Janne Prawitt
Pasteur Institute
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Featured researches published by Janne Prawitt.
Journal of Lipid Research | 2012
Geoffrey Porez; Janne Prawitt; Barbara Gross; Bart Staels
Dyslipidemia is an important risk factor for cardiovascular disease (CVD) and atherosclerosis. When dyslipidemia coincides with other metabolic disorders such as obesity, hypertension, and glucose intolerance, defined as the metabolic syndrome (MS), individuals present an elevated risk to develop type 2 diabetes (T2D) as well as CVD. Because the MS epidemic represents a growing public health problem worldwide, the development of therapies remains a major challenge. Alterations of bile acid pool regulation in T2D have revealed a link between bile acid and metabolic homeostasis. The bile acid receptors farnesoid X receptor (FXR) and TGR5 both regulate lipid, glucose, and energy metabolism, rendering them potential pharmacological targets for MS therapy. This review discusses the mechanisms of metabolic regulation by FXR and TGR5 and the utility relevance of natural and synthetic modulators of FXR and TGR5 activity, including bile acid sequestrants, in the treatment of the MS.
Diabetes | 2011
Janne Prawitt; Mouaadh Abdelkarim; Johanna H.M. Stroeve; Iuliana Popescu; Hélène Duez; Vidya Velagapudi; Julie Dumont; Emmanuel Bouchaert; Theo H. van Dijk; F Anthony San Lucas; Emilie Dorchies; Mehdi Daoudi; Sophie Lestavel; Frank J. Gonzalez; Matej Orešič; Bertrand Cariou; Folkert Kuipers; Sandrine Caron; Bart Staels
OBJECTIVE Bile acids (BA) participate in the maintenance of metabolic homeostasis acting through different signaling pathways. The nuclear BA receptor farnesoid X receptor (FXR) regulates pathways in BA, lipid, glucose, and energy metabolism, which become dysregulated in obesity. However, the role of FXR in obesity and associated complications, such as dyslipidemia and insulin resistance, has not been directly assessed. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS Here, we evaluate the consequences of FXR deficiency on body weight development, lipid metabolism, and insulin resistance in murine models of genetic and diet-induced obesity. RESULTS FXR deficiency attenuated body weight gain and reduced adipose tissue mass in both models. Surprisingly, glucose homeostasis improved as a result of an enhanced glucose clearance and adipose tissue insulin sensitivity. In contrast, hepatic insulin sensitivity did not change, and liver steatosis aggravated as a result of the repression of β-oxidation genes. In agreement, liver-specific FXR deficiency did not protect from diet-induced obesity and insulin resistance, indicating a role for nonhepatic FXR in the control of glucose homeostasis in obesity. Decreasing elevated plasma BA concentrations in obese FXR-deficient mice by administration of the BA sequestrant colesevelam improved glucose homeostasis in a FXR-dependent manner, indicating that the observed improvements by FXR deficiency are not a result of indirect effects of altered BA metabolism. CONCLUSIONS Overall, FXR deficiency in obesity beneficially affects body weight development and glucose homeostasis.
Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2011
Sandrine Caron; An Verrijken; I. Mertens; Carolina Huaman Samanez; Gisèle Mautino; Joel T. Haas; Daniel Duran-Sandoval; Janne Prawitt; Sven Francque; Emmanuelle Vallez; Anne Muhr-tailleux; Isabelle Berard; Folkert Kuipers; Jan Albert Kuivenhoven; Sudha B. Biddinger; Marja-Riitta Taskinen; Luc Van Gaal; Bart Staels
Objective—Hypertriglyceridemia and fatty liver are common in patients with type 2 diabetes, but the factors connecting alterations in glucose metabolism with plasma and liver lipid metabolism remain unclear. Apolipoprotein CIII (apoCIII), a regulator of hepatic and plasma triglyceride metabolism, is elevated in type 2 diabetes. In this study, we analyzed whether apoCIII is affected by altered glucose metabolism. Methods and Results—Liver-specific insulin receptor–deficient mice display lower hepatic apoCIII mRNA levels than controls, suggesting that factors other than insulin regulate apoCIII in vivo. Glucose induces apoCIII transcription in primary rat hepatocytes and immortalized human hepatocytes via a mechanism involving the transcription factors carbohydrate response element–binding protein and hepatocyte nuclear factor-4&agr;. ApoCIII induction by glucose is blunted by treatment with agonists of farnesoid X receptor and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-&agr; but not liver X receptor, ie, nuclear receptors controlling triglyceride metabolism. Moreover, in obese humans, plasma apoCIII protein correlates more closely with plasma fasting glucose and glucose excursion after oral glucose load than with insulin. Conclusion—Glucose induces apoCIII transcription, which may represent a mechanism linking hyperglycemia, hypertriglyceridemia, and cardiovascular disease in type 2 diabetes.
