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Dive into the research topics where Marc Chanson is active.

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Featured researches published by Marc Chanson.


Nature Medicine | 2006

Connexin37 protects against atherosclerosis by regulating monocyte adhesion

Cindy W Wong; Thomas Christen; Isabelle Roth; Christos E. Chadjichristos; Jean-Paul Derouette; Bernard Foglia; Marc Chanson; Daniel A. Goodenough; Brenda R. Kwak

A genetic polymorphism in the human gene encoding connexin37 (CX37, encoded by GJA4, also known as CX37) has been reported as a potential prognostic marker for atherosclerosis. The expression of this gap-junction protein is altered in mouse and human atherosclerotic lesions: it disappears from the endothelium of advanced plaques but is detected in macrophages recruited to the lesions. The role of CX37 in atherogenesis, however, remains unknown. Here we have investigated the effect of deleting the mouse connexin37 (Cx37) gene (Gja4, also known as Cx37) on atherosclerosis in apolipoprotein E–deficient (Apoe−/−) mice, an animal model of this disease. We find that Gja4−/−Apoe−/− mice develop more aortic lesions than Gja4+/+Apoe−/− mice that express Cx37. Using in vivo adoptive transfer, we show that monocyte and macrophage recruitment is enhanced by eliminating expression of Cx37 in these leukocytes but not by eliminating its expression in the endothelium. We further show that Cx37 hemichannel activity in primary monocytes, macrophages and a macrophage cell line (H36.12j) inhibits leukocyte adhesion. This antiadhesive effect is mediated by release of ATP into the extracellular space. Thus, Cx37 hemichannels may control initiation of the development of atherosclerotic plaques by regulating monocyte adhesion. H36.12j macrophages expressing either of the two CX37 proteins encoded by a polymorphism in the human GJA4 gene show differential ATP-dependent adhesion. These results provide a potential mechanism by which a polymorphism in CX37 protects against atherosclerosis.


Circulation | 2003

Reduced Connexin43 Expression Inhibits Atherosclerotic Lesion Formation in Low-Density Lipoprotein Receptor–Deficient Mice

Brenda R. Kwak; Niels R. Veillard; Graziano Pelli; Flore Mulhaupt; Richard W. James; Marc Chanson; François Mach

Background—Gap junctions allow the direct exchange of ions and small molecules between cells in contact, thus coordinating physiological processes such as cell growth and differentiation. We have recently demonstrated increased expression of the gap junction protein connexin43 (Cx43) in specific subsets of cells in atherosclerotic lesions. Because the development of atherosclerosis depends critically on paracrine cell-to-cell interactions, we hypothesized that direct intercellular communication via gap junctions may be another factor controlling atherogenesis. Methods and Results—The role of Cx43 in atherogenesis was examined by use of both a genetic and a pharmacological approach. First, atherosclerosis-susceptible LDL receptor–deficient (LDLR−/−) mice with normal (Cx43+/+) or reduced (Cx43+/−) levels of Cx43 were fed a cholesterol-rich diet for 14 weeks. The progression of atherosclerosis was reduced by 50% (P <0.01) in the thoracoabdominal aorta and in the aortic roots of Cx43+/−LDLR−/− mice compared with Cx43+/+LDLR−/− controls. Atheroma in Cx43+/−LDLR−/− mice contained fewer inflammatory cells and exhibited thicker fibrous caps with more collagen and smooth muscle cells. Next, we observed that HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors, or “statins,” lipid-lowering drugs well known for their pleiotropic antiatherogenic effects, reduced Cx43 expression in primary human vascular cells in vitro. Atheroma of LDLR−/− mice treated orally with pravastatin contained fewer inflammatory cells and exhibited thicker fibrous caps than controls. This was associated with reduced Cx43 expression in lesions of statin-treated mice. Conclusions—These data indicate a critical role for Cx43-mediated gap junctional communication in atherosclerotic plaque formation.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1990

Rapid and reversible secretion changes during uncoupling of rat insulin-producing cells.

Paolo Meda; Domenico Bosco; Marc Chanson; Emanuele Giordano; L Vallar; Claes B. Wollheim; Lelio Orci

To determine whether insulin secretion is affected by a blockage of gap junctions between B cells, we have studied the secretion of rat pancreatic islets of Langerhans, primary dispersed islet cells, and cells of the RINm5F line, during short-term exposure to heptanol. Within minutes, this alkanol blocked gap junctions between the B cells of intact islets and abolished their normal secretory response to glucose. These two changes were rapidly and fully reversible after return of the islets to control medium. We further found that heptanol had no significant effect on the glucose-stimulated secretion of single B cells but inhibited that of B cell pairs. In the clone of RINm5F cells, whose junctional coupling and D-glyceraldehyde-induced stimulation of insulin release by aggregated cells were also inhibited by heptanol, this alkanol did not perturb intracellular pH and Ca2+ and the most distal steps of the secretion pathway. In summary, a gap junction blocker affected the secretion of insulin-producing cells by a mechanism which is dependent on cell contact and is not associated with detectable pleiotropic perturbations of the cell secretory machinery. The data provide evidence for the involvement of junctional coupling in the control of insulin secretion.


Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology | 1995

Effects of cGMP-dependent phosphorylation on rat and human connexin43 gap junction channels

Brenda R. Kwak; Juan C. Sáez; Ronald Wilders; Marc Chanson; Glenn I. Fishman; Elliot L. Hertzberg; David C. Spray; Habo J. Jongsma

The effects of 8-bromoguanosine 3′:5′-cyclic monophosphate (8Br-cGMP), a membrane-permeant activator of protein kinase G (PKG), were studied on rat and human connexin43 (Cx43), the most abundant gap junction protein in mammalian heart, which were exogenously expressed in SKHep1 cells. Under dual whole-cell voltage-clamp conditions, 8Br-cGMP decreased gap junctional conductance (gj) in rat Cx43-transfected cells by 24.0±3.7% (mean±SEM, n=5), whereas gj was not affected in human Cx43-transfected cells by the same treatment. The relaxation of gj in response to steps in transjunctional voltage observed in rat Cx43 transfectants was best fitted with three exponentials. Time constants and amplitudes of the decay phases changed in the presence of 8Br-cGMP. Single rat and human Cx43 gap junction channels were resolved in the presence of halothane. Under control conditions, three single-channel conductance states (γj) of about 20, 40–45 and 70 pS were detected, the events of the intermediate size being most frequently observed. In the presence of 8Br-cGMP, the γj distribution shifted to the lower size in rat Cx43 but not in human Cx43 transfectants. Immunoblot analyses of Cx43 in subconfluent cultures of rat Cx43 or human Cx43 transfectants showed that 8Br-cGMP did not induce changes in the electrophoretic mobility of Cx43 in either species. However, the basal incorporation of [32P] into rat Cx43 was significantly altered by 8Br-cGMP, whereas this incorporation of [32P] into human Cx43 was not affected. We conclude that 8Br-cGMP modulates phosphorylation of rat Cx43 in SKHep1 cells, but not of human Cx43. This cGMP-dependent phosphorylation of rat Cx43 is associated with a decreased gj, which results from both an increase in the relative frequency of the lowest conductance state and a change in the kinetics of these channels.


Circulation | 2010

Endothelial-Specific Deletion of Connexin40 Promotes Atherosclerosis by Increasing CD73-Dependent Leukocyte Adhesion

Christos E. Chadjichristos; K.E.L. Scheckenbach; T. A. B. van Veen; M.Z. Richani Sarieddine; C. de Wit; Zhihong Yang; Isabelle Roth; Marc Bacchetta; Hema Viswambharan; Bernard Foglia; T. Dudez; M.J.A. van Kempen; F.E.J. Coenjaerts; Lucile Miquerol; Urban Deutsch; Habo J. Jongsma; Marc Chanson; Brenda R. Kwak

Background— Endothelial dysfunction is the initiating event of atherosclerosis. The expression of connexin40 (Cx40), an endothelial gap junction protein, is decreased during atherogenesis. In the present report, we sought to determine whether Cx40 contributes to the development of the disease. Methods and Results— Mice with ubiquitous deletion of Cx40 are hypertensive, a risk factor for atherosclerosis. Consequently, we generated atherosclerosis-susceptible mice with endothelial-specific deletion of Cx40 (Cx40del mice). Cx40del mice were indeed not hypertensive. The progression of atherosclerosis was increased in Cx40del mice after 5 and 10 weeks of a high-cholesterol diet, and spontaneous lesions were observed in the aortic sinuses of young mice without such a diet. These lesions showed monocyte infiltration into the intima, increased expression of vascular cell adhesion molecule-1, and decreased expression of the ecto-enzyme CD73 in the endothelium. The proinflammatory phenotype of Cx40del mice was confirmed in another model of induced leukocyte recruitment from the lung microcirculation. Endothelial CD73 is known to induce antiadhesion signaling via the production of adenosine. We found that reducing Cx40 expression in vitro with small interfering RNA or antisense decreased CD73 expression and activity and increased leukocyte adhesion to mouse endothelial cells. These effects were reversed by an adenosine receptor agonist. Conclusions— Cx40-mediated gap junctional communication contributes to a quiescent nonactivated endothelium by propagating adenosine-evoked antiinflammatory signals between endothelial cells. Alteration in this mechanism by targeting Cx40 promotes leukocyte adhesion to the endothelium, thus accelerating atherosclerosis.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2012

Hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction requires connexin 40-mediated endothelial signal conduction.

