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Dive into the research topics where Serge Delpal is active.

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Featured researches published by Serge Delpal.


American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 2010

Colon luminal content and epithelial cell morphology are markedly modified in rats fed with a high-protein diet

Mireille Andriamihaja; Anne-Marie Davila; Mamy Eklou-Lawson; Nathalie Petit; Serge Delpal; Fadhila Allek; Anne Blais; Corine Delteil; Daniel Tomé; François Blachier

Hyperproteic diets are used in human nutrition to obtain body weight reduction. Although increased protein ingestion results in an increased transfer of proteins from the small to the large intestine, there is little information on the consequences of the use of such diets on the composition of large intestine content and on epithelial cell morphology and metabolism. Rats were fed for 15 days with either a normoproteic (NP, 14% protein) or a hyperproteic isocaloric diet (HP, 53% protein), and absorptive colonocytes were observed by electron microscopy or isolated for enzyme activity studies. The colonic luminal content was recovered for biochemical analysis. Absorbing colonocytes were characterized by a 1.7-fold reduction in the height of the brush-border membranes (P = 0.0001) after HP diet consumption when compared with NP. This coincided in the whole colon content of HP animals with a 1.8-fold higher mass content (P = 0.0020), a 2.2-fold higher water content (P = 0.0240), a 5.2-fold higher protease activity (P = 0.0104), a 5.5-fold higher ammonia content (P = 0.0008), and a more than twofold higher propionate, valerate, isobutyrate, and isovalerate content (P < 0.05). The basal oxygen consumption of colonocytes was similar in the NP and HP groups, but ammonia was found to provoke a dose-dependent decrease of oxygen consumption in the isolated absorbing colonocytes. The activity of glutamine synthetase (which condenses ammonia and glutamate) was found to be much higher in colonocytes than in small intestine enterocytes and was 1.6-fold higher (P = 0.0304) in colonocytes isolated from HP animals than NP. Glutaminase activity remained unchanged. Thus hyperproteic diet ingestion causes marked changes both in the luminal environment of colonocytes and in the characteristics of these cells, demonstrating that hyperproteic diet interferes with colonocyte metabolism and morphology. Possible causal relationships between energy metabolism, reduced height of colonocyte brush-border membranes, and reduced water absorption are discussed.


The Journal of Physiology | 2006

Oxytocin stimulates secretory processes in lactating rabbit mammary epithelial cells

Vanessa Lollivier; Pierre-Guy Marnet; Serge Delpal; Dominique Rainteau; Caroline Achard; Aline Rabot; Michèle Ollivier-Bousquet

Oxytocin plays a major role in lactation mainly by its action on milk ejection via the contraction of myoepithelial cells. The effect of oxytocin on milk production and the presence of oxytocin receptors on different epithelial cells suggest that this hormone may play a role in mammary epithelial cells. To determine precisely the various roles of oxytocin, we studied localization of oxytocin receptors in lactating rabbit and rat mammary tissue and the influence of oxytocin on secretory processes in lactating rabbit mammary epithelial cells. Immunolocalization of oxytocin receptors on mammary epithelial cells by immunofluorescence and in mammary tissue by immunogold in addition to in situ hybridization showed that lactating rat and rabbit mammary epithelial cells expressed oxytocin receptors. Moreover, oxytocin bound specifically to epithelial cells. To determine whether oxytocin had an effect on lactating rabbit mammary epithelial cells, isolated mammary fragments were incubated in the presence or absence of 10−6 i.u. ml−1 of oxytocin. After 1 min of incubation with oxytocin, the morphology of epithelial cells and the localization of caseins and proteins associated with the secretory traffic suggested a striking acceleration of the transport leading to exocytosis, whereas the contraction of myoepithelial cells was only detectable after 7 min. Addition of 10−8 g ml−1 of atosiban before the addition of oxytocin prevented the oxytocin effect on secretory processes and on myoepithelial cell contraction. Addition of 10−6 i.u. ml−1 of vasopressin to the incubation medium did not mimic the stimulating effect of oxytocin on secretory traffic. These results show that lactating rabbit and rat mammary epithelial cells express oxytocin receptors and that oxytocin binds to these receptors. They strongly suggest that oxytocin has a dual effect on lactating mammary tissue: an acceleration of the intracellular transfer of caseins in mammary epithelial cells followed by the contraction of myoepithelial cells.


Cell Biology and Toxicology | 2002

Isolation of pig colonic crypts for cytotoxic assay of luminal compounds: effects of hydrogen sulfide, ammonia, and deoxycholic acid.

