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Dive into the research topics where Jerome Larghero is active.

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Featured researches published by Jerome Larghero.


European Heart Journal | 2015

Human embryonic stem cell-derived cardiac progenitors for severe heart failure treatment: first clinical case report

Philippe Menasché; Valérie Vanneaux; Albert Hagège; Alain Bel; Bernard Cholley; Isabelle Cacciapuoti; Alexandre Parouchev; Nadine Benhamouda; Gérard Tachdjian; Lucie Tosca; Jean-Hugues Trouvin; Jean-Roch Fabreguettes; Valérie Bellamy; Romain Guillemain; Caroline Suberbielle Boissel; Eric Tartour; Michel Desnos; Jerome Larghero

AIMSnComparative studies suggest that stem cells committed to a cardiac lineage are more effective for improving heart function than those featuring an extra-cardiac phenotype. We have therefore developed a population of human embryonic stem cell (ESC)-derived cardiac progenitor cells.nnnMETHODS AND RESULTSnUndifferentiated human ESCs (I6 line) were amplified and cardiac-committed by exposure to bone morphogenetic protein-2 and a fibroblast growth factor receptor inhibitor. Cells responding to these cardio-instructive cues express the cardiac transcription factor Isl-1 and the stage-specific embryonic antigen SSEA-1 which was then used to purify them by immunomagnetic sorting. The Isl-1(+) SSEA-1(+) cells were then embedded into a fibrin scaffold which was surgically delivered onto the infarct area in a 68-year-old patient suffering from severe heart failure [New York Heart Association [NYHA] functional Class III; left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF): 26%]. A coronary artery bypass was performed concomitantly in a non-infarcted area. The implanted cells featured a high degree of purity (99% were SSEA-1(+)), had lost the expression of Sox-2 and Nanog, taken as markers for pluripotency, and strongly expressed Isl-1. The intraoperative delivery of the patch was expeditious. The post-operative course was uncomplicated either. After 3 months, the patient is symptomatically improved (NYHA functional Class I; LVEF: 36%) and a new-onset contractility is echocardiographically evident in the previously akinetic cell/patch-treated, non-revascularized area. There have been no complications such as arrhythmias, tumour formation, or immunosuppression-related adverse events.nnnCONCLUSIONnThis observation demonstrates the feasibility of generating a clinical-grade population of human ESC-derived cardiac progenitors and combining it within a tissue-engineered construct. While any conclusion pertaining to efficacy would be meaningless, the patients functional outcome yet provides an encouraging hint. Beyond this case, the platform that has been set could be useful for generating different ESC-derived lineage-specific progenies.


Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2015

Long-term functional benefits of human embryonic stem cell-derived cardiac progenitors embedded into a fibrin scaffold.

Valérie Bellamy; Valérie Vanneaux; Alain Bel; Hany Nemetalla; Solène Emmanuelle Boitard; Yohan Farouz; Pierre Joanne; Marie-Cécile Perier; Estelle Robidel; Chantal Mandet; Albert A Hagège; Patrick Bruneval; Jerome Larghero; Onnik Agbulut; Philippe Menasché

BACKGROUNDnCardiac-committed cells and biomimetic scaffolds independently improve the therapeutic efficacy of stem cells. In this study we tested the long-term effects of their combination.nnnMETHODSnEighty immune-deficient rats underwent permanent coronary artery ligation. Five to 7 weeks later, those with an echocardiographically measured ejection fraction (EF) ≤55% were re-operated on and randomly allocated to receive a cell-free fibrin patch (n = 25), a fibrin patch loaded with 700,000 human embryonic stem cells (ESC) pre-treated to promote early cardiac differentiation (SSEA-1(+) progenitors [n = 30]), or to serve as sham-operated animals (n = 25). Left ventricular function was assessed by echocardiography at baseline and every month thereafter until 4 months. Hearts were then processed for assessment of fibrosis and angiogenesis and a 5-component heart failure score was constructed by integrating the absolute change in left ventricular end-systolic volume (LVESV) between 4 months and baseline, and the quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR)-based expression of natriuretic peptides A and B, myosin heavy chain 7 and periostin. All data were recorded and analyzed in a blinded manner.nnnRESULTSnThe cell-treated group consistently yielded better functional outcomes than the sham-operated group (p = 0.002 for EF; p = 0.01 for LVESV). Angiogenesis in the border zone was also significantly greater in the cell-fibrin group (p = 0.006), which yielded the lowest heart failure score (p = 0.04 vs sham). Engrafted progenitors were only detected shortly after transplantation; no grafted cells were identified after 4 months. There was no teratoma identified.nnnCONCLUSIONSnA fibrin scaffold loaded with ESC-derived cardiac progenitors resulted in sustained improvement in contractility and attenuation of remodeling without sustained donor cell engraftment. A paracrine effect, possibly on innate reparative responses, is a possible mechanism for this enduring effect.


Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2016

Cardiovascular progenitor-derived extracellular vesicles recapitulate the beneficial effects of their parent cells in the treatment of chronic heart failure

Anaïs Kervadec; Valérie Bellamy; Nadia El Harane; Lousineh Arakélian; Valérie Vanneaux; Isabelle Cacciapuoti; Hany Nemetalla; Marie-Cécile Perier; Hadi Toeg; Adèle Richart; Mathilde Lemitre; Min Yin; Xavier Loyer; Jerome Larghero; Albert Hagège; Marc Ruel; Chantal M. Boulanger; Jean-Sébastien Silvestre; Philippe Menasché; Nisa Renault

BACKGROUNDnCell-based therapies are being explored as a therapeutic option for patients with chronic heart failure following myocardial infarction. Extracellular vesicles (EV), including exosomes and microparticles, secreted by transplanted cells may orchestrate their paracrine therapeutic effects. We assessed whether post-infarction administration of EV released by human embryonic stem cell-derived cardiovascular progenitors (hESC-Pg) can provide equivalent benefits to administered hESC-Pg and whether hESC-Pg and EV treatments activate similar endogenous pathways.nnnMETHODSnMice underwent surgical occlusion of their left coronary arteries. After 2-3 weeks, 95 mice included in the study were treated with hESC-Pg, EV, or Minimal Essential Medium Alpha Medium (alpha-MEM; vehicle control) delivered by percutaneous injections under echocardiographic guidance into the peri-infarct myocardium. functional and histologic end-points were blindly assessed 6 weeks later, and hearts were processed for gene profiling. Genes differentially expressed between control hearts and hESC-Pg-treated and EV-treated hearts were clustered into functionally relevant pathways.nnnRESULTSnAt 6 weeks after hESC-Pg administration, treated mice had significantly reduced left ventricular end-systolic (-4.20 ± 0.96 µl or -7.5%, p = 0.0007) and end-diastolic (-4.48 ± 1.47 µl or -4.4%, p = 0.009) volumes compared with baseline values despite the absence of any transplanted hESC-Pg or human embryonic stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes in the treated mouse hearts. Equal benefits were seen with the injection of hESC-Pg-derived EV, whereas animals injected with alpha-MEM (vehicle control) did not improve significantly. Histologic examination suggested a slight reduction in infarct size in hESC-Pg-treated animals and EV-treated animals compared with alpha-MEM-treated control animals. In the hESC-Pg-treated and EV-treated groups, heart gene profiling identified 927 genes that were similarly upregulated compared with the control group. Among the 49 enriched pathways associated with these up-regulated genes that could be related to cardiac function or regeneration, 78% were predicted to improve cardiac function through increased cell survival and/or proliferation or DNA repair as well as pathways related to decreased fibrosis and heart failure.nnnCONCLUSIONSnIn this post-infarct heart failure model, either hESC-Pg or their secreted EV enhance recovery of cardiac function and similarly affect cardiac gene expression patterns that could be related to this recovery. Although the mechanisms by which EV improve cardiac function remain to be determined, these results support the idea that a paracrine mechanism is sufficient to effect functional recovery in cell-based therapies for post-infarction-related chronic heart failure.


