvement in surface hardness, especially after the two nitriding processes. Moreover, the good corrosion resistance of untreated alloys was maintained. A cell culture model using human cells was chosen to study the effect of such treatments on the cytocompatibility of these materials. The results showed that Ti-5Al-2.5Fe alloy was as cytocompatible as the Ti-6Al-4V alloy and the same surface treatment led to identical biological consequences on both alloys. Nitrogen implantation did not modify at all the cellular behaviour observed on untreated samples. After the two nitriding treatments, cell proliferation and viability appeared to be significantly reduced and the scanning electron microscopy study revealed somewhat irregular surface states. However, osteoblast phenotype expression and protein synthesis capacity were not affected. PDT and PACVD may be interesting alternatives to the physical vapour deposition technique.


Biomaterials | 1996

Evaluation of the effect of three surface treatments on the biocompatibility of 316L stainless steel using human differentiated cells

Karim Bordjih; Jean-Yves Jouzeau; Didier Mainard; E. Payan; Jean-Pierre Delagoutte; Patrick Netter

AISI 316L stainless steel (SS) is widely used in orthopaedic implantology, although biological complications may result from its insufficient mechanical and tribological properties. In order to improve the wear and corrosion resistance as well as the hardness of 316L SS, three surface treatments, derived from those applied in mechanical engineering industries, were investigated: (1) glow discharge nitrogen implantation, (2) carbon-doped stainless steel coating sputtering and (3) low temperature plasma nitriding. Surface characterization according to the different heat treatments showed that corrosion and wear resistance were strongly improved, especially by ion implantation or carbon-doped SS coating sputtering. In the same way, microhardness was significantly increased after the three treatments. The effect of such treatments on the biocompatibility of 316L SS was studied with human osteoblast and fibroblast cultures. Basic and specific features of the cells showed that ion-implanted and carbon-doped stainless steels were biocompatible, whereas dramatic cellular reactions were noted when contacted with nitrided stainless steel. A hypothesis is given to explain this observation but further experiments are needed to optimize the nitriding process. Nitrogen implantation and carbon-doped layer deposition could be efficient means for improving the physical properties of stainless steel without affecting its biocompatibility. Such surface treatments may have relevance for increasing the life time of 316L biomedical devices.


Carbohydrate Polymers | 2000

Amphiphilic derivatives of sodium alginate and hyaluronate: Synthesis and physico-chemical properties of aqueous dilute solutions

S. Pelletier; Patrick Hubert; Françoise Lapicque; E. Payan; Edith Dellacherie

This paper reports on the synthesis and the physico-chemical characterisation of various amphiphilic derivatives of two natural polysaccharides, sodium alginate and sodium hyaluronate, in which a rather small proportion of the carboxylic groups (≤10% mol) was esterified by long alkyl chains (C12H25 or C18H37). The derivatives thus prepared were characterised by gas chromatography, 1H and 13C n.m.r. spectroscopy and size exclusion chromatography coupled to a multi-angle laser light scattering detection. The tendency of these water-soluble compounds to hydrophobic association in aqueous solutions was evidenced firstly in dilute regime using capillary viscometry as well as fluorescence spectroscopy in the presence of a molecular probe, 1,1-dicyano-(4′-N,N-dimethylaminophenyl)-1,3-butadiene.


Journal of Biomedical Materials Research | 2001

Amphiphilic derivatives of sodium alginate and hyaluronate for cartilage repair: Rheological properties

S. Pelletier; Patrick Hubert; E. Payan; P. Marchal; L. Choplin; Edith Dellacherie

Various amphiphilic derivatives of sodium alginate and hyaluronate were prepared by covalent fixation of long alkyl chains (dodecyl and octadecyl) with various ratios on the polysaccharide backbones via ester functions. In the semidilute regime, aqueous solutions of the resulting compounds exhibited the typical rheological properties of hydrophobically associating polymers: tremendous enhancement of zero shear rate Newtonian viscosity, steep shear-thinning behavior, and formation of physically cross-linked gel-like networks. The influence of the alkyl chain length, its content on the polysaccharide and of the polymer concentration in the solution was well identified. All obtained results are discussed with respect to the schedule of conditions related to materials, which could be used for cartilage repair, such as in synovial fluid viscosupplementation as well as in cartilage replacement. In particular, it is seen that HA-C(12)-5 (hyaluronate substituted with 5% of dodecyl chains) and HA-C(18)-1 (hyaluronate substituted with 1% of octadecyl chains) in a 0.15N NaCl solution at 8 g/L have rheological properties quite similar to those of healthy synovial fluid. On the other hand, the rheological parameters of solutions at 8 g/L in 0.15N NaCl of some of derivatives, such as, for example, AA-C(12)-8 (alginate substituted with 8% of dodecyl chains) or HA-C(18)-2, are well fitted for a use in cartilage repair.


Clinical Pharmacokinectics | 1993

Protein binding and stereoselectivity of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs.

