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Dive into the research topics where Flavie Luciani is active.

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Featured researches published by Flavie Luciani.


Cancer Research | 2007

Stable Overexpression of Smad7 in Human Melanoma Cells Impairs Bone Metastasis

Delphine Javelaud; Khalid S. Mohammad; Christopher McKenna; Pierrick Fournier; Flavie Luciani; Maryla Niewolna; Jocelyne André; Véronique Delmas; Lionel Larue; Theresa A. Guise; Alain Mauviel

Melanoma has a propensity to metastasize to bone, where it is exposed to high concentrations of transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta). Because TGF-beta promotes bone metastases from other solid tumors, such as breast cancer, we tested the role of TGF-beta in melanoma metastases to bone. 1205Lu melanoma cells, stably transfected to overexpress the natural TGF-beta/Smad signaling inhibitor Smad7, were studied in an experimental model of bone metastasis whereby tumor cells are inoculated into the left cardiac ventricle of nude mice. All mice bearing parental and mock-transfected 1205Lu cells developed osteolytic bone metastases 5 weeks post-tumor inoculation. Mice bearing 1205Lu-Smad7 tumors had significantly less osteolysis on radiographs and longer survival compared with parental and mock-transfected 1205Lu mice. To determine if the reduced bone metastases observed in mice bearing 1205Lu-Smad7 clones was due to reduced expression of TGF-beta target genes known to enhance metastases to bone from breast cancer cells, we analyzed gene expression of osteolytic factors, parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP) and interleukin-11 (IL-11), the chemotactic receptor CXCR4, and osteopontin in 1205Lu cells. Quantitative reverse transcription-PCR analysis indicated that PTHrP, IL-11, CXCR4, and osteopontin mRNA steady-state levels were robustly increased in response to TGF-beta and that Smad7 and the TbetaRI small-molecule inhibitor, SB431542, prevented such induction. In addition, 1205Lu-Smad7 bone metastases expressed significantly lower levels of IL-11, connective tissue growth factor, and PTHrP. These data suggest that TGF-beta promotes osteolytic bone metastases due to melanoma by stimulating the expression of prometastatic factors via the Smad pathway. Blockade of TGF-beta signaling may be an effective treatment for melanoma metastasis to bone.


Development | 2011

Biological and mathematical modeling of melanocyte development.

Flavie Luciani; Delphine Champeval; Aurélie Herbette; Laurence Denat; Bouchra Aylaj; Silvia Martinozzi; Robert Ballotti; Rolf Kemler; Colin R. Goding; Florian De Vuyst; Lionel Larue; Véronique Delmas

We aim to evaluate environmental and genetic effects on the expansion/proliferation of committed single cells during embryonic development, using melanoblasts as a paradigm to model this phenomenon. Melanoblasts are a specific type of cell that display extensive cellular proliferation during development. However, the events controlling melanoblast expansion are still poorly understood due to insufficient knowledge concerning their number and distribution in the various skin compartments. We show that melanoblast expansion is tightly controlled both spatially and temporally, with little variation between embryos. We established a mathematical model reflecting the main cellular mechanisms involved in melanoblast expansion, including proliferation and migration from the dermis to epidermis. In association with biological information, the model allows the calculation of doubling times for melanoblasts, revealing that dermal and epidermal melanoblasts have short but different doubling times. Moreover, the number of trunk founder melanoblasts at E8.5 was estimated to be 16, a population impossible to count by classical biological approaches. We also assessed the importance of the genetic background by studying gain- and loss-of-function β-catenin mutants in the melanocyte lineage. We found that any alteration of β-catenin activity, whether positive or negative, reduced both dermal and epidermal melanoblast proliferation. Finally, we determined that the pool of dermal melanoblasts remains constant in wild-type and mutant embryos during development, implying that specific control mechanisms associated with cell division ensure half of the cells at each cell division to migrate from the dermis to the epidermis. Modeling melanoblast expansion revealed novel links between cell division, cell localization within the embryo and appropriate feedback control through β-catenin.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

αMSH and Cyclic AMP Elevating Agents Control Melanosome pH through a Protein Kinase A-independent Mechanism

