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Featured researches published by Stéphane Germain.


American Journal of Pathology | 2003

Angiopoietin-Like 4 Is a Proangiogenic Factor Produced during Ischemia and in Conventional Renal Cell Carcinoma

Sébastien Le Jan; Céline Amy; Aurélie Cazes; Catherine Monnot; Noël Lamandé; Judith Favier; Josette Philippe; Mathilde Sibony; Jean-Marie Gasc; Pierre Corvol; Stéphane Germain

Ischemic and solid tumor tissues are less well perfused than normal tissue, leading to metabolic changes and chronic hypoxia, which in turn promotes angiogenesis. We identified human angiopoietin-like 4 (angptl4) as a gene with hypoxia-induced expression in endothelial cells. We showed that the levels of both mRNA and protein for ANGPTL4 increased in response to hypoxia. When tested in the chicken chorioallantoic membrane assay, ANGPTL4 induced a strong proangiogenic response, independently of vascular endothelial growth factor. In human pathology, ANGPTL4 mRNA is produced in ischemic tissues, in conditions such as critical leg ischemia. In tumors, ANGPTL4 is produced in the hypoxic areas surrounding necrotic regions. We observed particularly high levels of ANGPTL4 mRNA in tumor cells of conventional renal cell carcinoma. Other benign and malignant renal tumor cells do not produce ANGPTL4 mRNA. This molecule therefore seems to be a marker of conventional renal cell carcinoma. ANGPTL4, originally identified as a peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha and gamma target gene, has potential for use as a new diagnostic tool and a potential therapeutic target, modulating angiogenesis both in tumors and in ischemic tissues. This study also suggests that ANGPTL4 may provide a link between metabolic disorders and hypoxia-induced angiogenesis.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

Angiopoietin-like 4 prevents metastasis through inhibition of vascular permeability and tumor cell motility and invasiveness

Ariane Galaup; Aurélie Cazes; Sebastien Jan; Josette Philippe; Elisabeth Connault; Emmanuelle Le Coz; Halima Mekid; Lluis M. Mir; Paule Opolon; Pierre Corvol; Catherine Monnot; Stéphane Germain

Angiopoietin-like 4 (ANGPTL4), a secreted protein of the angiopoietin-like family, is induced by hypoxia in both tumor and endothelial cells as well as in hypoxic perinecrotic areas of numerous cancers. Here, we investigated whether ANGPTL4 might affect tumor growth as well as metastasis. Metastatic 3LL cells were therefore xenografted into control mice and mice in which ANGPTL4 was expressed by using in vivo DNA electrotransfer. Whereas primary tumors grew at a similar rate in both groups, 3LL cells metastasized less efficiently to the lungs of mice that expressed ANGPTL4. Fewer 3LL emboli were observed in primary tumors, suggesting that intravasation of 3LL cells was inhibited by ANGPTL4. Furthermore, melanoma B16F0 cells injected into the retro-orbital sinus also metastasized less efficiently in mice expressing ANGPTL4. Although B16F0 cells were observed in lung vessels, they rarely invaded the parenchyma, suggesting that ANGPTL4 affects extravasation. In addition, recombinant B16F0 cells that overexpress ANGPTL4 were generated, showing a lower capacity for in vitro migration, invasion, and adhesion than control cells. Expression of ANGPTL4 induced reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton through inhibition of actin stress fiber formation and vinculin localization at focal contacts. Together, these results show that ANGPTL4, through its action on both vascular and tumor compartments, prevents the metastatic process by inhibiting vascular activity as well as tumor cell motility and invasiveness.


Cell Stem Cell | 2009

Autocrine and Paracrine Angiopoietin 1/Tie-2 Signaling Promotes Muscle Satellite Cell Self-Renewal

Rana Abou-Khalil; Fabien Le Grand; Giorgia Pallafacchina; Samuel Valable; François-Jérôme Authier; Michael A. Rudnicki; Romain K. Gherardi; Stéphane Germain; Fabrice Chrétien; Athanassia Sotiropoulos; Peggy Lafuste; Didier Montarras; Bénédicte Chazaud

