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Dive into the research topics where Edith Gagnon is active.

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Featured researches published by Edith Gagnon.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

Cloning and Functional Characterization of a Cation-Cl− Cotransporter-interacting Protein

Luc Caron; François Rousseau; Edith Gagnon; Paul Isenring

To date, the cation-Cl−cotransporter (CCC) family comprises two branches of homologous membrane proteins. One branch includes the Na+-K+-Cl− cotransporters (NKCCs) and the Na+-Cl− cotransporter, and the other branch includes the K+-Cl− cotransporters. Here, we have isolated the first member of a third CCC family branch. This member shares ∼25% identity in amino acid sequence with each of the other known mammalian CCCs. The corresponding cDNA, obtained from a human heart library and initially termed WO3.3, encodes a 914-residue polypeptide of 96.2 kDa (calculated mass). Sequence analyses predict a 12-transmembrane domain (tm) region, twoN-linked glycosylation sites between tm5 and tm6, and a large intracellular carboxyl terminus containing protein kinase C phosphorylation sites. Northern blot analysis uncovers an ∼3.7-kilobase pair transcript present in muscle, placenta, brain, and kidney. With regard to function, WO3.3 expressed either in HEK-293 cells or Xenopus laevis oocytes does not increase Rb+-, Na+-, and Cl−-coupled transport during 5- or 6-h fluxes, respectively. In the oocyte, however, WO3.3 specifically inhibits human NKCC1-mediated 86Rb+ flux. In addition, coimmunoprecipitation studies using lysates from WO3.3-transfected HEK-293 cells suggest a direct interaction of WO3.3 with endogenous NKCC. Thus, we have cloned and characterized the first putative heterologous CCC-interacting protein (CIP) known at present. CIP1 may be part of a novel family of proteins that modifies the activity or kinetics of CCCs through heterodimer formation.


Cornea | 2003

Collagen-poly(N-isopropylacrylamide)-based membranes for corneal stroma scaffolds.

Shigeto Shimmura; Charles J. Doillon; May Griffith; Masatsugu Nakamura; Edith Gagnon; Akemi Usui; Naoshi Shinozaki; Kazuo Tsubota

Purpose To investigate the feasibility of using the biocompatibility of collagen-based blended biomaterials as cell-delivery systems in ocular surface reconstruction in vivo. Methods Collagen-based composites that were blended with synthetic acrylamide-based polymers [poly(N-isopropylacrylamide), pNIPAAm] were transplanted into corneal pockets of white rabbits, with a 3-mm epithelial window. Epithelial cells were allowed to migrate onto the polymer. Transplanted eyes were examined daily for up to 30 days, after which animals were killed for histologic examination. Immunohistochemistry was performed for vimentin, &agr;–smooth muscle actin (&agr;-SMA), CD4, and CD8. Gold-chloride staining was performed to observe neuronal regrowth. Human amniotic membranes (AMs) and sham-operated corneas served as controls. All animals received topical antibiotics (levofloxacin) without the use of steroids or other immunosuppressive agents. Results The pNIPAAm polymer allowed smooth epithelialization of the cornea, which was similar to the epithelialization observed in sham controls and AM-transplanted eyes. Histology revealed that epithelium overlying the polymer was bundled into several layers, without the orientation observed with AM and sham controls. The polymer gradually thinned and was gradually replaced by host tissue. Vimentin- and &agr;-SMA–positive cells were found in stromal pockets up to 1 month following polymer transplantation. These cells were responsible for slight subepithelial haze near the wound edge. CD4- and CD8-positive lymphocytes were also observed in the vicinity of the polymer. Gold-chloride staining showed nerve regrowth in the wound edge after 1 month and subepithelial branches after 3 months. Conclusion Collagen–pNIPAAm blended polymers may be effective as biomaterials to be used in the early stages of lamellar stromal replacement.


Journal of Controlled Release | 2002

Immobilized liposome layers for drug delivery applications: inhibition of angiogenesis.

