Frédéric Mazurier
University Health Network
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Featured researches published by Frédéric Mazurier.
Nature Medicine | 2003
Frédéric Mazurier; Monica Doedens; Olga I. Gan; John E. Dick
A major problem hampering effective stem cell–based therapies is the absence of a clear understanding of the human hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) pool composition. The severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) repopulating cell (SRC) xenotransplant assay system provides a powerful tool for characterizing the frequency, cell surface markers, cell cycle status, homing and response to cytokine stimulation of human HSCs. Clonal tracking of retrovirally transduced SRCs and transplantation of specific subpopulations revealed SRC classes with distinct repopulation potentials. However, all HSC repopulation assays are based on intravenous injection, a complex process that requires circulation through blood, recognition and extravasation through bone marrow vasculature, and migration to a supportive microenvironment. Thus, some classes of HSCs may remain undetected. By direct intrafemoral injection, we identified rapid SRCs (R-SRCs) within the Lin−CD34+CD38loCD36− subpopulation. R-SRCs rapidly generate high levels of human myeloid and erythroid cells within the injected femur, migrate to the blood and colonize individual bones of non-obese diabetic (NOD)-SCID mice within 2 weeks after transplantation. Lentivector-mediated clonal analysis of individual R-SRCs revealed heterogeneity in their proliferative and migratory properties. The identification of a new HSC class and an effective intrafemoral assay provide the tools required to develop more effective stem cell–based therapies that rely on rapid reconstitution.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006
Hamid Reza Rezvani; Frédéric Mazurier; Muriel Cario-André; Catherine Pain; Cécile Ged; Alain Taïeb; Hubert de Verneuil
UV-induced apoptosis in keratinocytes is a highly complex process in which various molecular pathways are involved. These include the extrinsic pathway via triggering of death receptors and the intrinsic pathway via DNA damage and reactive oxygen species (ROS) formation. In this study we investigated the effect of catalase and CuZn-superoxide dismutase (SOD) overexpression on apoptosis induced by UVB exposure at room temperature or 4 °C on normal human keratinocytes. Irradiation at low temperature reduced UV-induced apoptosis by 40% in normal keratinocytes independently of any change in p53 and with a decrease in caspase-8 activation. Catalase overexpression decreased apoptosis by 40% with a reduction of caspase-9 activation accompanied by a decrease in p53. Keeping cells at low temperature and catalase overexpression had additive effects. CuZn-SOD overexpression had no significant effect on UVB-induced apoptosis. UVB induced an increase in ROS levels at two distinct stages: immediately following irradiation and around 3 h after irradiation. Catalase overexpression inhibited only the late increase in ROS levels. We conclude that catalase overexpression has a protective role against UVB irradiation by preventing DNA damage mediated by the late ROS increase.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007
Hamid Reza Rezvani; Sophie Dedieu; Sophie North; Francis Belloc; Rodrigue Rossignol; Thierry Letellier; Hubert de Verneuil; Alain Taïeb; Frédéric Mazurier
Hypoxia-inducible factor-1 (HIF-1) is a major transcription factor sensitive to oxygen levels, which responds to stress factors under both hypoxic and nonhypoxic conditions. UV irradiation being a common stressor of skin, we looked at the effect of UVB on HIF-1α expression in keratinocytes. We found that UVB induces a biphasic HIF-1α variation through reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation. Whereas rapid production of cytoplasmic ROS down-regulates HIF-1α expression, delayed mitochondrial ROS generation results in its up-regulation. Indeed, activation of p38 MAPK and JNK1 mediated by mitochondrial ROS were required for HIF-1α phosphorylation and accumulation after UVB irradiation. Our experiments also revealed a key role of HIF-1α in mediating UVB-induced apoptosis. We conclude that the broad impact of the HIF-1 transcription factor on gene expression could make it a key regulator of UV-responsive genes and photocarcinogenesis.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2011
Hamid Reza Rezvani; Arianna L. Kim; Rodrigue Rossignol; Nsrein Ali; Meaghan Daly; Walid Mahfouf; Nadège Bellance; Alain Taïeb; Hubert de Verneuil; Frédéric Mazurier; David R. Bickers
DNA damage is a well-known initiator of tumorigenesis. Studies have shown that most cancer cells rely on aerobic glycolysis for their bioenergetics. We sought to identify a molecular link between genomic mutations and metabolic alterations in neoplastic transformation. We took advantage of the intrinsic genomic instability arising in xeroderma pigmentosum C (XPC). The XPC protein plays a key role in recognizing DNA damage in nucleotide excision repair, and patients with XPC deficiency have increased incidence of skin cancer and other malignancies. In cultured human keratinocytes, we showed that lentivirus-mediated knockdown of XPC reduced mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation and increased glycolysis, recapitulating cancer cell metabolism. Accumulation of unrepaired DNA following XPC silencing increased DNA-dependent protein kinase activity, which subsequently activated AKT1 and NADPH oxidase-1 (NOX1), resulting in ROS production and accumulation of specific deletions in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) over time. Subcutaneous injection of XPC-deficient keratinocytes into immunodeficient mice led to squamous cell carcinoma formation, demonstrating the tumorigenic potential of transduced cells. Conversely, simultaneous knockdown of either NOX1 or AKT1 blocked the neoplastic transformation induced by XPC silencing. Our results demonstrate that genomic instability resulting from XPC silencing results in activation of AKT1 and subsequently NOX1 to induce ROS generation, mtDNA deletions, and neoplastic transformation in human keratinocytes.