Liming Wang; Jun Yin; Hannah T. Nickles; Hannes Ranke; Arata Tabuchi; Julia Hoffmann; Christoph Tabeling; Eduardo Barbosa-Sicard; Marc Chanson; Brenda R. Kwak; Hee-Sup Shin; Songwei Wu; Brant E. Isakson; Martin Witzenrath; Cor de Wit; Ingrid Fleming; Hermann Kuppe; Wolfgang M. Kuebler

Hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction (HPV) is a physiological mechanism by which pulmonary arteries constrict in hypoxic lung areas in order to redirect blood flow to areas with greater oxygen supply. Both oxygen sensing and the contractile response are thought to be intrinsic to pulmonary arterial smooth muscle cells. Here we speculated that the ideal site for oxygen sensing might instead be at the alveolocapillary level, with subsequent retrograde propagation to upstream arterioles via connexin 40 (Cx40) endothelial gap junctions. HPV was largely attenuated by Cx40-specific and nonspecific gap junction uncouplers in the lungs of wild-type mice and in lungs from mice lacking Cx40 (Cx40-/-). In vivo, hypoxemia was more severe in Cx40-/- mice than in wild-type mice. Real-time fluorescence imaging revealed that hypoxia caused endothelial membrane depolarization in alveolar capillaries that propagated to upstream arterioles in wild-type, but not Cx40-/-, mice. Transformation of endothelial depolarization into vasoconstriction involved endothelial voltage-dependent α1G subtype Ca2+ channels, cytosolic phospholipase A2, and epoxyeicosatrienoic acids. Based on these data, we propose that HPV originates at the alveolocapillary level, from which the hypoxic signal is propagated as endothelial membrane depolarization to upstream arterioles in a Cx40-dependent manner.


Circulation | 2006

Reduced Connexin43 Expression Limits Neointima Formation After Balloon Distension Injury in Hypercholesterolemic Mice

Christos E. Chadjichristos; Christian M. Matter; Isabelle Roth; Esther Sutter; Graziano Pelli; Thomas F. Lüscher; Marc Chanson; Brenda R. Kwak

Background— Reducing the expression of the gap junction protein connexin43 (Cx43) inhibits the progression of atherosclerosis, a chronic inflammatory disease. Furthermore, acute vascular injury induced by percutaneous coronary interventions is associated with increased Cx43 expression in neointimal smooth muscle cells (SMCs). However, the relevance of Cx43 after acute vascular injury remains unclear. Methods and Results— To investigate whether reducing Cx43 expression would affect neointima formation in vivo, we subjected hypercholesterolemic Cx43+/− LDL receptor–deficient (LDLR−/−) mice and Cx43+/+LDLR−/− control littermates to carotid balloon distension injury, which induced marked endothelial denudation and activation of medial SMCs. We observed decreased macrophage infiltration in Cx43+/−LDLR−/− mice 7 days after injury. Similarly, peritoneal macrophages isolated from Cx43+/−LDLR−/− mice showed reduced migration in vitro compared with Cx43+/+LDLR−/− macrophages. Interestingly, Cx43+/−LDLR−/− macrophages also displayed decreased chemotactic activity for SMCs. In addition, we observed less SMC infiltration and proliferation in Cx43+/−LDLR−/− mice 7 and 14 days after balloon angioplasty. Likewise, Cx43+/−LDLR−/− SMCs showed decreased proliferation and migration in vitro compared with Cx43+/+LDLR−/− cells. All these events resulted in a reduction of neointimal thickening after vascular injury in Cx43+/−LDLR−/− mice. Conclusions— The present study shows for the first time that reducing Cx43 limits neointima formation after acute vascular injury by decreasing the inflammatory response and reducing SMC migration and proliferation. Thus, decreasing Cx43 expression may offer a novel therapeutic strategy for reducing restenosis after percutaneous coronary intervention.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2008

Role of Gas6 in erythropoiesis and anemia in mice

Anne Angelillo-Scherrer; Laurent Burnier; Diether Lambrechts; Richard J. Fish; Marc Tjwa; Stephane Plaisance; Rocco Sugamele; M Demol; Eduardo Martinez-Soria; Patrick H. Maxwell; Greg Lemke; Stephen P. Goff; Glenn K. Matsushima; H. Shelton Earp; Marc Chanson; Desire Collen; Shozo Izui; Marc Schapira; Edward M. Conway; Peter Carmeliet

