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Dive into the research topics where Nicolas Loiseau is active.

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Featured researches published by Nicolas Loiseau.


Microbiology | 2009

Molecular cloning and functional characterization of two CYP619 cytochrome P450s involved in biosynthesis of patulin in Aspergillus clavatus.

Marie Pierre Artigot; Nicolas Loiseau; Joëlle Laffitte; Lina Mas-Reguieg; Souria Tadrist; Isabelle P. Oswald; Olivier Puel

Patulin is an acetate-derived tetraketide mycotoxin produced by several fungal species, especially Aspergillus, Penicillium and Byssochlamys species. The health risks due to patulin consumption by humans have led many countries to regulate it in human food. Previous studies have shown the involvement of cytochrome P450 monooxygenases in the hydroxylation of two precursors of patulin, m-cresol and m-hydroxybenzylalcohol. In the present study, two cytochrome P450 genes were identified in the genome sequence of Aspergillus clavatus, a patulin-producing species. Both mRNAs were strongly co-expressed during patulin production. CYP619C2, encoded by the first gene, consists of 529 aa, while the second cytochrome, CYP619C3, consists of 524 aa. The coding sequences were used to perform the heterologous expression of functional enzymes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The bioconversion assays showed that CYP619C3 catalysed the hydroxylation of m-cresol to yield m-hydroxybenzyl alcohol. CYP619C2 catalysed the hydroxylation of m-hydroxybenzyl alcohol and m-cresol to gentisyl alcohol and 2,5-dihydroxytoluene (toluquinol), respectively. Except for the last compound, all enzyme products are known precursors of patulin. Taken together, these data strongly suggest the involvement of CYP619C2 and CYP619C3 in the biosynthesis of patulin. CYP619C2 and CYP619C3 are located near to two other genes involved in patulin biosynthesis, namely the 6-methylsalicylic acid synthase (6msas) and isoepoxydon dehydrogenase (idh) genes. The current data associated with an analysis of the sequence of A. clavatus suggest the presence of a cluster of 15 genes involved in patulin biosynthesis.


BMC Microbiology | 2007

Verruculogen associated with Aspergillus fumigatus hyphae and conidia modifies the electrophysiological properties of human nasal epithelial cells

Khaled Khoufache; Olivier Puel; Nicolas Loiseau; Marcel Delaforge; Danièle Rivollet; André Coste; Catherine Cordonnier; Estelle Escudier; Françoise Botterel; Stéphane Bretagne

BackgroundThe role of Aspergillus fumigatus mycotoxins in the colonization of the respiratory tract by conidia has not been studied extensively, even though patients at risk from invasive aspergillosis frequently exhibit respiratory epithelium damage. In a previous study, we found that filtrates of A. fumigatus cultures can specifically alter the electrophysiological properties of human nasal epithelial cells (HNEC) compared to those of non pathogenic moulds.ResultsWe fractionated the organic phase of filtrate from 3-day old A. fumigatus cultures using high-performance liquid chromatography. The different fractions were tested for their ability to modify the electrophysiological properties of HNEC in an in vitro primary culture model.The fraction collected between 20 and 30 min mimicked the effects of the whole filtrate, i.e. decrease of transepithelial resistance and increase of potential differences, and contained secondary metabolites such as helvolic acid, fumagillin, and verruculogen. Only verruculogen (10-8 M) had effects similar to the whole filtrate. We verified that verruculogen was produced by a collection of 67 human, animal, plant and environmental A. fumigatus isolates. Using MS-MS analysis, we found that verruculogen was associated with both mycelium and conidia extracts.ConclusionVerruculogen is a secondary metabolite that modifies the electrophysiological properties of HNEC. The role of these modifications in the colonization and invasion of the respiratory epithelium by A. fumigatus on first contact with the epithelium remains to be determined.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Microbial biotransformation of DON: molecular basis for reduced toxicity

Alix Pierron; Sabria Mimoun; Leticia S. Murate; Nicolas Loiseau; Yannick Lippi; Ana Paula Frederico Rodrigues Loureiro Bracarense; Gerd Schatzmayr; Jian Wei He; Ting Zhou; Wulf-Dieter Moll; Isabelle P. Oswald

