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Dive into the research topics where Patrick Vernet is active.

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Featured researches published by Patrick Vernet.


Biology of Reproduction | 2006

Lipid Remodeling of Murine Epididymosomes and Spermatozoa During Epididymal Maturation

Hanae Rejraji; Benoit Sion; Gérard Prensier; Martine Carreras; Claude Motta; Jean-Marie Frenoux; Evelyne Véricel; Genevieve Grizard; Patrick Vernet; Joël R. Drevet

Abstract We have isolated vesicular structures from mouse epididymal fluid, referred to as epididymosomes. Epididymosomes have a roughly spherical aspect and a bilayer membrane, and they are heterogeneous in size and content. They originate from the epididymal epithelium, notably from the caput region, and are emitted in the epididymal lumen by way of apocrine secretion. We characterized their membranous lipid profiles in caput and cauda epididymidal fluid samples and found that epididymosomes were particularly rich in sphingomyelin (SM) and arachidonic acid. The proportion of SM increased markedly during epididymal transit and represented half the total phospholipids in cauda epididymidal epididymosomes. The cholesterol:phospholipid ratio increased from 0.26 in the caput to 0.48 in the cauda epididymidis. Measures of epididymosomal membrane anisotropy revealed that epididymosomes became more rigid during epididymal transit, in agreement with their lipid composition. In addition, we have characterized the membrane lipid pattern of murine epididymal spermatozoa during their maturation. Here, we have shown that mouse epididymal spermatozoa were distinguished by high percentages of SM and polyunsaturated membranous fatty acids (PUFAs), principally represented by arachidonic, docosapentanoic, and docosahexanoic acids. Both SM and PUFA increased throughout the epididymal tract. In particular, we observed a threefold rise in the ratio of docosapentanoic acid. Epididymal spermatozoa had a constant cholesterol:phospholipid ratio (average, 0.30) during epididymal transit. These data suggest that in contrast with epididymosomes, spermatozoal membranes seem to become more fluid during epididymal maturation.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2009

Epididymis seleno-independent glutathione peroxidase 5 maintains sperm DNA integrity in mice

Eléonore Chabory; Christelle Damon; Alain Lenoir; Gary Kauselmann; Hedrun Kern; Branko Zevnik; Catherine Garrel; Fabrice Saez; Rémi Cadet; Joëlle Henry-Berger; Michael Schoor; Ulrich Gottwald; Ursula Habenicht; Joël R. Drevet; Patrick Vernet

The mammalian epididymis provides sperm with an environment that promotes their maturation and protects them from external stresses. For example, it harbors an array of antioxidants, including non-conventional glutathione peroxidase 5 (GPX5), to protect them from oxidative stress. To explore the role of GPX5 in the epididymis, we generated mice that lack epididymal expression of the enzyme. Histological analyses of Gpx5-/- epididymides and sperm cells revealed no obvious defects. Furthermore, there were no apparent differences in the fertilization rate of sexually mature Gpx5-/- male mice compared with WT male mice. However, a higher incidence of miscarriages and developmental defects were observed when WT female mice were mated with Gpx5-deficient males over 1 year old compared with WT males of the same age. Flow cytometric analysis of spermatozoa recovered from Gpx5-null and WT male mice revealed that sperm DNA compaction was substantially lower in the cauda epididymides of Gpx5-null animals and that they suffered from DNA oxidative attacks. Real-time PCR analysis of enzymatic scavengers expressed in the mouse epididymis indicated that the cauda epididymidis epithelium of Gpx5-null male mice mounted an antioxidant response to cope with an excess of ROS. These observations suggest that GPX5 is a potent antioxidant scavenger in the luminal compartment of the mouse cauda epididymidis that protects spermatozoa from oxidative injuries that could compromise their integrity and, consequently, embryo viability.


