Joëlle Chabry
University of Nice Sophia Antipolis
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Featured researches published by Joëlle Chabry.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2004
Mathieu Marella; Joëlle Chabry
The accumulation and activation of microglial cells at sites of amyloid prion deposits or plaques have been documented extensively. Here, we investigate the in vivo recruitment of microglial cells soon after intraocular injection of scrapie-infected cell homogenate (hgtsc+) using immunohistochemistry on retinal sections. A population of CD11b/CD45-positive microglia was specifically detected within the ganglion and internal plexiform retinal cell layers by 2 d after intravitreal injection of hgtsc+. Whereas no chemotactism properties were ascribed to hgtsc+ alone, a massive migration of microglial cells was observed by incubating primary cultured neurons and astrocytes with hgtsc+ in a time- and concentration-dependent manner. hgtsc+ triggered the recruitment of microglial cells by interacting with both neurons and astrocytes by upregulation of the expression levels of a broad spectrum of neuronal and glial chemokines. We show that, in vitro and in vivo, the microglia migration is at least partly under the control of chemokine receptor-5 (CCR-5) activation, because highly specific CCR-5 antagonist TAK-779 significantly reduced the migration rate of microglia. Activated microglia recruited in the vicinity of prion may, in turn, cause neuronal cell damage by inducing apoptosis. These findings provide insight into the understanding of the cell-cell communication that takes place during the development of prion diseases.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2007
Sevda Dirikoc; Suzette A. Priola; Mathieu Marella; Nicole Zsürger; Joëlle Chabry
Prion diseases are transmissible neurodegenerative disorders characterized by the accumulation in the CNS of the protease-resistant prion protein (PrPres), a structurally misfolded isoform of its physiological counterpart PrPsen. Both neuropathogenesis and prion infectivity are related to PrPres formation. Here, we report that the nonpsychoactive cannabis constituent cannabidiol (CBD) inhibited PrPres accumulation in both mouse and sheep scrapie-infected cells, whereas other structurally related cannabinoid analogs were either weak inhibitors or noninhibitory. Moreover, after intraperitoneal infection with murine scrapie, peripheral injection of CBD limited cerebral accumulation of PrPres and significantly increased the survival time of infected mice. Mechanistically, CBD did not appear to inhibit PrPres accumulation via direct interactions with PrP, destabilization of PrPres aggregates, or alteration of the expression level or subcellular localization of PrPsen. However, CBD did inhibit the neurotoxic effects of PrPres and affected PrPres-induced microglial cell migration in a concentration-dependent manner. Our results suggest that CBD may protect neurons against the multiple molecular and cellular factors involved in the different steps of the neurodegenerative process, which takes place during prion infection. When combined with its ability to target the brain and its lack of toxic side effects, CBD may represent a promising new anti-prion drug.
Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2015
Sarah Nicolas; Julie Veyssiere; Carine Gandin; Nicole Zsürger; Mariel Pietri; Catherine Heurteaux; Nicolas Glaichenhaus; Agnès Petit-Paitel; Joëlle Chabry
Environmental enrichment (EE) that combines voluntary physical exercise, sensory and social stimuli, causes profound changes in rodent brain at molecular, anatomical and behavioral levels. Here, we show that EE efficiently reduces anxiety and depression-like behaviors in a mouse model of depression induced by long-term administration of corticosterone. Mechanisms underlying EE-related beneficial effects remain largely unexplored; however, our results point toward adiponectin, an adipocyte-secreted protein, as a main contributor. Indeed, adiponectin-deficient (adipo(-/-)) mice did not benefit from all the EE-induced anxiolytic and antidepressant-like effects as evidenced by their differential responses in a series of behavioral tests. Conversely, a single intravenous injection of exogenous adiponectin restored the sensitivity of adipo(-/-) mice to EE-induced behavioral benefits. Interestingly, adiponectin depletion did not prevent the hippocampal neurogenesis induced by EE. Therefore, antidepressant properties of adiponectin are likely to be related to changes in signaling in the hypothalamus rather than through hippocampal-neurogenesis mechanisms. Additionally, EE did not modify the plasma levels of adiponectin but may favor the passage of adiponectin from the blood to the cerebrospinal fluid. Our findings provide advances in the understanding of the anxiolytic and antidepressant-like effects of EE and highlight adiponectin as a pivotal mediator.
