Stéphanie Lerondel
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
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Publication
Featured researches published by Stéphanie Lerondel.
International Journal of Cancer | 2012
Marc Vandamme; Eric Robert; Stéphanie Lerondel; Vanessa Sarron; Delphine Ries; Sébastien Dozias; Julien Sobilo; David Gosset; Claudine Kieda; Brigitte Legrain; Jean-Michel Pouvesle; Alain Le Pape
Non‐thermal plasma (NTP) is generated by ionizing neutral gas molecules/atoms leading to a highly reactive gas at ambient temperature containing excited molecules, reactive species and generating transient electric fields. Given its potential to interact with tissue or cells without a significant temperature increase, NTP appears as a promising approach for the treatment of various diseases including cancer. The aim of our study was to evaluate the interest of NTP both in vitro and in vivo. To this end, we evaluated the antitumor activity of NTP in vitro on two human cancer cell lines (glioblastoma U87MG and colorectal carcinoma HCT‐116). Our data showed that NTP generated a large amount of reactive oxygen species (ROS), leading to the formation of DNA damages. This resulted in a multiphase cell cycle arrest and a subsequent apoptosis induction. In addition, in vivo experiments on U87MG bearing mice showed that NTP induced a reduction of bioluminescence and tumor volume as compared to nontreated mice. An induction of apoptosis was also observed together with an accumulation of cells in S phase of the cell cycle suggesting an arrest of tumor proliferation. In conclusion, we demonstrated here that the potential of NTP to generate ROS renders this strategy particularly promising in the context of tumor treatment.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Laura Brullé; Marc Vandamme; Delphine Ries; Eric Martel; Eric Robert; Stéphanie Lerondel; Valérie Trichet; Serge Richard; Jean-Michel Pouvesle; Alain Le Pape
Pancreatic tumors are the gastrointestinal cancer with the worst prognosis in humans and with a survival rate of 5% at 5 years. Nowadays, no chemotherapy has demonstrated efficacy in terms of survival for this cancer. Previous study focused on the development of a new therapy by non thermal plasma showed significant effects on tumor growth for colorectal carcinoma and glioblastoma. To allow targeted treatment, a fibered plasma (Plasma Gun) was developed and its evaluation was performed on an orthotopic mouse model of human pancreatic carcinoma using a MIA PaCa2-luc bioluminescent cell line. The aim of this study was to characterize this pancreatic carcinoma model and to determine the effects of Plasma Gun alone or in combination with gemcitabine. During a 36 days period, quantitative BLI could be used to follow the tumor progression and we demonstrated that plasma gun induced an inhibition of MIA PaCa2-luc cells proliferation in vitro and in vivo and that this effect could be improved by association with gemcitabine possibly thanks to its radiosensitizing properties.
Blood | 2009
David Daydé; David Ternant; Marc Ohresser; Stéphanie Lerondel; Sabrina Pesnel; Hervé Watier; Alain Le Pape; Pierre Bardos; Gilles Paintaud; Guillaume Cartron
Clinical studies have shown a large interindividual variability in rituximab exposure and its significant influence on clinical response in patients receiving similar doses of antibody. The aim of this study was to evaluate the influence of tumor burden on dose-concentration-response relationships of rituximab. Murine lymphoma cells (EL4, 8 x 10(3)), transduced with human CD20 cDNA and transfected with luciferase plasmid (EL4-huCD20-Luc), were intravenously injected into C57BL/6J mice. Tumor burden detection, dissemination, and progression were evaluated quantitatively by in vivo bioluminescence imaging. Different doses of rituximab (6, 12, 20, or 40 mg/kg) were infused 13 days after lymphoma cell inoculation, and rituximab serum concentrations were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Without rituximab, all mice developed disseminated lymphoma and died within 30 days, whereas a significant dose-response relationship was observed in mice receiving rituximab. The 20-mg/kg dose was adequate to study interindividual variability in response because 23% of mice were cured, 59% had partial response, and 18% had disease progression. Rituximab concentrations were inversely correlated with tumor burden; mice with low tumor burden had high rituximab concentrations. Furthermore, rituximab exposure influenced response and survival. Finally, using a pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic model, we demonstrated that tumor burden significantly influenced rituximab efficacy.
Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2009
Jean-Luc Bridot; David Daydé; Charlotte Rivière; Céline A. Mandon; Claire Billotey; Stéphanie Lerondel; Roland Sabattier; Guillaume Cartron; Alain Le Pape; G. Blondiaux; Marc Janier; Pascal Perriat; Stéphane Roux; Olivier Tillement
The cytotoxicity of luminescent paramagnetic gadolinium oxide nanoparticles activated by harmless thermal neutron irradiation was evaluated on a luciferase coding gene transfected lymphome cells (EL4-Luc). Cellular uptake of nanoparticles was determined by fluorescence and magnetic resonance imaging and by ICP-MS analyses while the metabolic activity of irradiated EL4-Luc cells was monitored by bioluminescence. The alteration of the irradiated cells depends both on neutron irradiation dose and on gadolinium content within cells. In addition to their dual modality imaging ability, the application of these multifunctional particles for neutron capture therapy can be envisaged.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008
Max Corbett; Willy M. J. M. Bogers; Jonathan L. Heeney; Stefan Gerber; Christian Genin; Arnaud Didierlaurent; Herman Oostermeijer; Rob Dubbes; Gerco Braskamp; Stéphanie Lerondel; Carmen Elena Gómez; Mariano Esteban; Ralf Wagner; Ivanella Kondova; Petra Mooij; Sunita S. Balla-Jhagjhoorsingh; Niels Beenhakker; Gerrit Koopman; Sjoerd H. van der Burg; Jean-Pierre Kraehenbuhl; Alain Le Pape
Each year, approximately five million people die worldwide from putatively vaccine-preventable mucosally transmitted diseases. With respect to mass vaccination campaigns, one strategy to cope with this formidable challenge is aerosol vaccine delivery, which offers potential safety, logistical, and cost-saving advantages over traditional vaccination routes. Additionally, aerosol vaccination may elicit pivotal mucosal immune responses that could contain or eliminate mucosally transmitted pathogens in a preventative or therapeutic vaccine context. In this current preclinical non-human primate investigation, we demonstrate the feasibility of aerosol vaccination with the recombinant poxvirus-based vaccine vectors NYVAC and MVA. Real-time in vivo scintigraphy experiments with radiolabeled, aerosol-administered NYVAC-C (Clade C, HIV-1 vaccine) and MVA-HPV vaccines revealed consistent mucosal delivery to the respiratory tract. Furthermore, aerosol delivery of the vaccines was safe, inducing no vaccine-associated pathology, in particular in the brain and lungs, and was immunogenic. Administration of a DNA-C/NYVAC-C prime/boost regime resulted in both systemic and anal-genital HIV-specific immune responses that were still detectable 5 months after immunization. Thus, aerosol vaccination with NYVAC and MVA vectored vaccines constitutes a tool for large-scale vaccine efforts against mucosally transmitted pathogens.
Angewandte Chemie | 2012
Thibaut Legigan; Jonathan Clarhaut; Isabelle Tranoy-Opalinski; Arnaud Monvoisin; Brigitte Renoux; Mikaël Thomas; Alain Le Pape; Stéphanie Lerondel; Sébastien Papot
Massive attack: Galactoside prodrugs have been designed that can be selectively activated by lysosomal β-galactosidase located inside cancer cells expressing a specific tumor-associated receptor. This efficient enzymatic process triggers a potent cytotoxic effect, releasing the potent antimitotic agent MMAE and allowing the destruction of both receptor-positive and surrounding receptor-negative tumor cells.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Guenhaël Sanz; Isabelle Leray; Aurélie Dewaele; Julien Sobilo; Stéphanie Lerondel; Stephan Bouet; Denise Grebert; Régine Monnerie; Edith Pajot-Augy; Lluis M. Mir
Olfactory receptors (ORs) are expressed in the olfactory epithelium, where they detect odorants, but also in other tissues with additional functions. Some ORs are even overexpressed in tumor cells. In this study, we identified ORs expressed in enterochromaffin tumor cells by RT-PCR, showing that single cells can co-express several ORs. Some of the receptors identified were already reported in other tumors, but they are orphan (without known ligand), as it is the case for most of the hundreds of human ORs. Thus, genes coding for human ORs with known ligands were transfected into these cells, expressing functional heterologous ORs. The in vitro stimulation of these cells by the corresponding OR odorant agonists promoted cell invasion of collagen gels. Using LNCaP prostate cancer cells, the stimulation of the PSGR (Prostate Specific G protein-coupled Receptor), an endogenously overexpressed OR, by β-ionone, its odorant agonist, resulted in the same phenotypic change. We also showed the involvement of a PI3 kinase γ dependent signaling pathway in this promotion of tumor cell invasiveness triggered by OR stimulation. Finally, after subcutaneous inoculation of LNCaP cells into NSG immunodeficient mice, the in vivo stimulation of these cells by the PSGR agonist β-ionone significantly enhanced metastasis emergence and spreading.