Yann Cheli; Flavie Luciani; Mehdi Khaled; Laurent Beuret; Karine Bille; Pierre Gounon; Jean-Paul Ortonne; Corine Bertolotto; Robert Ballotti

Melanins are synthesized in melanocytes within specialized organelles called melanosomes. Numerous studies have shown that the pH of melanosome plays a key role in the regulation of melanin synthesis. However, until now, acute regulation of melanosome pH by a physiological stimulus has never been demonstrated. In the present study, we show that the activation of the cAMP pathway by αMSH or forskolin leads to an alkalinization of melanosomes and a concomitant regulation of vacuolar ATPases and ion transporters of the solute carrier family. The solute carrier family members include SLC45A2, which is mutated in oculocutaneous albinism type IV, SLC24A4 and SLC24A5, proteins implicated in the control of eye, hair, and skin pigmentation, and the P protein, encoded by the oculocutaneous albinism type II locus. Interestingly, H89, a pharmacological inhibitor of protein kinase A (PKA), prevents the cAMP-induced pigmentation and induces acidification of melanosomes. The drastic depigmenting effect of H89 is not due to an inhibition of tyrosinase expression. Indeed, H89 blocks the induction of melanogenesis induced by LY294002, a potent inhibitor of the PI 3-kinase pathway, without any effect on tyrosinase expression. Furthermore, PKA is not involved in the inhibition of pigmentation promoted by H89 because LY294002 induces pigmentation independently of PKA. Also, other PKA inhibitors do not affect pigmentation. Taken together, our results strengthen the support for a key role of melanosome pH in the regulation of melanin synthesis and, for the first time, demonstrate that melanosome pH is regulated by cAMP and αMSH. Notably, these are both mediators of the response to solar UV radiation, the main physiological stimulus of skin pigmentation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Alpha-MSH and cyclic-AMP elevating agents control melanosome pH through a PKA-independent mechanism.

Yann Cheli; Flavie Luciani; Mehdi Khaled; Laurent Beuret; Karine Bille; Pierre Gounon; Jean-Paul Ortonne; Corine Bertolotto; Robert Ballotti

Melanins are synthesized in melanocytes within specialized organelles called melanosomes. Numerous studies have shown that the pH of melanosome plays a key role in the regulation of melanin synthesis. However, until now, acute regulation of melanosome pH by a physiological stimulus has never been demonstrated. In the present study, we show that the activation of the cAMP pathway by αMSH or forskolin leads to an alkalinization of melanosomes and a concomitant regulation of vacuolar ATPases and ion transporters of the solute carrier family. The solute carrier family members include SLC45A2, which is mutated in oculocutaneous albinism type IV, SLC24A4 and SLC24A5, proteins implicated in the control of eye, hair, and skin pigmentation, and the P protein, encoded by the oculocutaneous albinism type II locus. Interestingly, H89, a pharmacological inhibitor of protein kinase A (PKA), prevents the cAMP-induced pigmentation and induces acidification of melanosomes. The drastic depigmenting effect of H89 is not due to an inhibition of tyrosinase expression. Indeed, H89 blocks the induction of melanogenesis induced by LY294002, a potent inhibitor of the PI 3-kinase pathway, without any effect on tyrosinase expression. Furthermore, PKA is not involved in the inhibition of pigmentation promoted by H89 because LY294002 induces pigmentation independently of PKA. Also, other PKA inhibitors do not affect pigmentation. Taken together, our results strengthen the support for a key role of melanosome pH in the regulation of melanin synthesis and, for the first time, demonstrate that melanosome pH is regulated by cAMP and αMSH. Notably, these are both mediators of the response to solar UV radiation, the main physiological stimulus of skin pigmentation.


