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Dive into the research topics where Laurent Vinet is active.

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Featured researches published by Laurent Vinet.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2013

Lipotoxicity disrupts incretin-regulated human β cell connectivity

David J. Hodson; Ryan K. Mitchell; Elisa A. Bellomo; Gao Sun; Laurent Vinet; Paolo Meda; Daliang Li; Wen Hong Li; Marco Bugliani; Piero Marchetti; Domenico Bosco; Lorenzo Piemonti; Paul Johnson; Stephen J. Hughes; Guy A. Rutter

Pancreatic β cell dysfunction is pathognomonic of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) and is driven by environmental and genetic factors. β cell responses to glucose and to incretins such as glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) and glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP) are altered in the disease state. While rodent β cells act as a coordinated syncytium to drive insulin release, this property is unexplored in human islets. In situ imaging approaches were therefore used to monitor in real time the islet dynamics underlying hormone release. We found that GLP-1 and GIP recruit a highly coordinated subnetwork of β cells that are targeted by lipotoxicity to suppress insulin secretion. Donor BMI was negatively correlated with subpopulation responses to GLP-1, suggesting that this action of incretin contributes to functional β cell mass in vivo. Conversely, exposure of mice to a high-fat diet unveiled a role for incretin in maintaining coordinated islet activity, supporting the existence of species-specific strategies to maintain normoglycemia. These findings demonstrate that β cell connectedness is an inherent property of human islets that is likely to influence incretin-potentiated insulin secretion and may be perturbed by diabetogenic insults to disrupt glucose homeostasis in humans.


Circulation Research | 2008

Pharmacological Inhibition of Na/Ca Exchange Results in Increased Cellular Ca2+ Load Attributable to the Predominance of Forward Mode Block

Semir Ozdemir; Virginie Bito; Patricia Holemans; Laurent Vinet; Jean-Jacques Mercadier; András Varró; Karin R. Sipido

Block of Na/Ca exchange (NCX) has potential therapeutic applications, in particular, if a mode-selective block could be achieved, but also carries serious risks for disturbing the normal Ca2+ balance maintained by NCX. We have examined the effects of partial inhibition of NCX by SEA-0400 (1 or 0.3 &mgr;mol/L) in left ventricular myocytes from healthy pigs or mice and from mice with heart failure (MLP−/−). During voltage clamp ramps with [Ca2+]i buffering, block of reverse mode block was slightly larger than of forward mode (by 25±5%, P<0.05). In the absence of [Ca2+]i buffering and with sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) fluxes blocked, rate constants for Ca2+ influx and Ca2+ efflux were reduced to the same extent (to 36±6% and 32±4%, respectively). With normal SR function the reduction of inward NCX current (INCX) was 57±10% (n=10); during large caffeine-induced Ca2+ transients, it was larger (82±3%). [Ca2+]i transients evoked during depolarizing steps increased (from 424±27 to 994±127 nmol/L at +10mV, P<0.05), despite a reduction of ICaL by 27%. Resting [Ca2+]i increased; there was a small decrease in the rate of decline of [Ca2+]i. SR Ca2+ content increased more than 2-fold. Contraction amplitude of field-stimulated myocytes increased in healthy myocytes but not in myocytes from MLP−/− mice, in which SR Ca2+ content remained unchanged. These data provide proof-of-principle that even partial inhibition of NCX results in a net gain of Ca2+. Further development of NCX blockers, in particular, for heart failure, must balance potential benefits of INCX reduction against effects on Ca2+ handling by refining mode dependence and/or including additional targets.


Circulation | 2008

Cardiomyocyte overexpression of neuronal nitric oxide synthase delays transition toward heart failure in response to pressure overload by preserving calcium cycling.

Xavier Loyer; Ana M. Gómez; Paul Milliez; María Fernández-Velasco; Peter Vangheluwe; Laurent Vinet; Dominique Charue; Emilie Vaudin; Wei Zhang; Yannis Sainte-Marie; Estelle Robidel; Isabelle Marty; Bernd Mayer; Frederic Jaisser; Jean-Jacques Mercadier; Sylvain Richard; Ajay M. Shah; Jean-Pierre Benitah; Jane-Lise Samuel; Christophe Heymes