Biology of Reproduction | 2001

Analysis of Reactive Oxygen Species Generating Systems in Rat Epididymal Spermatozoa

Patrick Vernet; Norma Fulton; Ceanne Wallace; R. John Aitken

Abstract Epididymal sperm maturation culminates in the acquisition of functional competence by testicular spermatozoa. The expression of this functional state is dependent upon a redox-regulated, cAMP-mediated signal transduction cascade that controls the tyrosine phosphorylation status of the spermatozoa during capacitation. Analysis of superoxide anion (O2−·) generation by rat epididymal spermatozoa has revealed a two-component process involving electron leakage from the sperm mitochondria at complexes I and II and a plasma membrane NAD(P)H oxidoreductase. Following incubation in a glucose-, lactate-, and pyruvate-free medium (−GLP), O2−· generation was suppressed by 86% and 96% in caput and cauda spermatozoa, respectively. The addition of lactate, malate, or succinate to spermatozoa incubated in medium −GLP stimulated O2−· generation. This increase could be blocked by rotenone and oligomycin (R/O) in the presence of malate or lactate but not succinate. Stimulation with all three substrates, as well as spontaneous O2−· production in +GLP medium, was blocked by the flavoprotein inhibitor, diphenylene iodonium. Diphenylene iodonium, but not R/O, suppressed NAD(P)H-induced lucigenin-dependent chemiluminescence. This NAD(P)H-dependent enzyme resided in the sperm plasma membrane and its activity was regulated by zinc and uncharacterized cytosolic factors. Reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction analysis indicated that the sperm NAD(P)H oxidoreductase complex is quite distinct from the equivalent leukocyte system.


Molecular Reproduction and Development | 1997

Tissue and developmental distribution, dependence upon testicular factors and attachment to spermatozoa of GPX5, a murine epididymis-specific glutathione peroxidase.

Patrick Vernet; Joelle Faure; Jean-Pierre Dufaure; Joël R. Drevet

Using immunohistochemistry and Western blotting analyses, we present a detailed study of the distribution of the glutathione peroxidase protein (GPX5) within the mouse epididymis. We have shown that the expression of the epididymis‐specific protein is restricted to the caput and essentially localized to the apical cell border of the caput epithelium. Secretion of the protein was detected as early as the proximal segment of the caput and GPX5 was subsequently found in the lumen of corpus and cauda epididymis duct. Within the caput, Western blot analyses have shown that equivalent quantities of GPX5 protein were found in segments, I, II, and III. During ontogenesis, GPX5 appeared at 20 days postnatal, before the completion of the morphological differentiation of the caput and concomitantly with the appearance of spermatozoa within the epididymis, in agreement with what was reported earlier regarding the transcription of its corresponding gene during epididymal ontogenesis (Faure et al., 1991). Hormonal privation by castration abolished the accumulation of the GPX5 protein confirming previous data obtained on GPX5 mRNA levels. Treatments such as testosterone replacement or hemi‐castration led to the restriction of the protein to the caput epithelium, suggesting that protein secretion partly depends both on the presence of testicular factors and on spermatazoa. Using electron microscopy, we have shown that the secreted protein binds to spermatozoa and is found predominantly on the sperm acrosomic region. Finally, we report here that the GPX5 protein can be detected in fluids recovered from the uterinie horns of freshly mated female mice. These results suggest that GPX5 might play an important role in sperm maturation from the early events up to the onset of fertilization and therefore could potentially be used as a tool to monitor sperm quality. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 47:87–98, 1997.