Brain Behavior and Immunity | 2015
Joëlle Chabry; Sarah Nicolas; Julie Cazareth; Emilie Murris; Alice Guyon; Nicolas Glaichenhaus; Catherine Heurteaux; Agnès Petit-Paitel
Regulation of neuroinflammation by glial cells plays a major role in the pathophysiology of major depression. While astrocyte involvement has been well described, the role of microglia is still elusive. Recently, we have shown that Adiponectin (ApN) plays a crucial role in the anxiolytic/antidepressant neurogenesis-independent effects of enriched environment (EE) in mice; however its mechanisms of action within the brain remain unknown. Here, we show that in a murine model of depression induced by chronic corticosterone administration, the hippocampus and the hypothalamus display increased levels of inflammatory cytokines mRNA, which is reversed by EE housing. By combining flow cytometry, cell sorting and q-PCR, we show that microglia from depressive-like mice adopt a pro-inflammatory phenotype characterized by higher expression levels of IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α and IκB-α mRNAs. EE housing blocks pro-inflammatory cytokine gene induction and promotes arginase 1 mRNA expression in brain-sorted microglia, indicating that EE favors an anti-inflammatory activation state. We show that microglia and brain-macrophages from corticosterone-treated mice adopt differential expression profiles for CCR2, MHC class II and IL-4recα surface markers depending on whether the mice are kept in standard environment or EE. Interestingly, the effects of EE were abolished when cells are isolated from ApN knock-out mouse brains. When injected intra-cerebroventricularly, ApN, whose level is specifically increased in cerebrospinal fluid of depressive mice raised in EE, rescues microglia phenotype, reduces pro-inflammatory cytokine production by microglia and blocks depressive-like behavior in corticosterone-treated mice. Our data suggest that EE-induced ApN increase within the brain regulates microglia and brain macrophages phenotype and activation state, thus reducing neuroinflammation and depressive-like behaviors in mice.
Methods in Neurosciences | 1993
Jean Mazella; Joëlle Chabry; Frédéric Checler; Alain Beaudet; Jean-Pierre Vincent
Publisher Summary This chapter describes the main biochemical techniques that are available for neurotensin receptor characterization, localization, and regulation on the primary cultures of neurons. These methods can be applied to other cell culture systems if cautions concerning the degradation and internalization of the ligand are taken. The neuromodulatory role of neurotensin is supported by its actions through specific high-affinity binding sites in discrete regions of the mammalian central nervous system. These neurotensin receptors are localized along dopaminergic pathways and have been extensively studied in terms of biochemical, anatomical, functional, and molecular properties. The chapter describes a set of tools and methods to study neurotensin receptors, which bind to dispersed neurons in primary culture, and discusses some techniques that allow the visualization of neurotensin receptors, both in situ and in denaturing conditions by radioautography. It also explains the regulatory mechanisms and the functional relevance of neurotensin receptors present in the neuronal cell system.
Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience | 2017
Sarah Nicolas; Julie Cazareth; Hadi Zarif; Alice Guyon; Catherine Heurteaux; Joëlle Chabry; Agnès Petit-Paitel
We recently reported that increased levels of Adiponectin (ApN) in the brain led to microglia phenotype and activation state regulation, thus reducing both global brain inflammation and depressive-like behaviors in mice. Apart from this, little is known on ApN molecular effects on microglia, although these cells are crucial in both physiological and pathological processes. Here we fill this gap by studying the effects and targets of ApN toward neuroinflammation. Our findings suggest that ApN deficiency in mice leads to a higher sensitivity of mice to neuroinflammation that is due to enhanced microglia responsiveness to a pro-inflammatory challenge. Moreover, we show that globular ApN (gApN) exerts direct in vivo anti-inflammatory actions on microglia by reducing IL-1β, IL-6, and TNFα synthesis. In vitro, gApN anti-inflammatory properties are confirmed in brain-sorted microglia, primary cultured and microglia cell line (BV2), but are not observed on astrocytes. Our results also show that gApN blocks LPS-induced nitrosative and oxidative stress in microglia. Finally, we demonstrate for the first time that these anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidant actions of gApN on microglia are mediated through an AdipoR1/NF-κB signaling pathway.
