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Dive into the research topics where Marlène Z. Lacroix is active.

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Featured researches published by Marlène Z. Lacroix.


Environmental Health Perspectives | 2013

High Bioavailability of Bisphenol A from Sublingual Exposure

Véronique Gayrard; Marlène Z. Lacroix; Séverine H. Collet; Catherine Viguié; Alain Bousquet-Mélou; Pierre-Louis Toutain; Nicole Picard-Hagen

Background: Bisphenol A (BPA) risk assessment is currently hindered by the rejection of reported higher-than-expected plasma BPA concentrations in humans after oral ingestion. These are deemed incompatible with the almost complete hepatic first-pass metabolism of BPA into its inactive glucurono-conjugated form, BPA glucuronide (BPAG). Objectives: Using dogs as a valid model, we compared plasma concentrations of BPA over a 24-hr period after intravenous, orogastric, and sublingual administration in order to establish the absolute bioavailability of BPA administered sublingually and to compare it with oral bioavailability. Methods: Six dogs were sublingually administered BPA at 0.05 mg/kg and 5 mg/kg. We compared the time course of plasma BPA concentrations with that obtained in the same dogs after intravenous administration of the same BPA doses and after a 20-mg/kg BPA dose administrated by orogastric gavage. Results: The data indicated that the systemic bioavailability of BPA deposited sublingually was high (70–90%) and that BPA transmucosal absorption from the oral cavity led to much higher BPA internal exposure than obtained for BPA absorption from the gastrointestinal tract. The concentration ratio of BPAG to BPA in plasma was approximately 100-fold lower following sublingual administration than after orogastric dosing, distinguishing the two pathways of absorption. Conclusions: Our findings demonstrate that BPA can be efficiently and very rapidly absorbed through the oral mucosa after sublingual exposure. This efficient systemic entry route of BPA may lead to far higher BPA internal exposures than known for BPA absorption from the gastrointestinal tract.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Differential Effects of Bisphenol A and Diethylstilbestrol on Human, Rat and Mouse Fetal Leydig Cell Function

Thierry N’Tumba-Byn; Delphine Moison; Marlène Z. Lacroix; Charlotte Lécureuil; Laëtitia Lesage; Sophie M. Prud’homme; Stéphanie Pozzi-Gaudin; R. Frydman; Alexandra Benachi; Gabriel Livera; Virginie Rouiller-Fabre; René Habert

Endocrine disruptors (ED) have been incriminated in the current increase of male reproductive alterations. Bisphenol A (BPA) is a widely used weak estrogenic environmental ED and it is debated whether BPA concentrations within the average internal exposure are toxic. In the present study we investigated the effects of 10−12 to 10−5 M BPA concentrations on fetal Leydig cell function, as fetal life is a critical period of sensitivity to ED effects on male reproductive function. To this aim, fetal testes from human at 6.5–10.5 gestational weeks (GW) or from rat and mouse at a comparable critical period of development (14.5 days post-coitum (dpc) for rat and 12.5 dpc for mouse) were explanted and cultured using our validated organotypic culture system in the presence or absence of BPA for 1–3 days. BPA concentrations as low as 10−8 M reduced testosterone secretion by human testes from day 1 of culture onwards, but not by mouse and rat testes where concentrations equal to 10−5 M BPA were required. Similarly, 10−8 M BPA reduced INSL3 mRNA levels only in human cultured testes. On the contrary, 10−5 and 10−6 M diethylstilbestrol (DES), a classical estrogenic compound, affected testosterone secretion only in rat and mouse testis cultures, but not in human testis cultures. Lastly, contrarily to the DES effect, the negative effect of BPA on testosterone produced by the mouse fetal testis was maintained after invalidation of estrogen receptor α (ERα). In conclusion, these results evidenced i) a deleterious effect of BPA on fetal Leydig cells function in human for concentrations from 10−8 M upwards, ii) species-specific differences raising concerns about extrapolation of data from rodent studies to human risk assessment, iii) a specific signaling pathway for BPA which differs from the DES one and which does not involve ERα.


Journal of Chromatography B | 2010

Quantification of fipronil and its metabolite fipronil sulfone in rat plasma over a wide range of concentrations by LC/UV/MS.