X. Leschelle; Véronique Robert; Serge Delpal; Béatrice Mouillé; Camille Mayeur; P. Martel; François Blachier

Some colonic luminal molecules resulting from bacterial metabolism of alimentary or endogenous compounds are believed to exert various effects on the colonic epithelial cell physiology. We isolated surface epithelial cells and intact colonic crypts in order to test bacterial metabolites in the pig model, which is often considered relevant for extrapolation to the physiopathology of the human gastrointestinal tract. Using colonocytes isolated with EDTA, we found that the initial cell viability, estimated by the membrane integrity and oxidative capacity measurement, fell rapidly despite several experimental attempts to preserve it such as the use of a medium designed to increase the adherence of epithelial cells and of a coated extracellular matrix, the presence in the culture medium of the oxidative substrate butyrate, and the use of an inhibitor of the caspases involved in cell apoptosis. In contrast, using dispase and collagenase as proteolytic agents, we were able to obtain pig colonic crypts that maintain an excellent membrane integrity after 4 h. Using this preparation, we were able to test the presumably cytotoxic luminal compounds hydrogen sulfide, ammonia, and deoxycholic acid on colonic crypt viability. Of these, only deoxycholic acid was found to significantly alter the cellular membrane integrity. It is concluded that pig colonic crypts can be useful for thein vitro appraisal of the cytotoxic properties of luminal compounds.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1998

De novo synthesis of arginine and ornithine from citrulline in human colon carcinoma cells: metabolic fate of l-ornithine

Mohamed Selamnia; Véronique Robert; Camille Mayeur; Serge Delpal; François Blachier

In human colon carcinoma cells (HT-29 cells), L-arginine is the common precursor of L-ornithine which generates polyamines strictly necessary for cellular growth, and nitric oxide which has a strong antiproliferative activity. We show here that proliferative HT-29 cells possess the capacity for de novo synthesis of L-arginine from L-citrulline, but not from L-ornithine. L-Ornithine is apparently not an L-arginine precursor due to the absence of any detectable ornithine carbamoyltransferase activity. In contrast, the newly synthesized L-arginine was competent for urea and thus L-ornithine production in a context of a high putrescine production in the ornithine decarboxylase pathway and a low degradation of this polyamine in the diamine oxidase pathway. However, cells grown in an arginine-free culture medium containing added L-citrulline were unable to reach confluency. Furthermore, the low amount of nitric oxide produced from L-arginine by these cells was apparently not involved in the control of cell growth since inhibition of nitric oxide synthase activity was without effect. On the other hand, the capacity of more differentiated and less proliferative HT-29 cells for de novo L-arginine synthesis from L-citrulline was increased. It is concluded that L-citrulline is a precursor of L-arginine and L-ornithine in proliferative HT-29 cells and that the metabolic fate of L-ornithine in these cells is mainly devoted to polyamine synthesis. The similarity between differentiated HT-29 cells and the enterocytes of newborn animals in terms of L-arginine metabolism is finally discussed.


Endocrinology | 2008

Prolactin promotes the secretion of active cathepsin D at the basal side of rat mammary acini.

Roberta Castino; Serge Delpal; Edwige Bouguyon; Marina Démoz; Ciro Isidoro; Michèle Ollivier-Bousquet

Cathepsin D (CD), a lysosomal aspartic protease present in mammary tissue and milk in various molecular forms, is also found in the incubation medium of mammary acini in molecular forms that are proteolytically active on prolactin at a physiological pH. Because prolactin controls the vesicular traffic in mammary cells, we studied, in vivo and in vitro, its effects on the polarized transport and secretion of various forms of CD in the rat mammary gland. CD accumulated in vesicles not involved in endocytosis in the basal region of cells. Prolactin increased this accumulation and the release of endosomal active single-chain CD at the basal side of acini. The CD-mediated proteolysis of prolactin, leading to the antiangiogenic 16-kDa form, at a physiological pH, was observed only in conditioned medium but not milk. These data support the novel concept that an active molecular form of CD, secreted at the basal side of the mammary epithelium, participates in processing blood-borne prolactin outside the cell, this polarized secretion being controlled by prolactin itself.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1995

Vitamin A contained in the lipid droplets of rat liver stellate cells is substrate for acid retinyl ester hydrolase

Véronique Azaïs-Braesco; Isabelle Dodeman; Serge Delpal; Marie-Cécile Alexandre-Gouabau; Anne Partier; Patrick Borel; Pascal Grolier

Vitamin A is stored in the lipid droplets of liver stellate cells (LSCs), as retinyl esters whose hydrolysis is necessary for the secretion of retinol into the blood. Here, we isolated these retinyl esters under their physiological form, i.e., in LSC lipid droplets, which had retained their morphological and biochemical characteristics. These retinyl esters are substrate for an hydrolytic enzyme, whose optimum pH is 4.1, and which is kinetically similar to the acidic retinyl ester hydrolase (aREH) we had previously described (Mercier et al., Biochim. Biophys. Acta (1994) 1212, 176-182). The cellular and subcellular localizations of aREH activity in rat liver suggest that this enzyme could be involved in the hydrolysis of the esterified vitamin A stores.


