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Featured researches published by Youenn Lajat.
Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B-biology | 1999
Nathalie Rousset; Véronique Vonarx; Sabine Eléouet; Jérôme Carré; Erwan Kerninon; Youenn Lajat; Thierry Patrice
Photodynamic therapy (PDT) induces among numerous cell targets membrane damage and alteration in cancer cell adhesiveness, an important parameter in cancer metastasis. We have previously shown that hematoporphyrin derivative (HPD)-PDT decreases cancer cell adhesiveness to endothelial cells in vitro and that it reduces the metastatic potential of cells injected into rats. The present study analyzes the influence of PDT in vivo on the metastatic potential of cancers cells and in vitro on the expression of molecules involved in adhesion and in the metastatic process. Photofrin and benzoporphyrin derivative monoacid ring A (BPD) have been evaluated on two colon cancer cell lines obtained from the same cancer [progressive (PROb) and regressive (REGb)] with different metastatic properties. Studies of BPD and Photofrin toxicity and phototoxicity are performed by colorimetric MTT assay on PROb and REGb cells to determine the PDT doses inducing around 25% cell death. Flow cytometry is then used to determine adhesion-molecule expression at the cell surface. ICAM-I, MHC-I, CD44V6 and its lectins (àHt1.3, PNA, SNA and UEA) are studied using cells treated either with BPD (50 ng/ml, 457 nm light, 10 J/cm2) or Photofrin (0.5 microgram/ml, 514 nm light, 25 J/cm2). Changes of metastatic patterns of PROb cells have been assessed by the subcutaneous injection of non-lethally treated BPD or Photofrin cells and counting lung metastases. First, we confirm the metastatic potential reduction induced by PDT with respectively a 71 or 96% decrease of the mean number of metastases (as compared with controls) for PROb cells treated with 50 ng/ml BPD and 10 or 20 J/cm2 irradiation. Concerning Photofrin-PDT-treated cells, we find respectively a 90 or 97% decrease (as compared with controls) of the mean number of metastases for PROb cells treated with 0.5 microgram/ml Photofrin and 25 or 50 J/cm2 irradiation. Then, we observe that CD44V6, its lectins (àHt1.3, PNA, SNA) and MHC-I are significantly decreased (compared with the other molecules tested) in PROb and REGb cells after both BPD and Photofrin PDT treatment. These modifications in adhesion-molecule expression, particularly of CD44V6, can thus account only for part of the decrease in the metastatic potential of PDT-treated cancer cells. Changes in adhesion-molecule expression induced by PDT are only transient, implying that the rate of metastatic reduction is probably not linked simply to these changes.
Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B-biology | 2003
Ludovic Bourré; Gérard Simonneaux; Yann Ferrand; Sonia Thibaut; Youenn Lajat; Thierry Patrice
This paper reports the synthesis of a new diphenylchlorin photosensitizer, 2,3-dihydro-5,15-di(3,5-dihydroxyphenyl)porphyrin (SIM01). The photodynamic properties, cell uptake and localization of SIM01 were compared with those of structurally related meso-tetra(hydroxyphenyl)chlorin (m-THPC). In vitro studies were conducted on rat glioma cells (C6) and human adenocarcinoma (HT-29), and in vivo studies on human colon adenocarcinoma cells (HT-29) and human prostate adenocarcinoma cells (PC3). Both dyes showed an absorption maximum at around 650 nm, with a molar extinction coefficient of 13017 M(-1) cm(-1) for SIM01 and 22718 M(-1) cm(-1) for m-THPC. Their capacity to generate singlet oxygen was identical, but differences in partition coefficients indicated that SIM01 was slightly more hydrophilic. In vitro, SIM01 was slightly more phototoxic than m-THPC for C6 cells (4.8 vs. 6.8 microg ml(-1)). However, phototoxicities were nearly identical for HT29 cells (0.45 microg ml(-1) for 5 h incubation followed by 300 mW, 20 J cm(-2)). Pharmacokinetics in vivo in mice, as determined by fibre spectrofluorimetry, showed that the SIM01 fluorescence signal in the tumor was maximal between 6 and 12 h after injection, as compared to 72 h for m-THPC. With a 2 mg kg(-1) dye dose and laser irradiation at 300 J cm(-2) (650 nm, 300 mW), the optimal PDT response occurred when the interval between injection and irradiation was 6 h for SIM01 and 24 h for m-THPC. For SIM01 with 5 mg kg(-1) injection, the optimal PDT response occurred with a 12 h delay and with the same irradiation parameters as described above, in this case the tumor response showing 40% growth. Considering the tumor volume doubling time, the value was 6.5 days in the control group and increased to 13.5 days with SIM01. Thus, SIM01 may be a powerful sensitizer characterized by strong in vitro and in vivo phototoxicity and faster tissue uptake and elimination than m-THPC.
