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Dive into the research topics where Michel Parquet is active.

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Featured researches published by Michel Parquet.


Lipids | 1993

Hypolipidemic effects of β-cyclodextrin in the hamster and in the genetically hypercholesterolemic rico rat

Michel Riottot; Philippe Olivier; Anne Huet; Jean-Jacques Caboche; Michel Parquet; Jamila Khallou; Claude Lutton

The effect of increasing amounts of a cyclic oligosaccharide, β-cyclodextrin (BCD), included in the diet on plasma cholesterol and triglycerides, was investigated in two animal models, namely in male genetically hypercholesterolemic Rico rats and in male Syrian hamsters. The distribution of bile acids in the gastrointestinal tract and in the feces of hamsters was also determined. In the Rico rats and hamsters, plasma cholesterol and triglycerides decreased linearly with increasing doses of BCD. In these two species, 20% BCD as compared to control diet lowered cholesterolemia (−35%) and triglyceridemia (−70%). In the hamster, the BCD diet caused a marked decrease in cholesterol and triglycerides in chylomicrons and very low density lipoprotein, and in high density lipoproteins cholesterol. Composition and amounts of bile acids were modified in the gastrointestinal tract of hamsters receiving 10% BCD as compared to the control group. The total bile acid content of the gallbladder of treated hamsters was fourfold higher than in the control group, and the bile contained a large amount of hydrophilic bile acids. This trend was also observed in the small intestine, in which percentages and total quantities of cholic plus deoxycholic acids (cholic pathway) were higher than those of chenodeoxycholic plus ursodeoxycholic plus lithocholic acids (chenodeoxycholic pathway). The bile acid contents of the cecum and colon of treated hamsters were 2.7-fold higher than those of control animals, but the bile acid composition was similar in the two groups of hamsters. Fecal excretion of bile acids was 3.3-fold higher in the treated group than in the control group, and the percentage of lithocholic acid was markedly increased and close to that observed in the colon. The turnover of the chenodeoxycholic pool was twice as fast in treated hamsters as in control hamsters, whereas that of cholic acid was not significantly modified. These results suggest that BCD does not alter the microbial degradation of bile acids, but rather stimulates their synthesis and increases their pool size. BCD prevents the intestinal absorption of lithocholic acid and washes this cytotoxic bile acid from the colon. The hypocholesterolemic effect of BCD appears to be due to stimulation of bile acid synthesis.


Life Sciences | 1999

Modulation of cholesterol 7α-hydroxylase and sterol 27-hydroxylase activities by steroids and physiological conditions in hamster

Maâmar Souidi; Michel Parquet; Jacqueline Férézou; Claude Lutton

Our purpose was to examine the in vitro modulation of liver mitochondrial sterol 27-hydroxylase (S27OHase) and microsomal cholesterol 7alpha-hydroxylase (CH7alphaOHase) activities by certain drugs, sterols, oxysterols and bile acids, and to compare the influence of sex, age, diet and cholestyramine on these activities, in the hamster. In vitro, 7beta-hydroxycholesterol and 5alpha-cholestan-3beta-ol (cholestanol) were strong inhibitors (at 2 microM) of both enzyme activities, while 5beta-cholestan-3alpha-ol (epicoprostanol, 2 microM) and cyclosporin A (20 microM) inhibited S27OHase, but not CH7alphaOHase. These data suggest that a hydroxyl group at the 7alpha position is not required to inhibit CH7alphaOHase and that the presence of an aliphatic CH2-CH-(CH3)2 chain appears to be structurally important for S27OHase activity. Both enzyme activities remained unchanged by hyodeoxycholic acid (40 or 80 microM) while epicoprostanol inhibited only S27OHase and chenodeoxycholic acid only CH7alphaOHase. Adult (9-week old) male or female hamsters displayed similar S27OHase activity but the CH7alphaOHase activity was lower in females than in males, suggesting that the neutral bile acid pathway has a less important role in females. In male hamsters, S27OHase activity did not change with age, while CH7alphaOHase activity significantly increased (one-year vs 9-week old). A semi-purified sucrose-rich (lithogenic) diet significantly lowered both enzyme activities compared to the commercial diet. Cholestyramine induced a stimulation of both enzymes, slightly more vigorously however for the key enzyme involved in the neutral pathway. Taken together, these data indicate that the two enzymes are separately regulated and that certain drugs or steroid compounds can be useful for specifically inhibiting or stimulating the neutral or acidic bile acid pathway.


