Lamine Bensaddek
University of Picardie Jules Verne
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Publication
Featured researches published by Lamine Bensaddek.
Journal of Biotechnology | 2001
Lamine Bensaddek; Françoise Gillet; José Edmundo Nava Saucedo; Marc-André Fliniaux
The growth, the alkaloid production, as well as the scopolamine/hyoscyamine ratio of two clones of belladonna hairy roots were studied. The effects of nitrate and ammonium concentrations on these cultures were investigated. A rise in ammonium concentration caused the decline of the hairy roots, while nitrate had a marked effect on the alkaloid content. The alkaloid production obtained with 15.8 mM of NO3- and 20.5 mM of NH4+ was 1.2-1.4 times higher than that obtained when the roots were grown in the standard Murashige and Skoog medium (MS medium, 39.5 mM of NO3- and 20.5 mM of NH4+). The nitrate and ammonium concentrations in the culture medium also had a strong influence on the scopolamine/hyoscyamine ratio. When nitrate or ammonium concentrations were raised, that ratio also was increased 2-3-fold. The hairy root clones originating from transformations with two distinct strains of Agrobacterium had similar responses.
Plant Physiology and Biochemistry | 2008
Christophe Hano; Mohamed Addi; Ophélie Fliniaux; Lamine Bensaddek; Eric Duverger; François Mesnard; Frédéric Lamblin; Eric Lainé
The cellular and molecular events associated with cell death during compatible interaction between Fusarium oxysporum sp. linii and a susceptible flax (Linum usitatissimum) cell suspension are reported here. In order to determine the physiological and molecular sequence of cell death of inoculated cells, reactive oxygen species (ROS) production, mitochondrial potential, lipoxygenase, DNase, protease and caspase-3-like activities, lipid peroxidation and secondary metabolite production were monitored. We also used microscopy, in situ terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick end labelling (TUNEL) and DNA fragmentation assay. Cell death was associated with specific morphological and biochemical changes that are generally noticed in hypersensitive (incompatible) reaction. An oxidative burst as well as a loss of mitochondrial potential of inoculated cells, an activation of lipoxygenase and lipid peroxidation were noted. Enzyme-mediated nuclear DNA degradation was detectable but oligonucleosomal fragmentation was not observed. Caspase-3-like activity was dramatically increased in inoculated cells. Phenylpropanoid metabolism was also affected as demonstrated by activation of PAL and PCBER gene expressions and reduced soluble lignan and neolignan contents. These results obtained in flax suggest that compatible interaction triggers a cell death sequence sharing a number of common features with the hypersensitive response observed in incompatible interaction and in animal apoptosis.
Journal of Medicinal Food | 2010
Abdelali Lehraiki; Jacques Attoumbré; Christophe Bienaimé; Fabrice Matifat; Lamine Bensaddek; Edmundo Nava-Saucedo; Marc-André Fliniaux; Halima Ouadid-Ahidouch; Sylvie Baltora-Rosset
Over the last decade, there has been an increasing interest in using flaxseed (Linum usitatissimum) in diet in order to improve nutritional and health status. Lignans are major components of flaxseed. Therefore an extraction procedure for lignans from flaxseed has been optimized. The influence of some parameters was investigated: first the preliminary extraction step with alcoholic solvent, and then the solvent polarity and pH of the extract. All these conditions affected the total lignan content, but the most critical variables were preliminary extraction and solvent polarity. The optimized procedure, consisting of a direct hydrolysis in hydrochloric acid (1 M) at 100 degrees C for 1 hour followed by an extraction with a mixture of ethyl acetate/hexane (90:10 vol/vol), was applied to 340 g of defatted flaxseed and resulted in the isolation of secoisolariciresinol and anhydrosecoisolariciresinol with a purity of 97% and 98%, respectively, as determined by high-performance liquid chromatography. The ability of these two compounds and that of secoisolariciresinol diglucoside to modulate the growth of human breast cancer MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 cell lines was assessed. Our results show that lignans modulate development of breast cancer cells. The most intense effect was observed for anhydrosecoisolariciresinol, which significantly decreased cell growth at 50 and 100 microM.