Nature Communications | 2015
Mohamed-Sami Trabelsi; Mehdi Daoudi; Janne Prawitt; Sarah Ducastel; Véronique Touche; Sama Islam Sayin; Alessia Perino; Cheryl A Brighton; Yasmine Sebti; Jérome Kluza; Olivier Briand; Hélène Dehondt; Emmanuelle Vallez; Emilie Dorchies; Gregory Baud; Valeria Spinelli; Nathalie Hennuyer; Sandrine Caron; Kadiombo Bantubungi; Robert Caiazzo; Frank Reimann; Philippe Marchetti; Philippe Lefebvre; Fredrik Bäckhed; Fiona M. Gribble; Kristina Schoonjans; François Pattou; Anne Tailleux; Bart Staels; Sophie Lestavel
Bile acids (BA) are signalling molecules which activate the transmembrane receptor TGR5 and the nuclear receptor FXR. BA sequestrants (BAS) complex BA in the intestinal lumen and decrease intestinal FXR activity. The BAS-BA complex also induces Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 (GLP-1) production by L-cells which potentiates β-cell glucose-induced insulin secretion. Whether FXR is expressed in L-cells and controls GLP-1 production is unknown. Here we show that FXR activation in L-cells decreases proglucagon expression by interfering with the glucose-responsive factor Carbohydrate-Responsive Element Binding Protein (ChREBP) and GLP-1 secretion by inhibiting glycolysis. In vivo, FXR-deficiency increases GLP-1 gene expression and secretion in response to glucose hence improving glucose metabolism. Moreover, treatment of ob/ob mice with the BAS colesevelam increases intestinal proglucagon gene expression and improves glycemia in a FXR-dependent manner. These findings identify the FXR/GLP-1 pathway as a new mechanism of BA control of glucose metabolism and a pharmacological target for type 2 diabetes.
Hepatology | 2014
An Verrijken; Sven Francque; I. Mertens; Janne Prawitt; Sandrine Caron; G. Hubens; Eric Van Marck; Bart Staels; P. Michielsen; Luc Van Gaal
An independent role of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) in the development of cardiovascular disease has been suggested, probably mediated through increased levels of prothrombotic factors. Therefore, we examined whether NAFLD is linked to a prothrombotic state, independently of metabolic risk factors in a large single‐center cohort of overweight/obese patients. Patients presenting to the obesity clinic underwent a detailed metabolic and liver assessment, including an extensive panel of coagulation factors. If NAFLD was suspected, a liver biopsy was proposed. A series of 273 consecutive patients (65% female) with a liver biopsy were included (age, 44 ± 0.76 years; body mass index: 39.6 ± 0.40 kg/m2). Increase in fibrinogen, factor VIII, and von Willebrand factor and decrease in antithrombin III correlated with metabolic features, but not with liver histology. Levels of plasminogen activator inhibitor‐1 (PAI‐1) increased significantly with increasing severity of steatosis (P < 0.001), lobular inflammation (P < 0.001), ballooning (P = 0.002), and fibrosis (P < 0.001). Patients with nonalcoholic steatohepatitis had significantly higher PAI‐1 values than those with normal liver (P < 0.001). In multiple regression, including anthropometric and metabolic parameters, steatosis remained an independent predictor of PAI‐1 levels, explaining, together with fasting C‐peptide and waist circumference, 21% of the variance in PAI‐1. No consistent correlations with histology were found for the other coagulation factors. Conclusion: In obesity, NAFLD severity independently contributes to the increase in PAI‐1 levels, whereas other coagulation factors are unaltered. This finding might, in part, explain the increased cardiovascular risk associated with NAFLD. (Hepatology 2014;58:121–129)
Journal of Hepatology | 2015