Journal of Andrology | 2011

Glutathione Peroxidases at Work on Epididymal Spermatozoa: An Example of the Dual Effect of Reactive Oxygen Species on Mammalian Male Fertilizing Ability

Anaïs Noblanc; Ayhan Kocer; Eléonore Chabory; Patrick Vernet; Fabrice Saez; Rémi Cadet; Marcus Conrad; Joël R. Drevet

The mammalian glutathione peroxidase (GPx) gene family encodes bifunctional enzymes that can work either as classical reactive oxygen species (ROS) scavengers or as thiol peroxidases, thereby introducing disulfide bridges in thiol-containing proteins. These dual effects are nowhere better demonstrated than in epididymal maturing spermatozoa, where the concomitant actions of several GPx ensure the achievement of the structural maturation of sperm cells as well as their protection against ROS-induced damage. We review here the roles played by the sperm-associated forms of GPx4 (mitochondrial GPx4 and nuclear GPx4), the secreted GPx5 protein, and the epithelial proteins GPx1, GPx3, and cellular GPx4, all functioning in the mammalian epididymis at different stages of the sperms epididymal journey, and in different epididymis compartments.


Biology of Reproduction | 2003

Gene and Protein Expression in the Epididymis of Infertile c-ros Receptor Tyrosine Kinase-Deficient Mice

Trevor G. Cooper; Andrea Wagenfeld; Gail A. Cornwall; Nelson Hsia; Sin Tak Chu; Marie-Claire Orgebin-Crist; Joël R. Drevet; Patrick Vernet; Cosmina Avram; Eberhard Nieschlag; Ching-Hei Yeung

Abstract Transgenic male mice bearing inactive mutations of the receptor tyrosine kinase c-ros lack the initial segment of the epididymis and are infertile. Several techniques were applied to determine differences in gene expression in the epididymal caput of heterozygous fertile (HET) and infertile homozygous knockout (KO) males that may explain the infertility. Complementary DNA arrays, gene chips, Northern and Western blots, and immunohistochemistry indicated that some proteins were downregulated, including the initial segment/proximal caput-specific genes c-ros, cystatin-related epididymal-spermatogenic (CRES), and lipocalin mouse epididymal protein 17 (MEP17), whereas other caput-enriched genes (glutathione peroxidase 5, a disintegrin and metalloproteinase [ADAM7], bone morphogenetic proteins 7 and 8a, A-raf, CCAAT/enhancer binding protein β, PEA3) were unchanged. Genes normally absent from the initial segment (γ-glutamyltranspeptidase, prostaglandin D2 synthetase, alkaline phosphatase) were expressed in the undifferentiated proximal caput of the KO. More distally, lipocalin 2 (24p3), CRISP1 (formerly MEP7), PEBP (MEP9), and mE-RABP (MEP10) were unchanged in expression. Immunohistochemistry and Western blots confirmed the absence of CRES in epididymal tissue and fluid and the continued presence of CRES in spermatozoa of the KO mouse. The glutamate transporters EAAC1 (EAAT3) and EAAT5 were downregulated and upregulated, respectively. The genes of over 70 transporters, channels, and pores were detected in the caput epididymidis, but in the KO, only three were downregulated and six upregulated. The changes in these genes could affect sperm function by modifying the composition of epididymal fluid and explain the infertility of the KO males. These genes may be targets for a posttesticular contraceptive.


Molecular Reproduction and Development | 1998

The PEA3 protein of the Ets oncogene family is a putative transcriptional modulator of the mouse epididymis-specific glutathione peroxidase gene GPX5

Joël R. Drevet; Jean-Jacques Lareyre; Veronique Schwaab; Patrick Vernet; Jean-Pierre Dufaure

This report presents data that suggest that the tissue‐restricted polyoma enhancer activator protein (PEA3) of the Ets oncogene family of DNA‐binding proteins is a putative modulator of the epididymis‐specific glutathione peroxidase 5 gene gpx5. Northern and polymerase chain reactions on reverse‐transcribed epididymal RNAs were used to show that the PEA3 factor is spatially and temporally expressed within the mouse epididymis in a manner consistent with gpx5 characteristics of expression. Then, using cotransfection experiments carried out in heterologous tissue‐culture cells with various deletions of the gpx5 promoter driving a CAT reporter gene, we have shown that the transcriptional activity of the gpx5 promoter is modulated by the presence of the PEA3 protein. Subsequently, we have shown using gel‐shift assays that DNA sequences located within the 5′ flanking region of the gpx5 gene have the ability to bind specifically to the PEA3 protein. Finally, using Northern assays we present data that suggest that PEA3 mRNA accumulation in the mouse caput epididymidis is controlled by androgens and testicular factors. Altogether, these results strongly suggest that the PEA3 factor might participate in the transcriptional control of the murine epididymis caput‐specific gpx5 gene. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 49:131–140, 1998.