Marlène Z. Lacroix; Sylvie Puel; Pierre-Louis Toutain; Catherine Viguié

Fipronil is an insecticide extensively used to treat pets, which has been identified as a potential thyroid disruptor in the rat. In this species, fipronil is mainly metabolized to fipronil sulfone and plasma concentrations of fipronil sulfone can be at least 20-fold higher than those of fipronil. Investigations of fipronil and fipronil sulfone exposure in blood remain sparse because of the lack of convenient and suitable analytical methods. We have developed and validated an LC/UV/MS/MS method to quantify both fipronil and fipronil sulfone within a wide range of concentrations in rat plasma. The double detection UV and MS coupled on-line enabled the concentrations to be measured over a 3 Log range (2.5-2500 ng/mL). The volume of sample required for the extraction by solid phase extraction was reduced to 75 microL with a recovery higher than 70%. The two-detection method agreement, evaluated with a Bland-Altman plot, was good for concentrations between 50 and 150 ng/mL. The method was applied to monitor plasma concentrations following a commonly used dosage regimen for the toxicological evaluation of fipronil in rats.


Biology of Reproduction | 2013

Bisphenol A Disposition in the Sheep Maternal-Placental-Fetal Unit: Mechanisms Determining Fetal Internal Exposure

Tanguy Corbel; Véronique Gayrard; Catherine Viguié; Sylvie Puel; Marlène Z. Lacroix; Pierre-Louis Toutain; Nicole Picard-Hagen

ABSTRACT The widespread human exposure to bisphenol A (BPA), a xenoestrogen interfering with developmental processes, raises the question of the mechanisms determining fetal exposure to BPA. A physiological model was developed in ewes to determine whether the pregnancy-associated physiological changes and the metabolic specificities of the fetal-placental unit can influence BPA toxicokinetics (TK) and fetal exposure to BPA. In a first longitudinal study, BPA was infused (2 mg/[kg·day] i.v. for 1 day) into ewes before breeding, at early and late stages of gestation, and after lambing. In a second study, BPA and BPA-glucuronide (BPA-G) were infused intravenously into pregnant ewes or into fetuses at 4 mo of gestation. BPA and its metabolites were assayed in maternal and fetal plasma and amniotic fluid sampled at steady state and after the end of the infusion. The pregnancy status did not modify the TK parameters of BPA and of BPA-G. Five percent of the BPA dose infused into the pregnant ewe was transferred across the placenta to the fetus. The fetal-placental unit was very efficient in metabolizing BPA into conjugated compounds; those metabolites remained trapped in the fetal-placental compartment, leading to a high fetal exposure to BPA conjugates. Taking into account a body weight adjustment, the ovine fetus in late pregnancy is exposed to a BPA dose similar to that of its mother. In contrast to its mother, the fetus exhibits much higher and sustained exposure to BPA metabolites without evidence of their hydrolysis.


Drug Metabolism and Disposition | 2015

Conjugation and Deconjugation Reactions within the Fetoplacental Compartment in a Sheep Model: A Key Factor Determining Bisphenol A Fetal Exposure

Tanguy Corbel; Elisabeth Perdu; Véronique Gayrard; Sylvie Puel; Marlène Z. Lacroix; Catherine Viguié; Pierre-Louis Toutain; Daniel Zalko; Nicole Picard-Hagen

The widespread human exposure to bisphenol A (BPA), an endocrine disruptor targeting developmental processes, underlines the need to better understand the mechanisms of fetal exposure. Animal studies have shown that at a late stage of pregnancy BPA is efficiently conjugated by the fetoplacental unit, mainly into BPA-glucuronide (BPA-G), which remains trapped within the fetoplacental unit. Fetal exposure to BPA-G might in turn contribute to in situ exposure to bioactive BPA, following its deconjugation into parent BPA at the level of fetal sensitive tissues. The objectives of our study were 1) to characterize the BPA glucurono- and sulfoconjugation capabilities of the ovine fetal liver at different developmental stages, 2) to compare hepatic conjugation activities in human and sheep, and 3) to evaluate the extent of BPA conjugation and deconjugation processes in placenta and fetal gonads. At an early stage of pregnancy, and despite functional sulfoconjugation activity, ovine fetuses expressed low hepatic BPA conjugation capabilities, suggesting that this stage of development represents a critical window in terms of BPA exposure. Conversely, the late ovine fetus expressed an efficient detoxification system that metabolized BPA into BPA-G. Hepatic glucuronidation activities were quantitatively similar in adult sheep and humans. In placenta, BPA conjugation and BPA-G deconjugation activities were relatively balanced, whereas BPA-G hydrolysis was systematically higher than BPA conjugation in gonads. The possible reactivation of BPA-G into BPA could contribute to an increased exposure of fetal sensitive tissues to bioactive BPA in situ.