Bacteria are able to de-epoxidize or epimerize deoxynivalenol (DON), a mycotoxin, to deepoxy-deoxynivalenol (deepoxy-DON or DOM-1) or 3-epi-deoxynivalenol (3-epi-DON), respectively. Using different approaches, the intestinal toxicity of 3 molecules was compared and the molecular basis for the reduced toxicity investigated. In human intestinal epithelial cells, deepoxy-DON and 3-epi-DON were not cytotoxic, did not change the oxygen consumption or impair the barrier function. In intestinal explants, exposure for 4 hours to 10 μM DON induced intestinal lesions not seen in explants treated with deepoxy-DON and 3-epi-DON. A pan-genomic transcriptomic analysis was performed on intestinal explants. 747 probes, representing 323 genes, were differentially expressed, between DON-treated and control explants. By contrast, no differentially expressed genes were observed between control, deepoxy-DON and 3-epi-DON treated explants. Both DON and its biotransformation products were able to fit into the pockets of the A-site of the ribosome peptidyl transferase center. DON forms three hydrogen bonds with the A site and activates MAPKinases (mitogen-activated protein kinases). By contrast deepoxy-DON and 3-epi-DON only form two hydrogen bonds and do not activate MAPKinases. Our data demonstrate that bacterial de-epoxidation or epimerization of DON altered their interaction with the ribosome, leading to an absence of MAPKinase activation and a reduced toxicity.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Trypacidin, a Spore-Borne Toxin from Aspergillus fumigatus, Is Cytotoxic to Lung Cells

Thierry Gauthier; Xiaodi Wang; Joice Sifuentes Dos Santos; Athanasios Fysikopoulos; Souria Tadrist; Cécile Canlet; Marie Pierre Artigot; Nicolas Loiseau; Isabelle P. Oswald; Olivier Puel

Inhalation of Aspergillus fumigatus conidia can cause severe aspergillosis in immunosuppressed people. A. fumigatus produces a large number of secondary metabolites, some of which are airborne by conidia and whose toxicity to the respiratory tract has not been investigated. We found that spores of A. fumigatus contain five main compounds, tryptoquivaline F, fumiquinazoline C, questin, monomethylsulochrin and trypacidin. Fractionation of culture extracts using RP-HPLC and LC-MS showed that samples containing questin, monomethylsulochrin and trypacidin were toxic to the human A549 lung cell line. These compounds were purified and their structure verified using NMR in order to compare their toxicity against A549 cells. Trypacidin was the most toxic, decreasing cell viability and triggering cell lysis, both effects occurring at an IC50 close to 7 µM. Trypacidin toxicity was also observed in the same concentration range on human bronchial epithelial cells. In the first hour of exposure, trypacidin initiates the intracellular formation of nitric oxide (NO) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). This oxidative stress triggers necrotic cell death in the following 24 h. The apoptosis pathway, moreover, was not involved in the cell death process as trypacidin did not induce apoptotic bodies or a decrease in mitochondrial membrane potential. This is the first time that the toxicity of trypacidin to lung cells has been reported.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Recognition of Sulfonylurea Receptor (ABCC8/9) Ligands by the Multidrug Resistance Transporter P-glycoprotein (ABCB1) FUNCTIONAL SIMILARITIES BASED ON COMMON STRUCTURAL FEATURES BETWEEN TWO MULTISPECIFIC ABC PROTEINS

Anis Bessadok; Elisabeth Garcia; Hélène Jacquet; Solenne Martin; Alexia Garrigues; Nicolas Loiseau; François André; Stéphane Orlowski; Michel Vivaudou

