Remi Dulize
National Technical University of Athens
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Publication
Featured researches published by Remi Dulize.
Chemical Research in Toxicology | 2016
Ignacio Gonzalez-Suarez; Florian Martin; Emmanuel Guedj; Stefano Acali; Stephanie Johne; Remi Dulize; Karine Baumer; Dariusz Peric; Didier Goedertier; Stefan Frentzel; Nikolai V. Ivanov; Carole Mathis; Julia Hoeng; Manuel C. Peitsch
Cigarette smoke increases the risk for respiratory and other diseases. Although smoking prevalence has declined over the years, millions of adults choose to continue to smoke. Modified risk tobacco products (MRTPs) are potentially valuable tools for adult smokers that are unwilling to quit their habit. Here, we investigated the biological impact of a candidate MRTP, the tobacco-heating system (THS) 2.2, compared to that of the 3R4F reference cigarette in normal primary human bronchial epithelial cells. Chemical characterization of the THS 2.2 aerosol showed reduced levels of harmful constituents compared to those of a combustible cigarette. Multiparametric indicators of cellular toxicity were measured via real-time cellular analysis and high-content screening. The study was complemented by a whole transcriptome analysis, followed by computational approaches to identify and quantify perturbed molecular pathways. Exposure of cells to 3R4F cigarette smoke resulted in a dose-dependent response in most toxicity end points. Moreover, we found a significant level of perturbation in multiple biological pathways, particularly in those related to cellular stress. By contrast, exposure to THS 2.2 resulted in an overall lower biological impact. At 3R4F doses, no toxic effects were observed. A toxic response was observed for THS 2.2 in some functional end points, but the responses occurred at doses between 3 and 15 times higher than those of 3R4F. The level of biological network perturbation was also significantly reduced following THS 2.2 aerosol exposure compared to that of 3R4F cigarette smoke. Taken together, the data suggest that THS 2.2 aerosol is less toxic than combustible cigarette smoke and thus may have the potential to reduce the risk for smoke-related diseases.
Scientific Data | 2014
Carine Poussin; Carole Mathis; Leonidas G. Alexopoulos; Dimitris E. Messinis; Remi Dulize; Vincenzo Belcastro; Ioannis N. Melas; Theodore Sakellaropoulos; Kahn Rhrissorrakrai; Erhan Bilal; Pablo Meyer; Marja Talikka; Stéphanie Boué; Raquel Norel; John Rice; Gustavo Stolovitzky; Nikolai V. Ivanov; Manuel C. Peitsch; Julia Hoeng
The biological responses to external cues such as drugs, chemicals, viruses and hormones, is an essential question in biomedicine and in the field of toxicology, and cannot be easily studied in humans. Thus, biomedical research has continuously relied on animal models for studying the impact of these compounds and attempted to ‘translate’ the results to humans. In this context, the SBV IMPROVER (Systems Biology Verification for Industrial Methodology for PROcess VErification in Research) collaborative initiative, which uses crowd-sourcing techniques to address fundamental questions in systems biology, invited scientists to deploy their own computational methodologies to make predictions on species translatability. A multi-layer systems biology dataset was generated that was comprised of phosphoproteomics, transcriptomics and cytokine data derived from normal human (NHBE) and rat (NRBE) bronchial epithelial cells exposed in parallel to more than 50 different stimuli under identical conditions. The present manuscript describes in detail the experimental settings, generation, processing and quality control analysis of the multi-layer omics dataset accessible in public repositories for further intra- and inter-species translation studies.