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2015

Altered E-Cadherin Levels and Distribution in Melanocytes Precede Clinical Manifestations of Vitiligo

Roselyne Y. Wagner; Flavie Luciani; Muriel Cario-André; Alain Rubod; Valérie Petit; Laila Benzekri; Khaled Ezzedine; Sebastien Lepreux; Eirikur Steingrimsson; Alain Taïeb; Yvon Gauthier; Lionel Larue; Véronique Delmas

Vitiligo is the most common depigmenting disorder resulting from the loss of melanocytes from the basal epidermal layer. The pathogenesis of the disease is likely multifactorial and involves autoimmune causes, as well as oxidative and mechanical stress. It is important to identify early events in vitiligo to clarify pathogenesis, improve diagnosis, and inform therapy. Here, we show that E-cadherin (Ecad), which mediates the adhesion between melanocytes and keratinocytes in the epidermis, is absent from or discontinuously distributed across melanocyte membranes of vitiligo patients long before clinical lesions appear. This abnormality is associated with the detachment of the melanocytes from the basal to the suprabasal layers in the epidermis. Using human epidermal reconstructed skin and mouse models with normal or defective Ecad expression in melanocytes, we demonstrated that Ecad is required for melanocyte adhesiveness to the basal layer under oxidative and mechanical stress, establishing a link between silent/preclinical, cell-autonomous defects in vitiligo melanocytes and known environmental stressors accelerating disease expression. Our results implicate a primary predisposing skin defect affecting melanocyte adhesiveness that, under stress conditions, leads to disappearance of melanocytes and clinical vitiligo. Melanocyte adhesiveness is thus a potential target for therapy aiming at disease stabilization.


Journal of Theoretical Biology | 2011

Melanoblast proliferation dynamics during mouse embryonic development. Modeling and validation

Bouchra Aylaj; Flavie Luciani; Véronique Delmas; Lionel Larue; Florian De Vuyst

In this paper, we are looking for mathematical modeling of mouse embryonic melanoblast proliferation dynamics, taking into account, the expression level of β-catenin. This protein plays an important role into the whole signal pathway process. Different assumptions on some unobservable features lead to different candidate models. From real data measured, from biological experiments and from a priori biological knowledge, it was able to validate or invalidate some of the candidate models. Data assimilation and parameter identification allowed us to derive a mathematical model that is in very good agreement with biological data. As a result, the produced model can give tracks for biologists into their biological investigations and experimental evidence. Another interest is the use of this model for robust hidden parameter identification like double times or number of founder melanoblasts.


Genes & Development | 2007

beta-Catenin induces immortalization of melanocytes by suppressing p16INK4a expression and cooperates with N-Ras in melanoma development

Véronique Delmas; Friedrich Beermann; Silvia Martinozzi; Suzanne Carreira; Julien Ackermann; Mayuko Kumasaka; Laurence Denat; Jane Goodall; Flavie Luciani; Amaya Viros; Nese Demirkan; Boris C. Bastian; Colin R. Goding; Lionel Larue


Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 2017

Deciphering the Role of Oncogenic MITFE318K in Senescence Delay and Melanoma Progression

Caroline Bonet; Flavie Luciani; Jean-François Ottavi; Justine Leclerc; Fanélie-Marie Jouenne; Marina Boncompagni; Karine Bille; Véronique Hofman; Guillaume Bossis; Gian Marco De Donatis; Thomas Strub; Yann Cheli; Mickaël Ohanna; Frederic Luciano; Sandrine Marchetti; Stéphane Rocchi; Marie-Christine Birling; Marie-Françoise Avril; Nicolas Poulalhon; Thomas Luc; Corine Bertolotto


Archive | 2016

Regulation of Melanoma Progression through the TCF4/miR-125b/NEDD9

Cascade Rambow; Audrey Bechadergue; Flavie Luciani; Gwendoline Gros; Mélanie J. Domingues; Jacky Bonaventure; Guillaume Meurice; Jean-Christophe Marine; Lionel Larue


Archive | 2010

G li 2-Mediated Melanoma i nvasion and Metastasis

Vasileia-Ismini Alexaki; Delphine Javelaud; Khalid S. Mohammad; Flavie Luciani; Keith S. Hoek; James S. Goydos; Pierrick J. Fournier; Claire Sibon; Corine Bertolotto; Franck Verrecchia; Simon Saule; Véronique Delmas; Robert Ballotti; Lionel Larue; Philippe Saiag; Theresa A. Guise; Alain Mauviel

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Véronique Delmas

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Lionel Larue

University of Paris-Sud

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Yann Cheli

Scripps Research Institute

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Karine Bille

Ghent University Hospital

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Mehdi Khaled

French Institute of Health and Medical Research

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Florian De Vuyst

École normale supérieure de Cachan

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Jean-Paul Ortonne

University of Nice Sophia Antipolis

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