Pierre-Henri Guelluy
University of Liège
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Featured researches published by Pierre-Henri Guelluy.
Photochemical and Photobiological Sciences | 2010
Pierre-Henri Guelluy; Marie-Pierre Fontaine-Aupart; Angeliki Grammenos; Sandrine Lécart; Jacques Piette; Maryse Hoebeke
Photodynamic therapy (PDT), induced by a photosensitizer (PS) encapsulated in a nanostructure, has emerged as an appropriate treatment to cure a multitude of oncological and non-oncological diseases. Pyropheophorbide-a methyl ester (PPME) is a second-generation PS tested in PDT, and is a potential candidate for future clinical applications. The present study, carried out in a human colon carcinoma cell line (HCT-116), evaluates the improvement resulting from a liposomal formulation of PPME versus free-PPME. Absorption and fluorescence spectroscopies, fluorescence lifetime measurements, subcellular imaging and co-localization analysis have been performed in order to analyze the properties of PPME for each delivery mode. The benefit of drug encapsulation in DMPC-liposomes is clear from our experiments, with a 5-fold higher intracellular drug delivery than that observed with free-PPME at similar concentrations. The reactive oxygen species (ROSs) produced after PPME-mediated photosensitization have been identified and quantified by using electron spin resonance spectroscopy. Our results demonstrate that PPME-PDT-mediated ROSs are composed of singlet oxygen and a hydroxyl radical. The small amounts of PPME inside mitochondria, as revealed by fluorescence co-localization analysis, could maybe explain the very low apoptotic cell death measured in HCT-116 cells.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2010
Angeliki Grammenos; Ange Mouithys-Mickalad; Pierre-Henri Guelluy; Marjorie Lismont; Géraldine Piel; Maryse Hoebeke
A new way to study the action of cyclodextrin was developed to quantify the damage caused on cell membrane and lipid bilayer. The Electron Spin Resonance (ESR) spectroscopy was used to study the action of Randomly methylated-beta-cyclodextrin (Rameb) on living cells (HCT-116). The relative anisotropy observed in ESR spectrum of nitroxide spin probe (5-DSA and cholestane) is directly related to the rotational mobility of the probe, which can be further correlated with the microviscosity. The use of ESR probes clearly shows a close correlation between cholesterol contained in cells and cellular membrane microviscosity. This study also demonstrates the Rameb ability to extract cholesterol and phospholipids in time- and dose-dependent ways. In addition, ESR spectra enabled to establish that cholesterol is extracted from lipid rafts to form stable aggregates. The present work supports that ESR is an easy, reproducible and noninvasive technique to study the effect of cyclodextrins on cell membranes.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2009
Angeliki Grammenos; Mohamed Ali Bahri; Pierre-Henri Guelluy; Géraldine Piel; Maryse Hoebeke
In the present work, the effect of Randomly-methylated-beta-cyclodextrin (Rameb) on the microviscosity of dimyristoyl-l-alpha phosphatidylcholine (DMPC) bilayer was investigated using the electron spin resonance (ESR) technique. The ability of Rameb to extract membrane cholesterol was demonstrated. For the first time, the percentage of cholesterol extracted by Rameb from cholesterol doped DMPC bilayer was monitored and quantified throughout a wide Rameb concentration range. The effect of cholesterol on the inner part of the membrane was also investigated using 16-doxyl stearic acid spin label (16-DSA). 16-DSA seems to explore two different membrane domains and report their respective microviscosities. ESR experiments also establish that the presence of 30% of cholesterol in DMPC liposomes suppresses the jump in membrane fluidity at lipids phase-transition temperature (23.9 degrees C).
Macromolecular Bioscience | 2013
Marie Hurtgen; Antoine Debuigne; Maryse Hoebeke; Catherine Passirani; Nolwenn Lautram; Ange Mouithys-Mickalad; Pierre-Henri Guelluy; Christine Jérôme; Christophe Detrembleur
Water-soluble star-like poly(vinyl alcohol)/C(60) and poly{[poly(ethylene glycol) acrylate]-co-(vinyl acetate)}/C(60) nanohybrids are prepared by grafting macroradicals onto C(60) and are assessed as photosensitizers for photodynamic therapy. The photophysical and biological properties of both nanohybrids highlight key characteristics influencing their overall efficiency. The macromolecular structure (linear/graft) and nature (presence/absence of hydroxyl groups) of the polymeric arms respectively impact the photodynamic activity and the stealthiness of the nanohybrids. The advantages of both nanohybrids are encountered in a third one, poly[(N-vinylpyrrolidone)-co-(vinyl acetate)]/C(60) , which has linear grafts without hydroxyl groups, and shows a better photodynamic activity.
Archive | 2011
Angeliki Grammenos; Caroline Quoilin; Pierre-Henri Guelluy; Maryse Hoebeke
Archive | 2010
Pierre-Henri Guelluy; Caroline Quoilin; Angeliki Grammenos; Marie-Pierre Fontaine-Aupart; Maryse Hoebeke
Archive | 2010
Maryse Hoebeke; Pierre-Henri Guelluy; Angeliki Grammenos
Archive | 2010
Angeliki Grammenos; Pierre-Henri Guelluy; Géraldine Piel; Maryse Hoebeke
Archive | 2010
Caroline Quoilin; Pierre-Henri Guelluy; Angeliki Grammenos; Maryse Hoebeke
Archive | 2009
Angeliki Grammenos; Marjorie Lismont; Pierre-Henri Guelluy; Maryse Hoebeke