Journal of Lipid Research | 2009

LXR and ABCA1 control cholesterol homeostasis in the proximal mouse epididymis in a cell-specific manner

Aurélia Ouvrier; Rémi Cadet; Patrick Vernet; Brigitte Laillet; Jean-Michel Chardigny; Jean-Marc A. Lobaccaro; Joël R. Drevet; Fabrice Saez

Mammalian spermatozoa undergo important plasma membrane maturation steps during epididymal transit. Among these, changes in lipids and cholesterol are of particular interest as they are necessary for fertilization. However, molecular mechanisms regulating these transformations inside the epididymis are still poorly understood. Liver X receptors (LXRs), the nuclear receptors for oxysterols, are of major importance in intracellular cholesterol homeostasis, and LXR−/−-deficient male mice have already been shown to have reduced fertility at an age of 5 months and complete sterility for 9-month-old animals. This sterility phenotype is associated with testes and caput epididymides epithelial defects. The research presented here was aimed at investigating how LXRs act in the male caput epididymidis by analyzing key actors in cholesterol homeostasis. We show that accumulation of cholesteryl esters in LXR−/− male mice is associated with a specific loss of ABCA1 and an increase in apoptosis of apical cells of the proximal caput epididymidis. ATP-binding cassette G1 (ABCG1) and scavenger receptor B1 (SR-B1), two other cholesterol transporters, show little if any modifications. Our study also revealed that SR-B1 appears to have a peculiar expression pattern along the epididymal duct. These results should help in understanding the functional roles of LXR in cholesterol trafficking processes in caput epididymidis.


Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology | 2004

Spontaneously immortalized epithelial cells from mouse caput epididymidis

A. Britan; J-J. Lareyre; A-M. Lefrançois-Martinez; Michèle Manin; V. Schwaab; V. Greiffeuille; Patrick Vernet; Joël R. Drevet

We report here on the characterization of tissue-culture cell lines derived from primary cultures of the mouse caput epididymidis epithelium. The cell lines were spontaneously immortalized without the use of transforming oncogenes. In defined conditions, our epididymal cells adopted various morphological features that resembles that of the in vivo epididymis epithelium such as a polarized organization and the presence of junctional structures at their apical/lateral membranes as revealed by electron microscopy analyses. Flow cytometry analysis revealed that we were dealing with homogenous cell populations that had reached a near-tetraploid state. RT-PCR assays were used in order to show that several genes that can be considered as markers of in vivo caput epididymidis epithelium activity were expressed in our cell lines confirming that these cells were indeed in a differentiated state close to their endogenous state.


Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology | 2004

Male contraception—a topic with many facets

R. John Lye; Petra Sipilä; Patrick Vernet; Andrea Wagenfeld

In addition to the scientific issues associated with male contraception, there are a variety of other concerns that must be addressed before new male contraceptives reach the market. Cultural attitudes toward contraception will play a role both in the acceptability of any contraceptive and in compliance and usage. Delivery methods must also be considered; different methods are favored depending on the social context. Prevention of sexually transmitted diseases by a combined contraceptive/microbicidal treatment is a laudable goal, and may enhance public acceptance of a male contraceptive. This review is the result of a workshop that was convened to address these topics.

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Rémi Cadet

Blaise Pascal University

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Aurore Britan

Blaise Pascal University

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Kevin Mouzat

Blaise Pascal University

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Brigitte Laillet

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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