Background— Defects in cardiomyocyte Ca2+ cycling are a signature feature of heart failure (HF) that occurs in response to sustained hemodynamic overload, and they largely account for contractile dysfunction. Neuronal nitric oxide synthase (NOS1) influences myocyte excitation-contraction coupling through modulation of Ca2+ cycling, but the potential relevance of this in HF is unknown. Methods and Results— We generated a transgenic mouse with conditional, cardiomyocyte-specific NOS1 overexpression (double-transgenic [DT]) and studied cardiac remodeling, myocardial Ca2+ handling, and contractility in DT and control mice subjected to transverse aortic constriction (TAC). After TAC, control mice developed eccentric hypertrophy with evolution toward HF as revealed by a significantly reduced fractional shortening. In contrast, DT mice developed a greater increase in wall thickness (P<0.0001 versus control+TAC) and less left ventricular dilatation than control+TAC mice (P<0.0001 for both end-systolic and end-diastolic dimensions). Thus, DT mice displayed concentric hypertrophy with fully preserved fractional shortening (43.7±0.6% versus 30.3±2.6% in control+TAC mice, P<0.05). Isolated cardiomyocytes from DT+TAC mice had greater shortening, intracellular Ca2+ transients, and sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ load (P<0.05 versus control+TAC for all parameters). These effects could be explained, at least in part, through modulation of phospholamban phosphorylation status. Conclusions— Cardiomyocyte NOS1 may be a useful target against cardiac deterioration during chronic pressure-overload–induced HF through modulation of calcium cycling.


Circulation | 2008

Conditional FKBP12.6 Overexpression in Mouse Cardiac Myocytes Prevents Triggered Ventricular Tachycardia Through Specific Alterations in Excitation- Contraction Coupling

Barnabas Gellen; María Fernández-Velasco; François Briec; Laurent Vinet; Khai Lequang; Patricia Rouet-Benzineb; Jean-Pierre Benitah; Mylène Pezet; Gael Palais; Noémie Pellegrin; Andy Zhang; Romain Perrier; Brigitte Escoubet; Xavier Marniquet; Sylvain Richard; Frederic Jaisser; Ana M. Gómez; Flavien Charpentier; Jean-Jacques Mercadier

Background— Ca2+ release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum via the ryanodine receptor (RyR2) activates cardiac myocyte contraction. An important regulator of RyR2 function is FKBP12.6, which stabilizes RyR2 in the closed state during diastole. &bgr;-Adrenergic stimulation has been suggested to dissociate FKBP12.6 from RyR2, leading to diastolic sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ leakage and ventricular tachycardia (VT). We tested the hypothesis that FKBP12.6 overexpression in cardiac myocytes can reduce susceptibility to VT in stress conditions. Methods and Results— We developed a mouse model with conditional cardiac-specific overexpression of FKBP12.6. Transgenic mouse hearts showed a marked increase in FKBP12.6 binding to RyR2 compared with controls both at baseline and on isoproterenol stimulation (0.2 mg/kg IP). After pretreatment with isoproterenol, burst pacing induced VT in 10 of 23 control mice but in only 1 of 14 transgenic mice (P<0.05). In isolated transgenic myocytes, Ca2+ spark frequency was reduced by 50% (P<0.01), a reduction that persisted under isoproterenol stimulation, whereas the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ load remained unchanged. In parallel, peak ICa,L density decreased by 15% (P<0.01), and the Ca2+ transient peak amplitude decreased by 30% (P<0.001). A 33.5% prolongation of the caffeine-evoked Ca2+ transient decay was associated with an 18% reduction in the Na+-Ca2+ exchanger protein level (P<0.05). Conclusions— Increased FKBP12.6 binding to RyR2 prevents triggered VT in normal hearts in stress conditions, probably by reducing diastolic sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ leak. This indicates that the FKBP12.6-RyR2 complex is an important candidate target for pharmacological prevention of VT.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Multimodal image coregistration and inducible selective cell ablation to evaluate imaging ligands

John Virostko; Joseph A. Henske; Laurent Vinet; Smaragda Lamprianou; Chunhua Dai; Aramandla Radhika; Ronald M. Baldwin; Mohammad Sib Ansari; Franz Hefti; Daniel Skovronsky; Hank F. Kung; Pedro Luis Herrera; Todd E. Peterson; Paolo Meda; Alvin C. Powers

