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Dive into the research topics where Jean-Baptiste Bérard is active.

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Featured researches published by Jean-Baptiste Bérard.


Marine Drugs | 2011

Antiproliferative activity of violaxanthin isolated from bioguided fractionation of Dunaliella tertiolecta extracts.

Virginie Pasquet; Perrine Morisset; Said Ihammouine; Amandine Chepied; Lucie Aumailley; Jean-Baptiste Bérard; Benoît Serive; Raymond Kaas; Isabelle Lanneluc; Valérie Thiéry; Mathieu Lafferriere; Jean-Marie Piot; Thierry Patrice; Jean-Paul Cadoret

Dunaliella tertiolecta (DT) was chemically investigated to isolate molecules inhibiting cancer cell proliferation and inducing apoptosis in vitro. The potency to inhibit cell growth was used for the bio-guided fractionation and isolation of active compounds using chromatographic techniques. The DT dichloromethane extract exhibited a strong anti-proliferative activity on MCF-7 and LNCaP cells, and was further fractionated and sub-fractionated by RP-HPLC. High resolution mass spectrometry and spectrophotometric analysis unequivocally identified violaxanthin as the most antiproliferative molecule present in DT DCM extract. Violaxanthin purified from DT induced MCF-7 dose-dependent growth inhibition in continuous and discontinuous treatments, at concentrations as low as 0.1 μg·mL−1 (0.17 μM). Phosphatidylserine exposure, typical of early apoptosis, was observed after 48 h treatment at 8 μg·mL−1 (13.3 μM) but no DNA fragmentation, characteristic of late apoptosis steps, could be detected even after 72 h treatment at 40 μg·mL−1 (66.7 μM). Taken together, our results demonstrate the strong antiproliferative activity of violaxanthin on one human mammary cancer cell line, and suggest that studying the pharmacology of violaxanthin and pharmacomodulated derivatives on cancer cells may allow potent antiproliferative drugs to be obtained.


Bioresource Technology | 2012

Selection and optimisation of a method for efficient metabolites extraction from microalgae.

Benoît Serive; Raymond Kaas; Jean-Baptiste Bérard; Virginie Pasquet; Jean-Paul Cadoret

Over the last decade, the use of microalgae for biofuel production and carbon dioxide sequestration has become a challenge worldwide. Processing costs are still too high for these methods to be profitable though, leading to a need to find high value by-products to optimise the added value of this biomass. For high-throughput screening of such metabolites, it is essential to reach the inner content of the cell. This paper presents research and development of a technique enabling a high extraction yield of any metabolite, taking into account the difficulty of extracting bound and or inaccessible molecules with a wide variety of polarities. To this end, several disruption techniques were tested at laboratory scale on two biological models: Porphyridium purpureum and Phaeodactylum tricornutum. A mixer mill gave the best results, offering access to a broad diversity of metabolites from microalgae for high-throughput screening.


Marine Drugs | 2013

Antiproliferative Activity of Cyanophora paradoxa Pigments in Melanoma, Breast and Lung Cancer Cells

Paul-Hubert Baudelet; Anne-Laure Gagez; Jean-Baptiste Bérard; Camille Juin; Nicolas Bridiau; Raymond Kaas; Valérie Thiéry; Jean-Paul Cadoret

The glaucophyte Cyanophora paradoxa (Cp) was chemically investigated to identify pigments efficiently inhibiting malignant melanoma, mammary carcinoma and lung adenocarcinoma cells growth. Cp water and ethanol extracts significantly inhibited the growth of the three cancer cell lines in vitro, at 100 µg·mL−1. Flash chromatography of the Cp ethanol extract, devoid of c-phycocyanin and allophycocyanin, enabled the collection of eight fractions, four of which strongly inhibited cancer cells growth at 100 µg·mL−1. Particularly, two fractions inhibited more than 90% of the melanoma cells growth, one inducing apoptosis in the three cancer cells lines. The detailed analysis of Cp pigment composition resulted in the discrimination of 17 molecules, ten of which were unequivocally identified by high resolution mass spectrometry. Pheophorbide a, β-cryptoxanthin and zeaxanthin were the three main pigments or derivatives responsible for the strong cytotoxicity of Cp fractions in cancer cells. These data point to Cyanophora paradoxa as a new microalgal source to purify potent anticancer pigments, and demonstrate for the first time the strong antiproliferative activity of zeaxanthin and β-cryptoxanthin in melanoma cells.