Françoise Lapicque; N. Muller; E. Payan; Nathalie Dubois; Patrick Netter

SummaryStereoselective binding of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) can be studied using various techniques. Thus the results obtained by different investigators may be poorly consistent and even contradictory. NSAIDs are bound stereoselectively to serum albumin to different degrees depending on the drug investigated (ibuprofen, indoprofen, carprofen, etodolac, ketoprofen and flurbiprofen). For other drugs, both enantiomers are bound to a similar extent (pirprofen, fenoprofen). This stereoselectivity could vary with experimental conditions, in particular with protein concentration (ketoprofen, etodolac), leading to individual differences. Finally, the stereoselectivity of protein binding and of pharmacokinetics can be compared: differences in binding between enantiomers can explain their differences in pharmacokinetics, once metabolic properties such as inversion have been taken into account.


Biotechnology and Bioengineering | 1999

Hyaluronate-alginate gel as a novel biomaterial: Mechanical properties and formation mechanism

Sandra Oerther; Hervé Le Gall; E. Payan; François Lapicque; Nathalie Presle; Patrick Hubert; Jean Dexheimer; Patrick Netter; Françoise Lapicque

With the aim of producing a biomaterial for surgical applications, the alginate-hyaluronate association has been investigated to combine the gel-forming properties of alginate with the healing properties of hyaluronate. Gels were prepared by diffusion of calcium into alginate-hyaluronate mixtures, with an alginate content of 20 mg/mL. The hyaluronate source was shown to have significant effect on the aspect and the properties of the gels. The gels have viscoelastic behaviour and the transient measurements carried out in creep mode could be interpreted through a Kelvin-Voigt generalised model: experimental data led to the steady state hardness and a characteristic viscosity of the gel. Gels prepared from Na rooster comb hyaluronate with weight ratio up to 0.50 have satisfactory mechanical properties, and fully stable gels are obtained after a few days; on the contrary, use of lower molecular weight hyaluronate led to loose gels for hyaluronate contents over 0.25. Gel formation was investigated by measurements of the exchange fluxes between the calcium chloride solution and the forming gel, which allowed thorough investigations of the occuring diffusion phenomena of water, calcium ion and hyaluronate. Strong interactions of water with hyaluronate reduce significantly the rate of weight loss from the gel beads and allows higher water content in steady-state gels. Calcium content in the gel samples could be correlated to the actual alginate concentration, whatever the nature and the weight ratio of hyaluronate.


Fundamental & Clinical Pharmacology | 1990

Pharmacological aspects of chiral nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs

N. Muller; E. Payan; Françoise Lapicque; B. Bannwarth; Patrick Netter

Summary— Most NSAIDs are chiral molecules: they exist under 2 configurations of non‐superimposable mirror images which are termed enantiomers or optical isomers or optical antipodes. Direct or indirect (resolution) methods are used to separate this equal mixture of compounds. Some of the enantiomers of the NSAIDs are able to undergo chiral inversion from the inactive R(‐) to the active S(+) form. The pharmacokinetics in terms of absorption, distribution, metabolism, protein binding and elimination may be different for the 2 enantiomers, leading to interindividual variability in clinical response and drug toxicity.


Biopolymers | 2000

High interaction alginate–hyaluronate associations by hyaluronate deacetylation for the preparation of efficient biomaterials

Sandra Oerther; Anne-Catherine Maurin; E. Payan; Patrick Hubert; François Lapicque; Nathalie Presle; Jean Dexheimer; Patrick Netter; Françoise Lapicque

The paper presents fundamental investigations of alginate-hyaluronate association with significant polymer interactions for preparation of efficient biomaterials. For this purpose, acetamide functions of hyaluronate were partly cleaved by hydrazine at high temperature, yielding amino groups accessible to carboxylic functions of the alginate chain. Alginate-hyaluronate association was studied both in dissolved state by rheological measurements and CD, and in the form of gel slabs prepared after calcium diffusion. Appreciable interaction between carboxylic groups of alginate and the released amino groups of hyaluronate was put into evidence by enhanced values of the viscosity of mixed solutions, and by assessment of the properties of the gel formed: moderate deacetylation allowed gels of improved hardness and viscosity. Nevertheless, high deacetylation was observed to hinder the gel formation by Ca(2+) complexation of alginate, by the significant competition of COOH-NH(2) association. Interaction between alginate and modified hyaluronate results in regular gel structure, with small cavities.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1999

Hyaluronate-alginate combination for the preparation of new biomaterials: investigation of the behaviour in aqueous solutions

Sandra Oerther; E. Payan; François Lapicque; Nathalie Presle; Patrick Hubert; S. Muller; Patrick Netter; Françoise Lapicque

With the aim of producing a biomaterial for surgical applications, the alginate-hyaluronate association has been investigated. Crossed techniques were used to assess the existence of polymer interactions in aqueous solutions up to 20 mg/ml. Alginate was obtained from algae and hyaluronate was purified from rooster comb. Viscometry measurements using the capillary technique or the Couette flow, together with circular dichroism investigations, evidenced the moderate significance of interactions between the two polysaccharides in dilute solutions. In addition, the case of more concentrated solutions and containing 20 mg/ml alginate was approached by rheological measurements in the flow mode; the behaviour of the polymer associations appeared as a compromise between those of individual polysaccharides.

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Françoise Lapicque

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Edith Dellacherie

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jean-Yves Jouzeau

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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N. Muller

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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B. Bannwarth

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Didier Mainard

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Claudine Monot

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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