We combined multimodal imaging (bioluminescence, X-ray computed tomography, and PET), tomographic reconstruction of bioluminescent sources, and two unique, complementary models to evaluate three previously synthesized PET radiotracers thought to target pancreatic beta cells. The three radiotracers {[18F]fluoropropyl-(+)-dihydrotetrabenazine ([18F]FP-DTBZ), [18F](+)-2-oxiranyl-3-isobutyl-9-(3-fluoropropoxy)-10-methoxy-2,3,4,6,7,11b-hexahydro-1H-pyrido[2,1-a]isoquinoline (18F-AV-266), and (2S,3R,11bR)-9-(3-fluoropropoxy)-2-(hydroxymethyl)-3-isobutyl-10-methoxy-2,3,4,6,7,11b-hexahydro-1H-pyrido[2,1-a]isoquinolin-2-ol (18F-AV-300)} bind vesicular monoamine transporter 2. Tomographic reconstruction of the bioluminescent signal in mice expressing luciferase only in pancreatic beta cells was used to delineate the pancreas and was coregistered with PET and X-ray computed tomography images. This strategy enabled unambiguous identification of the pancreas on PET images, permitting accurate quantification of the pancreatic PET signal. We show here that, after conditional, specific, and rapid mouse beta-cell ablation, beta-cell loss was detected by bioluminescence imaging but not by PET imaging, given that the pancreatic signal provided by three PET radiotracers was not altered. To determine whether these ligands bound human beta cells in vivo, we imaged mice transplanted with luciferase-expressing human islets. The human islets were imaged by bioluminescence but not with the PET ligands, indicating that these vesicular monoamine transporter 2-directed ligands did not specifically bind beta cells. These data demonstrate the utility of coregistered multimodal imaging as a platform for evaluation and validation of candidate ligands for imaging islets.


Diabetes | 2011

High-Resolution Magnetic Resonance Imaging Quantitatively Detects Individual Pancreatic Islets

Smaragda Lamprianou; Riikka Immonen; Christine Nabuurs; Asllan Gjinovci; Laurent Vinet; Xavier Montet; Rolf Gruetter; Paolo Meda

OBJECTIVE We studied whether manganese-enhanced high-field magnetic resonance (MR) imaging (MEHFMRI) could quantitatively detect individual islets in situ and in vivo and evaluate changes in a model of experimental diabetes. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS Whole pancreata from untreated (n = 3), MnCl2 and glucose-injected mice (n = 6), and mice injected with either streptozotocin (STZ; n = 4) or citrate buffer (n = 4) were imaged ex vivo for unambiguous evaluation of islets. Exteriorized pancreata of MnCl2 and glucose-injected mice (n = 6) were imaged in vivo to directly visualize the gland and minimize movements. In all cases, MR images were acquired in a 14.1 Tesla scanner and correlated with the corresponding (immuno)histological sections. RESULTS In ex vivo experiments, MEHFMRI distinguished different pancreatic tissues and evaluated the relative abundance of islets in the pancreata of normoglycemic mice. MEHFMRI also detected a significant decrease in the numerical and volume density of islets in STZ-injected mice. However, in the latter measurements the loss of β-cells was undervalued under the conditions tested. The experiments on the externalized pancreata confirmed that MEHFMRI could visualize native individual islets in living, anesthetized mice. CONCLUSIONS Data show that MEHFMRI quantitatively visualizes individual islets in the intact mouse pancreas, both ex vivo and in vivo.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2008

Chronic doxycycline exposure accelerates left ventricular hypertrophy and progression to heart failure in mice after thoracic aorta constriction

Laurent Vinet; Patricia Rouet-Benzineb; Xavier Marniquet; Noémie Pellegrin; Laurence Mangin; Liliane Louedec; Jane-Lise Samuel; Jean-Jacques Mercadier

Tetracycline is a powerful tool for controlling the expression of specific transgenes (TGs) in various tissues, including heart. In these mouse systems, TG expression is repressed/enhanced by adding doxycycline (Dox) to the diet. However, Dox has been shown to attenuate matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) expression and activity in various tissues, and MMP inactivation mitigates left ventricular (LV) remodeling in animal models of heart failure. Therefore, we examined the influence of Dox on LV remodeling and MMP expression in mice after transverse aortic constriction (TAC). One month after TAC, cardiac hypertrophy (99% vs. 67%) and the proportion of mice exhibiting congestive heart failure (CHF, 74% vs. 32%) were higher in the TAC + Dox group than in the TAC group (P < 0.05). These differences were no longer seen 2 mo after TAC, although LV was more severely dilated in TAC + Dox mice than in TAC mice (P < 0.05). One month after TAC, the increase in brain natriuretic peptide and beta-myosin heavy chain mRNA levels was 1.6 and 1.7 times higher, respectively, in TAC + Dox mice than in TAC mice (P < 0.01). MMP-2 gelatin zymographic activity increased 1.9- and 2.4-fold in TAC and TAC + Dox mice, respectively (P < 0.01 and P < 0.05 relative to respective sham-operated animals), but the difference between TAC + Dox and TAC mice did not reach statistical significance. Dox did not significantly alter TAC-associated perivascular and interstitial myocardial fibrosis. These findings demonstrate that Dox accelerates the onset of cardiac hypertrophy and the progression to CHF following TAC in mice. Accordingly, care should be taken when designing and interpreting studies based on TG mouse models of LV hypertrophy using the tetracycline-regulated (tet)-on/tet-off system.


