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Dive into the research topics where Irène Tatischeff is active.

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Featured researches published by Irène Tatischeff.


Journal of extracellular vesicles | 2012

Fast characterisation of cell-derived extracellular vesicles by nanoparticles tracking analysis, cryo-electron microscopy, and Raman tweezers microspectroscopy

Irène Tatischeff; Eric Larquet; Juan M. Falcon-Perez; Pierre-Yves Turpin; Sergei G. Kruglik

The joint use of 3 complementary techniques, namely, nanoparticle tracking analysis (NTA), cryo-electron microscopy (Cryo-EM) and Raman tweezers microspectroscopy (RTM), is proposed for a rapid characterisation of extracellular vesicles (EVs) of various origins. NTA is valuable for studying the size distribution and concentration, Cryo-EM is outstanding for the morphological characterisation, including observation of vesicle heterogeneity, while RTM provides the global chemical composition without using any exogenous label. The capabilities of this approach are evaluated on the example of cell-derived vesicles of Dictyostelium discoideum, a convenient general model for eukaryotic EVs. At least 2 separate species differing in chemical composition (relative amounts of DNA, lipids and proteins, presence of carotenoids) were found for each of the 2 physiological states of this non-pathogenic microorganism, that is, cell growth and starvation-induced aggregation. These findings demonstrate the specific potency of RTM. In addition, the first Raman spectra of human urinary exosomes are reported, presumably constituting the primary step towards Raman characterisation of EVs for the purpose of human diseases diagnoses.


International Journal of Pharmaceutics | 2009

Nanovesicles released by Dictyostelium cells: A potential carrier for drug delivery

Françoise Lavialle; Sophie Deshayes; Florence Gonnet; Eric Larquet; Sergei G. Kruglik; Nicolas Boisset; Régis Daniel; Annette Alfsen; Irène Tatischeff

Nanovesicles released by Dictyostelium discoideum cells grown in the presence of the DNA-specific dye Hoechst 33342 have been previously shown to mediate the transfer of the dye into the nuclei of Hoechst-resistant cells. The present investigation extends this work by conducting experiments in the presence of hypericin, a fluorescent therapeutic photosensitizer assayed for antitumoral photodynamic therapy. Nanovesicles released by Dictyostelium cells exhibit an averaged diameter between 50 and 150 nm, as measured by transmission cryoelectron microscopy. A proteomic analysis reveals a predominance of actin and actin-related proteins. The detection of a lysosomal membrane protein (LIMP II) indicates that these vesicles are likely generated in the late endosomal compartment. The use of the hypericin-containing nanovesicles as nanodevices for in vitro drug delivery was investigated by fluorescence microscopy. The observed signal was almost exclusively located in the perinuclear area of two human cell lines, skin fibroblasts (HS68) and cervix carcinoma (HeLa) cells. Studies by confocal microscopy with specific markers of cell organelles, provided evidence that hypericin was accumulated in the Golgi apparatus. All these data shed a new light on in vitro drug delivery by using cell-released vesicles as carriers.


Journal of Fluorescence | 2008

Dictyostelium Extracellular Vesicles Containing Hoechst 33342 Transfer the Dye into the Nuclei of Living Cells: A Fluorescence Study

Irène Tatischeff; Françoise Lavialle; Sophie Pigaglio-Deshayes; Christine Péchoux-Longin; Laurent Chinsky; Annette Alfsen

Cells of the eukaryotic unicellular microorganism Dictyostelium discoideum are constitutively resistant to vital staining of their nuclei by the DNA-specific dye Hoechst 33342. By studying the mechanisms of this resistance, we evidenced that these cells expel vesicles containing the dye for detoxification (Tatischeff et al., Cell Mol Life Sci, 54: 476–87, 1998). The question to be addressed in the present work is the potential use of these extracellular vesicles as a biological drug delivery tool, using Hoechst 33342 as a model of a DNA-targeting drug. After cell growth with or without the dye, vesicles were prepared from the cell-free growth medium by differential centrifugation, giving rise to two types of vesicles. Negative staining electron microscopy showed their large heterogeneity in size. Using fluorescence techniques, data were obtained on the dye loading and its environment inside the vesicles. By UV video-microscopy, it was demonstrated that the dye-containing vesicles were able to deliver it into the nuclei of naive Dictyostelium cells, thus overcoming their constitutive resistance to the free dye. A vesicle-mediated dye-transfer into the nuclei of living human leukaemia multidrug resistant K562r cells was also observed.


Small | 2008

Intracellular Trafficking of Magnetic Nanoparticles to Design Multifunctional Biovesicles

Claire Wilhelm; Françoise Lavialle; Christine Péchoux; Irène Tatischeff; Florence Gazeau


European Journal of Cell Biology | 2001

Inhibition of multicellular development switches cell death of Dictyostelium discoideum towards mammalian-like unicellular apoptosis

Irène Tatischeff; Patrice Xavier Petit; Alain Grodet; Jean-Pierre Tissier; Isabelle Duband-Goulet; Jean-Claude Ameisen


Archive | 2004

Extracellular vesicles from non-pathogenic amoebae useful as vehicle for transferring a molecule of interest to an eukaryotic cell

Annette Alfsen; Françoise Lavialle; Irène Tatischeff


Archive | 2015

Cell-derived Extracellular Vesicles Open New Perspectives for Cancer Research

Irène Tatischeff


Journal of Biomaterials and Nanobiotechnology | 2011

A New Biological Strategy for Drug Delivery: Eucaryotic Cell-Derived Nanovesicles

Irène Tatischeff; Annette Alfsen


Journal of Biomaterials and Nanobiotechnology | 2014

The Lipid Bilayer of Biological Vesicles: A Liquid-Crystalline Material as Nanovehicles of Information

Annette Alfsen; Irène Tatischeff


F1000Research | 2012

Microvesicles of Dictyostelium as a model of eukaryotic extracellular vesicles

Irène Tatischeff; Sergei G. Kruglik; Eric Larquet; Monique Cheron; François Treussart

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Annette Alfsen

French Institute of Health and Medical Research

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Eric Larquet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Christine Péchoux

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Christine Péchoux-Longin

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Jean-Pierre Tissier

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Florence Gonnet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Régis Daniel

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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