FEBS Letters | 1997

Rat prolactin synthesis by lactating mammary epithelial cells

Mustapha Lkhider; Serge Delpal; Fabienne Le Provost; Michèle Ollivier-Bousquet

It has previously been suggested that the mammary cell could produce prolactin (PRL). This hypothesis was investigated by incubation with [35S]methionine‐cysteine followed by SDS‐PAGE, immunoblotting and autoradiography of immunoprecipitated PRL, and by electron microscopic analysis after incubation without or with cycloheximide. Immunoreactive 14‐, 23‐, 25‐, 32‐ and 36‐kDa PRL forms were radioactive. By two‐dimensional electrophoresis analysis, immunoreactive and radioactive spots, of about 25 kDa and high molecular weight, were also detected. After incubation of mammary epithelial cells with cycloheximide, immunogold electron microscopy showed a drastic decrease of labelling in organelles involved in synthesis and secretion, compared to those incubated in control medium. These results make it possible to conclude that lactating mammary tissue is able to synthesize PRL.


The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology | 2001

Retinol mobilization from cultured rat hepatic stellate cells does not require retinol binding protein synthesis and secretion

Patrick Sauvant; Vincent Sapin; Marie-Cécile Alexandre-Gouabau; Isabelle Dodeman; Serge Delpal; Loredana Quadro; Anne Partier; Armand Abergel; Vittorio Colantuoni; Edmond Rock; Véronique Azaı̈s-Braesco

Retinol mobilization from retinyl esters stores of hepatic stellate cells (HSCs) is a key step in the regulation of mammalian retinol homeostasis, but the precise mechanisms of such a mobilization are still poorly understood. Using primary cultures of HSCs, we first demonstrated that HSCs expressed immunoreactivity against retinol-binding-protein (RBP) when cultured in a medium containing RBP but were unable to synthesize RBP transcripts and proteins. Using pulse and chase-type experiments, we demonstrated that radioactive retinol was released in culture medium without binding proteins. Inhibition of protein secretion by brefeldin A did not modify quantitatively retinol release. This data ruled out, for the first time, the direct involvement of RBP in retinol mobilization from HSCs. Moreover, HSCs co-cultured with primary isolated hepatocytes displayed an increase of retinol transfer from HSCs to hepatocytes when they established direct physical contacts, as compared with co-cultures without contact. Based on this latter data, a mechanism of retinol mobilization from HSCs via the hepatocytes using retinol transfer through cellular membranes is proposed.


Biology of the Cell | 2002

Endocytic prolactin routes to the secretory pathway in lactating mammary epithelial cells.

Touria Seddiki; Serge Delpal; Alain Aubourg; Georges Durand; Michèle Ollivier-Bousquet

Plasma‐borne prolactin is carried from blood to milk by transcytosis across the mammary epithelial cell through the endocytic and secretory pathways. To determine the precise route of prolactin endocytosis, intracellular transport of biotinylated prolactin was monitored, in parallel with endocytosis of fluorescein isothiocyanate‐conjugated dextran and IgG, by using pulse‐chase experiments in lactating mammary fragments and in enzymatically dissociated acini. Biotinylated prolactin was sorted to vesiculo‐tubular organelles whereas dextran was very rapidly carried to the lumen and IgG remained accumulated in the basal region of cells. To determine whether prolactin uses routes into and across the Golgi and trans‐Golgi network, localisation of biotinylated prolactin was combined with the immunofluorescence detection of caseins and, respectively, p58 and TGN38. Biotinylated prolactin strongly colocalised with caseins during a chase but not all or only very little with p58 and TGN38. To characterise the organelles involved in transcytosis, gold‐labelled prolactin, experimentally accumulated in late endosomes and which recovered a normal transport, was localised by electron microscopy. In mammary fragments incubated at low temperature, and in mammary fragments from rats fed with a lipid‐deprived diet, transport of gold‐labelled prolactin was restored by increasing the temperature and by adding arachidonic acid, respectively. These data demonstrate that a sorting occurs very rapidly between prolactin, dextran and IgG. They suggest that prolactin may reach the biosynthetic pathway after direct fusion between multivesicular bodies and secretory vesicles.


Life Sciences | 1999

Antioxidant activity of resveratrol and alcohol-free wine polyphenols related to LDL oxidation and polyunsaturated fatty acids.

Lucie Frémont; Leila Belguendouz; Serge Delpal

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Michèle Ollivier-Bousquet

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Camille Mayeur

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Alain Pauloin

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Anne Partier

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Béatrice Mouillé

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Fabienne Le Provost

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Isabelle Dodeman

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Marie-Cécile Alexandre-Gouabau

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Véronique Robert

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Alain Aubourg

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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