Journal of Hepatology | 1990

Metabolism and effects on biliary lipid secretion of murocholic acid in the hamster

Michel Parquet; V. Legrand-Defretin; Michel Riottot; A. Karpouza; Claude Lutton

The metabolism of murocholic acid (MC), a 6 beta-hydroxylated bile acid, was investigated after intravenous (i.v.), intraduodenal (i.d.) or intragastric (i.g.) administration to bile fistula hamsters. The effects on biliary cholesterol and phospholipid secretion were measured during intravenous infusions of increasing doses of [3H]MC. At an infusion rate of 0.1 or 1 mumol.min-1.kg-1, the hepatic uptake was effective. More than 90% of the dose was recovered in bile within 4 h. A bolus injection of 500 micrograms of [3H]MC in the duodenum led to a rapid and efficient biliary secretion of radioactivity. Increasing i.v. infused doses of MC had no effect on bile flow or biliary cholesterol output compared to the controls. Phospholipid secretion was significantly reduced (0.113 mumol.min-1.kg-1 versus 0.238 mumol.min-1.kg-1 in in controls per mumol.min-1.kg-1 of excreted bile acids) as MC progressively replaced the endogenous bile acid pool in bile. After i.v. and i.d. administration, MC was secreted in bile as glyco and tauro conjugates without additional hepatic hydroxylation, sulfation or glucuronidation. The i.g. ingestion of MC followed by the faecal analysis of metabolites showed the formation of hyodeoxycholic acid and 3 alpha-OH-6-oxo-5 beta-cholan-24-oic acid. An equivalent experiment with hyodeoxycholic acid gave MC and the same oxo bile acid. We concluded that MC is metabolized by the hamster liver as an endogenous bile acid, which undergoes intestinal bacterial transformation into a 6-oxo derivative and is then reduced into hyodeoxycholic acid. This process is completely reversible.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Clinica Chimica Acta | 1998

Improved assay of hepatic microsomal cholesterol 7α-hydroxylase activity by the use of hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin and an NADPH-regenerating system

Maâmar Souidi; Michel Parquet; Claude Lutton

Cholesterol 7 α-hydroxylase, the key enzyme in bile acid synthesis, has been implicated in atherosclerosis and gallstone diseases. The aim of this study was to check if the use of hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin (HPBCD), a vehicle for solubilizing cholesterol, augmented the rate of 7α-hydroxycholesterol formation in hamster liver microsomes compared to classical assays in which labeled cholesterol was delivered in Tween 80. We observed that [14C]cholesterol carried by HPBCD enhanced the sensitivity of the assay tenfold. However, linearity of 7α-hydroxycholesterol formation with time was short because of the rapid transformation of 7α-hydroxycholesterol into 7α-hydroxy-cholesten-3-one and 7α,12α-dihydroxy-cholesten-3-one when NADPH alone was present in the incubation medium. In order to avoid the transformation of 7α-hydroxycholesterol into 7α-hydroxy-cholesten-3-one, which is essentially NAD+-dependent, but is also NADP+-dependent, NADPH (1 mmol/l) plus an NADPH-regenerating system must be present in the medium. In this improved assay, the optimal pH was 7.4 and the apparent Km for control and cholestyramine-fed hamsters had a similar value of 315 μmol/l; linearity in the formation of 7α-hydroxycholesterol was also apparent after a relatively short time period (10 min), but with a markedly greater slope of the curve. With a short incubation time (6 min), microsomes from livers of hamsters (five and nine weeks old) that were fed with a commercial ground diet yielded rates of 7α-hydroxycholesterol formation of 115±10 and 150±16 pmol/min.mg protein, respectively, whereas microsomes from hamsters fed with a lithogenic sucrose-rich diet (five weeks old) yielded rates of 7α-hydroxycholesterol formation of 77±7 pmol/min.mg protein, which were significantly lower (−33%) than those of corresponding control hamsters. This improved cholesterol 7α-hydroxylase assay is very sensitive, simple and rapid, and does not necessitate sophisticated equipment. It can be particularly useful for determining cholesterol 7α-hydroxylase activity in liver biopsies from dyslipidemic or lithiasic patients.


Journal of Hepatology | 2001

Insulin injections enhance cholesterol gallstone incidence by changing the biliary cholesterol saturation index and apo A-I concentration in hamsters fed a lithogenic diet

Sandrine Dubrac; Michel Parquet; Y. Blouquit; Daniel Gripois; Marie-France Blouquit; Maâmar Souidi; Claude Lutton

