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Featured researches published by Thomas Moyon.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2013

Maternal and cord blood LC-HRMS metabolomics reveal alterations in energy and polyamine metabolism, and oxidative stress in very-low birth weight infants.

Marie-Cécile Alexandre-Gouabau; Frédérique Courant; Thomas Moyon; Alice Kuster; Gwénaëlle Le Gall; Illa Tea; Jean-Philippe Antignac; Dominique Darmaun

To assess the global effect of preterm birth on fetal metabolism and maternal-fetal nutrient transfer, we used a mass spectrometric-based chemical phenotyping approach on cord blood obtained at the time of birth. We sampled umbilical venous, umbilical arterial, and maternal blood from mothers delivering very-low birth weight (VLBW, with a median gestational age and weight of 29 weeks, and 1210 g, respectively) premature or full-term (FT) neonates. In VLBW group, we observed a significant elevation in the levels and maternal-fetal gradients of butyryl-, isovaleryl-, hexanoyl- and octanoyl-carnitines, suggesting enhanced short- and medium chain fatty acid β-oxidation in human preterm feto-placental unit. The significant decrease in glutamine-glutamate in preterm arterial cord blood beside lower levels of amino acid precursors of Krebs cycle suggest increased glutamine utilization in the fast growing tissues of preterm fetus with a deregulation in placental glutamate-glutamine shuttling. Enhanced glutathione utilization is likely to account for the decrease in precursor amino acids (serine, betaine, glutamate and methionine) in arterial cord blood. An increase in both the circulating levels and maternal-fetal gradients of several polyamines in their acetylated form (diacetylspermine and acetylputrescine) suggests an enhanced polyamine metabolic cycling in extreme prematurity. Our metabolomics study allowed the identification of alterations in fetal energy, antioxidant defense, and polyamines and purines flux as a signature of premature birth.


Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry | 2012

Postnatal growth velocity modulates alterations of proteins involved in metabolism and neuronal plasticity in neonatal hypothalamus in rats born with intrauterine growth restriction

Marie-Cécile Alexandre-Gouabau; Emilie Bailly; Thomas Moyon; Isabelle Grit; Bérengère Coupé; Gwenola Le Drean; Hélène Rogniaux; Patricia Parnet

Intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) due to maternal protein restriction is associated in rats with an alteration in hypothalamic centers involved in feeding behaviour. In order to gain insight into the mechanism of perinatal maternal undernutrition in the brain, we used proteomics approach to identify hypothalamic proteins that are altered in their expression following protein restriction in utero. We used an animal model in which restriction of the protein intake of pregnant rats (8% vs. 20%) produces IUGR pups which were randomized to a nursing regimen leading to either rapid or slow catch-up growth. We identified several proteins which allowed, by multivariate analysis, a very good discrimination of the three groups according to their perinatal nutrition. These proteins were related to energy-sensing pathways (Eno 1, E(2)PDH, Acot 1 and Fabp5), redox status (Bcs 1L, PrdX3 and 14-3-3 protein) or amino acid pathway (Acy1) as well as neurodevelopment (DRPs, MAP2, Snca). In addition, the differential expressions of several key proteins suggested possible shunts towards ketone-body metabolism and lipid oxidation, providing the energy and carbon skeletons necessary to lipogenesis. Our results show that maternal protein deprivation during pregnancy only (IUGR with rapid catch-up growth) or pregnancy and lactation (IUGR with slow postnatal growth) modulates numerous metabolic pathways resulting in alterations of hypothalamic energy supply. As several of these pathways are involved in signalling, it remains to be determined whether hypothalamic proteome adaptation of IUGR rats in response to different postnatal growth rates could also interfere with cerebral plasticity or neuronal maturation.