Bioinformatics | 2015
Kahn Rhrissorrakrai; Vincenzo Belcastro; Erhan Bilal; Raquel Norel; Carine Poussin; Carole Mathis; Remi Dulize; Nikolai V. Ivanov; Leonidas G. Alexopoulos; John Jeremy Rice; Manuel C. Peitsch; Gustavo Stolovitzky; Pablo Meyer; Julia Hoeng
Motivation: Inferring how humans respond to external cues such as drugs, chemicals, viruses or hormones is an essential question in biomedicine. Very often, however, this question cannot be addressed because it is not possible to perform experiments in humans. A reasonable alternative consists of generating responses in animal models and ‘translating’ those results to humans. The limitations of such translation, however, are far from clear, and systematic assessments of its actual potential are urgently needed. sbv IMPROVER (systems biology verification for Industrial Methodology for PROcess VErification in Research) was designed as a series of challenges to address translatability between humans and rodents. This collaborative crowd-sourcing initiative invited scientists from around the world to apply their own computational methodologies on a multilayer systems biology dataset composed of phosphoproteomics, transcriptomics and cytokine data derived from normal human and rat bronchial epithelial cells exposed in parallel to 52 different stimuli under identical conditions. Our aim was to understand the limits of species-to-species translatability at different levels of biological organization: signaling, transcriptional and release of secreted factors (such as cytokines). Participating teams submitted 49 different solutions across the sub-challenges, two-thirds of which were statistically significantly better than random. Additionally, similar computational methods were found to range widely in their performance within the same challenge, and no single method emerged as a clear winner across all sub-challenges. Finally, computational methods were able to effectively translate some specific stimuli and biological processes in the lung epithelial system, such as DNA synthesis, cytoskeleton and extracellular matrix, translation, immune/inflammation and growth factor/proliferation pathways, better than the expected response similarity between species. Contact: [email protected] or [email protected] Supplementary information: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.
Chemical Research in Toxicology | 2014
Ignacio Gonzalez-Suarez; Alain Sewer; Paul Walker; Carole Mathis; Samantha Ellis; Heather Woodhouse; Emmanuel Guedj; Remi Dulize; Stefano Acali; Florian Martin; Nikolai V. Ivanov; Julia Hoeng; Manuel C. Peitsch
Exposure to cigarette smoke is a leading cause of lung diseases including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and cancer. Cigarette smoke is a complex aerosol containing over 6000 chemicals and thus it is difficult to determine individual contributions to overall toxicity as well as the molecular mechanisms by which smoke constituents exert their effects. We selected three well-known harmful and potentially harmful constituents (HPHCs) in tobacco smoke, acrolein, formaldehyde and catechol, and established a high-content screening method using normal human bronchial epithelial cells, which are the first bronchial cells in contact with cigarette smoke. The impact of each HPHC was investigated using 13 indicators of cellular toxicity complemented with a microarray-based whole-transcriptome analysis followed by a computational approach leveraging mechanistic network models to identify and quantify perturbed molecular pathways. HPHCs were evaluated over a wide range of concentrations and at different exposure time points (4, 8, and 24 h). By high-content screening, the toxic effects of the three HPHCs could be observed only at the highest doses. Whole-genome transcriptomics unraveled toxicity mechanisms at lower doses and earlier time points. The most prevalent toxicity mechanisms observed were DNA damage/growth arrest, oxidative stress, mitochondrial stress, and apoptosis/necrosis. A combination of multiple toxicological end points with a systems-based impact assessment allows for a more robust scientific basis for the toxicological assessment of HPHCs, allowing insight into time- and dose-dependent molecular perturbations of specific biological pathways. This approach allowed us to establish an in vitro systems toxicology platform that can be applied to a broader selection of HPHCs and their mixtures and can serve more generally as the basis for testing the impact of other environmental toxicants on normal bronchial epithelial cells.
Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2015
Diana Kuehn; Shoaib Majeed; Emmanuel Guedj; Remi Dulize; Karine Baumer; Anita R. Iskandar; Stéphanie Boué; Florian Martin; Radina Kostadinova; Carole Mathis; Nikolai V. Ivanov; Stefan Frentzel; Julia Hoeng; Manuel C. Peitsch
Cigarette smoke (CS) has a major impact on lung biology and may result in the development of lung diseases such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or lung cancer. To understand the underlying mechanisms of disease development, it would be important to examine the impact of CS exposure directly on lung tissues. However, this approach is difficult to implement in epidemiological studies because lung tissue sampling is complex and invasive. Alternatively, tissue culture models can facilitate the assessment of exposure impacts on the lung tissue. Submerged 2D cell cultures, such as normal human bronchial epithelial (NHBE) cell cultures, have traditionally been used for this purpose. However, they cannot be exposed directly to smoke in a similar manner to the in vivo exposure situation. Recently developed 3D tissue culture models better reflect the in vivo situation because they can be cultured at the air-liquid interface (ALI). Their basal sides are immersed in the culture medium; whereas, their apical sides are exposed to air. Moreover, organotypic tissue cultures that contain different type of cells, better represent the physiology of the tissue in vivo. In this work, the utilization of an in vitro exposure system to expose human organotypic bronchial and nasal tissue models to mainstream CS is demonstrated. Ciliary beating frequency and the activity of cytochrome P450s (CYP) 1A1/1B1 were measured to assess functional impacts of CS on the tissues. Furthermore, to examine CS-induced alterations at the molecular level, gene expression profiles were generated from the tissues following exposure. A slight increase in CYP1A1/1B1 activity was observed in CS-exposed tissues compared with air-exposed tissues. A network-and transcriptomics-based systems biology approach was sufficiently robust to demonstrate CS-induced alterations of xenobiotic metabolism that were similar to those observed in the bronchial and nasal epithelial cells obtained from smokers.