ATP-sensitive K+ (KATP) channels are the target of a number of pharmacological agents, blockers like hypoglycemic sulfonylureas and openers like the hypotensive cromakalim and diazoxide. These agents act on the channel regulatory subunit, the sulfonylurea receptor (SUR), which is an ABC protein with homologies to P-glycoprotein (P-gp). P-gp is a multidrug transporter expressed in tumor cells and in some healthy tissues. Because these two ABC proteins both exhibit multispecific recognition properties, we have tested whether SUR ligands could be substrates of P-gp. Interaction with P-gp was assayed by monitoring ATPase activity of P-gp-enriched vesicles. The blockers glibenclamide, tolbutamide, and meglitinide increased ATPase activity, with a rank order of potencies that correlated with their capacity to block KATP channels. P-gp ATPase activity was also increased by the openers SR47063 (a cromakalim analog), P1075 (a pinacidil analog), and diazoxide. Thus, these molecules bind to P-gp (although with lower affinities than for SUR) and are possibly transported by P-gp. Competition experiments among these molecules as well as with typical P-gp substrates revealed a structural similarity between drug binding domains in the two proteins. To rationalize the observed data, we addressed the molecular features of these proteins and compared structural models, computerized by homology from the recently solved structures of murine P-gp and bacterial ABC transporters MsbA and Sav1866. Considering the various residues experimentally assigned to be involved in drug binding, we uncovered several hot spots, which organized spatially in two main binding domains, selective for SR47063 and for glibenclamide, in matching regions of both P-gp and SUR.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Characterising the Inhibitory Actions of Ceramide upon Insulin Signaling in Different Skeletal Muscle Cell Models: A Mechanistic Insight

Rana Mahfouz; Rhéa Khoury; Agnieszka Blachnio-Zabielska; Sophie Turban; Nicolas Loiseau; Christopher Lipina; Clare Stretton; Olivier Bourron; Pascal Ferré; Fabienne Foufelle; Harinder S. Hundal; Eric Hajduch

Ceramides are known to promote insulin resistance in a number of metabolically important tissues including skeletal muscle, the predominant site of insulin-stimulated glucose disposal. Depending on cell type, these lipid intermediates have been shown to inhibit protein kinase B (PKB/Akt), a key mediator of the metabolic actions of insulin, via two distinct pathways: one involving the action of atypical protein kinase C (aPKC) isoforms, and the second dependent on protein phosphatase-2A (PP2A). The main aim of this study was to explore the mechanisms by which ceramide inhibits PKB/Akt in three different skeletal muscle-derived cell culture models; rat L6 myotubes, mouse C2C12 myotubes and primary human skeletal muscle cells. Our findings indicate that the mechanism by which ceramide acts to repress PKB/Akt is related to the myocellular abundance of caveolin-enriched domains (CEM) present at the plasma membrane. Here, we show that ceramide-enriched-CEMs are markedly more abundant in L6 myotubes compared to C2C12 myotubes, consistent with their previously reported role in coordinating aPKC-directed repression of PKB/Akt in L6 muscle cells. In contrast, a PP2A-dependent pathway predominantly mediates ceramide-induced inhibition of PKB/Akt in C2C12 myotubes. In addition, we demonstrate for the first time that ceramide engages an aPKC-dependent pathway to suppress insulin-induced PKB/Akt activation in palmitate-treated cultured human muscle cells as well as in muscle cells from diabetic patients. Collectively, this work identifies key mechanistic differences, which may be linked to variations in plasma membrane composition, underlying the insulin-desensitising effects of ceramide in different skeletal muscle cell models that are extensively used in signal transduction and metabolic studies.


FEBS Journal | 2011

Metabolism of N‐methyl‐amide by cytochrome P450s

Lionel Perrin; Nicolas Loiseau; François André; Marcel Delaforge

We report unambiguous proof of the stability of a carbinol intermediate in the case of P450 metabolism of an N‐methylated natural cyclo‐peptide, namely tentoxin. Under mild acidic or neutral conditions, the lifetime of carbinol‐amide is long enough to be fully characterized. This metabolite has been characterized using specifically labeled 14C‐methyl tentoxin isotopomers, HPLC, HPLC‐MS, MS‐MS and NMR. Under stronger acidic conditions, the stability of this metabolite vanishes through deformylation. A theoretical mechanistic investigation reveals that the stability is governed by the accessibility of the nitrogen lone pair and its protonation state. For carbinol‐amines, even in neutral conditions, the energy barrier for deformylation is low enough to allow rapid deformylation. Carbinol‐amide behaves differently. Under neutral conditions, delocalization of the nitrogen lone pair increases the energy barrier of deformylation that is a slow process under such conditions. After protonation, we were able to optimize a deformylation transition that is lower in energy and thus accounts for the lower stability of carbinol‐amides observed experimentally in acidic conditions. Finally, by considering the protocol usually used for extraction and analysis of this type of metabolite, carbinol‐amide may thus be frequently ignored in drug metabolism pathways.