Aging Cell | 2013

HIV protease inhibitors induce senescence and alter osteoblastic potential of human bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells: beneficial effect of pravastatin

Sandra J. Hernandez-Vallejo; Carine Beaupere; Jerome Larghero; Jacqueline Capeau; Claire Lagathu

HIV‐infected patients receiving antiretroviral therapy present an increased prevalence of age‐related comorbidities, including osteoporosis. HIV protease inhibitors (PIs) have been suspected to participate to bone loss, but the mechanisms involved are unknown. In endothelial cells, some PIs have been shown to induce the accumulation of farnesylated prelamin‐A, a biomarker of cell aging leading to cell senescence. Herein, we hypothesized that these PIs could induce premature aging of osteoblast precursors, human bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), and affect their capacity to differentiate into osteoblasts. Senescence was studied in proliferating human MSCs after a 30‐day exposure to atazanavir and lopinavir with or without ritonavir. When compared to untreated cells, PI‐treated MSCs had a reduced proliferative capacity that worsened with increasing passages. PI treatment led to increased oxidative stress and expression of senescence markers, including prelamin‐A. Pravastatin, which blocks prelamin‐A farnesylation, prevented PI‐induced senescence and oxidative stress, while treatment with antioxidants partly reversed these effects. Moreover, senescent MSCs presented a decreased osteoblastic potential, which was restored by pravastatin treatment. Because age‐related bone loss is associated with increased bone marrow fat, we also evaluated the capacity of PI‐treated MSCs to differentiate into adipocyte. We observed an altered adipocyte differentiation in PI‐treated MSCs that was reverted by pravastatin. We have shown that some PIs alter osteoblast formation by affecting their differentiation potential in association with altered senescence in MSCs, with a beneficial effect of statin. These data corroborate the clinical observations and allow new insight into pathophysiological mechanisms of PI‐induced bone loss in HIV‐infected patients.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2014

Conditioned media from mesenchymal stromal cells restore sodium transport and preserve epithelial permeability in an in vitro model of acute alveolar injury

Arnaud Goolaerts; Nadia Pellan-Randrianarison; Jerome Larghero; Valérie Vanneaux; Yurdagul Uzunhan; Thomas Gille; Nicolas Dard; Carole Planès; Michael A. Matthay; Christine Clerici

Mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) or their media (MSC-M) were reported to reverse acute lung injury (ALI)-induced decrease of alveolar fluid clearance. To determine the mechanisms by which MSC-M exert their beneficial effects, an in vitro model of alveolar epithelial injury was created by exposing primary rat alveolar epithelial cells (AECs) to hypoxia (3% O2) plus cytomix, a combination of IL-1β, TNF-α, and IFN-γ. MSC-M were collected from human MSCs exposed for 12 h to either normoxia (MSC-M) or to hypoxia plus cytomix (HCYT-MSC-M). This latter condition was used to model the effect of alveolar inflammation and hypoxia on paracrine secretion of MSCs in the injured lung. Comparison of paracrine soluble factors in MSC media showed that the IL-1 receptor antagonist and prostaglandin E2 were markedly increased while keratinocyte growth factor (KGF) was twofold lower in HCYT-MSC-M compared with MSC-M. In AECs, hypoxia plus cytomix increased protein permeability, reduced amiloride-sensitive short-circuit current (AS-Isc), and also decreased the number of α-epithelial sodium channel (α-ENaC) subunits in the apical membrane. To test the effects of MSC media, MSC-M and HCYT-MSC-M were added for an additional 12 h to AECs exposed to hypoxia plus cytomix. MSC-M and HCYT-MSC-M completely restored epithelial permeability to normal. MSC-M, but not HCYT-MSC-M, significantly prevented the hypoxia plus cytomix-induced decrease of ENaC activity and restored apical α-ENaC channels. Interestingly, KGF-deprived MSC-M were unable to restore amiloride-sensitive sodium transport, indicating a possible role for KGF in the beneficial effect of MSC-M. These results indicate that MSC-M may be a preferable therapeutic option for ALI.


Aging Cell | 2015

The HIV proteins Tat and Nef promote human bone marrow mesenchymal stem cell senescence and alter osteoblastic differentiation

Carine Beaupere; Marie Garcia; Jerome Larghero; Bruno Fève; Jacqueline Capeau; Claire Lagathu