Scientific Data | 2016
Sam Ansari; Karine Baumer; Stéphanie Boué; Sophie Dijon; Remi Dulize; Kim Ekroos; Ashraf Elamin; Clement Foong; Emmanuel Guedj; Julia Hoeng; Nikolai V. Ivanov; Subash Krishnan; Patrice Leroy; Florian Martin; Celine Merg; Michael J. Peck; Manuel C. Peitsch; Blaine Phillips; Walter K. Schlage; Thomas Schneider; Marja Talikka; Bjoern Titz; Patrick Vanscheeuwijck; Emilija Veljkovic; Terhi Vihervaara; Gregory Vuillaume; Ching Qing Woon
Smoking of combustible cigarettes has a major impact on human health. Using a systems toxicology approach in a model of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (C57BL/6 mice), we assessed the health consequences in mice of an aerosol derived from a prototype modified risk tobacco product (pMRTP) as compared to conventional cigarettes. We investigated physiological and histological endpoints in parallel with transcriptomics, lipidomics, and proteomics profiles in mice exposed to a reference cigarette (3R4F) smoke or a pMRTP aerosol for up to 7 months. We also included a cessation group and a switching-to-pMRTP group (after 2 months of 3R4F exposure) in addition to the control (fresh air-exposed) group, to understand the potential risk reduction of switching to pMRTP compared with continuous 3R4F exposure and cessation. The present manuscript describes the study design, setup, and implementation, as well as the generation, processing, and quality control analysis of the toxicology and ‘omics’ datasets that are accessible in public repositories for further analyses.
Inhalation Toxicology | 2016
Giuseppe Lo Sasso; Bjoern Titz; Catherine Nury; Stéphanie Boué; Blaine Phillips; Vincenzo Belcastro; Thomas Schneider; Sophie Dijon; Karine Baumer; Daruisz Peric; Remi Dulize; Ashraf Elamin; Emmanuel Guedj; Ansgar Buettner; Patrice Leroy; Samuel Kleinhans; Gregory Vuillaume; Emilija Veljkovic; Nikolai V. Ivanov; Florian Martin; Patrick Vanscheeuwijck; Manuel C. Peitsch; Julia Hoeng
Abstract The liver is one of the most important organs involved in elimination of xenobiotic and potentially toxic substances. Cigarette smoke (CS) contains more than 7000 chemicals, including those that exert biological effects and cause smoking-related diseases. Though CS is not directly hepatotoxic, a growing body of evidence suggests that it may exacerbate pre-existing chronic liver disease. In this study, we integrated toxicological endpoints with molecular measurements and computational analyses to investigate effects of exposures on the livers of Apoe−/− mice. Mice were exposed to 3R4F reference CS, to an aerosol from the Tobacco Heating System (THS) 2.2, a candidate modified risk tobacco product (MRTP) or to filtered air (Sham) for up to 8 months. THS2.2 takes advantage of a “heat-not-burn” technology that, by heating tobacco, avoids pyrogenesis and pyrosynthesis. After CS exposure for 2 months, some groups were either switched to the MRTP or filtered air. While no group showed clear signs of hepatotoxicity, integrative analysis of proteomics and transcriptomics data showed a CS-dependent impairment of specific biological networks. These networks included lipid and xenobiotic metabolism and iron homeostasis that likely contributed synergistically to exacerbating oxidative stress. In contrast, most proteomic and transcriptomic changes were lower in mice exposed to THS2.2 and in the cessation and switching groups compared to the CS group. Our findings elucidate the complex biological responses of the liver to CS exposure. Furthermore, they provide evidence that THS2.2 aerosol has reduced biological effects, as compared with CS, on the livers of Apoe−/− mice.
