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Featured researches published by Stéphane Poitevin.


Toxins | 2014

The Aryl Hydrocarbon Receptor-Activating Effect of Uremic Toxins from Tryptophan Metabolism: A New Concept to Understand Cardiovascular Complications of Chronic Kidney Disease

M. Sallée; Laetitia Dou; Claire Cerini; Stéphane Poitevin; Philippe Brunet; S. Burtey

Patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) have a higher risk of cardiovascular diseases and suffer from accelerated atherosclerosis. CKD patients are permanently exposed to uremic toxins, making them good candidates as pathogenic agents. We focus here on uremic toxins from tryptophan metabolism because of their potential involvement in cardiovascular toxicity: indolic uremic toxins (indoxyl sulfate, indole-3 acetic acid, and indoxyl-β-d-glucuronide) and uremic toxins from the kynurenine pathway (kynurenine, kynurenic acid, anthranilic acid, 3-hydroxykynurenine, 3-hydroxyanthranilic acid, and quinolinic acid). Uremic toxins derived from tryptophan are endogenous ligands of the transcription factor aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR). AhR, also known as the dioxin receptor, interacts with various regulatory and signaling proteins, including protein kinases and phosphatases, and Nuclear Factor-Kappa-B. AhR activation by 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin and some polychlorinated biphenyls is associated with an increase in cardiovascular disease in humans and in mice. In addition, this AhR activation mediates cardiotoxicity, vascular inflammation, and a procoagulant and prooxidant phenotype of vascular cells. Uremic toxins derived from tryptophan have prooxidant, proinflammatory, procoagulant, and pro-apoptotic effects on cells involved in the cardiovascular system, and some of them are related with cardiovascular complications in CKD. We discuss here how the cardiovascular effects of these uremic toxins could be mediated by AhR activation, in a “dioxin-like” effect.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2015

The Cardiovascular Effect of the Uremic Solute Indole-3 Acetic Acid

Laetitia Dou; M. Sallée; Claire Cerini; Stéphane Poitevin; Bertrand Gondouin; N. Jourde-Chiche; Karim Fallague; Philippe Brunet; Raymond Calaf; Bertrand Dussol; Bernard Mallet; Françoise Dignat-George; S. Burtey

In CKD, uremic solutes may induce endothelial dysfunction, inflammation, and oxidative stress, leading to increased cardiovascular risk. We investigated whether the uremic solute indole-3 acetic acid (IAA) predicts clinical outcomes in patients with CKD and has prooxidant and proinflammatory effects. We studied 120 patients with CKD. During the median study period of 966 days, 29 patients died and 35 experienced a major cardiovascular event. Kaplan-Meier analysis revealed that mortality and cardiovascular events were significantly higher in the higher IAA group (IAA>3.73 µM) than in the lower IAA group (IAA<3.73 µM). Multivariate Cox regression analysis demonstrated that serum IAA was a significant predictor of mortality and cardiovascular events after adjustments for age and sex; cholesterol, systolic BP, and smoking; C-reactive protein, phosphate, body mass index, and albumin; diastolic BP and history of cardiovascular disease; and uremic toxins p-cresyl sulfate and indoxyl sulfate. Notably, IAA level remained predictive of mortality when adjusted for CKD stage. IAA levels were positively correlated with markers of inflammation and oxidative stress: C-reactive protein and malondialdehyde, respectively. In cultured human endothelial cells, IAA activated an inflammatory nongenomic aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR)/p38MAPK/NF-κB pathway that induced the proinflammatory enzyme cyclooxygenase-2. Additionally, IAA increased production of endothelial reactive oxygen species. In conclusion, serum IAA may be an independent predictor of mortality and cardiovascular events in patients with CKD. In vitro, IAA induces endothelial inflammation and oxidative stress and activates an inflammatory AhR/p38MAPK/NF-κB pathway.


International Journal of Cancer | 2015

CD146 mediates VEGF-induced melanoma cell extravasation through FAK activation.

Nathalie Jouve; Richard Bachelier; Nicolas Despoix; Muriel G. Blin; Maryam Khalili Matinzadeh; Stéphane Poitevin; Michel Aurrand-Lions; Karim Fallague; Nathalie Bardin; Marcel Blot-Chabaud; Frédéric Vély; Françoise Dignat-George; Aurélie S. Leroyer

CD146 is an adhesion molecule expressed by both melanoma and endothelial cells and thus is well positioned to control melanoma extravasation. Nevertheless, during melanoma metastasis, the involvement of CD146 expressed within tumor microenvironment has never been analyzed. To investigate whether host CD146 mediates the extravasation of melanoma cells across the endothelium, we generated CD146 KO mice. We demonstrated that host CD146 did not affect melanoma growth or tumor angiogenesis but promoted hematogenous melanoma metastasis to the lung. Accordingly, the survival of CD146‐deficient mice was markedly prolonged during melanoma metastasis. Interestingly, vascular endothelial growth factor‐induced vascular permeability was significantly decreased in CD146 KO mice. We also provided evidence that VEGF‐induced transendothelial migration of melanoma cells was significantly reduced across CD146 KO lung microvascular endothelial cells (LMEC). CD146 deficiency decreased the expression of VEGFR‐2/Ve‐cadherin and altered focal adhesion kinase (FAK) activation in response to VEGF. In addition, inhibition of FAK phosphorylation reduced transmigration of B16 melanoma cells across WT LMEC at the same level that across CD146 KO LMEC. Altogether, we propose a novel mechanism involving the VEGF/CD146/FAK/Ve‐cadherin network in melanoma extravasation across the vessel barrier that identifies CD146‐targeted therapy as a potential strategy for the treatment of melanoma metastasis.


Kidney International | 2018

Aryl hydrocarbon receptor is activated in patients and mice with chronic kidney disease

Laetitia Dou; Stéphane Poitevin; M. Sallée; Tawfik Addi; Bertrand Gondouin; N. Mckay; Michael S. Denison; N. Jourde-Chiche; Ariane Duval-Sabatier; Claire Cerini; Philippe Brunet; Françoise Dignat-George; S. Burtey

Patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) are exposed to uremic toxins and have an increased risk of cardiovascular disease. Some uremic toxins, like indoxyl sulfate, are agonists of the transcription factor aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR). These toxins induce a vascular procoagulant phenotype. Here we investigated AHR activation in patients with CKD and in a murine model of CKD. We performed a prospective study in 116 patients with CKD stage 3 to 5D and measured the AHR-Activating Potential of serum by bioassay. Compared to sera from healthy controls, sera from CKD patients displayed a strong AHR-Activating Potential; strongly correlated with eGFR and with the indoxyl sulfate concentration. The expression of the AHR target genes Cyp1A1 and AHRR was up-regulated in whole blood from patients with CKD. Survival analyses revealed that cardiovascular events were more frequent in CKD patients with an AHR-Activating Potential above the median. In mice with 5/6 nephrectomy, there was an increased serum AHR-Activating Potential, and an induction of Cyp1a1 mRNA in the aorta and heart, absent in AhR-/- CKD mice. After serial indoxyl sulfate injections, we observed an increase in serum AHR-AP and in expression of Cyp1a1 mRNA in aorta and heart in WT mice, but not in AhR-/- mice. Thus, the AHR pathway is activated both in patients and mice with CKD. Hence, AHR activation could be a key mechanism involved in the deleterious cardiovascular effects observed in CKD.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2018

Indoxyl Sulfate Upregulates Liver P-Glycoprotein Expression and Activity through Aryl Hydrocarbon Receptor Signaling

Tacy Santana Machado; Stéphane Poitevin; Pascale Paul; N. Mckay; N. Jourde-Chiche; Tristan Legris; Annick Mouly-Bandini; Françoise Dignat-George; Philippe Brunet; Rosalinde Masereeuw; S. Burtey; Claire Cerini

In patients with CKD, not only renal but also, nonrenal clearance of drugs is altered. Uremic toxins could modify the expression and/or activity of drug transporters in the liver. We tested whether the uremic toxin indoxyl sulfate (IS), an endogenous ligand of the transcription factor aryl hydrocarbon receptor, could change the expression of the following liver transporters involved in drug clearance: SLC10A1, SLC22A1, SLC22A7, SLC47A1, SLCO1B1, SLCO1B3, SLCO2B1, ABCB1, ABCB11, ABCC2, ABCC3, ABCC4, ABCC6, and ABCG2 We showed that IS increases the expression and activity of the efflux transporter P-glycoprotein (P-gp) encoded by ABCB1 in human hepatoma cells (HepG2) without modifying the expression of the other transporters. This effect depended on the aryl hydrocarbon receptor pathway. Presence of human albumin at physiologic concentration in the culture medium did not abolish the effect of IS. In two mouse models of CKD, the decline in renal function associated with the accumulation of IS in serum and the specific upregulation of Abcb1a in the liver. Additionally, among 109 heart or kidney transplant recipients with CKD, those with higher serum levels of IS needed higher doses of cyclosporin, a P-gp substrate, to obtain the cyclosporin target blood concentration. This need associated with serum levels of IS independent of renal function. These findings suggest that increased activity of P-gp could be responsible for increased hepatic cyclosporin clearance. Altogether, these results suggest that uremic toxins, such as IS, through effects on drug transporters, may modify the nonrenal clearance of drugs in patients with CKD.


Kidney International | 2013

Indolic uremic solutes increase tissue factor production in endothelial cells by the aryl hydrocarbon receptor pathway.

Bertrand Gondouin; Claire Cerini; Laetitia Dou; M. Sallée; Ariane Duval-Sabatier; Anneleen Pletinck; Raymond Calaf; Romaric Lacroix; N. Jourde-Chiche; Stéphane Poitevin; Laurent Arnaud; Raymond Vanholder; Philippe Brunet; Françoise Dignat-George; S. Burtey


Nephrologie & Therapeutique | 2018

Comment aryl hydrocarbon receptor active-t-il l’expression du facteur tissulaire dans l’endothélium humain en réponse à l’indole-3 acétique acide ?

S. Burtey; Tawfik Addi; N. Mckay; Stéphane Poitevin; Laetitia Dou


Archives of Toxicology | 2018

Mechanisms of tissue factor induction by the uremic toxin indole-3 acetic acid through aryl hydrocarbon receptor/nuclear factor-kappa B signaling pathway in human endothelial cells

Tawfik Addi; Stéphane Poitevin; N. Mckay; Kamel Eddine El Mecherfi; O. Kheroua; N. Jourde-Chiche; Alix de Macedo; Bertrand Gondouin; Claire Cerini; Philippe Brunet; Françoise Dignat-George; S. Burtey; Laetitia Dou


Nephrologie & Therapeutique | 2014

La toxine urémique, l’acide indole-3 acétique prédit la mortalité et la survenue d’un événement cardiovasculaire au cours de l’insuffisance rénale chronique

M. Sallée; Laetitia Dou; Claire Cerini; Stéphane Poitevin; Bertrand Gondouin; N. Jourde-Chiche; Philippe Brunet; S. Burtey


Nephrologie & Therapeutique | 2013

Comment une toxine urémique, l’acide indole-3 acétique, stresse-t-elle la cellule endothéliale ?

M. Sallée; Laetitia Dou; Bertrand Gondouin; Claire Cerini; Stéphane Poitevin; Philippe Brunet; Françoise Dignat-George; S. Burtey

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S. Burtey

Aix-Marseille University

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Claire Cerini

Aix-Marseille University

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Laetitia Dou

Aix-Marseille University

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M. Sallée

Aix-Marseille University

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N. Mckay

Aix-Marseille University

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