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Dive into the research topics where Muriel Golzio is active.

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Featured researches published by Muriel Golzio.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Direct visualization at the single-cell level of electrically mediated gene delivery

Muriel Golzio; Justin Teissié; Marie-Pierre Rols

Electropermeabilization is one of the nonviral methods successfully used to transfer genes into living cells in vitro and in vivo. Although this approach shows promise in the field of gene therapy, very little is known about the basic processes supporting DNA transfer. The present investigation studies this process at the single-cell level by using digitized fluorescence microscopy. Permeabilization is a prerequisite for gene transfer. Its assay by propidium-iodide (PI) penetration shows that it occurs at the sides of the cell membrane facing the two electrodes, whereas fluorescently labeled plasmids only interact with the electropermeabilized side of the cell facing the cathode. The plasmid interaction with the electropermeabilized part of the cell surface results in the formation of localized aggregates. These membrane-associated spots are formed only when pulses with a longer duration than a critical value are applied. These complexes are formed within 1 s after the pulses and cannot be destroyed by pulses of reversed polarities. They remain at the membrane level up to 10 min after pulsing. Although freely accessible to DNA dye (TOTO-1) 1 min after the pulses, they are fully protected when the addition takes place 10 min after. They diffuse in the cytoplasm 30 min after pulses and are present around the nucleus 24 h later.


Cancer Research | 2005

Sphingosine Kinase-1 as a Chemotherapy Sensor in Prostate Adenocarcinoma Cell and Mouse Models

Dimitri Pchejetski; Muriel Golzio; Elisabeth Bonhoure; Cyril Calvet; Nicolas Doumerc; Virginie Garcia; Catherine Mazerolles; P. Rischmann; Justin Teissié; Bernard Malavaud; Olivier Cuvillier

Systemic chemotherapy was considered of modest efficacy in prostate cancer until the recent introduction of taxanes. We took advantage of the known differential effect of camptothecin and docetaxel on human PC-3 and LNCaP prostate cancer cells to determine their effect on sphingosine kinase-1 (SphK1) activity and subsequent ceramide/sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P) balance in relation with cell survival. In vitro, docetaxel and camptothecin induced strong inhibition of SphK1 and elevation of the ceramide/S1P ratio only in cell lines sensitive to these drugs. SphK1 overexpression in both cell lines impaired the efficacy of chemotherapy by decreasing the ceramide/S1P ratio. Alternatively, silencing SphK1 by RNA interference or pharmacologic inhibition induced apoptosis coupled with ceramide elevation and loss of S1P. The differential effect of both chemotherapeutics was confirmed in an orthotopic PC-3/green fluorescent protein model established in nude mice. Docetaxel induced a stronger SphK1 inhibition and ceramide/S1P ratio elevation than camptothecin. This was accompanied by a smaller tumor volume and the reduced occurrence and number of metastases. SphK1-overexpressing PC-3 cells implanted in animals developed remarkably larger tumors and resistance to docetaxel treatment. These results provide the first in vivo demonstration of SphK1 as a sensor of chemotherapy.


European Biophysics Journal | 2003

Effect of electric field induced transmembrane potential on spheroidal cells: theory and experiment

Blaž Valič; Muriel Golzio; Mojca Pavlin; Anne Schatz; Cécile Faurie; Bruno Gabriel; Justin Teissié; Marie-Pierre Rols; Damijan Miklavčič

The transmembrane potential on a cell exposed to an electric field is a critical parameter for successful cell permeabilization. In this study, the effect of cell shape and orientation on the induced transmembrane potential was analyzed. The transmembrane potential was calculated on prolate and oblate spheroidal cells for various orientations with respect to the electric field direction, both numerically and analytically. Changing the orientation of the cells decreases the induced transmembrane potential from its maximum value when the longest axis of the cell is parallel to the electric field, to its minimum value when the longest axis of the cell is perpendicular to the electric field. The dependency on orientation is more pronounced for elongated cells while it is negligible for spherical cells. The part of the cell membrane where a threshold transmembrane potential is exceeded represents the area of electropermeabilization, i.e. the membrane area through which the transport of molecules is established. Therefore the surface exposed to the transmembrane potential above the threshold value was calculated. The biological relevance of these theoretical results was confirmed with experimental results of the electropermeabilization of plated Chinese hamster ovary cells, which are elongated. Theoretical and experimental results show that permeabilization is not only a function of electric field intensity and cell size but also of cell shape and orientation.


