Maurice Israël
French Institute of Health and Medical Research
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Featured researches published by Maurice Israël.
American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 2008
Laurent Schwartz; Mohammad Abolhassani; Mohammad Pooya; Jean-Marc Steyaert; Xavier Wertz; Maurice Israël; Adeline Guais; Philippe Chaumet-Riffaud
There are several reports suggesting hyperosmotic contents in the feces of patients suffering from inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Previous works have documented that hyperosmolarity can cause inflammation attributable to methylation of the catalytic subunit of protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) and subsequent NF-kappaB activation resulting in cytokine secretion. In this study, we demonstrate that dextran sulfate sodium (DSS) induces colitis due to hyperosmolarity and subsequent PP2A activation. Mice were randomized and fed with increased concentrations of DSS (0 mOsm, 175 mOsm, 300 mOsm, and 627 mOsm) for a duration of 3 wk or with hyperosmotic concentrations of DSS (627 mOsm) or mannitol (450 mOsm) for a duration of 12 wk. Long-term oral administration of hyposmotic DSS or mannitol had no demonstrable effect. Hyperosmotic DSS or mannitol produced a significant increase in colonic inflammation, as well as an increase in the weight of sacral lymph nodes and in serum amyloid A protein levels. Similar results were obtained through the ingestion of comparable osmolarities of mannitol. Hyperosmolarity induces the methylation of PP2A, nuclear p65 NF-kappaB activation. and cytokine secretion. The rectal instillation of okadaic acid, a well-known PP2A inhibitor, reverses the IBD. Short inhibiting RNAs (siRNAs) targeted toward PP2Ac reverse the effect of hyperosmotic DSS. The present study strongly suggests that DSS-induced chronic colitis is a consequence of the methylation of PP2Ac induced by hyperosmolarity.
Investigational New Drugs | 2012
Mohammad Abolhassani; Adeline Guais; Edward Sanders; Frédéric Campion; Iduna Fichtner; Jacques Bonte; Gianfranco Baronzio; Giammaria Fiorentini; Maurice Israël; Laurent Schwartz
SummaryAlterations in metabolic pathways are known to characterize cancer. In order to suppress cancer growth, however, multiple proteins involved in these pathways have to be targeted simultaneously. We have developed a screening method to assess the best drug combination for cancer treatment based on targeting several factors implicated in tumor specific metabolism. Following a review of the literature, we identified those enzymes known to be deregulated in cancer and established a list of sixty-two drugs targeting them. These molecules are used routinely in clinical settings for diseases other than cancer. We screened a first library in vitro against four cell lines and then evaluated the most promising binary combinations in vivo against three murine syngeneic cancer models, (LL/2, Lewis lung carcinoma; B16-F10, melanoma; and MBT-2, bladder cancer). The optimum result was obtained using a combination of α-lipoic acid and hydroxycitrate (METABLOCTM). In this study, a third agent was added by in vivo evaluation of a large number of combinations. The addition of octreotide strongly reduced tumor development (T/C% value of 30.2 to 34.5%; P < 0.001) in the same models and prolonged animal survival (P < 0.001) as compared to cisplatin. These results were confirmed in a different laboratory setting using a human xenograft model (NCI-H69, small cell lung cancer). None of these three molecules are known to target DNA. The effectiveness of this combination in several animal models, as well as the low toxicity of these inexpensive drugs, emphasizes the necessity of rapidly setting up a clinical trial.
Investigational New Drugs | 2013
Laurent Schwartz; Adeline Guais; Maurice Israël; Bernard Junod; Jean-Marc Steyaert; Elisabetta Crespi; Gianfranco Baronzio; Mohammad Abolhassani
SummaryCellular metabolic alterations are now well described as implicated in cancer and some strategies are currently developed to target these different pathways. In previous papers, we demonstrated that a combination of molecules (namely alpha-lipoic acid and hydroxycitrate, i.e. Metabloc™) targeting the cancer metabolism markedly decreased tumor cell growth in mice. In this work, we demonstrate that the addition of capsaicin further delays tumor growth in mice in a dose dependant manner. This is true for the three animal model tested: lung (LLC) cancer, bladder cancer (MBT-2) and melanoma B16F10. There was no apparent side effect of this ternary combination. The addition of a fourth drug (octreotide) is even more effective resulting in tumor regression in mice bearing LLC cancer. These four compounds are all known to target the cellular metabolism not its DNA. The efficacy, the apparent lack of toxicity, the long clinical track records of these medications in human medicine, all points toward the need for a clinical trial. The dramatic efficacy of treatment suggests that cancer may simply be a disease of dysregulated cellular metabolism.
