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Dive into the research topics where Sébastien Harlepp is active.

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Featured researches published by Sébastien Harlepp.


Cancer Research | 2009

A Ruthenium-Containing Organometallic Compound Reduces Tumor Growth through Induction of the Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress Gene CHOP

Xiangjun Meng; Mili L. Leyva; Marjorie Jenny; Isabelle Gross; Samir Benosman; Bastien Fricker; Sébastien Harlepp; Pascal Hébraud; Anne Boos; Pauline Wlosik; Pierre Bischoff; Claude B. Sirlin; Michel Pfeffer; Jean-Philippe Loeffler; Christian Gaiddon

Cisplatin-derived anticancer therapy has been used for three decades despite its side effects. Other types of organometallic complexes, namely, some ruthenium-derived compounds (RDC), which would display cytotoxicity through different modes of action, might represent alternative therapeutic agents. We have studied both in vitro and in vivo the biological properties of RDC11, one of the most active compounds of a new class of RDCs that contain a covalent bond between the ruthenium atom and a carbon. We showed that RDC11 inhibited the growth of various tumors implanted in mice more efficiently than cisplatin. Importantly, in striking contrast with cisplatin, RDC11 did not cause severe side effects on the liver, kidneys, or the neuronal sensory system. We analyzed the mode of action of RDC11 and showed that RDC11 interacted poorly with DNA and induced only limited DNA damages compared with cisplatin, suggesting alternative transduction pathways. Indeed, we found that target genes of the endoplasmic reticulum stress pathway, such as Bip, XBP1, PDI, and CHOP, were activated in RDC11-treated cells. Induction of the transcription factor CHOP, a crucial mediator of endoplasmic reticulum stress apoptosis, was also confirmed in tumors treated with RDC11. Activation of CHOP led to the expression of several of its target genes, including proapoptotic genes. In addition, the silencing of CHOP by RNA interference significantly reduced the cytotoxicity of RDC11. Altogether, our results led us to conclude that RDC11 acts by an atypical pathway involving CHOP and endoplasmic reticulum stress, and thus might provide an interesting alternative for anticancer therapy.


Biochemical Pharmacology | 2012

Induction of caspase 8 and reactive oxygen species by ruthenium-derived anticancer compounds with improved water solubility and cytotoxicity

Vania Vidimar; Xiangjun Meng; Marcelina Klajner; Cynthia Licona; Ludivine Fetzer; Sébastien Harlepp; Pascal Hébraud; Marjorie Sidhoum; Claude B. Sirlin; Jean-Philippe Loeffler; Georg Mellitzer; Gianni Sava; Michel Pfeffer; Christian Gaiddon

Organometallic compounds which contain metals, such as ruthenium or gold, have been investigated as a replacement for platinum-derived anticancer drugs. They often show good antitumor effects, but the identification of their precise mode of action or their pharmacological optimization is still challenging. We have previously described a class of ruthenium(II) compounds with interesting anticancer properties. In comparison to cisplatin, these molecules have lower side effects, a reduced ability to interact with DNA, and they induce cell death in absence of p53 through CHOP/DDIT3. We have now optimized these molecules by improving their cytotoxicity and their water solubility. In this article, we demonstrate that by changing the ligands around the ruthenium we modify the ability of the compounds to interact with DNA. We show that these optimized molecules reduce tumor growth in different mouse models and retain their ability to induce CHOP/DDIT3. However, they are more potent inducers of cancer cell death and trigger the production of reactive oxygen species and the activation of caspase 8. More importantly, we show that blocking reactive oxygen species production or caspase 8 activity reduces significantly the activity of the compounds. Altogether our data suggest that water-soluble ruthenium(II)-derived compounds represent an interesting class of molecules that, depending on their structures, can target several pro-apoptotic signaling pathways leading to reactive oxygen species production and caspase 8 activation.


Current Biology | 2013

Heartbeat-Driven Pericardiac Fluid Forces Contribute to Epicardium Morphogenesis

Marina Peralta; Emily Steed; Sébastien Harlepp; Juan Manuel González-Rosa; Fabien Monduc; Ana Ariza-Cosano; Alfonso Cortés; Teresa Rayon; José Luis Gómez-Skarmeta; A. Zapata; Julien Vermot; Nadia Mercader