Toxicological Sciences | 2010

Estrogenicity of Bisphenol A: A Concentration-Effect Relationship on Luteinizing Hormone Secretion in a Sensitive Model of Prepubertal Lamb

Séverine H. Collet; Nicole Picard-Hagen; Catherine Viguié; Marlène Z. Lacroix; Pierre-Louis Toutain; Véronique Gayrard

The model of the prepubertal ovariectomized lamb was selected as a sensitive model to characterize the estrogenic effects of bisphenol A (BPA) on the hypothalamo-pituitary axis (HPA). In a first experiment, the disrupting effect of BPA and of 17-beta estradiol (E2), administered as a constant 54-h iv infusion, on luteinizing hormone (LH) pulsatility was quantified. The results showed that the inhibitory effect of BPA and E2 on LH secretion appeared to follow a dual mechanism: a rapid (about 1 h) suppressive effect for high exposure and an effect observed with a period of latency (about 48 h) probably of genomic origin and observed for lower E2 and BPA levels. For E2, the disrupting dose was 0.14 microg/(kg x d), corresponding to a plasma concentration of 2 pg/ml; for BPA, the lowest observed disrupting plasma concentration was 38 ng/ml, a value only 10-fold higher than the human plasma concentration routinely reported in biomonitoring surveys. In a second experiment, we showed that after 7 weeks of BPA treatment, there was no BPA accumulation and no evidence of an alteration in the HPA responsiveness to BPA. Finally, our results showed that directly considering plasma concentrations, the ratio of the BPA disrupting plasma concentration in lambs over the observed human plasma concentration is only 10, whereas if the dose is considered, it could be concluded that the BPA disrupting dose in lamb is conservatively 50-fold higher than the currently recommended Tolerable Daily Intake of 50 microg/(kg x d).


Endocrinology | 2013

Maternal and fetal exposure to bisphenol a is associated with alterations of thyroid function in pregnant ewes and their newborn lambs.

Catherine Viguié; Séverine H. Collet; Véronique Gayrard; Nicole Picard-Hagen; Sylvie Puel; Béatrice B. Roques; Pierre-Louis Toutain; Marlène Z. Lacroix

The putative thyroid-disrupting properties of bisphenol A (BPA) highlight the need for an evaluation of fetal exposure and its consequence on the mother/newborn thyroid functions in models relevant to human. The goals of this study were to characterize in sheep a relevant model for human pregnancy and thyroid physiology, the internal exposures of the fetuses and their mothers to BPA and its main metabolite BPA-glucuronide (Gluc), and to determine to what extent it might be associated with thyroid disruption. Ewes were treated with BPA [5 mg/(kg · d) sc] or vehicle from d 28 until the end of pregnancy. Unconjugated BPA did not appear to accumulate in pregnant ewes, and its concentration was similar in the newborns and their mothers (0.13 ± 0.02 and 0.18 ± 0.03 nmol/ml in cord and maternal blood, respectively). In amniotic fluid and cord blood, BPA-Gluc concentrations were about 1300-fold higher than those of BPA. Total T(4) concentrations were decreased in BPA-treated pregnant ewes and in the cord and the jugular blood of their newborns (30% decrease). A similar difference was observed for free T(4) plasma concentrations in the jugular blood of the newborns. Our results show in a long-gestation species with a similar regulatory scheme of thyroid function as humans that BPA in utero exposure can be associated with hypothyroidism in the newborns. If such an effect were to be confirmed for a more relevant exposure scheme to BPA, this would constitute a major issue for BPA risk assessment.


Environment International | 2016

Bisphenol A glucuronide deconjugation is a determining factor of fetal exposure to bisphenol A

Glenn Gauderat; Nicole Picard-Hagen; Pierre-Louis Toutain; Tanguy Corbel; Catherine Viguié; Sylvie Puel; Marlène Z. Lacroix; Pierre Mindeguia; Alain Bousquet-Mélou; Véronique Gayrard

Previous studies in experimental animals have shown that maternal exposure to bisphenol A (BPA) during late pregnancy leads to high plasma concentrations of BPA glucuronide (BPAG) in fetus compared to mother due to the inability of BPAG to cross the placental barrier. A recent in vitro study has reported that BPAG can exert adipogenic effect underlining the need for characterization of the fetal disposition of BPAG. Experiments were conducted in chronically catheterized fetal sheep to determine the contribution of BPAG hydrolysis to BPA to the elimination of BPAG from the fetal compartment and its resulting effect on the overall fetal exposure to free BPA. Serial sampling of fetal arterial blood, amniotic fluid, maternal venous blood and urine was performed following separate single doses of BPA and BPAG administered intravenously to eight fetal/maternal pairs after cesarean section, and repeated BPAG doses given to two fetal sheep. On average 67% of the BPA entering the fetal circulation was rapidly eliminated through fetal to maternal clearance, with a very short half-life (20 min), while the remaining fraction (24%) was glucuronoconjugated. BPA conjugation-deconjugation cycling was responsible for a 43% increase of the overall fetal exposure to free BPA. A very specific pattern of fetal exposure to free BPA was observed due to its highly increased persistence with a hydrolysis-dependent plasma terminal free BPA half-life of several tens of hours. These findings suggest that although the high fetal to maternal clearance of free BPA protects the fetus from transient increases in free BPA plasma concentrations associated with maternal BPA intake, low but sustained basal free BPA concentrations are maintained in the fetus through BPA conjugation-deconjugation cycling. The potential health implications of these low but sustained basal concentrations of free BPA in fetal plasma should be addressed especially when considering time-dependent effects.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2011