To maintain bone mass turnover and bone mineral density (BMD), bone marrow (BM) mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are constantly recruited and subsequently differentiated into osteoblasts. HIV‐infected patients present lower BMD than non‐HIV infected individuals and a higher prevalence of osteopenia/osteoporosis. In antiretroviral treatment (ART)‐naive patients, encoded HIV proteins represent pathogenic candidates. They are released by infected cells within BM and can impact on neighbouring cells. In this study, we tested whether HIV proteins Tat and/or Nef could induce senescence of human BM‐MSCs and reduce their capacity to differentiate into osteoblasts. When compared to nontreated cells, MSCs chronically treated with Tat and/or Nef up to 30 days reduced their proliferative activity and underwent early senescence, associated with increased oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction. The antioxidant molecule N‐acetyl‐ cysteine had no or minimal effects on Tat‐ or Nef‐induced senescence. Tat but not Nef induced an early increase in NF‐κB activity and cytokine/chemokine secretion. Tat‐induced effects were prevented by the NF‐κB inhibitor parthenolide, indicating that Tat triggered senescence via NF‐κB activation leading to oxidative stress. Otherwise, Nef‐ but not Tat‐treated cells displayed early inhibition of autophagy. Rapamycin, an autophagy inducer, reversed Nef‐induced senescence and oxidative stress. Moreover, Tat+Nef had cumulative effects. Finally, Tat and/or Nef decreased the MSC potential of osteoblastic differentiation. In conclusion, our in vitro data show that Tat and Nef could reduce the number of available precursors by inducing MSC senescence, through either enhanced inflammation or reduced autophagy. These results offer new insights into the pathophysiological mechanisms of decreased BMD in HIV‐infected patients.


Haematologica | 2014

Pre-transplant prognostic factors of long-term survival after allogeneic peripheral blood stem cell transplantation with matched related/unrelated donors

Sophie Servais; Raphael Porcher; A Xhaard; M. Robin; Emeline Masson; Jerome Larghero; P Ribaud; Nathalie Dhedin; Sarah Abbes; Flore Sicre; Gérard Socié; Régis Peffault de Latour

Mobilized peripheral blood has become the predominant stem cell source for allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation. In this retrospective single center study of 442 patients with hematologic malignancies, we analyzed prognostic factors for long-term survival after peripheral blood stem cell transplantation from HLA-matched related or unrelated donors. To account for disease/status heterogeneity, patients were risk-stratified according to the Disease Risk Index. Five-year overall survival was similar after transplants with matched related and unrelated donors (45% and 46%, respectively; P=0.49). Because donor age ≥60 years impacted outcome during model building, we further considered 3 groups of donors: matched unrelated (aged <60 years by definition), matched related aged <60 years and matched related aged ≥60 years. In multivariate analysis, the donor type/age group and the graft CD34+ and CD3+ cell doses impacted long-term survival. Compared with matched unrelated donor transplant, transplant from matched related donor <60 years resulted in similar long-term survival (P=0.67) while transplant from matched related donor ≥60 years was associated with higher risks for late mortality (hazard ratio (HR) 4.41; P=0.006) and treatment failure (HR: 6.33; P=0.009). Lower mortality risks were observed after transplant with CD34+ cell dose more than 4.5×106/kg (HR: 0.56; P=0.002) and CD3+ cell dose more than 3×108/kg (HR: 0.61; P=0.01). The Disease Risk Index failed to predict survival. We built an “adapted Disease Risk Index” by modifying risks for myeloproliferative neoplasms and multiple myeloma that improved stratification ability for progression-free survival (P=0.04) but not for overall survival (P=0.82).


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2018

Transplantation of Human Embryonic Stem Cell–Derived Cardiovascular Progenitors for Severe Ischemic Left Ventricular Dysfunction

Philippe Menasché; Valérie Vanneaux; Albert Hagège; Alain Bel; Bernard Cholley; Alexandre Parouchev; Isabelle Cacciapuoti; Reem Al-Daccak; Nadine Benhamouda; Hélène Blons; Onnik Agbulut; Lucie Tosca; Jean-Hugues Trouvin; Jean-Roch Fabreguettes; Valérie Bellamy; Dominique Charron; Eric Tartour; Gérard Tachdjian; Michel Desnos; Jerome Larghero