Marine Drugs | 2015

UPLC-MSE Profiling of Phytoplankton Metabolites: Application to the Identification of Pigments and Structural Analysis of Metabolites in Porphyridium purpureum

Camille Juin; Antoine Bonnet; Elodie Nicolau; Jean-Baptiste Bérard; Romain Devillers; Valérie Thiéry; Jean-Paul Cadoret

A fast and high-resolution UPLC-MSE analysis was used to identify phytoplankton pigments in an ethanol extract of Porphyridium purpureum (Pp) devoid of phycobiliproteins. In a first step, 22 standard pigments were analyzed by UPLC-MSE to build a database including retention time and accurate masses of parent and fragment ions. Using this database, seven pigments or derivatives previously reported in Pp were unequivocally identified: β,β-carotene, chlorophyll a, zeaxanthin, chlorophyllide a, pheophorbide a, pheophytin a, and cryptoxanthin. Minor amounts of Divinyl chlorophyll a, a chemotaxonomic pigment marker for prochlorophytes, were also unequivocally identified using the database. Additional analysis of ionization and fragmentation patterns indicated the presence of ions that could correspond to hydroxylated derivatives of chlorophyll a and pheophytin a, produced during the ethanolic extraction, as well as previously described galactosyldiacylglycerols, the thylakoid coenzyme plastoquinone, and gracilamide B, a molecule previously reported in the red seaweed Gracillaria asiatica. These data point to UPLC-MSE as an efficient technique to identify phytoplankton pigments for which standards are available, and demonstrate its major interest as a complementary method for the structural elucidation of ionizable marine molecules.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Community analysis of pigment patterns from 37 microalgae strains reveals new carotenoids and porphyrins characteristic of distinct strains and taxonomic groups

Benoît Serive; Elodie Nicolau; Jean-Baptiste Bérard; Raymond Kaas; Virginie Pasquet; Jean-Paul Cadoret; Adrianna Ianora

Phytoplankton, with an estimated 30 000 to 1 000 000 species clustered in 12 phyla, presents a high taxonomic and ecophysiological diversity, reflected by the complex distribution of pigments among the different algal classes. High performance liquid chromatography is the gold standard method for qualitative and quantitative analysis of phytoplankton pigments in seawater and culture samples, but only a few pigments can be used as robust chemotaxonomic markers. A major challenge is thus to identify new ones, characteristic of a strain, species, class or taxon that cannot be currently identified on the basis of its pigment signature. Using an optimized extraction process coupled to a HPLC de-replication strategy, we examined the pigment composition of 37 microalgae strains, representative of the broad taxonomic diversity of marine and freshwater species (excluding cyanobacteria). For each species, the major pigments already described were unambiguously identified. We also observed the presence of several minor unidentified pigments in each chromatogram. The global analysis of pigment compositions revealed a total of 124 pigments, including 98 pigments or derivatives unidentified using the standards. Absorption spectra indicated that 35 corresponded to chlorophyll/porphyrin derivatives, 57 to carotenoids and six to derivatives having both spectral signatures. Sixty-one of these unidentified or new carotenoids and porphyrin derivatives were characteristic of particular strains or species, indicating their possible use as highly specific chemotaxonomic markers capable of identifying one strain out of the 37 selected. We developed a graphical analysis using Gephi software to give a clear representation of pigment communities among the various phytoplankton strains, and to reveal strain-characteristic and shared pigments. This made it possible to reconstruct the taxonomic evolution of microalgae classes, on the basis of the conservation, loss, and/or appearance of pigments.