Bulletin De L Academie Veterinaire De France | 2006

Toxicologie des mycotoxines : dangers et risques en alimentation humaine et animale

P. Galtier; Nicolas Loiseau; Isabelle P. Oswald; Olivier Puel

Mycotoxins are secondary metabolites produced on plants either in the field or during storage. These toxins are found as natural contaminants on numerous foods and feeds of plant origin, such as cereals, fruits, nuts, almonds, grains, fodder, as well as processed foods and feeds using these ingredients. The toxicity of mycotoxins varies, ranging from hepatotoxic or even carcinogenic (aflatoxins) effects, to estrogenic (zearalenone), immunotoxic (patulin, trichothecenes, fumonisins), nephrotoxic (ochratoxin A) and neurotoxic (tremorgens) effects. Their toxicity can also be caused by the presence of mycotoxin residues in products deriving from animals fed with contaminated feedstuffs. The mycotoxic risk is difficult to evaluate, as mycotoxin are natural contaminants impossible to eliminate, fungal contaminations are difficult to control, and one mould may produce several toxins. Consequently, further research is needed to improve current knowledge on the toxicity of these products, particularly when various mycotoxins are combined, either together or with other toxins or pathogens.


Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology | 2017

Insights into the role of hepatocyte PPARα activity in response to fasting

Marion Régnier; Arnaud Polizzi; Yannick Lippi; Edwin Fouché; Géraldine Michel; Céline Lukowicz; Sarra Smati; Alain Marrot; F. Lasserre; Claire Naylies; Aurélie Batut; Fanny Viars; Justine Bertrand-Michel; Catherine Postic; Nicolas Loiseau; Walter Wahli; Hervé Guillou; Alexandra Montagner

The liver plays a central role in the regulation of fatty acid metabolism. Hepatocytes are highly sensitive to nutrients and hormones that drive extensive transcriptional responses. Nuclear hormone receptors are key transcription factors involved in this process. Among these factors, PPARα is a critical regulator of hepatic lipid catabolism during fasting. This study aimed to analyse the wide array of hepatic PPARα-dependent transcriptional responses during fasting. We compared gene expression in male mice with a hepatocyte specific deletion of PPARα and their wild-type littermates in the fed (ad libitum) and 24-h fasted states. Liver samples were acquired, and transcriptome and lipidome analyses were performed. Our data extended and confirmed the critical role of hepatocyte PPARα as a central for regulator of gene expression during starvation. Interestingly, we identified novel PPARα-sensitive genes, including Cxcl-10, Rab30, and Krt23. We also found that liver phospholipid remodelling was a novel fasting-sensitive pathway regulated by PPARα. These results may contribute to investigations on transcriptional control in hepatic physiology and underscore the clinical relevance of drugs that target PPARα in liver pathologies, such as non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.


International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2016

Hepatic Fasting-Induced PPARα Activity Does Not Depend on Essential Fatty Acids

Arnaud Polizzi; Edwin Fouché; S. Ducheix; F. Lasserre; Alice Marmugi; Laila Mselli-Lakhal; Nicolas Loiseau; Walter Wahli; Hervé Guillou; Alexandra Montagner

The liver plays a central role in the regulation of fatty acid metabolism, which is highly sensitive to transcriptional responses to nutrients and hormones. Transcription factors involved in this process include nuclear hormone receptors. One such receptor, PPARα, which is highly expressed in the liver and activated by a variety of fatty acids, is a critical regulator of hepatic fatty acid catabolism during fasting. The present study compared the influence of dietary fatty acids and fasting on hepatic PPARα-dependent responses. Pparα−/− male mice and their wild-type controls were fed diets containing different fatty acids for 10 weeks prior to being subjected to fasting or normal feeding. In line with the role of PPARα in sensing dietary fatty acids, changes in chronic dietary fat consumption influenced liver damage during fasting. The changes were particularly marked in mice fed diets lacking essential fatty acids. However, fasting, rather than specific dietary fatty acids, induced acute PPARα activity in the liver. Taken together, the data imply that the potent signalling involved in triggering PPARα activity during fasting does not rely on essential fatty acid-derived ligand.

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Arnaud Polizzi

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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F. Lasserre

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Isabelle P. Oswald

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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P. Galtier

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Edwin Fouché

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Marion Régnier

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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S. Ducheix

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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