Philippe Golstein
Université libre de Bruxelles
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Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology | 1999
Philippe Golstein; Alain Boom; J. van Geffel; Paul Jacobs; B. Masereel; Renaud Beauwens
Abstract Glibenclamide is well known to interact with the sulphonylurea receptor (SUR) and has been shown more recently to inhibit the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator protein (CFTR), both proteins that are members of the ABC [adenosine 5′-triphosphate (ATP)-binding cassette] transporters. The effect of glibenclamide and two synthetic sulphonylcyanoguanidine derivatives (dubbed BM-208 and BM-223) was examined on P-glycoprotein, the major ABC transporter responsible for multidrug resistance (MDR) in cancer cells. To this end, we employed different cell lines that do or do not express P-glycoprotein, as confirmed by Western blotting: first, a tumour cell line (VBL600) selected from a human T-cell line (CEM) derived from an acute leukaemia; second, an epithelial cell line derived from a rat colonic adenocarcinoma (CC531mdr+) and finally, a non tumour epithelial cell line derived from the proximal tubule of the opossum kidney (OK). Glibenclamide and the two related derivatives inhibited P-glycoprotein because firstly, they acutely increased [3H]colchicine accumulation in P-glycoprotein-expressing cell lines only; secondly BM-223 reversed the MDR phenomenon, quite similarly to verapamil, by enhancing the cytotoxicity of colchicine, taxol and vinblastine and thirdly, BM-208 and BM-223 blocked the photoaffinity-labelling of P-glycoprotein by [3H]azidopine. Furthermore, glibenclamide is itself a substrate for P-glycoprotein, since the cellular accumulation of [3H]glibenclamide was low and substantially increased by addition of P-glycoprotein substrates (e.g., vinblastine and cyclosporine) only in the P-glycoprotein-expressing cell lines. We conclude that glibenclamide and two sulphonylcyanoguanidine derivatives inhibit P-glycoprotein and that sulphonylurea drugs would appear to be general inhibitors of ABC transporters, suggesting an interaction with some conserved motif.
Cellular Physiology and Biochemistry | 2011
Laure Twyffels; Claude Massart; Philippe Golstein; Eric Raspé; Jacqueline Van Sande; Jacques Emile Dumont; Renaud Beauwens; Véronique Kruys
In the thyroid, the transport of iodide from the extracellular space to the follicular lumen requires two steps: the transport in the cell at the basal side and in the lumen at the apical side. The first step is mediated by the Na+/I- symporter (NIS). In most reviews and textbooks, the second step is presented as mediated by pendrin. In this review, we analyze this assumption. There are several arguments supporting the concept that indeed pendrin plays an important role in thyroid physiology. However, biochemical, clinical and histological data on the thyroid of a patient with Pendred syndrome do not suggest an essential role in iodide transport, which is corroborated by the lack of a thyroid phenotype in pendrin knockout mice. Experiments in vivo and in vitro on polarized and unpolarized cells show that iodide is transported transport of iodide at the apex of the thyroid cell. Moreover, ectopic expression of pendrin in transfected non-thyroid cells is capable of mediating iodide efflux. It is concluded that pendrin may participate in the iodide efflux into thyroid lumen but not as the unique transporter. Moreover, another role of pendrin in mediating Cl-/HCO3- exchange and controlling luminal pH is suggested.
The Journal of Physiology | 2000
Alain Boom; Philippe Golstein; M. Frérotte; J. Van Sande; Renaud Beauwens
1 The effect of sulphonylurea drugs on hydrosmotic flow across toad urinary bladder epithelium was re‐evaluated in the present study. Glibenclamide, added to the basolateral medium, significantly enhanced the osmotic flow induced by low doses of antidiuretic hormone (ADH) or forskolin (FK), while it inhibited the effect of exogenous cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) or its non‐hydrolysable bromo derivative, 8‐Br‐cAMP, added to the basolateral medium. These opposite effects of glibenclamide on the transepithelial osmotic flow can be explained by a reduction of cAMP permeability across the basolateral membrane of the epithelium. The decrease in cAMP permeability leads, according to the direction of the cAMP gradient, to firstly an enhanced osmotic flow when cAMP is generated intracellularly by addition of ADH and FK, glibenclamide reducing cAMP exit from the cell, and secondly a decreased osmotic flow in response to cAMP (and 8‐Br‐cAMP) added to the basolateral medium, glibenclamide inhibiting, in this case, their entry into the cell 2 The demonstration that glibenclamide actually inhibits the basolateral cAMP permeability rests on the fact that firstly it decreases the release of cAMP into the basolateral medium by about 40 %, at each concentration of ADH or forskolin tested, secondly it increases the cAMP content of paired hemibladders incubated in the presence of ADH or FK, when intracellular degradation was prevented by phosphodiesterase inhibition, and thirdly it decreases also the uptake of basolateral 8‐Br‐[3H]cAMP into paired toad hemibladders. 3 Taken together, the present data demonstrate that glibenclamide inhibits the toad urinary bladder basolateral membrane permeability to cAMP, most probably by a direct interaction with a membrane protein not yet indentified but distinct from the sulphonylurea receptor.
Methods in Enzymology | 1999
Philippe Golstein; Abdullah Sener; Fernand Colin; Renaud Beauwens
Publisher Summary The functional unit of the thyroid is the follicle, a cystlike structure lined by a single-layer epithelium, the follicular epithelium, enclosing a central cavity: the colloid. The latter one represents a special extracellular compartment that serves as a reservoir for storage of iodinated thyroglobulin—that is, a prohormone from which thyroid hormones are released on appropriate stimulus. Thyroglobulin is synthesized within the endoplasmic reticulum of the follicular cells (or thyrocytes) and is secreted into the colloid. Iodide reaches this compartment separately where it is eventually coupled to thyroglobulin. This chapter reviews the evidence for the existence of an iodide channel in the apical membrane of the thyrocyte.
American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 1992
Philippe Golstein; Maurice Abramow; Jacques Emile Dumont; Robert Beauwens
Endocrine | 2007
Alain Boom; Pascale Lybaert; Jean-François Pollet; Paul Jacobs; Hassan Jijakli; Philippe Golstein; Abdullah Sener; Willy Malaisse; Renaud Beauwens
American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 1997
Olivier Devuyst; Philippe Golstein; Marcio V. Sanches; Klaus Piontek; Patricia D. Wilson; William B. Guggino; Jacques E. Dumont; Renaud Beauwens
American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 1995
Philippe Golstein; Abdullah Sener; Renaud Beauwens
Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology | 2016
Raphaël Crutzen; Myrna Virreira; Nicolas Markadieu; Vadim Shlyonsky; Abdullah Sener; Willy Malaisse; Renaud Beauwens; Alain Boom; Philippe Golstein
Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology | 1997
L. Vroye; Renaud Beauwens; J. Van Sande; D. Daloze; Jean Claude Braekman; Philippe Golstein