BACKGROUND/AIMS A link between insulin and cholesterol gallstone disease has often been suspected but never demonstrated. The aim was to evaluate the direct implication of insulin in the gallbladder cholesterol gallstone formation process. METHODS Hamsters fed with a soft-inducing lithogenic diet, enriched with sucrose, were injected daily, for 1 week, either with long-acting insulin or saline (controls). RESULTS Insulin injections doubled the cholesterol gallstone incidence. The cholesterol saturation index (CSI) of bile significantly increased (+19%) and biliary apolipoprotein A-I (apo A-I) decreased, both in concentration (-71%) and the proportion relative to the total biliary proteins (-25%). No modifications in the biliary bile acid composition were noticed. Hepatic HMGCoA reductase activity was higher (+341%), CYP7A1 activity was lower (-52%), whereas CYP27A1 and CYP7B1 were not affected. The hepatic low-density liprotein (LDL)-receptor and SR-BI masses did not vary. The hepatic total cholesterol content increased (+42%). Fasting plasma phospholipid and triglyceride concentrations significantly decreased (-15 and -60%, respectively), but the cholesterol concentration remained constant. CONCLUSIONS These results suggest that insulin injections enhance cholesterol gallstone incidence by increasing the CSI of bile and decreasing the concentration and proportion of a biliary anti-nucleating protein, apo A-I. Insulin modulates the major enzymes of cholesterol and bile acid metabolisms in vivo.


Gastroenterology | 1993

Cholesterol and bile acid biodynamics after total small bowel resection and bile diversion in humans

Jacqueline Férézou; Philippe Beau; Michel Parquet; Gérard Champarnaud; Claude Lutton; Claude Matuchansky

BACKGROUND In humans, the patterns of cholesterol and bile acid biodynamics in the absence of the small intestine are not yet known. They are described in two parenterally fed patients several months after total enterectomy and bile diversion. METHODS After an intravenous pulse of [3H]cholesterol, a long-term study involved the analysis of both the decay in the specific activity of plasma cholesterol and the biliary outputs of sterols and bile acids. RESULTS Plasma cholesterol input reached 2-3 g/day (vs. 1 g/day in healthy patients), mostly from synthesis. As assessed by sterol balance, whole body cholesterol synthesis approximated 6 g/day (vs. 0.6-0.8 g/day). Unusually, about 60% of the newly synthesized cholesterol was eliminated, without prior transit into the bloodstream, from the liver into the bile. Bile acid conversion concerned over 90% (vs. 40%-50%) of the cholesterol meant to be excreted, issued from plasma or hepatic synthesis. In addition to cholic and chenodeoxycholic acids, one patient secreted up to 1 g/day of 7-epicholic acid. CONCLUSIONS The stimulation (up to 10-fold) of the cholesterol and bile acid synthesis, stronger than that observed following ileal bypass or resection or complete bile diversion, could well be partially linked to the absence of small bowel tissue per se.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1995

Effects of hyodeoxycholic acid and α-hyocholic acid, two 6α-hydroxylated bile acids, on cholesterol and bile acid metabolism in the hamster

Corinne Cohen-Solal; Michel Parquet; Jacqueline Férézou; Colette Sérougne; Claude Lutton

The effects of hyodeoxycholic (HDCA) and alpha-hyocholic acids (alpha-HCA), on cholesterol, bile acid and lipoprotein metabolism, were studied in hamsters. The animals were fed a low cholesterol control diet supplemented with 0.1% HDCA or alpha-HCA for 3 weeks. In both treated groups, the LDL-cholesterol concentration was significantly lowered and was associated with a global hypocholesterolemic effect. Moreover, hepatic cholesterol ester storage was reduced and HMGCoA reductase activity was respectively enhanced 13.5-times and 7.7-times in HDCA and alpha-HCA groups compared to controls. In contrast, cholesterol 7 alpha-hydroxylase activity and LDL-receptor activity and mass were not modified. In bile, the cholesterol saturation index was increased 5-fold (HDCA group) and 2-fold (alpha-HCA group) as a consequence of an enlarged proportion of biliary cholesterol. The two 6-hydroxylated bile acids induced an enhanced fecal excretion of neutral sterols (HDCA group: 11.6-times, alpha-HCA group: 3.2-times versus controls) which was consistent with a 59% decrease in intestinal cholesterol absorption in the HDCA group. The major effects due to bile acid treatments were a decrease in LDL-cholesterol concentration, a strong stimulation of hepatic cholesterol biosynthesis and an excessive loss of cholesterol in feces. These perturbations might be the result of the enrichment of bile with hydrophilic bile acids, leading to a limited return of endogenous cholesterol from the intestine to the liver.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2000

Assay of microsomal oxysterol 7α-hydroxylase activity in the hamster liver by a sensitive method: in vitro modulation by oxysterols

Maâmar Souidi; Michel Parquet; Sandrine Dubrac; Olivier Audas; Thierry Bécue; Claude Lutton