Sven Francque; An Verrijken; Sandrine Caron; Janne Prawitt; Réjane Paumelle; Bruno Derudas; Philippe Lefebvre; Marja-Riitta Taskinen; Wim Van Hul; I. Mertens; G. Hubens; Eric Van Marck; P. Michielsen; Luc Van Gaal; Bart Staels
BACKGROUND & AIMS Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs) have been implicated in non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) pathogenesis, mainly based on animal data. Gene expression data in NASH patients are scarce. We studied liver PPARα, β/δ, and γ expression in a large cohort of obese patients assessed for presence of NAFLD at baseline and 1 year follow-up. METHODS Patients presented to the obesity clinic underwent a hepatic work-up. If NAFLD was suspected, liver biopsy was performed. Gene expression was studied by mRNA quantification. Patients were reassessed after 1 year. RESULTS 125 patients were consecutively included in the study, of which 85 patients had paired liver biopsy taken at 1 year of follow-up. Liver PPARα expression negatively correlated with the presence of NASH (p=0.001) and with severity of steatosis (p=0.003), ballooning (p=0.001), NASH activity score (p=0.008) and fibrosis (p=0.003). PPARα expression was positively correlated to adiponectin (R(2)=0.345, p=0.010) and inversely correlated to visceral fat (R(2)=-0.343, p<0.001), HOMA IR (R(2)=-0.411, p<0.001) and CK18 (R(2)=-0.233, p=0.012). Liver PPARβ/δ and PPARγ expression did not correlate with any histological feature nor with glucose metabolism or serum lipids. At 1 year, correlation of PPARα expression with liver histology was confirmed. In longitudinal analysis, an increase in expression of PPARα and its target genes was significantly associated with histological improvement (p=0.008). CONCLUSION Human liver PPARα gene expression negatively correlates with NASH severity, visceral adiposity and insulin resistance and positively with adiponectin. Histological improvement is associated with an increase in expression of PPARα and its target genes. These data might suggest that PPARα is a potential therapeutic target in NASH.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2014
Fleur Lien; Alexandre Berthier; Emmanuel Bouchaert; Céline Gheeraert; Jeremy Alexandre; Geoffrey Porez; Janne Prawitt; Hélène Dehondt; Maheul Ploton; Sophie Colin; Anthony Lucas; Alexandre Patrice; François Pattou; Hélène Diemer; Alain Van Dorsselaer; Christophe Rachez; Jelena Kamilic; Albert K. Groen; Bart Staels; Philippe Lefebvre
The nuclear bile acid receptor farnesoid X receptor (FXR) is an important transcriptional regulator of bile acid, lipid, and glucose metabolism. FXR is highly expressed in the liver and intestine and controls the synthesis and enterohepatic circulation of bile acids. However, little is known about FXR-associated proteins that contribute to metabolic regulation. Here, we performed a mass spectrometry-based search for FXR-interacting proteins in human hepatoma cells and identified AMPK as a coregulator of FXR. FXR interacted with the nutrient-sensitive kinase AMPK in the cytoplasm of target cells and was phosphorylated in its hinge domain. In cultured human and murine hepatocytes and enterocytes, pharmacological activation of AMPK inhibited FXR transcriptional activity and prevented FXR coactivator recruitment to promoters of FXR-regulated genes. Furthermore, treatment with AMPK activators, including the antidiabetic biguanide metformin, inhibited FXR agonist induction of FXR target genes in mouse liver and intestine. In a mouse model of intrahepatic cholestasis, metformin treatment induced FXR phosphorylation, perturbed bile acid homeostasis, and worsened liver injury. Together, our data indicate that AMPK directly phosphorylates and regulates FXR transcriptional activity to precipitate liver injury under conditions favoring cholestasis.