Molecular Cancer | 2012
Maurice Israël
BackgroundCancer is a devastating type of disease. New and innovative ways to tackle cancers that have so far proved refractive to conventional therapies is urgently needed. It is becoming increasingly clear that, in addition to conventional therapeutics targeting by small molecules, that tumor cell metabolism presents new opportunities to target selectively specific cancer cell populations. Metabolic defects in cancer cells can be manifested in many ways that might not be readily apparent, such as altering epigenetic gene regulation for example.The complex rewiring of metabolic pathways gives tumor cells a special advantage over differentiated cells, since they deplete body stores as fuel for their growth and proliferation. Tumor metabolism looks simpler when we consider that some enzymatic switches are in a neoglucogenic direction thereby depleting body stores. However, these pathways may be inadequately switched on by catabolic hormones (glucagon, epinephrine and cortisol) in a specific situation where anabolism is activated by, for example insulin released from beta pancreatic cells or IGF, inducing mitosis and synthesis that are powered by glucose catabolism. Such a hybrid metabolic situation would be reached if a pancreatic beta cell mechanism, mediated by GABA, failed to silence neighboring alpha cells and delta cells. The inhibitory transmitter GABA hyperpolarizes alpha and delta cells via their GABA A receptors, and blocks the release of glucagon and somatostatin. Alternatively, an anomaly of alpha cell channels, would lead to a similar situation. Whatever is the alteration, anabolism fails to silence catabolism and enzymatic switches controlled by kinases and phosphatases adopt an inadequate direction, leading to a hybrid metabolic rewiring found in cancer. It is daring to formulate such a hypothesis as this. However, it is quite possible that the starting point in cancer is an alteration of the endocrine pancreas, suppressing the mechanism by which beta cells silence the neighboring alpha and delta cells, with GABA and Zn2+.
American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2012
Daniel Morvan; Jean Marc Steyaert; Laurent Schwartz; Maurice Israël; Aicha Demidem
Recent epidemiological studies have suggested a link between cancer and pathophysiological conditions associated with hyperinsulinemia. In this report, we address the possible role of insulin exposure in melanocyte transformation. To this aim, normal melanocytes were exposed to chronic insulin and glucose supplementation (twice the standard medium concentration) for at least 3 wk. After 3-wk treatment, melanocytes increased proliferation (doubling time: 2.7 vs. 5.6 days, P < 0.01). After 3-wk treatment or after 3-wk treatment followed by 4-wk reculture in standard medium, melanocytes were able to grow in soft agar colonies. Treated melanocytes had increased DNA content (+8%, P < 0.05), chromosomal aberrations, and modified oncoprotein profile: p-Akt expression increased (+32%, P < 0.01), Akt decreased, and c-Myc increased (+40%, P < 0.05). PP2A protein expression increased (+42, P < 0.05), while PP2A methylation decreased (-42%, P < 0.05), and PP2A activity was reduced (-27%, P < 0.05). PP2A transcription level was increased (ppp2r1a, PP2A subunit A, +44%, P < 0.05). Also, transcriptomic data revealed modifications in insr (insulin receptors, +10%, P < 0.05) and Il8 (inflammation protein, +99%, P < 0.01). Glycolysis was modified with increased transcription of Pgk1 and Hif1a (P < 0.05), decreased transcription of Pfkfb3 (P < 0.05), decreased activity of pyruvate kinase (P < 0.01), and decreased pyruvate cell content as assessed by (1)H-NMR spectroscopy. In addition, methyl group metabolism was altered with decreased global DNA methylation (-51%, P < 0.01), increased cytosolic protein methylation (+18%, P < 0.05), and consistent changes in methylated species on (1)H-NMR spectra. In conclusion, exposure to chronic insulin and glucose supplementation induces oncogenic changes and methyl group metabolism redistribution, which may be a biomarker of transformation.
Molecular Cancer | 2011
Maurice Israël; Laurent Schwartz
Oncology Reports | 2010
Laurent Schwartz; Mohammad Abolhassani; Adeline Guais; Edward Sanders; Jean-Marc Steyaert; Frédéric Campion; Maurice Israël
Archive | 2005
Laurent Schwartz; Maurice Israël
Archive | 2005
Laurent Schwartz; Maurice Israël
Archive | 2012
Aicha Demidem; Daniel Morvan; Jean Marc Steyaert; Maurice Israël; Laurent Schwartz