BACKGROUND Hydrodynamic forces play a central role in organ morphogenesis. The role of blood flow in shaping the developing heart is well established, but the role of fluid forces generated in the pericardial cavity surrounding the heart is unknown. Mesothelial cells lining the pericardium generate the proepicardium (PE), the precursor cell population of the epicardium, the outer layer covering the myocardium, which is essential for its maturation and the formation of the heart valves and coronary vasculature. However, there is no evidence from in vivo studies showing how epicardial precursor cells reach and attach to the heart. RESULTS Using optical tools for real-time analysis in the zebrafish, including high-speed imaging and optical tweezing, we show that the heartbeat generates pericardiac fluid advections that drive epicardium formation. These flow forces trigger PE formation and epicardial progenitor cell release and motion. The pericardial flow also influences the site of PE cell adhesion to the myocardium. We additionally identify novel mesothelial sources of epicardial precursors and show that precursor release and adhesion occur both through pericardiac fluid advections and through direct contact with the myocardium. CONCLUSIONS Two hydrodynamic forces couple cardiac development and function: first, blood flow inside the heart, and second, the pericardial fluid advections outside the heart identified here. This pericardiac fluid flow is essential for epicardium formation and represents the first example of hydrodynamic flow forces controlling organogenesis through an action on mesothelial cells.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2010

DNA binding to an anticancer organo-ruthenium complex.

Marcelina Klajner; Pascal Hébraud; Claude B. Sirlin; Christian Gaiddon; Sébastien Harlepp

Because many anticancer drugs interact with DNA, the determination of their association constants to DNA is essential for quantifying their mechanisms of action. The interactions between a new ruthenium-derived compound [ruthenium(phenanthroline)(κ-C,N-(2-phenyl-pyridine)(NCMe)(2)]PF(6), called RDC11] and DNA are studied using different techniques. Fluorescent experiments are used to determine the association and dissociation constants under different salt concentrations. The binding is shown to be reversible and noncovalent. The association constants vary from 1.5 × 10(6) M(-1) to 2.9 × 10(3) M(-1) when increasing the sodium concentration from 0.1 to 200 mM. Single-molecule stretching methods are used to study the interaction of RDC with longer DNA strands (8.6 kbp home-built dimer of pBR322). The affinities of RDC with DNA under different loads are obtained using McGhee and von Hippel analysis. The affinity constant and thermodynamic parameters are in good agreement with the values found in the literature and lead to the conclusion that this molecule intercalates dsDNA.


Cell Adhesion & Migration | 2015

Metastasis of circulating tumor cells: Favorable soil or suitable biomechanics, or both?

Ana Sofia Azevedo; Gautier Follain; Shankar Patthabhiraman; Sébastien Harlepp; Jacky G. Goetz

Metastasis is the end product of a multistep process where cancer cells disseminate and home themselves in distant organs. Tumor cell extravasation is a rare, inefficient and transient event in nature and makes its studies very difficult. Noteworthy, little is known about how cancer cells arrest, adhere and pass through the endothelium of capillaries. Moreover, the key events driving metastatic growth in specific organs are not well understood. Thus, although metastasis is the leading cause of cancer-related death, how cancer cells acquire their abilities to colonize distant organs and why they do so in specific locations remain central questions in the understanding of this deadly disease. In this review, we would like to confront 2 concepts explaining the efficiency and location of metastatic secondary tumors. While the “seed and soil” hypothesis states that metastasis occurs at sites where the local microenvironment is favorable, the “mechanical” concept argues that metastatic seeding occurs at sites of optimal flow patterns. In addition, recent evidence suggests that the primary event driving tumor cell arrest before extravasation is mostly controlled by blood circulation patterns as well as mechanical cues during the process of extravasation. In conclusion, the organ tropism displayed by cancer cells during metastatic colonization is a multi-step process, which is regulated by the delivery and survival of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) through blood circulation, the ability of these CTCs to adhere and cross the physical barrier imposed by the endothelium and finally by the suitability of the soil to favor growth of secondary tumors.


Journal of Cell Science | 2017

Seeing is believing: multi-scale spatio-temporal imaging towards in vivo cell biology.

Gautier Follain; Luc Mercier; Naël Osmani; Sébastien Harlepp; Jacky G. Goetz

ABSTRACT Life is driven by a set of biological events that are naturally dynamic and tightly orchestrated from the single molecule to entire organisms. Although biochemistry and molecular biology have been essential in deciphering signaling at a cellular and organismal level, biological imaging has been instrumental for unraveling life processes across multiple scales. Imaging methods have considerably improved over the past decades and now allow to grasp the inner workings of proteins, organelles, cells, organs and whole organisms. Not only do they allow us to visualize these events in their most-relevant context but also to accurately quantify underlying biomechanical features and, so, provide essential information for their understanding. In this Commentary, we review a palette of imaging (and biophysical) methods that are available to the scientific community for elucidating a wide array of biological events. We cover the most-recent developments in intravital imaging, light-sheet microscopy, super-resolution imaging, and correlative light and electron microscopy. In addition, we illustrate how these technologies have led to important insights in cell biology, from the molecular to the whole-organism resolution. Altogether, this review offers a snapshot of the current and state-of-the-art imaging methods that will contribute to the understanding of life and disease. Summary: This Commentary provides an overview of the imaging technologies currently available for performing cell biology in vivo.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2014

Subcellular localization and transport kinetics of ruthenium organometallic anticancer compounds in living cells: a dose-dependent role for amino acid and iron transporters.