Human Gene Therapy | 2008

Efficiency of High- and Low-Voltage Pulse Combinations for Gene Electrotransfer in Muscle, Liver, Tumor, and Skin

Franck M. Andre; Julie Gehl; Gregor Sersa; Véronique Préat; Pernille Hojman; Jens Eriksen; Muriel Golzio; Maja Cemazar; Nataša Pavšelj; Marie-Pierre Rols; Damijan Miklavčič; Eberhard Neumann; Justin Teissié; Lluis M. Mir

Gene electrotransfer is gaining momentum as an efficient methodology for nonviral gene transfer. In skeletal muscle, data suggest that electric pulses play two roles: structurally permeabilizing the muscle fibers and electrophoretically supporting the migration of DNA toward or across the permeabilized membrane. To investigate this further, combinations of permeabilizing short high-voltage pulses (HV; hundreds of V/cm) and mainly electrophoretic long low-voltage pulses (LV; tens of V/cm) were investigated in muscle, liver, tumor, and skin in rodent models. The following observations were made: (1) Striking differences between the various tissues were found, likely related to cell size and tissue organization; (2) gene expression is increased, if there was a time interval between the HV pulse and the LV pulse; (3) the HV pulse was required for high electrotransfer to muscle, tumor, and skin, but not to liver; and (4) efficient gene electrotransfer was achieved with HV field strengths below the detectability thresholds for permeabilization; and (5) the lag time interval between the HV and LV pulses decreased sensitivity to the HV pulses, enabling a wider HV amplitude range. In conclusion, HV plus LV pulses represent an efficient and safe option for future clinical trials and we suggest recommendations for gene transfer to various types of tissues.


Biophysical Journal | 1998

Control by Osmotic Pressure of Voltage-Induced Permeabilization and Gene Transfer in Mammalian Cells

Muriel Golzio; Marie-Pierre Mora; Catherine Raynaud; Christine Delteil; Justin Teissié; Marie-Pierre Rols

Cells can be transiently permeabilized by a membrane potential difference increase induced by the application of high electric pulses. This was shown to be under the control of the pulsing buffer osmotic pressure, when short pulses were applied. In this paper, the effects of buffer osmotic pressure during electric treatment and during the following 10 min were investigated in Chinese hamster ovary cells subjected to long (ms) square wave pulses, a condition needed to mediate gene transfer. No effect on cell permeabilization for a small molecule such as propidium iodide was observed. The use of a hypoosmolar buffer during pulsation allows more efficient loading of cells with beta-galactosidase, a tetrameric protein, but no effect of the postpulse buffer osmolarity was observed. The resulting expression of plasmid coding for beta-galactosidase was strongly controlled by buffer osmolarity during as well as after the pulse. The results, tentatively explained in terms of the effect of osmotic pressure on cell swelling, membrane organization, and interaction between molecules and membrane, support the existence of key steps in plasmid-membrane interaction in the mechanism of cell electrically mediated gene transfer.


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2008

Chemosensitizing effects of sphingosine kinase-1 inhibition in prostate cancer cell and animal models

Dimitri Pchejetski; Nicolas Doumerc; Muriel Golzio; Maria Naymark; Justin Teissié; Takafumi Kohama; Jonathan Waxman; Bernard Malavaud; Olivier Cuvillier

We have previously reported that, in prostate cancer, inhibition of the oncogenic sphingosine kinase-1/sphingosine 1-phosphate (SphK1/S1P) pathway is a key element in chemotherapy-induced apoptosis. Here, we show that selective pharmacologic inhibition of SphK1 triggers apoptosis in LNCaP and PC-3 prostate cancer cells, an effect that is reversed by SphK1 enforced expression. More importantly, we show for the first time that the up-regulation of the SphK1/S1P pathway plays a crucial role in the resistance of prostate cancer cells to chemotherapy. Importantly, pharmacologic SphK1 inhibition with the B-5354c compound sensitizes LNCaP and PC-3 cells to docetaxel and camptothecin, respectively. In vivo, camptothecin and B-5354c alone display a limited effect on tumor growth in PC-3 cells, whereas in combination there is a synergy of effect on tumor size with a significant increase in the ceramide to S1P sphingolipid ratio. To conclude, our study highlights the notion that drugs specifically designed to inhibit SphK1 could provide a means of enhancing the effects of conventional treatment through the prosurvival antiapoptotic SphK1/S1P pathway. [Mol Cancer Ther 2008;7(7):1836–45]


Cancer Research | 2010

FTY720 (Fingolimod) Sensitizes Prostate Cancer Cells to Radiotherapy by Inhibition of Sphingosine Kinase-1

Dmitri Pchejetski; Torsten Böhler; Leyre Brizuela; Lysann Sauer; Nicolas Doumerc; Muriel Golzio; Vishal Salunkhe; Justin Teissié; Bernard Malavaud; Jonathan Waxman; Olivier Cuvillier