BACKGROUNDnIn addition to scalability, human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) have the unique advantage of allowing their directed differentiation toward lineage-specific cells.nnnOBJECTIVESnThis study tested the feasibility of leveraging the properties of hESCs to generate clinical-grade cardiovascular progenitor cells and assessed their safety in patients with severe ischemic left ventricular dysfunction.nnnMETHODSnSix patients (median age 66.5 years [interquartile range (IQR): 60.5 to 74.7 years]; median left ventricular ejection fraction 26% [IQR: 22% to 32%]) received a median dose of 8.2 million (IQR: 5 to 10 million) hESC-derived cardiovascular progenitors embedded in a fibrin patch that was epicardially delivered during a coronary artery bypass procedure. The primary endpoint was safety at 1 year and focused on: 1) cardiac or off-target tumor, assessed by imaging (computed tomography and fluorine-18 fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography scans); 2) arrhythmias, detected by serial interrogations of the cardioverter-defibrillators implanted in all patients; and 3) alloimmunization, assessed by the presence of donor-specific antibodies. Patients were followed up for a median of 18xa0months.nnnRESULTSnThe protocol generated a highly purified (median 97.5% [IQR: 95.5% to 98.7%]) population of cardiovascular progenitors. One patient died early post-operatively from treatment-unrelated comorbidities. All others had uneventful recoveries. No tumor was detected during follow-up, and none of the patients presented with arrhythmias. Three patients developed clinically silent alloimmunization. All patients were symptomatically improved with an increased systolic motion of the cell-treated segments. One patient died of heart failure after 22xa0months.nnnCONCLUSIONSnThis trial demonstrates the technical feasibility of producing clinical-grade hESC-derived cardiovascular progenitors and supports their short- and medium-term safety, thereby setting the grounds for adequately powered efficacy studies. (Transplantation of Human Embryonic Stem Cell-derived Progenitors in Severe Heart Failure [ESCORT]; NCT02057900).


Biomaterials | 2016

Nanofibrous clinical-grade collagen scaffolds seeded with human cardiomyocytes induces cardiac remodeling in dilated cardiomyopathy.

Pierre Joanne; Maria Kitsara; Solène-Emmanuelle Boitard; Hany Naemetalla; Valérie Vanneaux; Mathieu Pernot; Jerome Larghero; Patricia Forest; Yong Chen; Philippe Menasché; Onnik Agbulut

Limited data are available on the effects of stem cells in non-ischemic dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM). Since the diffuse nature of the disease calls for a broad distribution of cells, this study investigated the scaffold-based delivery of human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (hiPS-CM) in a mouse model of DCM. Nanofibrous scaffolds were produced using a clinical grade atelocollagen which was electrospun and cross-linked under different conditions. As assessed by scanning electron microscopy and shearwave elastography, the optimum crosslinking conditions for hiPS-CM colonization proved to be a 10% concentration of citric acid crosslinking agent and 150xa0min of post-electrospinning baking. Acellular collagen scaffolds were first implanted in both healthy mice and those with induced DCM by a cardiac-specific invalidation of serum response factor (SRF). Seven and fourteen days after implantation, the safety of the scaffold was demonstrated by echocardiography and histological assessments. The subsequent step of implantation of the scaffolds seeded with hiPS-CM in DCM induced mice, using cell-free scaffolds as controls, revealed that after fourteen days heart function decreased in controls while it remained stable in the treated mice. This pattern was associated with an increased number of endothelial cells, in line with the greater vascularity of the scaffold. Moreover, a lesser degree of fibrosis consistent with the upregulation of several genes involved in extracellular matrix remodeling was observed. These results support the interest of the proposed hiPS-CM seeded electrospun scaffold for the stabilization of the DCM outcome with potential for its clinical use in the future.


Cell Cycle | 2012

Presence of a defect in karyokinesis during megakaryocyte endomitosis

Larissa Lordier; Jiajia Pan; Valeria Naim; Abdelali Jalil; Idinath Badirou; Philippe Rameau; Jerome Larghero; Najet Debili; Filippo Rosselli; William Vainchenker; Yunhua Chang

Megakaryocyte is the naturally polyploid cell that gives rise to platelets. Polyploidization occurs by endomitosis, a process corresponding to a late failure of cytokinesis with a backward movement of the daughter cells. Generally, a pure defect in cytokinesis produces a multinucleated cell, but megakaryocytes are characterized by a single polylobulated nucleus with a 2N ploidy. Here, we show the existence of a defect in karyokinesis during the endomitotic process. From late telophase until the reversal of cytokinesis, some dipolar mitosis/endomitosis and most multipolar endomitosis present a thin DNA link between the segregated chromosomes surrounded by an incomplete nuclear membrane formation, which implies that sister chromatid separation is not complete. This observation may explain why polyploid megakaryocytes display a single polylobulated nucleus along with an increase in ploidy.

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Albert Hagège

Paris Descartes University

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Raphael Porcher

Paris Descartes University

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Michel Desnos

Paris Descartes University

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Christine Chomienne

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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