Paw Inflammation Model in Dogs for Preclinical Pharmacokinetic/Pharmacodynamic Investigations of Nonsteroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs

Elisabeth Jeunesse; Isabelle A Bargues; Celine E Toutain; Marlène Z. Lacroix; Ingrid M. Letellier; Jerome M Giraudel; Pierre-Louis Toutain

The goal of the present study was to develop and validate a new canine model of inflammation. The motivation was to make available a scientifically appropriate and ethically acceptable model to conduct pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic investigations for testing nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs in dogs. A kaolin-induce paw inflammation model previously developed in cats was adapted to the dog. The paw inflammation developed within a few hours, reached maximum values 24 h and up to 3 days after kaolin administration, and then progressively resolved over 2 months. Five end points of clinical interest (body temperature, creeping time under a tunnel, paw withdrawal latency to a standardized thermal stimulus, lameness score, and vertical force developed during walking on a force plate) were measured regularly over the next 24 h and beyond to characterize the time development of the inflammation either in control conditions (placebo period) or after the administration of meloxicam (test period) according to a crossover design. Pharmacodynamic data were modeled using an indirect response pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic model. This model described three effects of meloxicam, namely, classic anti-inflammatory, analgesic, and antipyretic effects. The mean plasma meloxicam IC50 values were 210 ng/ml for the antipyretic effect, 390 ng/ml for the analgesic effect, and 546 ng/ml for the vertical force exerted by the paw on the ground as measured by force plates. These in vivo IC50 values require approximately 80 (antipyretic effect) to 90% (all other effects) cyclooxygenase-2 inhibition as calculated ex vivo whole-blood assay data.


Veterinary Surgery | 2011

Laparoscopic-assisted colopexy and sterilization in male dogs: short-term results and physiologic consequences.

Didier Mathon; Sophie Palierne; Patricia Meynaud‐Collard; Catherine Layssol‐Lamour; Alice Dulaurent‐ Ferrieres; Arnaud Colson; Marlène Z. Lacroix; Alain Bousquet-Mélou; Maxence Delverdier; André Autefage

OBJECTIVE To describe laparoscopic-assisted colopexy and sterilization, and evaluate outcome and effects in healthy male dogs. STUDY DESIGN Experimental study. ANIMALS Male Beagle dogs (n=7). METHODS A laparoscopic-assisted, extracorporeally sutured colopexy, and sterilization by ligation and section of the testicular vessels and ductus deferens were evaluated 11 weeks after surgery. Ex vivo tensile tests were performed on the colopexy sites and loss of testicular function was assessed by monitoring serum testosterone, and by ultrasonographic and histologic examinations of the testes. Systemic inflammation and potential iatrogenic colonic functional disorders were investigated by monitoring serum C-reactive protein (CRP) in the perioperative period and from a sulfapyridine (SP) kinetic profile obtained before and 10 weeks after surgery. RESULTS No intraoperative complications were recorded and clinical outcome was considered fair in all dogs. A mean tensile force of 42 N was required to disrupt colopexies. No relevant postoperative increase in CRP concentrations or changes in SP kinetics were observed. Testicular function was lost. CONCLUSIONS Laparoscopic-assisted colopexy achieved adhesion of the colon to the abdominal wall and testicular endocrine function and spermatogenesis were eliminated by laparoscopic castration.

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Dive into the Marlène Z. Lacroix's collaboration.

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Pierre-Louis Toutain

École nationale vétérinaire de Toulouse

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Catherine Viguié

École nationale vétérinaire de Toulouse

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Nicole Picard-Hagen

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Véronique Gayrard

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Alain Bousquet-Mélou

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Sylvie Puel

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Séverine H. Collet

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Glenn Gauderat

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Tanguy Corbel

École nationale vétérinaire de Toulouse

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Béatrice B. Roques

École nationale vétérinaire de Toulouse

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