A method of assaying hepatic cytochrome P-450, oxysterol 7alpha-hydroxylase (CYP7B), was developed by combining the use of 25-[26,27-(3)H]hydroxycholesterol as a substrate and hydroxypropyl-beta-cyclodextrin as a substrate vehicle. When these assay conditions were tested, an undesirable transformation was observed of the reaction product, 7alpha,25-dihydroxycholesterol, into 3-oxo-7alpha,25-dihydroxy-4-cholesten by the activity of 3beta-hydroxy-Delta(5)-C(27) steroid oxydoreductase, a microsomal NAD(+) and NADP(+) dependent enzyme of bile acid metabolism. A great improvement was reached by using a continuous NADPH generating system which constantly re-transforms NADP(+) into NADPH, thus inhibiting this activity. This improved CYP7B assay, comparable to our previously described assay for cholesterol 7alpha-hydroxylase (CYP7A), allowed a 3-fold increase of the apparent enzyme activity. The possibility to simultaneously measure CYP7A and CYP7B activities on the same microsomal preparation was investigated. A marked decrease (-33%) in the CYP7B activity was noticed, while that of CYP7A remained unchanged. The CYP7B activity was observed to be inhibited by cholesterol (-30%) and also by the oxysterols 7alpha-hydroxycholesterol (-21%), 7beta-hydroxycholesterol (-25%) and epicoprostanol (-20%), and by cyclosporin A (-26%). It can be concluded that this sensible and easy to perform CYP7B assay allows to observe, at least in vitro, a modulation of the enzyme activity by oxysterols.


Journal of Hepatology | 1995

Magnetic resonance imaging for the visualization of cholesterol gallstones in hamster fed a new high sucrose lithogenic diet

Corinne Cohen-Solal; Michel Parquet; Bernard Tiffon; Andreas Volk; Michel Laurent; Claude Lutton

Cholesterol gallstone induction in hamster gallbladder is usually achieved by specific diets. An X-ray in vivo follow-up of cholelithiasis development in this species is impossible, since cholesterol gallstones are transparent as long as they are not calcified. Moreover, their size (0.2 to 1 mm) also prevents their detection by ultrasonography. The current study presents an in vivo cholesterol gallstone detection by magnetic resonance imaging in hamsters fed a new high sucrose diet containing a low proportion of cholesterol (0.015%) and a normal ratio of lipids (10%). The diet produced gallstones and an increase in the cholesterol saturation index in about 50% of animals after a 5-week feeding period. The visualization of gallstones by magnetic resonance imaging in anaesthetized animals required synchronization between breathing movements and image acquisition. A high magnetic field was also necessary to allow a fine image resolution, adapted to gallstone size. Two major advantages of this technique are a direct selection of lithiasic animals with a functional gallbladder (in spite of the presence of gallstones) and a possible adjustment of the treatment period of potential litholytic drugs.


Life Sciences | 2001

Diet-dependent effects of insulin infusion on the hepatic lipoprotein receptors and the key enzymes of bile acid synthesis in the hamster.

Sandrine Dubrac; Michel Parquet; Daniel Gripois; Marie-France Blouquit; Colette Sérougne; Carole Loison; Claude Lutton

The effects of an induced hyperinsulinemia on both the cholesterol and bile acid metabolisms were analyzed in the hamster. The role of dietary sucrose as modulator of these effects was evaluated by feeding the animals with two semi-synthetic diets containing a low (SD, 20%) and a high (LD, 62.5%) sucrose proportion. Hamsters fed under basal nutritional conditions (chow diet, CD) were also used. LD enabled the consequences of an insulin infusion on cholesterol gallstone formation to be evaluated. Subcutaneous osmotic pumps were implanted in all the animals and delivered either 3 IU/day of insulin (insulin groups: CDI, SDI, LDI) or saline (control groups: CDC, SDC, LDC). Several parameters bound to lipid metabolism were measured. The plasma cholesterol concentration remained constant in all the insulin treated groups compared to the controls. Phospholipid and triglyceride concentrations decreased in both the plasma and liver in the CDI and SDI groups. A lower SR-BI mass (around 50%) was found in the liver of CDI and SDI hamsters with concomitant higher hydroxy-methyl-glutaryl coenzyme A reductase activity. The LDL-receptor mass and cholesterol 7alpha-hydroxylase activity in the LDI group were both decreased (-47%, -71% respectively). No variations in the cholesterol gallstone incidence were observed. In conclusion, chronic insulin infusion in growing hamsters induced similar effects on cholesterol metabolism in the CD and SD groups but different ones, between diets containing a low (SD) and a high (LD) sucrose proportion. The distribution of triglycerides and phospholipids in the plasma, liver and bile was also affected by the insulin infusion.

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Maâmar Souidi

Institut de radioprotection et de sûreté nucléaire

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Annie Quignard-Boulangé

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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