Nutrition | 2015

Preweaning modulation of intestinal microbiota by oligosaccharides or amoxicillin can contribute to programming of adult microbiota in rats

Fanny Morel; Raish Oozeer; Hugues Piloquet; Thomas Moyon; Anthony Pagniez; Jan Knol; Dominique Darmaun; Catherine Michel

OBJECTIVE Increasing evidence suggests that early nutrition has programming effects on adult health. Identifying mechanisms underlying nutritional programming would aid in the design of new disease prevention strategies. The intestinal microbiota could be a key player in this programming because it affects host metabolic homeostasis, postnatal gut colonization is sensitive to early nutrition, and initial microbial set-up is thought to shape microbiota composition for life. The aim of this study was to determine whether early manipulation of intestinal microbiota actually programs adult microbiota in rats. METHODS Suckling rats pups were supplemented with fructo-oligosaccharides, galacto-oligosaccharides/long-chain fructan mix (GOS/lcF, 9/1), acidic oligosaccharides, amoxicillin, or vehicle from the fifth to the fourteenth day of life, and weaned to standard chow at day 21. Ceco-colonic microbiota was characterized at 14 and 131 d by real-time polymerase chain reaction analysis. RESULTS At day 14, all treatments affected microbiota. Amoxicillin had the most significant effect. All oligosaccharides decreased Firmicutes levels, whereas only fructo-oligosaccharides and GOS/lcF increased bifidobacteria. At day 131, most of these effects had faded away but a significant, albeit minor, adult microbiota programming was observed for rats that received GOS/lcF mix before weaning, regarding Roseburia intestinalis cluster, one subdivision of the Erysipelotrichaceae family as well as butyrate kinase gene. CONCLUSIONS As revealed by a targeted quantitative polymerase chain reaction approach, programming of adult intestinal microbiota seems to vary according to the nature of the preweaning microbiotal modulator. This suggests that intestinal microbiota may, only under specific circumstances, serve as a relay of neonatal nutrition and thus potentially contribute to nutritional programming of host physiology.


Metabolomics | 2012

Statistical strategies for relating metabolomics and proteomics data: a real case study in nutrition research area

Thomas Moyon; Fabien Le Marec; El Mostafa Qannari; Evelyne Vigneau; Aurélie Le Plain; Frédérique Courant; Jean-Philippe Antignac; Patricia Parnet; Marie-Cécile Alexandre-Gouabau

The current investigations were carried out in the context of a nutritional case study aiming at assessing the postnatal impact of maternal dietary protein restriction during pregnancy and lactation on rat offspring plasma metabolome and hypothalamic proteome. Although data generated by different “Omics” technologies are usually considered and analyzed separately, their interrelation may offer a valuable opportunity for assessing the emerging ‘integrated biology’ concept. The overall strategy of analysis first investigated data pretreatment and variable selection for each dataset. Then, three multivariate analyses were applied to investigate the links between the abundance of metabolites and the expression of proteins collected on the same samples. Unfold principal component analysis and regularized canonical correlation analysis did not take into account the presence of groups of individuals related to the intervention study. On the contrary, the predictive MultiBlock Partial Least Squares method used this information. Regularized canonical correlation analysis appeared as a relevant approach to investigate of the relationships between the two datasets. However, in order to highlight the molecular compounds, proteins and metabolites, associated in interacting or common metabolic pathways for the experimental groups, MultiBlock partial least squares was the most appropriate method in the present nutritional case study.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Non-Invasive Exploration of Neonatal Gastric Epithelium by Using Exfoliated Epithelial Cells

Bertrand Kaeffer; Arnaud Legrand; Thomas Moyon; Anne Frondas-Chauty; Hélène Billard; Omar Guzmán-Quevedo; Dominique Darmaun; Jean-Christophe Rozé

Background & Aims In preterm infants, exfoliated gastric epithelial cells can be retrieved from aspirates sampled through the naso-gastric feeding tube. Our aims were to determine (1) whether the recovery of exfoliated cells is feasible at any time from birth through the removal of the nasogastric tube, (2) whether they can be grown in culture in vitro, and (3) whether the physiological state of exfoliated cells expressing H+/K+ -ATPases reflects that of their counterparts remaining in situ at the surface of the gastric epithelium in neonatal rat pups. Methods In infants, gastric fluid aspirates were collected weekly after birth or every 3 hours over 24-h periods, and related to clinical parameters (Biocollection PROG/09/18). In rat pups submitted to a single fasting/refeeding cycle, we explored circadian exfoliation with the cellular counter-parts in the gland. All samples were analyzed by confocal imaging and Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay. Results Epithelial cells were identified by microscopy using membrane-bound anti-H+/K+ ATPases antibody, assessed for nucleus integrity, and the expression of selected proteins (autophagy, circadian clock). On 34 infants, the H+/K+ -ATPase-positive cells were consistently found quiescent, regardless of gestational age and feeding schedule from day-5 of life to the day of removal of the naso-gastric tube. By logistic regression analysis, we did find a positive correlation between the intensity of exfoliation (cellular loss per sample) and the postnatal age (p<0.001). The H+/K+ ATPase-positive cells established in culture retained the expression of a biomarker of progenitor status (Pouf5F1-Oct4). In rat pups, the expression pattern of Survivin in H+/K+ ATPase-positive exfoliated cells paralleled that observed in cells remaining at the surface of the gastric gland. Conclusions Tracking parietal cells can improve clinical monitoring and understanding of the autophagic death via the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/Akt/survivin pathway.


Nutrients | 2018

Breast Milk Lipidome Is Associated with Early Growth Trajectory in Preterm Infants

Marie-Cécile Alexandre-Gouabau; Thomas Moyon; Véronique Cariou; Jean-Philippe Antignac; El Mostafa Qannari; Mikaël Croyal; Mohamed Soumah; Yann Guitton; Agnès David-Sochard; Hélène Billard; Arnaud Legrand; Cécile Boscher; Dominique Darmaun; Jean-Christophe Rozé; Clair-Yves Boquien

Human milk is recommended for feeding preterm infants. The current pilot study aims to determine whether breast-milk lipidome had any impact on the early growth-pattern of preterm infants fed their own mother’s milk. A prospective-monocentric-observational birth-cohort was established, enrolling 138 preterm infants, who received their own mother’s breast-milk throughout hospital stay. All infants were ranked according to the change in weight Z-score between birth and hospital discharge. Then, we selected infants who experienced “slower” (n = 15, −1.54 ± 0.42 Z-score) or “faster” (n = 11, −0.48 ± 0.19 Z-score) growth; as expected, although groups did not differ regarding gestational age, birth weight Z-score was lower in the “faster-growth” group (0.56 ± 0.72 vs. −1.59 ± 0.96). Liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry lipidomic signatures combined with multivariate analyses made it possible to identify breast-milk lipid species that allowed clear-cut discrimination between groups. Validation of the selected biomarkers was performed using multidimensional statistical, false-discovery-rate and ROC (Receiver Operating Characteristic) tools. Breast-milk associated with faster growth contained more medium-chain saturated fatty acid and sphingomyelin, dihomo-γ-linolenic acid (DGLA)-containing phosphethanolamine, and less oleic acid-containing triglyceride and DGLA-oxylipin. The ability of such biomarkers to predict early-growth was validated in presence of confounding clinical factors but remains to be ascertained in larger cohort studies.


Frontiers in Endocrinology | 2017

Perinatal Western Diet Consumption Leads to Profound Plasticity and GABAergic Phenotype Changes within Hypothalamus and Reward Pathway from Birth to Sexual Maturity in Rat

Julie Paradis; Pierre Boureau; Thomas Moyon; Sophie Nicklaus; Patricia Parnet; Vincent Paillé