Biotechnology and Bioengineering | 2000
Lassaad Belbahri; Laurence Chevalier; Lamine Bensaddek; Françoise Gillet; Marc-André Fliniaux; Wout Boerjan; Dirk Inzé; Daniel Thomas; Brigitte Thomasset
Transformed callus cultures of Nicotiana tabacum were generated in which the SAM-1 gene from Arabidopsis thaliana encoding S-adenosylmethionine synthetase (SAM-S), under the control of the 35S promoter, had been integrated. The presence of the SAM-1 gene was detected in all tested transformants and the SAM-S activity correlated with the accumulation of SAM in the tobacco callus cultures. Three distinct phenotypic classes were identified among the transgenic cell lines in relation to growth of the cells, structure of the calli, and level of SAM. Transgene silencing was observed in several cultivated transgenic calli and this phenomenon was correlated directly with a low level of SAM-1 mRNA accompanied by a decrease of the SAM-S activity. The transgenic calli overexpressing the SAM-1 gene accumulated a high SAM level. The modifications in SAM-S activity were reflected in the pattern of secondary products present in the different cell lines, thereby demonstrating that the flux through the biosynthetic pathway of a plant secondary product can be modified by means of genetic engineering.
Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2010
Jorge Lozada-Lechuga; María Luisa Villarreal; Marc-André Fliniaux; Lamine Bensaddek; Fraçois Mesnard; María del Carmen Gutiérrez; Alexandre Cardoso-Taketa
ETHNOPHARMACOLOGICAL RELEVANCE Ternstroemia pringlei represents one of the most widely employed and commercially exploited medicinal plant in Mexico, used popularly as a tranquilizer and for the treatment of insomnia. AIM OF THE STUDY To investigate the sedative constituents of the plant through a bio-guided fractionation of extracts derived from calyx and fruits. MATERIALS AND METHODS Crude extracts with different polarities (CHCl(3), AcOEt, MeOH, aqueous) were prepared and subjected to chromatographic fractionation, leading to the isolation of the sedative compound (1) from the MeOH crude extract. The identity of 1 was unequivocally established by means of 1D and 2D NMR spectroscopic analysis. The sleeping time induced by sodium pentobarbital and the elevated plus-maze models were performed on mice to determine the sedative and anxiolytic activities, respectively. Bioactivity was also investigated though in vitro GABA release experiments using mice brain slices. RESULTS The sedative compound was established as jacaranone (1), and its effect was clearly demonstrated through a dose-dependent response analysis (ED(50) = 25 mg/kg mouse weight). When tested in the elevated plus-maze model, none of the extracts from Ternstroemia pringlei displayed anxiolytic activity. GABA release experiments showed that the MeOH and aqueous crude extracts released this neurotransmitter at a ratio of 217 and 179 pmol/g protein, respectively, evidencing the presence of other bioactive constituents in the extracts apart of 1, whose activity was absent in this model. CONCLUSIONS Although 1 has been isolated and identified in a number of plant species, this is the first time that its sedative effect has been demonstrated. No previous record exists of other sedative compounds having been isolated from Ternstroemia pringlei.
Phytochemical Analysis | 2007
Vickram Beejmohun; Ophélie Fliniaux; Eric Grand; Frédéric Lamblin; Lamine Bensaddek; Philippe Christen; José Kovensky; Marc-André Fliniaux; François Mesnard
Planta | 2006
Christophe Hano; M. Addi; Lamine Bensaddek; David Crônier; Sylvie Baltora-Rosset; J. Doussot; Stéphane Maury; François Mesnard; Brigitte Chabbert; S. Hawkins; Eric Lainé; Frédéric Lamblin
Plant Physiology and Biochemistry | 2002
Stéphane Charlet; Lamine Bensaddek; Sophie Raynaud; Françoise Gillet; François Mesnard; Marc-André Fliniaux
Electronic Journal of Integrative Biosciences | 2008
Lamine Bensaddek; María Luisa Villarreal; Marc-André Fliniaux
Plant Cell Reports | 2006
Jacques Attoumbré; Stéphane Charlet; Sylvie Baltora-Rosset; Christophe Hano; Sophie Raynaud-Le Grandic; Françoise Gillet; Lamine Bensaddek; François Mesnard; Marc-André Fliniaux