Gastroenterology | 2012
Dominique Debray; Dominique Rainteau; Véronique Barbu; Myriam Rouahi; Haquima El Mourabit; Stéphanie Lerondel; Colette Rey; Lydie Humbert; Dominique Wendum; Charles–Henry Cottart; Paul A. Dawson; Nicolas Chignard; Chantal Housset
BACKGROUND & AIMS Patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) have poorly defined defects in biliary function. We evaluated the effects of cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) deficiency on the enterohepatic disposition of bile acids (BAs). METHODS Bile secretion and BA homeostasis were investigated in Cftr(tm1Unc) (Cftr-/-) and CftrΔF508 (ΔF508) mice. RESULTS Cftr-/- and ΔF508 mice did not grow to normal size, but did not have liver abnormalities. The gallbladders of Cftr-/- mice were enlarged and had defects in emptying, based on (99m)technetium-mebrofenin scintigraphy or post-prandial variations in gallbladder volume; gallbladder contraction in response to cholecystokinin-8 was normal. Cftr-/- mice had abnormal gallbladder bile and duodenal acidity, and overexpressed the vasoactive intestinal peptide-a myorelaxant factor for the gallbladder. The BA pool was larger in Cftr-/- than wild-type mice, although there were no differences in fecal loss of BAs. Amounts of secondary BAs in portal blood, liver, and bile of Cftr-/- mice were much lower than normal. Expression of genes that are induced by BAs, including fibroblast growth factor-15 and BA transporters, was lower in the ileum but higher in the gallbladders of Cftr-/- mice, compared with wild-type mice, whereas enzymes that synthesize BA were down-regulated in livers of Cftr-/- mice. This indicates that BAs underwent a cholecystohepatic shunt, which was confirmed using cholyl-(Ne-NBD)-lysine as a tracer. In Cftr-/- mice, cholecystectomy reversed most changes in gene expression and partially restored circulating levels of secondary BAs. The ΔF508 mice overexpressed vasoactive intestinal peptide and had defects in gallbladder emptying and in levels of secondary BAs, but these features were less severe than in Cftr-/- mice. CONCLUSIONS Cftr-/- and CftrΔF508 mice have defects in gallbladder emptying that disrupt enterohepatic circulation of BAs. These defects create a shunt pathway that restricts the amount of toxic secondary BAs that enter the liver.
Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine | 2011
G. Gaud; S. Iochmann; Audrey Guillon-Munos; Benjamin Brillet; Stéphanie Petiot; Florian Seigneuret; Antoine Touzé; Nathalie Heuzé-Vourc’h; Yves Courty; Stéphanie Lerondel; Yves Gruel; Pascale Reverdiau
Tissue factor pathway inhibitor‐2 (TFPI‐2) is a potent inhibitor of plasmin which activates matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) involved in degradation of the extracellular matrix. Its secretion in the tumour microenvironment makes TFPI‐2 a potential inhibitor of tumour invasion and metastasis. As demonstrated in aggressive cancers, TFPI‐2 is frequently down‐regulated in cancer cells, but the mechanisms involved in the inhibition of tumour progression remained unclear. We showed in this study that stable TFPI‐2 down‐regulation in the National Cancer Institute (NCI)‐H460 non‐small cell lung cancer cell line using specific micro interfering micro‐interfering RNA promoted tumour progression in a nude mice orthotopic model that resulted in an increase in cell invasion. Moreover, TFPI‐2 down‐regulation enhanced cell adhesion to collagen IV and laminin via an increase in α1 integrin on cell surface, and increased MMP expression (mainly MMP‐1 and ‐3) contributing to cancer cell invasion through basement membrane components. This study also reveals for the first time that pulmonary fibroblasts incubated with conditioned media from TFPI‐2 silencing cancer cells exhibited increased expression of MMPs, particularly MMP‐1, ‐3 and ‐7, that are likely involved in lung cancer cell invasion through the surrounding stromal tissue, thus enhancing formation of metastases.
Lung Cancer | 2012
S. Iochmann; Stéphanie Lerondel; C. Blechet; Marion Lavergne; Sabrina Pesnel; Julien Sobilo; Nathalie Heuzé-Vourc’h; Alain Le Pape; Pascale Reverdiau
Human small cell lung carcinoma (SCLC) is the most aggressive type of lung cancer but no clinically relevant animal model has been developed to date. Such a model would be valuable to study the molecular aspects of tumour progression and to test the effectiveness of new treatment agents. We generated a reproducible and reliable nude mouse orthotopic model of human SCLC with NCI-H209 tumour cells genetically modified to express firefly luciferase. Cells were analysed for long-term stability of bioluminescence and a clone was passaged twice subcutaneously to enhance tumorigenicity. Cells resuspended in Matrigel and/or EDTA RPMI medium containing a (99m)Tc-labelled tin colloid used as tracer were implanted intrabronchially with a catheter inserted into the trachea and positioned in the main bronchus using X-ray-guided imaging. Deposition of cells into the lung was then assessed by scintigraphy. The growth of the primary tumour was sensitively and non-invasively followed by bioluminescence imaging that allowed real-time monitoring of tumour progression in the same animals over a 2-12-week period. Additional 3D bioluminescence imaging and computed tomography scanning were used to document tumour location and measurements that were confirmed by histological analyses. In conclusion, this original nude mouse orthotopic model resembles various stages of human small cell lung cancer, and therefore could be used to evaluate new treatment strategies.