Patrick Vermette; Laurence Meagher; Edith Gagnon; Hans J. Griesser; Charles J. Doillon

Liposomes were immobilized onto the surface of perfluorinated polymer tape samples and tissue culture polystyrene well-plates using a multilayer immobilization strategy. In the first step, a thin interfacial bonding layer with surface aldehyde groups was deposited from a glow discharge struck in acetaldehyde vapour. Polyethylenimine was then covalently bound onto the aldehyde groups by reductive amination, followed by covalent binding of NHS-PEG-biotin molecules onto the surface amine groups by carbodiimide chemistry. Next, NeutrAvidin protein molecules were bound onto the PEG-biotin layer. Finally, liposomes containing PEG-biotinylated lipids were docked onto the remaining binding sites of the surface-immobilized NeutrAvidin molecules. AFM was used to image surface-bound liposomes and revealed a density well below close packing. The release characteristics of the surface-bound liposomes were measured by the fluorescence intensity changes of carboxyfluorescein upon release. Liposomes filled with sodium orthovanadate were surface immobilized and used in two in vitro angiogenesis assays. Marked differences compared to various control samples were observed, demonstrating the utility of drug-filled, surface-bound liposomes for evoking localized, controlled biological host responses proximal to an implanted biomedical device.


Cytoskeleton | 2009

Human angiomotin-like 1 associates with an angiomotin protein complex through its coiled-coil domain and induces the remodeling of the actin cytoskeleton

Valérie Gagné; Julie Moreau; Mélodie Plourde; Mathieu Lapointe; Mathieu Lord; Edith Gagnon; Maria J. G. Fernandes

Angiostatin is a potent inhibitor of angiogenesis. One mechanism through which angiostatin inhibits angiogenesis is by binding to the cell surface protein p80-angiomotin. The p80-angiomotin protein promotes angiogenesis, in part, by conferring a hypermigratory phenotype to endothelial cells. Although p80-angiomotin is extensively characterized, less is known about the related protein angiomotin-like 1. We report that angiomotin-like 1 forms part of a protein complex containing p80-angiomotin. Structure-function studies revealed that angiomotin-like 1 associates with this p80-angiomotin-containing complex via its coiled-coil domain. Since p80-angiomotin plays a role in cell migration, a process that involves the remodeling of the actin cytoskeleton, we then addressed the hypothesis that angiomotin-like 1 may interact with the cytoskeleton. Immunofluorescence studies reveal that angiomotin-like 1 not only co-localizes with filamentous actin but also significantly modifies the architecture of the actin cytoskeleton. Regarding migration, angiomotin-like 1 increases the velocity of migration and decreases the persistence of migration directionality. Together these observations strongly suggest that angiomotin-like 1 is involved in actin-cytoskeleton-based processes, in part, via its interaction with a p80-angiomotin-containing complex and the actin cytoskeleton. These findings have important implications for angiogenesis-driven disease since angiomotin and angiomotin-like 1 are both expressed in capillaries.


Angiogenesis | 2002

Human vascular endothelial cells with extended life spans: In vitro cell response, protein expression, and angiogenesis

Edith Gagnon; Paola Cattaruzzi; May Griffith; Lea Muzakare; Katell LeFlao; Robert Faure; Richard Béliveau; Sabah N. A. Hussain; Michael Koutsilieris; Charles J. Doillon

An in vitro angiogenesis system was designed for screening angiogenic agonists and antagonists. In order to obtain large quantities of cells and reproducibility, human endothelial cells with extended life spans were developed by retroviral transfection. The resulting cells grown in a serum-free medium containing endothelial cell growth supplement (ECGS) have a telomerase activity, extended life spans of at least 21 passages, and an endothelial cell phenotype (diI-acetylated-LDL upake, factor VIII-related antigen, VEGFR-1 and R-2, and tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA)) that resembled that of unaltered primary endothelial cells. Exceptions were (i) a higher expression of tPA, and (ii) a non-significant growth response to FGF-2 or VEGF stimulation. Within three-dimensional fibrin gels, specific cell clones rapidly formed tubular structures in a more reproducible manner than those observed with low-passage primary cells. Tube formation by primary endothelial cells and those with extended life spans was dependent upon FGF-2 and ECGS, respectively. Both cell types produced FGF-2 and VEGF cytokines. Increasing doses of suramin significantly decreased the size of microvessels formed by both cell lines. These functional results indicate that a vascular matrix system containing human cells with extended life spans can be successfully utilized as an in vitro assay for antiangiogenic compounds.