Perinatal maternal consumption of energy dense food increases the risk of obesity in children. This is associated with an overconsumption of palatable food that is consumed for its hedonic property. The underlying mechanism that links perinatal maternal diet and offspring preference for fat is still poorly understood. In this study, we aim at studying the influence of maternal high-fat/high-sugar diet feeding [western diet (WD)] during gestation and lactation on the reward pathways controlling feeding in the rat offspring from birth to sexual maturity. We performed a longitudinal follow-up of WD and Control offspring at three critical time periods (childhood, adolescence, and adulthood) and focus on investigating the influence of perinatal exposure to palatable diet on (i) fat preference, (ii) gene expression profile, and (iii) neuroanatomical/architectural changes of the mesolimbic dopaminergic networks. We showed that WD feeding restricted to the perinatal period has a clear long-lasting influence on the organization of homeostatic and hedonic brain circuits but not on fat preference. We demonstrated a period specific evolution of the preference for fat that we correlated with specific brain molecular signatures. In offspring from WD fed dams, we observed during childhood the existence of fat preference associated with a higher expression of key gene involved in the dopamine (DA) systems; at adolescence, a high-fat preference for both groups, progressively reduced during the 3 days test for the WD group and associated with a reduced expression of key gene involved in the DA systems for the WD group that could suggest a compensatory mechanism to protect them from further high-fat exposure; and finally at adulthood, a preference for fat that was identical to control rats but associated with profound modification in key genes involved in the γ-aminobutyric acid network, serotonin receptors, and polysialic acid–NCAM-dependent remodeling of the hypothalamus. Altogether, these data reveal that maternal WD, restricted to the perinatal period, has no sustained impact on energy homeostasis and fat preference later in life even though a strong remodeling of the hypothalamic homeostatic and reward pathway involved in eating behavior occurred. Further functional experiments would be needed to understand the relevance of these circuits remodeling.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2018

Stable Isotope Kinetic Study of ApoM (Apolipoprotein M)

Mikaël Croyal; Stéphanie Billon-Crossouard; Sophie Goulitquer; Audrey Aguesse; Luis León; Fanta Fall; Maud Chétiveaux; Thomas Moyon; Valentin Blanchard; Khadija Ouguerram; Gilles Lambert; Estelle Nobecourt; Michel Krempf

Objective— ApoM (apolipoprotein M) binds primarily to high-density lipoprotein before to be exchanged with apoB (apolipoprotein B)–containing lipoproteins. Low-density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor–mediated clearance of apoB-containing particles could influence plasma apoM kinetics and decrease its antiatherogenic properties. In humans, we aimed to describe the interaction of apoM kinetics with other components of lipid metabolism to better define its potential benefit on atherosclerosis. Approach and Results— Fourteen male subjects received a primed infusion of 2H3-leucine for 14 hours, and analyses were performed by liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry from the hourly plasma samples. Fractional catabolic rates and production rates within lipoproteins were calculated using compartmental models. ApoM was found not only in high-density lipoprotein (59%) and LDL (4%) but also in a non–lipoprotein-related compartment (37%). The apoM distribution was heterogeneous within LDL and non–lipoprotein-related compartments according to plasma triglycerides (r=0.86; P<0.001). The relationships between sphingosine-1-phosphate and apoM were confirmed in all compartments (r range, 0.55–0.89; P<0.05). ApoM fractional catabolic rates and production rates were 0.16±0.07 pool/d and 0.14±0.06 mg/kg per day in high-density lipoprotein and 0.56±0.10 pool/d and 0.03±0.01 mg/kg per day in LDL, respectively. Fractional catabolic rates of LDL-apoM and LDL-apoB100 were correlated (r=0.55; P=0.042). Significant correlations were found between triglycerides and production rates of LDL-apoM (r=0.73; P<0.004). Conclusions— In humans, LDL kinetics play a key role in apoM turnover. Plasma triglycerides act on both apoM and sphingosine-1-phosphate distributions between lipoproteins. These results confirmed that apoM could be bound to high-density lipoprotein after secretion and then quickly exchanged with a non–lipoprotein-related compartment and to LDL to be slowly catabolized.


Atherosclerosis | 2016

PCSK9 and lipoprotein (a) levels are two predictors of coronary artery calcification in asymptomatic patients with familial hypercholesterolemia

Rodrigo Alonso; Pedro Mata; Ovidio Muñiz; Francisco Fuentes-Jiménez; José L. Díaz; Daniel Zambón; Marta Tomás; César Martín; Thomas Moyon; Mikaël Croyal; Aurélie Thedrez; Gilles Lambert


Electronic Journal of Applied Statistical Analysis | 2015

AoV-PLS: a new method for the analysis of multivariate data depending on several factors

Angélina El Ghaziri; El Mostafa Qannari; Thomas Moyon; Marie-Cécile Alexandre-Gouabau

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Frédérique Courant

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Marie-Cécile Alexandre-Gouabau

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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El Mostafa Qannari

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Bernard Lyan

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Carole Migné

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Claudine Manach

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Cécile Canlet

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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