Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Maurice Dufour is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Maurice Dufour.


Biology of Reproduction | 2002

Effect of Bovine Oviduct Epithelial Cell Apical Plasma Membranes on Sperm Function Assessed by a Novel Flow Cytometric Approach

Mathieu Boilard; Janice L. Bailey; Simon Collin; Maurice Dufour; Marc-André Sirard

Abstract In the bovine, as in many mammalian species, sperm are temporarily stored in the oviduct before fertilization by binding to the oviduct epithelial cell apical plasma membranes. As the oviduct is able to maintain motility and viability of sperm and modulate capacitation, we propose that proteins present on the apical plasma membrane of oviduct epithelial cells contribute to these effects. To verify this hypothesis, the motility of frozen-thawed sperm was determined after incubation for 6 h with purified apical plasma membranes from fresh or cultured oviduct epithelial cells or from bovine mammary gland cells as a control. Analysis of intracellular calcium levels was performed by flow cytometry on sperm incubated with fresh membranes using Indo-1 to assess the membrane effect on intracellular calcium concentration. The coculture of sperm with fresh and cultured apical membranes maintained initial motility for 6 h (65% and 84%, respectively). This effect was significantly different from control sperm incubated without oviduct epithelial cell apical membranes (23%), with mammary gland cell apical membranes (23%), or with boiled epithelial cell apical membranes (21%). Apical membranes from oviduct epithelial cells diminished the percentage of sperm that reached a lethal calcium concentration over a 4-h period (18.7%) compared with the control (53.8%) and maintained lower intracellular calcium levels in viable sperm. These results show that the apical plasma membrane of bovine oviduct epithelial cells contains anchored proteinic factors that contribute to maintaining motility and viability and possibly to modulating capacitation of bovine sperm.


Biology of Reproduction | 2002

Regulation of the Phosphotyrosine Content of Human Sperm Proteins by Intracellular Ca2+: Role of Ca2+-Adenosine Triphosphatases

Véronique Dorval; Maurice Dufour; Pierre Leclerc

Abstract An increase in the concentration of intracellular free Ca2+ and in the phosphotyrosine content of specific proteins characterizes human sperm capacitation. Whether tyrosine phosphorylation regulates the intracellular free Ca2+ concentration through modulation of Ca2+-ATPase activity or the phosphotyrosine content is under Ca2+ regulation was investigated using Ca2+-ATPase modulators and tyrosine kinase inhibitors. The presence of the Ca2+-ATPase-inhibitor thapsigargin during human sperm capacitation caused an increase in the cytoplasmic free Ca2+ concentration and was associated with an increase in the phosphotyrosine content of specific sperm proteins. Conversely, a decrease in protein tyrosine phosphorylation was observed when gingerol, a Ca2+-ATPase activator, was present during the incubation period. On the other hand, thapsigargin had no effect on the phosphotyrosine content or the cytoplasmic Ca2+ concentration when spermatozoa were incubated in the presence of the phosphodiesterase-inhibitor 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (IBMX). However, the effect of IBMX on phosphotyrosine-containing proteins appears to be a Ca2+-dependent phenomenon, because it was partly inhibited in spermatozoa pretreated with 1,2-bis-(o-aminophenoxy)-ethane-N,N,N,N-tetraacetic acid tetra-(acetoxymethyl)-ester (BAPTA-AM) even though, by itself, BAPTA-AM caused an increase in sperm protein phosphotyrosine content. Tyrosine kinase inhibitors prevented the increase in the phosphotyrosine content without affecting the cytoplasmic free Ca2+ concentration. Based on these findings, the present study suggests that Ca2+-ATPases are involved in the filling of internal Ca2+ stores, such as the acrosome, and are inhibited later during capacitation. Their inhibition allows an increase in cytoplasmic free Ca2+, which is involved in the subsequent increase in the phosphotyrosine content of specific sperm proteins.


Molecular Reproduction and Development | 1998

Steroid production, cell proliferation, and apoptosis in cultured bovine antral and mural granulosa cells: Development of an in vitro model to study estradiol production

Paul Rouillier; P. Matton; Maurice Dufour; Marc-André Sirard; L.A. Guilbault

This study was undertaken to characterize the relationship between changes in steroid production, cell cycle activity (ie, cell proliferation) and apoptosis in antral and mural bovine granulosa cells cultured in vitro. This was done to select conditions promoting optimal estradiol production by bovine granulosa cells cultured in completely defined conditions. In the first experiment, antral granulosa cells were cultured over the entire 4 days of the culture period in the presence of either 0, 2, or 10 ng/ml of FSH (chronic conditions) or were maintained under minimal FSH support (0.5 ng/ml FSH) for the first 3 days of culture and then were challenged over the fourth day of culture with either 0, 2, or 10 ng/ml FSH (challenged conditions). Compared with cells exposed to constant FSH levels (chronic conditions), the FSH‐induced production of estradiol was higher (P < 0.006) and that of progesterone was lower (P < 0.02) over the last 24 h of culture, when antral granulosa cells were maintained under minimal FSH support during the first 3 days of culture (challenged conditions). In the second experiment, dynamics of estradiol and progesterone productions, conversion of [14C]androstenedione into subsequent steroid metabolites, DNA content, cell cycle activity, and apoptosis (as assessed by flow cytometry) of antral and mural granulosa cells over the first 3 days of culture under minimal FSH support and in response to a challenge with FSH during the last 24 h of culture were evaluated. Estradiol production as well as the conversion of androstenedione into testosterone and estradiol were greater (P< 0.01) in antral than in mural granulosa cells cultured under challenged conditions. A higher proportion of mural than antral granulosa cells were in the proliferative state at the end of culture (P < 0.03). This may be related to the decreased ability of mural cells to produce estradiol. FSH suppressed (P < 0.05) the spontaneous onset of apoptosis in both cell types. These results suggest that functional differences between these two cell compartments need to be considered in studying bovine granulosa cells in vitro. Because of their large (400 to 600%) FSH‐induced estradiol production, antral granulosa cells cultured under challenged conditions provide a model that can be used to examine substances for their ability to alter estradiol production and apoptosis in bovine granulosa cells. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 50:170–177, 1998.