Physiologia Plantarum | 2015

High‐affinity nitrate/nitrite transporter genes (Nrt2) in Tisochrysis lutea: identification and expression analyses reveal some interesting specificities of Haptophyta microalgae

Aurélie Charrier; Jean-Baptiste Bérard; Gaël Bougaran; Gregory Carrier; Ewa Lukomska; Nathalie Schreiber; Flora Fournier; Aurelie Charrier; Catherine Rouxel; Matthieu Garnier; Jean-Paul Cadoret; Bruno Saint-Jean

Microalgae have a diversity of industrial applications such as feed, food ingredients, depuration processes and energy. However, microalgal production costs could be substantially improved by controlling nutrient intake. Accordingly, a better understanding of microalgal nitrogen metabolism is essential. Using in silico analysis from transcriptomic data concerning the microalgae Tisochrysis lutea, four genes encoding putative high-affinity nitrate/nitrite transporters (TlNrt2) were identified. Unlike most of the land plants and microalgae, cloning of genomic sequences and their alignment with complementary DNA (cDNA) sequences did not reveal the presence of introns in all TlNrt2 genes. The deduced TlNRT2 protein sequences showed similarities to NRT2 proteins of other phyla such as land plants and green algae. However, some interesting specificities only known among Haptophyta were also revealed, especially an additional sequence of 100 amino acids forming an atypical extracellular loop located between transmembrane domains 9 and 10 and the function of which remains to be elucidated. Analyses of individual TlNrt2 gene expression with different nitrogen sources and concentrations were performed. TlNrt2.1 and TlNrt2.3 were strongly induced by low NO3 (-) concentration and repressed by NH4 (+) substrate and were classified as inducible genes. TlNrt2.2 was characterized by a constitutive pattern whatever the substrate. Finally, TlNrt2.4 displayed an atypical response that was not reported earlier in literature. Interestingly, expression of TlNrt2.4 was rather related to internal nitrogen quota level than external nitrogen concentration. This first study on nitrogen metabolism of T. lutea opens avenues for future investigations on the function of these genes and their implication for industrial applications.


Chemosphere | 2011

Behavioural and biochemical responses of two marine invertebrates Scrobicularia plana and Hediste diversicolor to copper oxide nanoparticles

Pierre-Emmanuel Buffet; Olivia Fossi Tankoua; Jin-Fen Pan; Deborah Berhanu; Christine Herrenknecht; Laurence Poirier; Claude Amiard-Triquet; Jean-Claude Amiard; Jean-Baptiste Bérard; Christine Risso; Marielle Guibbolini; Michèle Roméo; Paul Reip; Eugenia Valsami-Jones; Catherine Mouneyrac


Process Biochemistry | 2011

Study on the microalgal pigments extraction process: Performance of microwave assisted extraction

Virginie Pasquet; Jean-René Chérouvrier; Firas Farhat; Valérie Thiéry; Jean-Marie Piot; Jean-Baptiste Bérard; Raymond Kaas; Benoît Serive; Thierry Patrice; Jean-Paul Cadoret


Algal Research-Biomass Biofuels and Bioproducts | 2013

Screening and selection of growth-promoting bacteria for Dunaliella cultures

Myriam Le Chevanton; Matthieu Garnier; Gaël Bougaran; Nathalie Schreiber; Ewa Lukomska; Jean-Baptiste Bérard; Eric Fouilland; Olivier Bernard; Jean-Paul Cadoret


Aquatic Living Resources | 2007

Modelling the accumulation of PSP toxins in Thau Lagoon oysters (Crassostrea gigas) from trials using mixed cultures of Alexandrium catenella and Thalassiosira weissflogii

Patrick Lassus; Zouher Amzil; Régis Baron; Véronique Séchet; Laurent Barillé; Eric Abadie; Manoella Sibat; Philippe Truquet; Jean-Baptiste Bérard; Marielle Guéguen

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Benoît Serive

University of La Rochelle

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Camille Juin

University of La Rochelle

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