Marcelina Klajner; Cynthia Licona; Ludivine Fetzer; Pascal Hébraud; Georg Mellitzer; Michel Pfeffer; Sébastien Harlepp; Christian Gaiddon

Ruthenium-based compounds are developed for anticancer treatment, but their mode of action including their import mechanism and subcellular localization remains elusive. Here, we used the intrinsic luminescent properties of cytotoxic organoruthenium (Ru(II)) compounds obtained with an anionic cyclometalated 2-phenylpyridine chelate and neutral aromatic chelating ligands (e.g., phenanthrolines) to follow their behavior in living cells. We established that the difference in sensitivity between cancer cells and noncancerous cells toward one of the compounds correlates with its import kinetics and follows a balance between active and passive transport. The active-transport mechanism involves iron and amino-acid transporters, which are transcriptionally regulated by the drug. We also demonstrated a correlation between the accumulation of these compounds in specific compartments (endoplasmic reticulum, nucleus, mitochondria) and the activation of specific cytotoxic mechanisms such as the mitochondrial stress pathway. Our study pinpoints a novel and complex mechanism of accumulation of ruthenium drugs in cancer cells.


Development | 2013

Pulse propagation by a capacitive mechanism drives embryonic blood flow

Halina Anton; Sébastien Harlepp; Caroline Ramspacher; Dave Wu; Fabien Monduc; Sandeep Bhat; Michael Liebling; Camille Paoletti; Gilles Charvin; Jonathan B. Freund; Julien Vermot

Pulsatile flow is a universal feature of the blood circulatory system in vertebrates and can lead to diseases when abnormal. In the embryo, blood flow forces stimulate vessel remodeling and stem cell proliferation. At these early stages, when vessels lack muscle cells, the heart is valveless and the Reynolds number (Re) is low, few details are available regarding the mechanisms controlling pulses propagation in the developing vascular network. Making use of the recent advances in optical-tweezing flow probing approaches, fast imaging and elastic-network viscous flow modeling, we investigated the blood-flow mechanics in the zebrafish main artery and show how it modifies the heart pumping input to the network. The movement of blood cells in the embryonic artery suggests that elasticity of the network is an essential factor mediating the flow. Based on these observations, we propose a model for embryonic blood flow where arteries act like a capacitor in a way that reduces heart effort. These results demonstrate that biomechanics is key in controlling early flow propagation and argue that intravascular elasticity has a role in determining embryonic vascular function.


Archive | 2018

Using the Zebrafish Embryo to Dissect the Early Steps of the Metastasis Cascade

Gautier Follain; Naël Osmani; Cédric Fuchs; Guillaume Allio; Sébastien Harlepp; Jacky G. Goetz

Most cancers end up with the death of patients caused by the formation of secondary tumors, called metastases. However, how these secondary tumors appear and develop is only poorly understood. A fine understanding of the multiple steps of the metastasis cascade requires in vivo models allowing high spatiotemporal analysis of the behavior of metastatic cells. Zebrafish embryos combine several advantages such as transparency, small size, stereotyped anatomy, and easy handling, making it a very powerful model for cell and cancer biology, and in vivo imaging analysis. In the following chapter, we describe a complete procedure allowing in vivo imaging methods, at high throughput and spatiotemporal resolution, to assess the behavior of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in an experimental metastasis assay. This protocol provides access, for the first time, to the earliest steps of tumor cell seeding during metastasis formation.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2017

Hemodynamic forces can be accurately measured in vivo with optical tweezers

Sébastien Harlepp; Fabrice Thalmann; Gautier Follain; Jacky G. Goetz

Force sensing and generation is central to many biological events. There is a growing interest in modern cell biology for methods enabling force measurements in vivo. Here we demonstrate the power of optical tweezing in measuring low-range hemodynamic forces in vivo and, thereby, offer an unprecedented tool for both cell and developmental biology.

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Pascal Hébraud

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jacky G. Goetz

University of Strasbourg

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Michel Pfeffer

University of Strasbourg

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Naël Osmani

University of Strasbourg

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Cynthia Licona

University of Strasbourg

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