Cytokine | 2012
Stephanie Coulon; Sven Francque; Isabelle Colle; An Verrijken; Bram Blomme; Femke Heindryckx; Steffi De Munter; Janne Prawitt; Sandrine Caron; Bart Staels; Hans Van Vlierberghe; Luc Van Gaal; Anja Geerts
The liver is a major target of injury in obese patients. Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is present in 60-90% of obese Americans and can range from simple steatosis to the more severe non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). The onset of a chronic inflammatory reaction marks the progression from simple steatosis to NASH and the expansion of adipose tissue is strongly associated with angiogenesis. Therefore, we determined the serum concentration of inflammatory [tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα) and interleukin 6 (IL6)] and angiogenic [vascular endothelial growth factor A (VEGF)] cytokines and soluble VEGF receptors 1 and 2 (sVEGFR1, sVEGFR2) in the serum of an obese population with simple steatosis and NASH compared to healthy controls. Moreover, we determined the TNFα, IL6, VEGF, VEGFR1 and VEGFR2 gene expression in the liver of these simple steatosis and NASH patients. The population consisted of 30 obese patients, which were diagnosed with simple steatosis and 32 patients with NASH and compared to 30 age-and-sex matched healthy controls. Mean serum TNFα levels were elevated in the serum of simple steatosis and NASH patients compared to healthy controls, reaching significance in NASH patients. IL6 was significantly increased in simple steatosis and NASH patients compared to the healthy controls. VEGF levels were significantly elevated in patients with simple steatosis and borderline significantly elevated in NASH patients compared to the serum levels of healthy control subjects. The concentration of sVEGFR1 was significantly increased in serum of simple steatosis and NASH patients compared to controls. sVEGFR2 concentration was not significantly different in the three groups. TNFα mRNA expression was higher in NASH patients compared to simple steatosis patients. Hepatic gene expression of VEGF, VEGFR1 and VEGFR2 were slightly decreased in NASH patients compared to simple steatosis patients. These data indicate the involvement of inflammatory (TNFα and IL6), angiogenic (VEGF) cytokines and sVEGFR1 in the pathophysiology of NAFLD.
Trends in Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2014
Janne Prawitt; Sandrine Caron; Bart Staels
Intestinal bile acid (BA) sequestration efficiently lowers plasma glucose concentrations in type 2 diabetes (T2D) patients. Because BAs act as signaling molecules via receptors, including the G protein-coupled receptor TGR5 and the nuclear receptor FXR (farnesoid X receptor), to regulate glucose homeostasis, BA sequestration, which interrupts the entero-hepatic circulation of BAs, constitutes a plausible action mechanism of BA sequestrants. An increase of intestinal L-cell glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) secretion upon TGR5 activation is the most commonly proposed mechanism, but recent studies also argue for a direct entero-hepatic action to enhance glucose utilization. We discuss here recent findings on the mechanisms of sequestrant-mediated glucose lowering via an increase of splanchnic glucose utilization through entero-hepatic FXR signaling.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2014
Delphine Staumont-Sallé; Sébastien Fleury; Anne Lazzari; Olivier Molendi-Coste; Nicolas Hornez; Céline Lavogiez; Akira Kanda; Julien Wartelle; Anissa Fries; Davide Pennino; Cyrille Mionnet; Janne Prawitt; Emmanuel Bouchaert; E. Delaporte; Nicolas Glaichenhaus; Bart Staels; Valérie Julia; David Dombrowicz
Fractalkine interactions with its receptor, CX3CR1, regulate CD4+ T cell retention in atopic dermatitis and offer a potential therapeutic target in allergic disease.