Mechanisms governing muscle satellite cell withdrawal from cell cycle to enter into quiescence remain poorly understood. We studied the role of angiopoietin 1 (Ang1) and its receptor Tie-2 in the regulation of myogenic precursor cell (mpc) fate. In human and mouse, Tie-2 was preferentially expressed by quiescent satellite cells in vivo and reserve cells (RCs) in vitro. Ang1/Tie-2 signaling, through ERK1/2 pathway, decreased mpc proliferation and differentiation, increased the number of cells in G0, increased expression of RC-associated markers (p130, Pax7, Myf-5, M-cadherin), and downregulated expression of differentiation-associated markers. Silencing Tie-2 had opposite effects. Cells located in the satellite cell neighborhood (smooth muscle cells, fibroblasts) upregulated RC-associated markers by secreting Ang1 in vitro. In vivo, Tie-2 blockade and Ang1 overexpression increased the number of cycling and quiescent satellite cells, respectively. We propose that Ang1/Tie-2 signaling regulates mpc self-renewal by controlling the return to quiescence of a subset of satellite cells.


Circulation Research | 2006

Extracellular matrix-bound angiopoietin-like 4 inhibits endothelial cell adhesion, migration, and sprouting and alters actin cytoskeleton.

Aurélie Cazes; Ariane Galaup; Clémence Chomel; Marine Bignon; Nicolas Bréchot; Sebastien Jan; Holger Weber; Pierre Corvol; Laurent Muller; Stéphane Germain; Catherine Monnot

Angiopoietin-like 4 (ANGPTL4) is a secreted protein that belongs to the angiopoietin family and is involved in angiogenesis and metabolism regulation. We previously reported the induction of angptl4 by hypoxia in endothelial cells and in human ischemic tissues from peripheral artery disease. We here observed in a mouse model of hindlimb ischemia that the mRNA upregulation in the vessels correlates with the accumulation of the full-length protein in ischemic tissues. We then investigated its functions in endothelial cells. In response to hypoxia, endogenous ANGPTL4 accumulates in the subendothelial extracellular matrix (ECM). Although the secreted protein undergoes proteolysis leading to truncated fragments present in the medium, only full-length ANGPTL4 interacts with the ECM. Competition and direct binding assays indicate that the strong interaction of ANGPTL4 with the ECM is heparin/heparan sulfate proteoglycan dependent. The balance between matrix-associated and soluble forms of ANGPTL4 points to the role of the ECM in the regulation of its bioavailability. The angiogenic function of the ECM-bound full-length protein was investigated using either the form associated with the conditioned ECM from ANGPTL4-transfected HEK293 cells or the purified immobilized protein. We show that matrix-associated and immobilized ANGPTL4 limit the formation of actin stress fibers and focal contacts in the adhering endothelial cells and inhibit their adhesion. Immobilized ANGPTL4 also decreases motility of endothelial cells and inhibits the sprouting and tube formation. Altogether, these findings show that hypoxic endothelial cells accumulate ANGPTL4 in the ECM, which in turn negatively regulates their angiogenic capacities through an autocrine pathway.


Nature Medicine | 2015

Microbiota depletion promotes browning of white adipose tissue and reduces obesity

Nicolas Suárez-Zamorano; Salvatore Fabbiano; Claire Chevalier; Ozren Stojanović; Didier J. Colin; Ana Stevanović; Christelle Veyrat-Durebex; Valentina Tarallo; Dorothée Rigo; Stéphane Germain; Miroslava Ilievska; Xavier Montet; Yann Seimbille; Siegfried Hapfelmeier; Mirko Trajkovski

Brown adipose tissue (BAT) promotes a lean and healthy phenotype and improves insulin sensitivity. In response to cold or exercise, brown fat cells also emerge in the white adipose tissue (WAT; also known as beige cells), a process known as browning. Here we show that the development of functional beige fat in the inguinal subcutaneous adipose tissue (ingSAT) and perigonadal visceral adipose tissue (pgVAT) is promoted by the depletion of microbiota either by means of antibiotic treatment or in germ-free mice. This leads to improved glucose tolerance and insulin sensitivity and decreased white fat and adipocyte size in lean mice, obese leptin-deficient (ob/ob) mice and high-fat diet (HFD)-fed mice. Such metabolic improvements are mediated by eosinophil infiltration, enhanced type 2 cytokine signaling and M2 macrophage polarization in the subcutaneous white fat depots of microbiota-depleted animals. The metabolic phenotype and the browning of the subcutaneous fat are impaired by the suppression of type 2 cytokine signaling, and they are reversed by recolonization of the antibiotic-treated or germ-free mice with microbes. These results provide insight into the microbiota-fat signaling axis and beige-fat development in health and metabolic disease.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2008