Islets | 2012

Pancreatic magnetic resonance imaging after manganese injection distinguishes type 2 diabetic and normoglycemic patients

Diomidis Botsikas; Sylvain Terraz; Laurent Vinet; Smaragda Lamprianou; Christoph Becker; Domenico Bosco; Paolo Meda; Xavier Montet

A non-invasive method to image the mass and/or function of human pancreatic islets is needed to monitor the progression of diabetes, and the effect of therapeutic interventions. As yet, no method is available for this purpose, which could be applied to in situ human islets. Animal and in vitro studies have documented that manganese infusion could improve the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the endocrine pancreas. Here, we have tested whether a similar approach could discriminate diabetic and non-diabetic patients. In vitro, human isolated islets readily incorporated manganese. In vivo, 243 manganese-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MEMRI) examinations were reviewed, including 41 examinations which were run on 24 patients with type 2 diabetes and 202 examinations which were run on 119 normoglycemic patients. The results show that MEMRI discriminates type 2 diabetics from non-diabetic patients, based on the signal enhancement of pancreas.


Diabetologia | 2015

Targeting GLP-1 receptors for repeated magnetic resonance imaging differentiates graded losses of pancreatic beta cells in mice

Laurent Vinet; Smaragda Lamprianou; Andrej Babič; Norbert Lange; Fabrizio Thorel; Pedro Luis Herrera; Xavier Montet; Paolo Meda

Aims/hypothesisNon-invasive imaging of beta cells is a much-needed development but is one that faces significant biological and technological hurdles. A relevant imaging method should at least allow for an evaluation over time of the mass of beta cells under physiological and pathological conditions, and for an assessment of novel therapies. We, therefore, investigated the ability of a new MRI probe to repeatedly measure the loss of beta cells in a rodent model.MethodsWe developed an innovative nanoparticle probe that targets the glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor, and can be used for both fluorescence imaging and MRI. Using fluorescence, we characterised the specificity and biodistribution of the probe. Using 1.5T MRI, we longitudinally imaged the changes in insulin content in male and female mice of the RIP-DTr strain, which mimic the changes expected in type 1 and type 2 diabetes, respectively.ResultsWe showed that this probe selectively labelled beta cells in situ, imaged in vivo native pancreatic islets and evaluated their loss after diphtheria toxin administration, in a model of graded beta cell deletion. Thus, using clinical MRI, the probe quantitatively differentiates, in the same mouse strain, between female animals featuring a 50% loss of beta cells and the males featuring an almost complete loss of beta cells.Conclusions/interpretationThe approach addresses several of the hurdles that have so far limited the non-invasive imaging of beta cells, including the potential to repeatedly monitor the very same animals using clinically available equipment, and to differentiate graded losses of beta cells.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Pannexin1 links lymphatic function to lipid metabolism and atherosclerosis

Filippo Molica; Merlijn J. Meens; Juan Dubrot; Avigail Ehrlich; Christel L. Roth; Sandrine Morel; Graziano Pelli; Laurent Vinet; Vincent Braunersreuther; Osman Ratib; Marc Chanson; Stéphanie Hugues; Eliana Scemes; Brenda R. Kwak

Extracellular ATP is a central signaling molecule in inflammatory responses. Pannexin1 (Panx1) channels release ATP in a controlled manner and have been implicated in various inflammatory pathologies, but their role in atherogenesis remains elusive. Using atherosclerosis-susceptible mouse models with ubiquitous deletion of Panx1 (Panx1−/−Apoe−/−) or with Cre recombinase-mediated deletion of Panx1 in endothelial cells and monocytes (Tie2-CreTgPanx1fl/flApoe−/−; Panx1delApoe−/−), we identified a novel role for Panx1 in the lymphatic vasculature. Atherosclerotic lesion development in response to high-cholesterol diet was enhanced in Panx1delApoe−/− mice, pointing to an atheroprotective role for Panx1 in endothelial and/or monocytic cells. Unexpectedly, atherogenesis was not changed in mice with ubiquitous Panx1 deletion, but Panx1−/−Apoe−/− mice displayed reduced body weight, serum cholesterol, triglycerides and free fatty acids, suggesting altered lipid metabolism in these Panx1-deficient mice. Mechanistically, Panx1−/−Apoe−/− mice showed impairment of lymphatic vessel function with decreased drainage of interstitial fluids and reduced dietary fat absorption. Thus, the detrimental effect of Panx1 deletion in endothelial and/or monocytic cells during atherogenesis is counterbalanced by an opposite effect resulting from impaired lymphatic function in ubiquitous Panx1-deficient mice. Collectively, our findings unveil a pivotal role of Panx1 in linking lymphatic function to lipid metabolism and atherosclerotic plaque development.

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Rolf Gruetter

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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