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Dive into the research topics where Philippe André is active.

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Featured researches published by Philippe André.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2014

TiO2 photocatalysis damages lipids and proteins in Escherichia coli

Gaëlle Carré; Erwann Hamon; Saïd Ennahar; Maxime Estner; Marie-Claire Lett; Peter Horvatovich; Jean Pierre Gies; Valérie Keller; Nicolas Keller; Philippe André

ABSTRACT This study investigates the mechanisms of UV-A (315 to 400 nm) photocatalysis with titanium dioxide (TiO2) applied to the degradation of Escherichia coli and their effects on two key cellular components: lipids and proteins. The impact of TiO2 photocatalysis on E. coli survival was monitored by counting on agar plate and by assessing lipid peroxidation and performing proteomic analysis. We observed through malondialdehyde quantification that lipid peroxidation occurred during the photocatalytic process, and the addition of superoxide dismutase, which acts as a scavenger of the superoxide anion radical (O2·−), inhibited this effect by half, showing us that O2·− radicals participate in the photocatalytic antimicrobial effect. Qualitative analysis using two-dimensional electrophoresis allowed selection of proteins for which spot modifications were observed during the applied treatments. Two-dimensional electrophoresis highlighted that among the selected protein spots, 7 and 19 spots had already disappeared in the dark in the presence of 0.1 g/liter and 0.4 g/liter TiO2, respectively, which is accounted for by the cytotoxic effect of TiO2. Exposure to 30 min of UV-A radiation in the presence of 0.1 g/liter and 0.4 g/liter TiO2 increased the numbers of missing spots to 14 and 22, respectively. The proteins affected by photocatalytic oxidation were strongly heterogeneous in terms of location and functional category. We identified several porins, proteins implicated in stress response, in transport, and in bacterial metabolism. This study reveals the simultaneous effects of O2·− on lipid peroxidation and on the proteome during photocatalytic treatment and therefore contributes to a better understanding of molecular mechanisms in antibacterial photocatalytic treatment.


British Journal of Pharmacology | 2010

Advanced glycation end products (AGEs) activate mast cells

Emilie Sick; S Brehin; Philippe André; G. Coupin; Yves Landry; Kenneth Takeda; Jean-Pierre Gies

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Advanced glycation endproducts (AGEs) represent one of the many types of chemical modifications that occur with age in long‐lived proteins. AGEs also accumulate in pathologies such as diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, neurodegeneration and cancer. Mast cells are major effectors of acute inflammatory responses that also contribute to the progression of chronic diseases. Here we investigated interactions between AGEs and mast cells.


Glia | 2011

Activation of CD47 receptors causes proliferation of human astrocytoma but not normal astrocytes via an Akt‐dependent pathway

Emilie Sick; Abdelaziz Boukhari; Thérèse B. Deramaudt; Philippe Rondé; Bernard Bucher; Philippe André; Jean-Pierre Gies; Kenneth Takeda

CD47 is a membrane receptor that plays pivotal roles in many pathophysiological processes, including infection, inflammation, cell spreading, proliferation, and apoptosis. We show that activation of CD47 increases proliferation of human U87 and U373 astrocytoma cells but not normal astrocytes. CD47 function‐blocking antibodies inhibit proliferation of untreated U87 and U373 cells but not normal astrocytes, suggesting that CD47 may be constitutively activated in astrocytoma. CD47 expression levels were similar in our three cell types. CD47 couples to G‐proteins in astrocytes and astrocytoma and especially to the Gβγ dimer. Downstream signaling following CD47 activation involves Gβγ dimer‐dependent activation of the PI3K/Akt pathway in astrocytoma cells but not in normal astrocytes. This pathway is known to be deregulated in astrocytoma, leading to cell proliferation and enhanced survival signals. Putative PLIC‐1 interaction with CD47 in astrocytoma cells but not astrocytes may contribute to the proliferative effect observed upon activation of CD47. Our data indicate that CD47 receptors have a stimulatory role in cell proliferation and demonstrate for the first time that CD47 signals via the PI3K/Akt pathway in cancerous cells but not normal cells.


Materials Science and Engineering: C | 2014

Effect of ball-milling and Fe-/Al-doping on the structural aspect and visible light photocatalytic activity of TiO2 towards Escherichia coli bacteria abatement.

Laurent Schlur; Sylvie Begin-Colin; P. Gilliot; M. Gallart; Gaëlle Carré; Spiros Zafeiratos; Nicolas Keller; Valérie Keller; Philippe André; Jean-Marc Greneche; Bernard Hezard; Marie-Hélène Desmonts; Geneviève Pourroy

Escherichia coli abatement was studied in liquid phase under visible light in the presence of two commercial titania photocatalysts, and of Fe- and Al-doped titania samples prepared by high energy ball-milling. The two commercial titania photocatalysts, Aeroxide P25 (Evonik industries) exhibiting both rutile and anatase structures and MPT625 (Ishihara Sangyo Kaisha), a Fe-, Al-, P- and S-doped titania exhibiting only the rutile phase, are active suggesting that neither the structure nor the doping is the driving parameter. Although the MPT625 UV-visible spectrum is shifted towards the visible domain with respect to the P25 one, the effect on bacteria is not increased. On the other hand, the ball milled iron-doped P25 samples exhibit low activities in bacteria abatement under visible light due to charge recombinations unfavorable to catalysis as shown by photoluminescence measurements. While doping elements are in interstitial positions within the rutile structure in MPT625 sample, they are located at the surface in ball milled samples and in isolated octahedral units according to (57)Fe Mössbauer spectrometry. The location of doping elements at the surface is suggested to be responsible for the sample cytotoxicity observed in the dark.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Efficient and rapid generation of large genomic variants in rats and mice using CRISMERE