Endothelin receptor antagonism prevents hypoxia-induced mortality and morbidity in a mouse model of sickle-cell disease

Nathalie Sabaa; Lucia De Franceschi; Philippe Bonnin; Yves Castier; Giorgio Malpeli; Haythem Debbabi; Ariane Galaup; Micheline Maier-Redelsperger; Sophie Vandermeersch; Aldo Scarpa; Anne Janin; Bernard I. Levy; Robert Girot; Yves Beuzard; Christophe Leboeuf; Annie Henri; Stéphane Germain; Jean-Claude Dussaule; Pierre-Louis Tharaux

Patients with sickle-cell disease (SCD) suffer from tissue damage and life-threatening complications caused by vasoocclusive crisis (VOC). Endothelin receptors (ETRs) are mediators of one of the most potent vasoconstrictor pathways in mammals, but the relationship between vasoconstriction and VOC is not well understood. We report here that pharmacological inhibition of ETRs prevented hypoxia-induced acute VOC and organ damage in a mouse model of SCD. An in vivo ultrasonographic study of renal hemodynamics showed a substantial increase in endothelin-mediated vascular resistance during hypoxia/reoxygenation-induced VOC. This increase was reversed by administration of the dual ETR antagonist (ETRA) bosentan, which had pleiotropic beneficial effects in vivo. It prevented renal and pulmonary microvascular congestion, systemic inflammation, dense rbc formation, and infiltration of activated neutrophils into tissues with subsequent nitrative stress. Bosentan also prevented death of sickle-cell mice exposed to a severe hypoxic challenge. These findings in mice suggest that ETRA could be a potential new therapy for SCD, as it may prevent acute VOC and limit organ damage in sickle-cell patients.


The EMBO Journal | 2002

Different Smad2 partners bind a common hydrophobic pocket in Smad2 via a defined proline-rich motif

Rebecca A. Randall; Stéphane Germain; Gareth J. Inman; Paul A. Bates; Caroline S. Hill

Transforming growth factor‐β (TGF‐β)/activin‐induced Smad2/Smad4 complexes are recruited to different promoter elements by transcription factors, such as Fast‐1 or the Mix family proteins Mixer and Milk, through a direct interaction between Smad2 and a common Smad interaction motif (SIM) in the transcription factors. Here we identify residues in the SIM critical for Mixer–Smad2 interaction and confirm their functional importance by demonstrating that only Xenopus and zebrafish Mix family members containing a SIM with all the correct critical residues can bind Smad2 and mediate TGF‐β‐induced transcriptional activation in vivo. We identify significant sequence similarity between the SIM and the Smad‐binding domain (SBD) of the membrane‐associated protein SARA (Smad anchor for receptor activation). Molecular modelling, supported by mutational analyses of Smad2 and the SIM and the demonstration that the SARA SBD competes directly with the SIM for binding to Smad2, indicates that the SIM binds Smad2 in the same hydrophobic pocket as does the proline‐rich rigid coil region of the SARA SBD. Thus, different Smad2 partners, whether cytoplasmic or nuclear, interact with the same binding pocket in Smad2 through a common proline‐rich motif.


Nature Medicine | 2005

Trans-arachidonic acids generated during nitrative stress induce a thrombospondin-1-dependent microvascular degeneration.

Elsa Kermorvant-Duchemin; Florian Sennlaub; Mirna Sirinyan; Sonia Brault; Gregor Andelfinger; Amna Kooli; Stéphane Germain; Huy Ong; Pedro D'Orléans-Juste; Tang Zhu; Chantal Boisvert; Pierre Hardy; Kavita Jain; J Russel Falck; Michael Balazy; Sylvain Chemtob

Nitrative stress has an important role in microvascular degeneration leading to ischemia in conditions such as diabetic retinopathy and retinopathy of prematurity. Thus far, mediators of nitrative stress have been poorly characterized. We recently described that trans-arachidonic acids are major products of NO2•-mediated isomerization of arachidonic acid within the cell membrane, but their biological relevance is unknown. Here we show that trans-arachidonic acids are generated in a model of retinal microangiopathy in vivo in a NO•-dependent manner. They induce a selective time- and concentration-dependent apoptosis of microvascular endothelial cells in vitro, and result in retinal microvascular degeneration ex vivo and in vivo. These effects are mediated by an upregulation of the antiangiogenic factor thrombospondin-1, independently of classical arachidonic acid metabolism. Our findings provide new insight into the molecular mechanisms of nitrative stress in microvascular injury and suggest new therapeutic avenues in the management of disorders involving nitrative stress, such as ischemic retinopathies and encephalopathies.