Bone | 2011

Novel SQSTM1 mutations in patients with Paget's disease of bone in an unrelated multiethnic American population

Laëtitia Michou; Jean Morissette; Edith Gagnon; Anik Marquis; Maryann Dellabadia; Jacques P. Brown; Ethel S. Siris

More than 20 mutations of the Sequestosome 1 (SQSTM1) gene have been reported in patients of European descent affected by Pagets disease of bone (PDB). In this investigation, a systematic screening for SQSTM1 mutations was conducted in consecutively evaluated unrelated patients with phenotypical PDB living in the New York City area (NY, United States). Seventy unrelated PDB patients with a multiethnic background, mostly of Jewish, Italian American, and Western European ancestries, were recruited. Sequencing of exons 7 and 8 was performed on DNA samples isolated from peripheral blood. Seven patients (10%) had SQSTM1 mutations, of which three had a family history of PDB. Four patients carried the C1215T (P392L) mutation, and three patients carried novel SQSTM1 missense mutations: T1085A (S349T), C1209T (A390V), and T1290A (L417Q) mutations. All PDB patients with SQSTM1 mutations had polyostotic involvement, and the mean number of affected bones was significantly higher in pagetic patient carriers of a SQSTM1 mutation when compared to non-mutated PDB patients (4.0 vs. 2.0, respectively; P = 0.003). Haplotype analysis in patient carriers of the P392L mutation revealed that all P392L mutations were carried by haplotype 2. The SQSTM1 mutation rate in unrelated American patients described in the present study was similar to that reported in European populations.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Identification of Key Functional Domains in the C Terminus of the K+-Cl– Cotransporters

Marc J. Bergeron; Edith Gagnon; Luc Caron; Paul Isenring

The K+-Cl– cotransporter (KCC) isoforms constitute a functionally heterogeneous group of ion carriers. Emerging evidence suggests that the C terminus (Ct) of these proteins is important in conveying isoform-specific traits and that it may harbor interacting sites for 4β-phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA)-induced effectors. In this study, we have generated KCC2-KCC4 chimeras to identify key functional domains in the Ct of these carriers and single point mutations to determine whether canonical protein kinase C sites underlie KCC2-specific behaviors. Functional characterization of wild-type (wt) and mutant carriers in Xenopus laevis oocytes showed for the first time that the KCCs do not exhibit similar sensitivities to changes in osmolality and that this distinguishing feature as well as differences in transport activity under both hypotonic and isotonic conditions are in part determined by the residue composition of the distal Ct. At the same time, several mutations in this domain and in the proximal Ct of the KCCs were found to generate allosteric-like effects, suggesting that the regions analyzed are important in defining conformational ensembles and that isoform-specific structural configurations could thus account for variant functional traits as well. Characterization of the other mutants in this work showed that KCC2 is not inhibited by PMA through phosphorylation of its canonical protein kinase C sites. Intriguingly, however, the substitutions N728S and S940A were seen to alter the PMA effect paradoxically, suggesting again that allosteric changes in the Ct are important determinants of transport activity and, furthermore, that the structural configuration of this domain can convey specific functional traits by defining the accessibility of cotransporter sites to regulatory intermediates such as PMA-induced effectors.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

Molecular Mechanisms of Cl- Transport by the Renal Na+-K+-Cl- Cotransporter IDENTIFICATION OF AN INTRACELLULAR LOCUS THAT MAY FORM PART OF A HIGH AFFINITY Cl--BINDING SITE

Edith Gagnon; Marc J. Bergeron; Geneviève M. Brunet; Nikolas D. Daigle; Charles F. Simard; Paul Isenring