Marie-Christine Birling; Laurence Schaeffer; Philippe André; Loic Lindner; Damien Maréchal; Abdel Ayadi; Tania Sorg; Guillaume Pavlovic; Yann Herault

Modelling Down syndrome (DS) in mouse has been crucial for the understanding of the disease and the evaluation of therapeutic targets. Nevertheless, the modelling so far has been limited to the mouse and, even in this model, generating duplication of genomic regions has been labour intensive and time consuming. We developed the CRISpr MEdiated REarrangement (CRISMERE) strategy, which takes advantage of the CRISPR/Cas9 system, to generate most of the desired rearrangements from a single experiment at much lower expenses and in less than 9 months. Deletions, duplications, and inversions of genomic regions as large as 24.4 Mb in rat and mouse founders were observed and germ line transmission was confirmed for fragment as large as 3.6 Mb. Interestingly we have been able to recover duplicated regions from founders in which we only detected deletions. CRISMERE is even more powerful than anticipated it allows the scientific community to manipulate the rodent and probably other genomes in a fast and efficient manner which was not possible before.


RSC Advances | 2015

Antibacterial textiles functionalized by layer-by-layer assembly of polyelectrolytes and TiO2 photocatalyst

Gaëlle Carré; Laurent Garnier; Janina Moeller-Siegert; Jean-Pierre Gies; Valérie Keller; Philippe André; Nicolas Keller

The sprayed layer-by-layer assembly of TiO2 photocatalyst has been efficiently used for functionalizing polyester textiles and elaborating solar light active antibacterial textiles. Polyethylenimine (PEI) and polyanionic poly(styrene sulfonate) (PSS) polyelectrolytes have been used as polycation and polyanion layers, in alternation with dispersions of negatively- and positively-charged TiO2 particles, respectively. A synergistic effect resulting from both biocidal photocatalytic activity of TiO2 layers and biocidal activity of PEI layers within the multilayer system was put forward for explaining the high self-decontaminating activity of (PEI/TiO2)n functionalized textiles, 5 log of cell viability reduction being achieved with a single TiO2 layer at 50 μg cm−2. The sole solar light photocatalytic antibacterial activity of multilayer textiles was determined by masking the biocidal activity of PEI layers through the controlled assembly of PEI/(PSS/TiO2)n multilayers.


Transgenic Research | 2015

Blastocyst genotyping for quality control of mouse mutant archives: an ethical and economical approach

Ferdinando Scavizzi; Edward Ryder; Stuart Newman; Marcello Raspa; Diane Gleeson; Hannah Wardle-Jones; Lluís Montoliu; A. Fernández; Marie-Laure Dessain; Vanessa Larrigaldie; Zuzana Khorshidi; Reetta Vuolteenaho; Raija Soininen; Philippe André; Sylvie Jacquot; Yi Hong; Martin Hrabé de Angelis; Ramiro Ramirez-Solis; Brendan Doe

With the advent of modern developmental biology and molecular genetics, the scientific community has generated thousands of newly genetically altered strains of laboratory mice with the aim of elucidating gene function. To this end, a large group of Institutions which form the International Mouse Phenotyping Consortium is generating and phenotyping a knockout mouse strain for each of the ~20,000 protein-coding genes using the mutant ES cell resource produced by the International Knockout Mouse Consortium. These strains are made available to the research community via public repositories, mostly as cryopreserved sperm or embryos. To ensure the quality of this frozen resource there is a requirement that for each strain the frozen sperm/embryos are proven able to produce viable mutant progeny, before the live animal resource is removed from cages. Given the current requirement to generate live pups to demonstrate their mutant genotype, this quality control check necessitates the use and generation of many animals and requires considerable time, cage space, technical and economic resources. Here, we describe a simple and efficient method of genotyping pre-implantation stage blastocysts with significant ethical and economic advantages especially beneficial for current and future large-scale mouse mutagenesis projects.


Anticancer Research | 2015

CD47 activation-induced UHRF1 over-expression is associated with silencing of tumor suppressor gene p16INK4A in glioblastoma cells.

Abdelaziz Boukhari; Mahmoud Alhosin; Christian Bronner; Krizia Sagini; Cécile Truchot; Emilie Sick; Valérie B. Schini-Kerth; Philippe André; Yves Mély; Marc Mousli; Jean-Pierre Gies


Photochemical and Photobiological Sciences | 2013

On the use of capillary cytometry for assessing the bactericidal effect of TiO2. Identification and involvement of reactive oxygen species

Gaëlle Carré; Dounia Benhamida; Jean Peluso; Christian D. Muller; Marie-Claire Lett; Jean-Pierre Gies; Valérie Keller; Nicolas Keller; Philippe André


Fems Microbiology Letters | 2016

Endophytic fungi associated with Sudanese medicinal plants show cytotoxic and antibiotic potential

Afra Khiralla; Ietidal Mohamed; Tzvetomira Tzanova; Hervé Schohn; Sophie Slezack-Deschaumes; Alain Hehn; Philippe André; Gaëlle Carré; Rosella Spina; Annelise Lobstein; Sakina Yagi; Dominique Laurain-Mattar

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Gaëlle Carré

University of Strasbourg

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Nicolas Keller

University of Strasbourg

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Emilie Sick

University of Strasbourg

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Erwann Hamon

University of Strasbourg

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Saïd Ennahar

University of Strasbourg

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Kenneth Takeda

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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