Radiotherapy is widely used as a radical treatment for prostate cancer, but curative treatments are elusive for poorly differentiated tumors where survival is just 15% at 15 years. Dose escalation improves local response rates but is limited by tolerance in normal tissues. A sphingosine analogue, FTY720 (fingolimod), a drug currently in phase III studies for treatment of multiple sclerosis, has been found to be a potent apoptosis inducer in prostate cancer cells. Using in vitro and in vivo approaches, we analyzed the impact of FTY720 on sphingolipid metabolism in hormone-refractory metastatic prostate cancer cells and evaluated its potential as a radiosensitizer on cell lines and prostate tumor xenografts. In prostate cancer cell lines, FTY720 acted as a sphingosine kinase 1 (SphK1) inhibitor that induced prostate cancer cell apoptosis in a manner independent of sphingosine-1-phosphate receptors. In contrast, γ irradiation did not affect SphK1 activity in prostate cancer cells yet synergized with FTY720 to inhibit SphK1. In mice bearing orthotopic or s.c. prostate cancer tumors, we show that FTY720 dramatically increased radiotherapeutic sensitivity, reducing tumor growth and metastasis without toxic side effects. Our findings suggest that low, well-tolerated doses of FTY720 could offer significant improvement to the clinical treatment of prostate cancer.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Direct visualization at the single-cell level of siRNA electrotransfer into cancer cells

A. Paganin-Gioanni; E. Bellard; J. M. Escoffre; Marie-Pierre Rols; Justin Teissié; Muriel Golzio

The RNA interference-mediated gene silencing approach is promising for therapies based on the targeted inhibition of disease-relevant genes. Electropermeabilization is one of the nonviral methods successfully used to transfer siRNA into living cells in vitro and in vivo. Although this approach is effective in the field of gene silencing by RNA interference, very little is known about the basic processes supporting siRNA transfer. In this study, we investigated, by direct visualization at the single-cell level, the delivery of Alexa Fluor 546-labeled siRNA into murine melanoma cells stably expressing the enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) as a target gene. The electrotransfer of siRNA was quantified by time lapse fluorescence microscopy and was correlated with the silencing of egfp expression. A direct transfer into the cell cytoplasm of the negatively charged siRNA was observed across the plasma membrane exclusively on the side facing the cathode. When added after electropulsation, the siRNA was inefficient for gene silencing because it did not penetrate the cells. Therefore, we report that an electric field acts on both the permeabilization of the cell plasma membrane and on the electrophoretic drag of the negatively charged siRNA molecules from the bulk phase into the cytoplasm. The transfer kinetics of siRNA are compatible with the creation of nanopores, which are described with the technique of synthetic nanopores. The mechanism involved was clearly specific for the physico-chemical properties of the electrotransferred molecule and was different from that observed with small molecules or plasmid DNA.


Journal of Gene Medicine | 2010

ELECTRO-MEDIATED GENE TRANSFER AND EXPRESSION ARE CONTROLLED BY THE LIFE-TIME OF DNA/MEMBRANE COMPLEX FORMATION

Cécile Faurie; Matej Reberšek; Muriel Golzio; Maša Kandušer; Jean-Michel Escoffre; Mojca Pavlin; Justin Teissié; Damijan Miklavčič; Marie-Pierre Rols

Electroporation is a physical method used to transfer molecules into cells and tissues. Clinical applications have been developed for antitumor drug delivery. Clinical trials of gene electrotransfer are under investigation. However, knowledge about how DNA enters cells is not complete. By contrast to small molecules that have direct access to the cytoplasm, DNA forms a long lived complex with the plasma membrane and is transferred into the cytoplasm with a considerable delay.


Nature Communications | 2016

Periprostatic adipocytes act as a driving force for prostate cancer progression in obesity

Victor Laurent; Adrien Guérard; Catherine Mazerolles; Sophie Le Gonidec; Aurélie Toulet; Laurence Nieto; Falek Zaidi; Bilal Majed; David Garandeau; Youri Socrier; Muriel Golzio; Thomas Cadoudal; Karima Chaoui; Cédric Dray; Bernard Monsarrat; Odile Schiltz; Yuan Yuan Wang; Bettina Couderc; Philippe Valet; Bernard Malavaud; Catherine Muller

Obesity favours the occurrence of locally disseminated prostate cancer in the periprostatic adipose tissue (PPAT) surrounding the prostate gland. Here we show that adipocytes from PPAT support the directed migration of prostate cancer cells and that this event is strongly promoted by obesity. This process is dependent on the secretion of the chemokine CCL7 by adipocytes, which diffuses from PPAT to the peripheral zone of the prostate, stimulating the migration of CCR3 expressing tumour cells. In obesity, higher secretion of CCL7 by adipocytes facilitates extraprostatic extension. The observed increase in migration associated with obesity is totally abrogated when the CCR3/CCL7 axis is inhibited. In human prostate cancer tumours, expression of the CCR3 receptor is associated with the occurrence of aggressive disease with extended local dissemination and a higher risk of biochemical recurrence, highlighting the potential benefit of CCR3 antagonists in the treatment of prostate cancer.

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Elisabeth Bellard

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jean-Michel Escoffre

François Rabelais University

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Gregor Sersa

École Normale Supérieure

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Maja Cemazar

University of Primorska

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Christine Delteil

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Sandrine Pelofy

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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