The 2nd transmembrane domain (tm) of the secretory Na+-K+-Cl- cotransporter (NKCC1) and of the kidney-specific isoform (NKCC2) has been shown to play an important role in cation transport. For NKCC2, by way of illustration, alternative splicing of exon 4, a 96-bp sequence from which tm2 is derived, leads to the formation of the NKCC2A and F variants that both exhibit unique affinities for cations. Of interest, the NKCC2 variants also exhibit substantial differences in Cl- affinity as well as in the residue composition of the first intracellular connecting segment (cs1a), which immediately follows tm2 and which too is derived from exon 4. In this study, we have prepared chimeras of the shark NKCC2A and F (saA and saF) to determine whether cs1a could play a role in Cl- transport; here, tm2 or cs1a in saF was replaced by the corresponding domain from saA (generating saA/F or saF/A, respectively). Functional analyses of these chimeras have shown that cs1a-specific residues account for most of the A-F difference in Cl- affinity. For example, Km(Cl-)s were ∼8 mm for saF/A and saA, and ∼70 mm for saA/F and saF. Intriguingly, variant residues in cs1a also affected cation transport; here, Km(Na+)s for the chimeras and for saA were all ∼20 mm, and Km(Rb+) all ∼2 mm. Regarding tm2, our studies have confirmed its importance in cation transport and have also identified novel properties for this domain. Taken together, our results demonstrate for the first time that an intracellular loop in NKCC contributes to the transport process perhaps by forming a flexible structure that positions itself between membrane spanning domains.


The Journal of General Physiology | 2005

Novel Insights Regarding the Operational Characteristics and Teleological Purpose of the Renal Na+-K+-Cl2 Cotransporter (NKCC2s) Splice Variants

Geneviève M. Brunet; Edith Gagnon; Charles F. Simard; Nikolas D. Daigle; Luc Caron; Micheline Noël; Marie-Hélène Lefoll; Marc J. Bergeron; Paul Isenring

The absorptive Na+-K+-Cl− cotransporter (NKCC2) is a polytopic protein that forms homooligomeric complexes in the apical membrane of the thick ascending loop of Henle (TAL). It occurs in at least four splice variants (called B, A, F, and AF) that are identical to one another except for a short region in the membrane-associated domain. Although each of these variants exhibits unique functional properties and distributions along the TAL, their teleological purpose and structural organization remain poorly defined. In the current work, we provide additional insight in these regards by showing in mouse that the administration of either furosemide or an H2O-rich diet, which are predicted to alter NKCC2 expression in the TAL, exerts differential effects on mRNA levels for the variants, increasing those of A (furosemide) but decreasing those of F and AF (furosemide or H2O). Based on a yeast two-hybrid mapping analysis, we also show that the formation of homooligomeric complexes is mediated by two self-interacting domains in the COOH terminus (residues 671 to 816 and 910 to 1098), and that these complexes could probably include more than one type of variant. Taken together, the data reported here suggest that A, F, and AF each play unique roles that are adapted to specific physiological needs, and that the accomplishment of such roles is coordinated through the splicing machinery as well as complex NKCC2–NKCC2 interactions.


American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 1999

Inhibition of Na(+)-K(+)-2Cl(-) cotransport by mercury.

Steven C. Jacoby; Edith Gagnon; Luc Caron; John J. Chang; Paul Isenring

Mercury alters the function of proteins by reacting with cysteinyl sulfhydryl (SH(-)) groups. The inorganic form (Hg(2+)) is toxic to epithelial tissues and interacts with various transport proteins including the Na(+) pump and Cl(-) channels. In this study, we determined whether the Na(+)-K(+)-Cl(-) cotransporter type 1 (NKCC1), a major ion pathway in secretory tissues, is also affected by mercurial substrates. To characterize the interaction, we measured the effect of Hg(2+) on ion transport by the secretory shark and human cotransporters expressed in HEK-293 cells. Our studies show that Hg(2+) inhibits Na(+)-K(+)-Cl(-) cotransport, with inhibitor constant (K(i)) values of 25 microM for the shark carrier (sNKCC1) and 43 microM for the human carrier. In further studies, we took advantage of species differences in Hg(2+) affinity to identify residues involved in the interaction. An analysis of human-shark chimeras and of an sNKCC1 mutant (Cys-697-->Leu) reveals that transmembrane domain 11 plays an essential role in Hg(2+) binding. We also show that modification of additional SH(-) groups by thiol-reacting compounds brings about inhibition and that the binding sites are not exposed on the extracellular face of the membrane.

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Ethel S. Siris

Columbia University Medical Center

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