Many patients with anemia fail to respond to treatment with erythropoietin (Epo), a commonly used hormone that stimulates erythroid progenitor production and maturation by human BM or by murine spleen. The protein product of growth arrest-specific gene 6 (Gas6) is important for cell survival across several cell types, but its precise physiological role remains largely enigmatic. Here, we report that murine erythroblasts released Gas6 in response to Epo and that Gas6 enhanced Epo receptor signaling by activating the serine-threonine kinase Akt in these cells. In the absence of Gas6, erythroid progenitors and erythroblasts were hyporesponsive to the survival activity of Epo and failed to restore hematocrit levels in response to anemia. In addition, Gas6 may influence erythropoiesis via paracrine erythroblast-independent mechanisms involving macrophages. When mice with acute anemia were treated with Gas6, the protein normalized hematocrit levels without causing undesired erythrocytosis. In a transgenic mouse model of chronic anemia caused by insufficient Epo production, Gas6 synergized with Epo in restoring hematocrit levels. These findings may have implications for the treatment of patients with anemia who fail to adequately respond to Epo.


Experimental Cell Research | 1991

In vivo modulation of connexin 43 gene expression and junctional coupling of pancreatic B-cells

Paolo Meda; Marc Chanson; Michael S. Pepper; Emanuele Giordano; Domenico Bosco; Otto Traub; Klaus Willecke; Abdelakim El Aoumari; Daniel Gros; Eric C. Beyer; Lelio Orci; David C. Spray

We have explored the expression of gap junctional proteins and corresponding mRNAs by insulin-producing B-cells of native rat pancreas and of a transplantable rat insulinoma. By immunostaining cryostat sections (indirect immunofluorescence) and crude membrane preparations (Western blots) with antibodies against connexins 26, 32, and 43 and by hybridizing total islet and insulinoma RNA (Northern blot) with cRNAs for the latter two proteins, we have found that normal and tumoral B-cells express connexin 43 but do not show detectable levels of either connexin 32 or 26. By evaluating the conductance (dual patch-clamp whole-cell recording) and permeability of junctional channels (microinjection of Lucifer yellow), we have found that control B-cells show low levels of electrical and dye coupling in only a portion of the pairs studied. By studying B-cells of glibenclamide-treated rats, we have found that sustained stimulation of insulin release in vivo is associated with a two-fold increase in the level of connexin 43 gene transcripts and in the incidence of both ionic and dye coupling. These observations indicate that (1) connexin 43 is a major component of communicating channels between insulin-producing cells; (2) some but not all B-cells are electrically coupled by low conductance junctional channels; and (3) connexin 43 gene transcripts and incidence of junctional coupling are modulated in parallel during sustained stimulation of B-cell functioning in vivo.


Journal of Cell Science | 2003

A tyrosine-based sorting signal is involved in connexin43 stability and gap junction turnover.

Marc A. Thomas; Nathalie Zosso; Isabelle Scerri; Nicolas Demaurex; Marc Chanson; Olivier Staub

The gap junction protein connexin43 is known to have a rapid turnover, involving degradation by both the proteasomal and lysosomal systems, but the structural features of connexin43 that govern these actions are not known. The connexin43 C-terminal sequence contains a proline-rich region corresponding to the consensus of a protein-protein interaction PY-motif (xPPxY), and an overlapping putative tyrosine-based sorting signal (Yxxϕ;ϕ =hydrophobic), known to play a role in the intracellular trafficking of many membrane proteins. As both motifs may control turnover of connexin43, we used a combination of metabolic radiolabelling, immuno-precipitation and functional assays to determine the possible role of these motifs in controlling degradation of human connexin43 expressed in SKHep1 cells. Mutation V289D in the tyrosine-based sorting motif increased the steady-state pool of connexin43 by approximately 3.5-fold, while mutation P283L in the PY-motif produced a comparatively modest augmentation (1.7-fold). No additive effect was observed when the overlapping tyrosine was mutated. In pulse-chase experiments, the Y286A substitution increased the half-life of connexin43 from 2 to 6 hours, indicating that the increased steady-state levels reflected reduced protein degradation. Moreover, expression at the junctional membrane, as well as gap junction-mediated intercellular communication (GJC), were nearly abolished by lysosomal inhibitors and Brefeldin A in cells expressing wild-type connexin43, but were unaffected in the tyrosine mutant. These results provide strong evidence that the tyrosine-based motif of human connexin43 is a prime determinant controlling connexin43 stability, and consequently GJC, by targeting connexin43 for degradation in the endocytic/lysosomal compartment.

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