Methods in Neurosciences | 1991
Jean-Pierre Vincent; Joëlle Chabry; Nicole Zsürger; Jean Mazella
Publisher Summary This chapter describes the methods for purification of neurotensin receptor from newborn mouse brain using chromatography. Neurotensin is a peptide of 13 amino acids that fulfills a dual function as a neuromodulator in the brain and as a hormone in the gastrointestinal tract. Both modes of action imply as a first step the selective association of the neuropeptide with a specific receptor located on the plasma membrane of target cells. Neurotensin-binding sites have been localized and characterized in various tissue preparations and cell cultures of central or peripheral nervous system origin. Membranes prepared from brain and gut tissues generally contain two classes of neurotensin-binding sites that can be distinguished by their affinity and by their sensitivity to sodium ions, GTP, and the antihistamine drug levocabastine. To purify receptor proteins in their native form, it is necessary to work in the presence of protease inhibitors. The CHAPS-solubilized neurotensin receptor from mouse brain exhibits the same binding parameters and the same selectivity for neurotensin and its analogs as the high-affinity neurotensin binding sites initially present in brain homogenates. The affinity of the soluble receptor for neurotensin decreases by sodium ions and is insensitive to levocabastine.
Translational Psychiatry | 2018
Sarah Nicolas; Delphine Debayle; Catherine Béchade; Luc Maroteaux; Pascale Bayer; Catherine Heurteaux; Alice Guyon; Joëlle Chabry
Major depression is a psychiatric disorder with complex etiology. About 30% of depressive patients are resistant to antidepressants that are currently available, likely because they only target the monoaminergic systems. Thus, identification of novel antidepressants with a larger action spectrum is urgently required. Epidemiological data indicate high comorbidity between metabolic and psychiatric disorders, particularly obesity and depression. We used a well-characterized anxiety/depressive-like mouse model consisting of continuous input of corticosterone for seven consecutive weeks. A panel of reliable behavioral tests were conducted to assessing numerous facets of the depression-like state, including anxiety, resignation, reduced motivation, loss of pleasure, and social withdrawal. Furthermore, metabolic features including weight, adiposity, and plasma biological parameters (lipids, adipokines, and cytokines) were investigated in corticosterone-treated mice. Our data show that chronic administration of corticosterone induced the parallel onset of metabolic and behavioral dysfunctions in mice. AdipoRon, a potent adiponectin receptor agonist, prevented the corticosterone-induced early onset of moderate obesity and metabolic syndromes. Moreover, in all the behavioral tests, daily treatment with AdipoRon successfully reversed the corticosterone-induced depression-like state in mice. AdipoRon exerted its pleiotropic actions on various systems including hippocampal neurogenesis, serotonergic neurotransmission, neuroinflammation, and the tryptophan metabolic pathway, which can explain its antidepressant properties. Our study highlights the pivotal role of the adiponergic system in the development of both metabolic and psychiatric disorders. AdipoRon may constitute a promising novel antidepressant.
Frontiers in Synaptic Neuroscience | 2018
Hadi Zarif; Salma Hosseiny; Agnès Paquet; Kevin Lebrigand; Marie-Jeanne Arguel; Julie Cazareth; Anne Lazzari; Catherine Heurteaux; Nicolas Glaichenhaus; Joëlle Chabry; Alice Guyon; Agnès Petit-Paitel
Living in an enriched environment (EE) benefits health by acting synergistically on various biological systems including the immune and the central nervous systems. The dialog between the brain and the immune cells has recently gained interest and is thought to play a pivotal role in beneficial effects of EE. Recent studies show that T lymphocytes have an important role in hippocampal plasticity, learning, and memory, although the precise mechanisms by which they act on the brain remain elusive. Using a mouse model of EE, we show here that CD4+ T cells are essential for spinogenesis and glutamatergic synaptic function in the CA of the hippocampus. However, CD4+ lymphocytes do not influence EE-induced neurogenesis in the DG of the hippocampus, by contrast to what we previously demonstrated for CD8+ T cells. Importantly, CD4+ T cells located in the choroid plexus have a specific transcriptomic signature as a function of the living environment. Our study highlights the contribution of CD4+ T cells in the brain plasticity and function.
Neuropharmacology | 2016
Hadi Zarif; Agnès Petit-Paitel; Catherine Heurteaux; Joëlle Chabry; Alice Guyon
Thyrotropin Releasing Hormone (TRH) is a tripeptide that induces the release of Thyroid Stimulating Hormone (TSH) in the blood. Besides its role in the thyroid system, TRH has been shown to regulate several neuronal systems in the brain however its role in hippocampus remains controversial. Using electrophysiological recordings in acute mouse brain slices, we show that TRH depresses glutamate responses at the CA3-CA1 synapse through an action on NMDA receptors, which, as a consequence, decreases the ability of the synapse to establish a long term potentiation (LTP). TRH also induces a late increase in AMPA/kainate responses. Together, these results suggest that TRH plays an important role in the modulation of hippocampal neuronal activities, and they contribute to a better understanding of the mechanisms by which TRH impacts synaptic function underlying emotional states, learning and memory processes.