Blood | 2011

Lysyl oxidase-like protein-2 regulates sprouting angiogenesis and type IV collagen assembly in the endothelial basement membrane

Marine Bignon; Cathy Pichol-Thievend; Julie Hardouin; Marilyne Malbouyres; Nicholas Brechot; Luiz Nasciutti; Alain Barret; Jérémie Teillon; Emilie Guillon; Eric Etienne; Michel Caron; Raymonde Joubert-Caron; Catherine Monnot; Florence Ruggiero; Laurent Muller; Stéphane Germain

Sprouting angiogenesis is associated with extensive extracellular matrix (ECM) remodeling. The molecular mechanisms involved in building the vascular microenvironment and its impact on capillary formation remain elusive. We therefore performed a proteomic analysis of ECM from endothelial cells maintained in hypoxia, a major stimulator of angiogenesis. Here, we report the characterization of lysyl oxidase-like protein-2 (LOXL2) as a hypoxia-target expressed in neovessels and accumulated in the endothelial ECM. LOXL2 belongs to the lysyl oxidase family of secreted enzymes involved in ECM crosslinking. Knockdown experiments in Tg(fli1:egfp)y1 zebrafish embryos resulted in lack of intersegmental vessel circulation and demonstrated LOXL2 involvement in proper capillary formation. Further investigation in vitro by loss and gain of function experiments confirmed that LOXL2 was required for tubulogenesis in 3D fibrin gels and demonstrated that this enzyme was required for collagen IV assembly in the ECM. In addition, LOXL2 depletion down-regulated cell migration and proliferation. These data suggest a major role for LOXL2 in the organization of endothelial basal lamina and in the downstream mechanotransductive signaling. Altogether, our study provides the first evidence for the role of LOXL2 in regulating angiogenesis through collagen IV scaffolding.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2008

Bone Morphogenetic Proteins 2 and 4 Are Selectively Expressed by Late Outgrowth Endothelial Progenitor Cells and Promote Neoangiogenesis

David M. Smadja; Ivan Bièche; Jean-Sébastien Silvestre; Stéphane Germain; Adeline Cornet; Ingrid Laurendeau; Jean-Paul Duong-Van-Huyen; Joseph Emmerich; Michel Vidaud; Martine Aiach; Pascale Gaussem

Objective—Endothelial progenitor cells are currently identified either by their surface antigen expression or by their generation of early colonies in culture (CFU-Hill). Another population, endothelial colony-forming cells (ECFCs), has strong vessel-forming capacity but is less well characterized. Given the potential usefulness of CFU-Hill and ECFCs as cell therapy products, their thorough characterization is of major importance. Methods and Results—CFU-Hill and ECFCs were expanded from human cord and adult blood. Bone morphogenetic proteins 2 and 4 (BMP2/4) were selectively expressed by ECFCs but not by CFU-Hill. The BMP pathway was involved in ECFC commitment and angiogenic potential in vitro. In vivo, BMP inhibition strongly reduced plug vascularization in bFGF-containing Matrigel plugs implanted in C57/Bl6 mice. Moreover, ECFC exposure to BMP increased their therapeutic potential in a nude mouse model of hindlimb ischemia. In amputation specimens from patients with critical leg ischemia who had received a local therapeutic injection of bone marrow mononuclear cells, newly formed vessels were strongly positive for BMP2/4, suggesting that endothelial cells involved in neovascularization have an ECFC-like phenotype. Conclusion—BMP2/4 are a marker of ECFCs and play a key role in ECFC commitment and outgrowth during neovascularization.

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Sebastien Fuchs

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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Thomas Mathivet

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Catherine Monnot

French Institute of Health and Medical Research

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