Food and Chemical Toxicology | 2018
Bjoern Titz; Ulrike Kogel; Florian Martin; Walter K. Schlage; Yang Xiang; Catherine Nury; Sophie Dijon; Karine Baumer; Dariusz Peric; David Bornand; Remi Dulize; Blaine Phillips; Patrice Leroy; Gregory Vuillaume; Stefan Lebrun; Ashraf Elamin; Emmanuel Guedj; Keyur Trivedi; Nikolai V. Ivanov; Patrick Vanscheeuwijck; Manuel C. Peitsch; Julia Hoeng
Modified risk tobacco products (MRTPs) have the potential to reduce smoking-related health risks. The Carbon Heated Tobacco Product 1.2 (CHTP1.2) is a potential MRTP that uses a pressed carbon heat source to generate an aerosol by heating tobacco. Here, we report the results from the systems toxicology arm of a 90-day rat inhalation study (OECD test guideline 413) to assess the effects of CHTP1.2 aerosol compared with cigarette smoke (CS). Transcriptomics, proteomics, and lipidomics analyses complemented the standard endpoints. In the respiratory nasal epithelium, CS induced an adaptive tissue and inflammatory response, which was much weaker after CHTP1.2 aerosol exposure, mostly limited to the highest CHTP1.2 concentration (at twice the 3R4F CS concentration: 50 vs. 23 μg nicotine/L), in female rats. In the lungs, the effects of CS exposure included inflammatory and cellular stress responses, which were absent or much lower after CHTP1.2 aerosol exposure. Outside of the respiratory tract, CS and CHTP1.2 aerosol induced effects that were previously associated with exposure to any nicotine-containing aerosol, e.g., lower lipid concentrations in serum. Overall, this systems toxicology analysis complements and confirms the results from classical toxicological endpoints and further suggests potentially reduced respiratory health risks of CHTP1.2.
Food and Chemical Toxicology | 2018
Carine Poussin; Alexandra Laurent; Athanasios Kondylis; Marco van der Toorn; Emmanuel Guedj; Didier Goedertier; Stefano Acali; Claudius Pak; Remi Dulize; Karine Baumer; Dariusz Peric; Elodie Maluenda; David Bornand; Ignacio Gonzalez Suarez; Walter K. Schlage; Nikolai V. Ivanov; Manuel C. Peitsch; Julia Hoeng
Cigarette smoking causes cardiovascular diseases. Heating tobacco instead of burning it reduces the amount of toxic compounds in the aerosol and may exert a reduced impact on health compared with cigarette smoke. Aqueous extract from the aerosol of a potential modified risk tobacco product, the Carbon Heated Tobacco Product (CHTP) 1.2, was compared in vitro with aqueous extract from the smoke of a 3R4F reference cigarette for its impact on the adhesion of monocytic cells to artery endothelial cells. Human coronary artery endothelial cells (HCAEC) were treated for 4 h with conditioned media from human monocytic Mono Mac 6 (MM6) cells exposed to CHTP1.2 or 3R4F extracts for 2 h or directly with those extracts freshly generated. In vitro monocyte-endothelial cell adhesion was measured concomitantly with inflammatory, oxidative stress, cytotoxicity, and death markers. Furthermore, transcriptomics analyses enabled to quantify the level of perturbation in HCAECs, and provide biological interpretation for the underlying molecular changes following exposure to 3R4F or CHTP1.2 extract. Our systems toxicology study demonstrated that approximately 10-15-fold higher concentrations of the CHTP 1.2 aerosol extract were needed to elicit similar effects as the 3R4F smoke extract on cardiovascular disease-relevant inflammation and cytotoxicity-related mechanisms and markers investigated in vitro.
Toxicology Letters | 2015
Carole Mathis; Anita Iskandar; Stephanie Johne; Shoaib Majeed; D. Grandolfo; D. Kuehn; Celine Merg; Ashraf Elamin; Emmanuel Guedj; Remi Dulize; D. Peric; Keyur Trivedi; A. Benyagoub; Yang Xiang; Florian Martin; Patrice Leroy; Stefan Frentzel; Nikolai V. Ivanov; Manuel C. Peitsch; Julia Hoeng
T: +41 58 242 21 13, F: +41 58 242 28 11, W: www.pmi.com CONFIDENTIAL – FOR DISCUSSION PURPOSES ONLY 3R4F smoke (0.15 mg/L nicotine)-exposed nasal tissues have lower proportion of the FoxJ1 positive stained cells 72h after exposure whereas THS2.2 aerosol-exposed tissues had lower proportion of the Ki67-positive stained cells 48 and 72h after exposure. Assessment of the Tobacco Heating System 2.2, a candidate Modified Risk Tobacco Product, on human organotypic nasal and bronchial epithelial tissue culture using systems toxicology approach