Biology of Reproduction | 2012

ATP-Binding Cassette Transporter G2 Activity in the Bovine Spermatozoa Is Modulated Along the Epididymal Duct and at Ejaculation

Julieta Caballero; Gilles Frenette; Olivier D'Amours; Maurice Dufour; Richard Oko; Robert Sullivan

ABSTRACT During their epididymal maturation, stabilizing factors such as cholesterol sulfate are associated with the sperm plasma membrane. Cholesterol is sulfated in epididymal spermatozoa by the enzyme estrogen sulfotransferase. Because of its role in the efflux of sulfate conjugates formed intracellularly by sulfotransferases, the ATP-binding cassette membrane transporter G2 (ABCG2) might have a role in the translocation of this compound across the plasma membrane. In the present study we showed that ABCG2 is present in the plasma membrane overlaying the acrosomal region of spermatozoa recovered from testis, epididymis, and after ejaculation. Although ABCG2 is also present in epididymosomes, the transporter is not transferred to spermatozoa via this mechanism. Furthermore, although epididymal sperm ABCG2 was shown to be functional, as determined by its ability to extrude Hoechst 33342 in the presence of the specific inhibitor Fumitremorgin C, ABCG2 present in ejaculated sperm was found to be nonfunctional. Additional experiments demonstrated that phosphorylation of ABCG2 tyrosyl residues, but not its localization in lipid rafts, is the mechanism responsible for its functionality. Dephosphorylation of ABCG2 in ejaculated spermatozoa is proposed to cause a partial protein relocalization to other intracellular compartments. Prostasomes are proposed to have a role in this process because incubation with this fraction of seminal plasma induces a decrease in the amount of ABCG2 in the associated sperm membrane fraction. These results demonstrate that ABCG2 plays a role in epididymal sperm maturation, but not after ejaculation. The loss of ABCG2 function after ejaculation is proposed to be regulated by prostasomes.


Journal of Immunological Methods | 2009

A rapid flow cytometry assay for the assessment of calcium mobilization in human neutrophils in a small volume of lysed whole-blood.

Philippe Desmeules; Maurice Dufour; Maria J. G. Fernandes

Flow cytometry-based methods have been developed to measure most neutrophil responses. The assessment of the mobilization of calcium, however, is routinely performed on neutrophils isolated from whole blood. This report describes a flow cytometry-based assay to measure the mobilization of calcium in neutrophils directly in whole blood. This method requires minimal sample manipulation, small volumes of blood and is performed in a short period of time. Both clinical and research laboratories will be able to assess neutrophil function and the quality of granulocyte preparations using a more time and cost effective calcium mobilization test.


Progress in Neuro-psychopharmacology | 1980

Influence of drug associations incorporting psychotropic drugs and theophylline on cerebral cyclic AMP in mice

Pritam Singh; Maurice Dufour; Claire D'Auteuil

Abstract 1. 1. This study found that the administration of chlorpromazine decresed whole brain cyclic AMP in mice. The decreases induced by phenobarbital, promazine and theophylline were not significant. 2. 2. The association of theophylline with promazine significantly increased whole brain cyclic AMP. 3. 3. Theophylline counteracted the diazepam induced decreased in plasma cyclic AMP. 4. 4. A marked decrease in cortical cyclic AMP induced by theophylline, chlorpromazine, promazine and phenobarbital was noted. This decrease was prolonged and was evident even after one hour. 5. 5. Although theophylline, chlorpromazine, promazine, and phenobarbital did not affect cyclic AMP content of striatum, the association of theophylline with chlorpromazine or promazine resulted in significant lowering of striatal cyclic AMP.


Journal of Andrology | 2004

Cryopreservation of ram semen facilitates sperm DNA damage: Relationship between sperm andrological parameters and the sperm chromatin structure assay

Soliman I. Peris; Ariane Morrier; Maurice Dufour; Janice L. Bailey


Molecular Reproduction and Development | 2007

Impact of cryopreservation and reactive oxygen species on DNA integrity, lipid peroxidation, and functional parameters in ram sperm

Soliman I. Peris; Jean-François Bilodeau; Maurice Dufour; Janice L. Bailey


Biology of Reproduction | 1996

Analysis of atresia in bovine follicles using different methods: flow cytometry, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, and classic histology.

Patrick Blondin; Maurice Dufour; Marc-André Sirard


Journal of Andrology | 2000

Sperm calcium levels and chlortetracycline fluorescence patterns are related to the in vivo fertility of Cryopreserved bovine semen

Simon Collin; Marc-André Sirard; Maurice Dufour; Janice L. Bailey

Collaboration


Dive into the Maurice Dufour's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge