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Dive into the research topics where Stephanie Duguez is active.

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Featured researches published by Stephanie Duguez.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Bodywide skipping of exons 45–55 in dystrophic mdx52 mice by systemic antisense delivery

Yoshitsugu Aoki; Toshifumi Yokota; Tetsuya Nagata; Akinori Nakamura; Jun Tanihata; Takashi Saito; Stephanie Duguez; Kanneboyina Nagaraju; Eric P. Hoffman; Terence A. Partridge; Shin'ichi Takeda

Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), the commonest form of muscular dystrophy, is caused by lack of dystrophin. One of the most promising therapeutic approaches is antisense-mediated elimination of frame-disrupting mutations by exon skipping. However, this approach faces two major hurdles: limited applicability of each individual target exon and uncertain function and stability of each resulting truncated dystrophin. Skipping of exons 45–55 at the mutation hotspot of the DMD gene would address both issues. Theoretically it could rescue more than 60% of patients with deletion mutations. Moreover, spontaneous deletions of this specific region are associated with asymptomatic or exceptionally mild phenotypes. However, such multiple exon skipping of exons 45–55 has proved technically challenging. We have therefore designed antisense oligo (AO) morpholino mixtures to minimize self- or heteroduplex formation. These were tested as conjugates with cell-penetrating moieties (vivo-morpholinos). We have tested the feasibility of skipping exons 45–55 in H2K-mdx52 myotubes and in mdx52 mice, which lack exon 52. Encouragingly, with mixtures of 10 AOs, we demonstrated skipping of all 10 exons in vitro, in H2K-mdx52 myotubes and on intramuscular injection into mdx52 mice. Moreover, in mdx52 mice in vivo, systemic injections of 10 AOs induced extensive dystrophin expression at the subsarcolemma in skeletal muscles throughout the body, producing up to 15% of wild-type dystrophin protein levels, accompanied by improved muscle strength and histopathology without any detectable toxicity. This is a unique successful demonstration of effective rescue by exon 45–55 skipping in a dystrophin-deficient animal model.


Expert Review of Proteomics | 2012

Advances in the proteomic investigation of the cell secretome

Kristy J. Brown; Catherine A. Formolo; Haeri Seol; Ramya Marathi; Stephanie Duguez; Eunkyung An; Dinesh K. Pillai; Javad Nazarian; Brian R. Rood; Yetrib Hathout

Studies of the cell secretome have greatly increased in recent years owing to improvements in proteomic platforms, mass spectrometry instrumentation and to the increased interaction between analytical chemists, biologists and clinicians. Several secretome studies have been implemented in different areas of research, leading to the generation of a valuable secretome catalogs. Secreted proteins continue to be an important source of biomarkers and therapeutic target discovery and are equally valuable in the field of microbiology. Several discoveries have been achieved in vitro using cell culture systems, ex vivo using human tissue specimens and in vivo using animal models. In this review, some of the most recent advances in secretome studies and the fields that have benefited the most from this evolving technology are highlighted.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2014

Survival motor neuron protein deficiency impairs myotube formation by altering myogenic gene expression and focal adhesion dynamics

Katherine V. Bricceno; Tara Martinez; Evgenia Leikina; Stephanie Duguez; Terence A. Partridge; Leonid V. Chernomordik; Kenneth H. Fischbeck; Charlotte J. Sumner; Barrington G. Burnett

While spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is characterized by motor neuron degeneration, it is unclear whether and how much survival motor neuron (SMN) protein deficiency in muscle contributes to the pathophysiology of the disease. There is increasing evidence from patients and SMA model organisms that SMN deficiency causes intrinsic muscle defects. Here we investigated the role of SMN in muscle development using muscle cell lines and primary myoblasts. Formation of multinucleate myotubes by SMN-deficient muscle cells is inhibited at a stage preceding plasma membrane fusion. We found increased expression and reduced induction of key muscle development factors, such as MyoD and myogenin, with differentiation of SMN-deficient cells. In addition, SMN-deficient muscle cells had impaired cell migration and altered organization of focal adhesions and the actin cytoskeleton. Partially restoring SMN inhibited the premature expression of muscle differentiation markers, corrected the cytoskeletal abnormalities and improved myoblast fusion. These findings are consistent with a role for SMN in myotube formation through effects on muscle differentiation and cell motility.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2012

Δ-9,11 Modification of Glucocorticoids Dissociates Nuclear Factor-κB Inhibitory Efficacy from Glucocorticoid Response Element-Associated Side Effects

Andreas R. Baudy; Erica K.M. Reeves; Jesse M. Damsker; Christopher R. Heier; Lindsay M. Garvin; Blythe C. Dillingham; John M. McCall; Sree Rayavarapu; Zuyi Wang; Jack Vandermeulen; Arpana Sali; Vanessa Jahnke; Stephanie Duguez; Debra C. DuBois; Mary C. Rose; Kanneboyina Nagaraju; Eric P. Hoffman

Glucocorticoids are standard of care for many inflammatory conditions, but chronic use is associated with a broad array of side effects. This has led to a search for dissociative glucocorticoids—drugs able to retain or improve efficacy associated with transrepression [nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB) inhibition] but with the loss of side effects associated with transactivation (receptor-mediated transcriptional activation through glucocorticoid response element gene promoter elements). We investigated a glucocorticoid derivative with a Δ-9,11 modification as a dissociative steroid. The Δ-9,11 analog showed potent inhibition of tumor necrosis factor-α-induced NF-κB signaling in cell reporter assays, and this transrepression activity was blocked by 17β-hydroxy-11β-[4-dimethylamino phenyl]-17α-[1-propynyl]estra-4,9-dien-3-one (RU-486), showing the requirement for the glucocorticoid receptor (GR). The Δ-9,11 analog induced the nuclear translocation of GR but showed the loss of transactivation as assayed by GR-luciferase constructs as well as mRNA profiles of treated cells. The Δ-9,11 analog was tested for efficacy and side effects in two mouse models of muscular dystrophy: mdx (dystrophin deficiency), and SJL (dysferlin deficiency). Daily oral delivery of the Δ-9,11 analog showed a reduction of muscle inflammation and improvements in multiple muscle function assays yet no reductions in body weight or spleen size, suggesting the loss of key side effects. Our data demonstrate that a Δ-9,11 analog dissociates the GR-mediated transcriptional activities from anti-inflammatory activities. Accordingly, Δ-9,11 analogs may hold promise as a source of safer therapeutic agents for chronic inflammatory disorders.


Annals of Neurology | 2015

Correlation between low FAT1 expression and early affected muscle in facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy.

Virginie Mariot; Stéphane Roche; Christophe Hourdé; Débora M. Portilho; Sabrina Sacconi; Francesca Puppo; Stephanie Duguez; Philippe Rameau; Nathalie Caruso; Anne-Lise Delezoide; Claude Desnuelle; Bettina Bessières; Sophie Collardeau; Léonard Féasson; Thierry Maisonobe; Frédérique Magdinier; Françoise Helmbacher; Gillian Butler-Browne; Vincent Mouly; Julie Dumonceaux

Facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD) is linked to either contraction of D4Z4 repeats on chromosome 4 or to mutations in the SMCHD1 gene, both of which result in the aberrant expression of the transcription factor DUX4. However, it is still difficult to correlate these genotypes with the phenotypes observed in patients. Because we have recently shown that mice with disrupted Fat1 functions exhibit FSHD‐like phenotypes, we have investigated the expression of the human FAT1 gene in FSHD.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Atmospheric oxygen tension slows myoblast proliferation via mitochondrial activation.

Stephanie Duguez; William Duddy; Viola Gnocchi; James Bowe; Sherry Dadgar; Terence A. Partridge

Background Mitochondrial activity inhibits proliferation and is required for differentiation of myoblasts. Myoblast proliferation is also inhibited by the ∼20% oxygen level used in standard tissue culture. We hypothesize that mitochondrial activity would be greater at hyperoxia (20% O2) relative to more physiological oxygen (5% O2). Methodology/Principal Findings Murine primary myoblasts from isolated myofibres and conditionally immortalized H-2K myoblasts were cultured at 5% and 20% oxygen. Proliferation, assayed by cell counts, EdU labeling, and CFSE dilution, was slower at 20% oxygen. Expression of MyoD in primary myoblasts was delayed at 20% oxygen, but myogenicity, as measured by fusion index, was slightly higher. FACS-based measurement of mitochondrial activity indicators and luminometric measurement of ATP levels revealed that mitochondria exhibited greater membrane potential and higher levels of Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) at 20% oxygen with concomitant elevation of intracellular ATP. Mitochondrial mass was unaffected. Low concentrations of CCCP, a respiratory chain uncoupler, and Oligomycin A, an ATP synthase inhibitor, each increased the rate of myoblast proliferation. ROS were investigated as a potential mechanism of mitochondrial retrograde signaling, but scavenging of ROS levels by N-acetyl-cysteine (NAC) or α-Phenyl-N-tert-butylnitrone (PBN) did not rescue the suppressed rate of cell division in hyperoxic conditions, suggesting other pathways. Primary myoblasts from older mice showed a slower proliferation than those from younger adult mice at 20% oxygen but no difference at 5% oxygen. Conclusions/Significance These results implicate mitochondrial regulation as a mechanistic explanation for myoblast response to oxygen tension. The rescue of proliferation rate in myoblasts of aged mice by 5% oxygen suggests a major artefactual component to age-related decline of satellite cell proliferation in standard tissue culture at 20% oxygen. It lends weight to the idea that these age-related changes result at least in part from environmental factors rather than characteristics intrinsic to the satellite cell.


Experimental Cell Research | 2011

The isolated muscle fibre as a model of disuse atrophy: characterization using PhAct, a method to quantify f-actin

William Duddy; Tatiana V. Cohen; Stephanie Duguez; Terence A. Partridge

Research into muscle atrophy and hypertrophy is hampered by limitations of the available experimental models. Interpretation of in vivo experiments is confounded by the complexity of the environment while in vitro models are subject to the marked disparities between cultured myotubes and the mature myofibres of living tissues. Here we develop a method (PhAct) based on ex vivo maintenance of the isolated myofibre as a model of disuse atrophy, using standard microscopy equipment and widely available analysis software, to measure f-actin content per myofibre and per nucleus over two weeks of ex vivo maintenance. We characterize the 35% per week atrophy of the isolated myofibre in terms of early changes in gene expression and investigate the effects on loss of muscle mass of modulatory agents, including Myostatin and Follistatin. By tracing the incorporation of a nucleotide analogue we show that the observed atrophy is not associated with loss or replacement of myonuclei. Such a completely controlled investigation can be conducted with the myofibres of a single muscle. With this novel method we can distinguish those features and mechanisms of atrophy and hypertrophy that are intrinsic to the muscle fibre from those that include activities of other tissues and systemic agents.


Journal of neuromuscular diseases | 2015

Changes in Communication between Muscle Stem Cells and their Environment with Aging

Matthew Thorley; Apostolos Malatras; William Duddy; Laura Le Gall; Vincent Mouly; Gillian Butler Browne; Stephanie Duguez

Abstract Aging is associated with both muscle weakness and a loss of muscle mass, contributing towards overall frailty in the elderly. Aging skeletal muscle is also characterised by a decreasing efficiency in repair and regeneration, together with a decline in the number of adult stem cells. Commensurate with this are general changes in whole body endocrine signalling, in local muscle secretory environment, as well as in intrinsic properties of the stem cells themselves. The present review discusses the various mechanisms that may be implicated in these age-associated changes, focusing on aspects of cell-cell communication and long-distance signalling factors, such as levels of circulating growth hormone, IL-6, IGF1, sex hormones, and inflammatory cytokines. Changes in the local environment are also discussed, implicating IL-6, IL-4, FGF-2, as well as other myokines, and processes that lead to thickening of the extra-cellular matrix. These factors, involved primarily in communication, can also modulate the intrinsic properties of muscle stem cells, including reduced DNA accessibility and repression of specific genes by methylation. Finally we discuss the decrease in the stem cell pool, particularly the failure of elderly myoblasts to re-quiesce after activation, and the consequences of all these changes on general muscle homeostasis.


Cell Stem Cell | 2009

Skeletal Muscle Sings a Choral Stem Cell Lullaby

Stephanie Duguez; Terry Partridge

Constraint of stem cell number in skeletal muscle is investigated by Abou-Khalil et al. (2009), in this issue of Cell Stem Cell. Their results attribute it both to autocrine positive feedback and to paracrine signals from the surrounding cellular community.


American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2003

Myogenic and nonmyogenic cells differentially express proteinases, Hsc/Hsp70, and BAG-1 during skeletal muscle regeneration

Stephanie Duguez; Marie-Catherine Le Bihan; Dominique Gouttefangeas; Léonard Féasson; Damien Freyssenet

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Terence A. Partridge

Children's National Medical Center

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William Duddy

Children's National Medical Center

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Helen Johnston

Children's National Medical Center

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Kristy J. Brown

Children's National Medical Center

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Yetrib Hathout

Children's National Medical Center

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