Journal of Cell Science | 2011
Hamid Reza Rezvani; Nsrein Ali; Martin Serrano-Sanchez; Pierre Dubus; Christine Varon; Cécile Ged; Catherine Pain; Muriel Cario-André; Julien Seneschal; Alain Taïeb; Hubert de Verneuil; Frédéric Mazurier
In mouse and human skin, HIF-1α is constitutively expressed in the epidermis, mainly in the basal layer. HIF-1α has been shown to have crucial systemic functions: regulation of kidney erythropoietin production in mice with constitutive HIF-1α epidermal deletion, and hypervascularity following epidermal HIF-1α overexpression. However, its local role in keratinocyte physiology has not been clearly defined. To address the function of HIF-1α in the epidermis, we used the mouse model of HIF-1α knockout targeted to keratinocytes (K14-Cre/Hif1aflox/flox). These mice had a delayed skin phenotype characterized by skin atrophy and pruritic inflammation, partly mediated by basement membrane disturbances involving laminin-332 (Ln-332) and integrins. We also investigated the relevance of results of studies in mice to human skin using reconstructed epidermis and showed that HIF-1α knockdown in human keratinocytes impairs the formation of a viable reconstructed epidermis. A diminution of keratinocyte growth potential, following HIF-1α silencing, was associated with a decreased expression of Ln-322 and α6 integrin and β1 integrin. Overall, these results indicate a role of HIF-1α in skin homeostasis especially during epidermal aging.
Transfusion | 2006
Zoran Ivanovic; Pascale Duchez; Bernard Dazey; Francis Hermitte; Isabelle Lamrissi-Garcia; Frédéric Mazurier; Vincent Praloran; Josy Reiffers; Gerard Vezon; Jean-Michel Boiron
BACKGROUND: The autologous transplantation of CD34+ cells expanded ex vivo in serum‐free conditions dramatically reduces postmyeloablative neutropenia in myeloma patients. In our cell therapy unit, cells for this clinical assay have been expanded under GMP with serum‐free Irvine Scientific (IS) medium with stem cell factor (SCF), granulocyte–colony‐stimulating factor (G‐CSF), and megakaryocyte growth and development factor (MGDF; 100 ng/mL, respectively). Because this clinical‐grade IS medium is no longer available, a new serum‐free medium, Maco Biotech HP01 (Macopharma), was evaluated.
Cell Research | 2007
Celine Haond; Françoise Farace; Martine Guillier; Yann Lécluse; Frédéric Mazurier; William Vainchenker; Ali G. Turhan
The murine skeletal muscle contains hematopoietic stem cells, but this potential has so far not been studied quantitatively or qualitatively in vitro. To quantify the hematopoietic stem cell potential, we have used highly purified SP/CD45+ cells in long-term culture initiating cell (LTC-IC) assays. The SP/CD45+ cell population purified from murine muscle was found to have significant stem cell activity with an LTC-IC frequency of 1/640. Single-cell-sorted SP/CD45+ cells from muscle exhibited robust proliferative activity in vitro at day 16 (380-fold amplification), especially after culture with OP-9 layers that also support embryonic stem cells. Amplified cell populations originating from single cells exhibited multilineage differentiation ability with evidence of myeloid, lymphoid and NK cell markers. Thus, our results demonstrate that hematopoietic stem cells that can be quantified by LTC-IC assays exist in the murine skeletal muscle and show also for the first time, at the single-cell level, that these cells exhibit multilineage differentiation ability and major proliferative potential.
Blood | 2004
Frédéric Mazurier; Olga I. Gan; Joby L. McKenzie; Monica Doedens; John E. Dick
Blood | 2007
Ronan Chaligné; Chloé James; Carole Tonetti; Rodolphe Besancenot; Jean Pierre Le Couédic; Fanny Fava; Frédéric Mazurier; Isabelle Godin; Karim Maloum; Frédéric Larbret; Yann Lécluse; William Vainchenker; Stéphane Giraudier
Experimental Hematology | 2005
Gerard J. Madlambayan; Ian Rogers; Daniel C. Kirouac; Nobuko Yamanaka; Frédéric Mazurier; Monica Doedens; Robert F. Casper; John E. Dick; Peter W. Zandstra