Photochemistry and Photobiology | 2000
Sabine Eléouet; Nathalie Rousset; Jérôme Carré; Ludovic Bourré; Véronique Vonarx; Youenn Lajat; Gerard M. J. Beijersbergen van Henegouwen; Thierry Patrice
Abstract Synthesis of δ-aminolevulinic acid (ALA) derivatives is a promising way to improve the therapeutic properties of ALA, particularly cell uptake or homogeneity of protoporphyrin IX (PpIX) synthesis. The fluorescence emission kinetics and phototoxic properties of ALA-n-pentyl ester (E1) and R,S-ALA-2-(hydroxymethyl) tetrahydrofuranyl ester (E2) were compared with those of ALA and assessed on C6 glioma cells. ALA (100 μg/mL), E1 and E2 (10 μg/mL) induced similar PpIX-fluorescence kinetics (maximum between 5 and 7 h incubation), fluorescence being limited to the cytoplasm. The 50% lethal dose occurred after 6 h with 45, 4 and 8 μg/mL of ALA, E1 and E2, respectively. ALA, E1 and E2 induced no dark toxicity when drugs were removed after 5 min of incubation. However, light (25 J/cm2) applied 6 h after 5 min incubation with 168 μg/mL of each compound induced 85% survival with ALA, 27% with E1 and 41% with E2. Increasing the incubation time with ALA, E1 and E2 before washing increased the phototoxicity, but E1 and E2 remained more efficient than ALA, regardless of incubation time. ALA-esters were more efficient than ALA in inducing phototoxicity after short incubation times, probably through an increase of the amount of PpIX synthesized by C6 cells.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2003
Yann Ferrand; Ludovic Bourre; Gérard Simonneaux; Sonia Thibaut; Fabrice Odobel; Youenn Lajat; Thierry Patrice
The synthesis and characterization of 2,3-dihydro-5,15-di(3,5-dihydroxyphenyl) porphyrin is reported. The phototoxicity on C6 cell lines and the pharmacokinetics are also reported as preliminary results showing a very high tumor to skin ratio and short retention time in tissues, and thus promising activity in photodynamic therapy.
Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B-biology | 2000
Nathalie Rousset; Erwann Kerninon; Sabine Eléouet; Tanguy Le Néel; Jean-Louis Auget; Véronique Vonarx; Jérôme Carré; Youenn Lajat; Thierry Patrice
Photodynamic therapy (PDT) with Photofrin has already been authorized for certain applications in Japan, the USA and France, and powerful second-generation sensitizers such as meta-(tetrahydroxyphenyl) chlorin (m-THPC) are now being considered for approval. Although sensitizers are likely to localize within the cytoplasm or the plasma membrane, nuclear membrane can be damaged at an early stage of photodynamic reaction, resulting in DNA lesions. Thus, it is of critical importance to assess the safety of m-THPC-PDT, which would be used mainly against early well-differentiated cancers. In this context, m-THPC toxicity and phototoxicity were studied by a colorimetric MTT assay on C6 cells to determine the LD50 (2.5 microg/ml m-THPC for 10 J/cm2 irradiation and 1 microg/ml for 25 J/cm2 irradiation) and PDT doses inducing around 25% cell death. Single-cell electrophoresis (a Comet assay with Tail Moment calculation) was used to evaluate DNA damage and repair in murine glioblastoma C6 cells after LD25 or higher doses for assays of PDT. These results were correlated with m-THPC nuclear distribution by confocal microspectrofluorimetry. m-THPC failed to induce significant changes in the Tail Moment of C6 cells in the absence of light, whereas m-THPC-PDT induced DNA damage immediately after irradiation. The Tail Moment increase was not linear (curve slope being 43 for 0-1 microg/ml m-THPC and 117 for 1-3 microg/ml), but the mean value increased with the light dose (0, 10 or 25 J/cm2) and incubation time (every hour from 1 to 4 h) for an incubation with m-THPC 1 microg/ml. However, cultured murine glioblastoma cells were capable of significant DNA repair after 4 h, and no residual DNA damage was evident after 24-h post-treatment incubation at 37 degrees C. An increase in the light dose appeared to be less genotoxic than an increase in the m-THPC dose for similar toxicities. Our results indicate that m-THPC PDT appears to be a safe treatment since DNA repair seemed to not be impaired and DNA damage occurred only with lethal PDT doses. However, the Comet assay cannot give us the certainty that no mutation, photoadducts or oxidative damage have been developed so this point would be verified with another mutagenicity assay.
Surgical Neurology | 1992
Marie-Thérèse Foultier; Thierry Patrice; Sergio Yactayo; Youenn Lajat; François Resche
Photodynamic therapy is based on the interaction of a sensitizer (hematoporphyrin derivative) selectively retained by tumor cells, which becomes toxic after light exposure. We studied the influence of exogenous prostaglandins and indomethacin on photodynamic therapy of normal human endothelial cells and glioma cells. Although differing in origin and kinetic properties, endothelial cells exhibited photodynamic therapy sensitivity quite comparable to that of C6 cells. However, in contrast to studies performed using radiotherapy, exogenous prostaglandins decreased rather than protected the surviving fraction of both cell types treated by photodynamic therapy. Indomethacin, a potent inhibitor of endogenous prostaglandin synthesis, increased the surviving fraction of C6 glioma cells but not that of endothelial cells. Exogenous or endogenous prostaglandins seem to influence in vitro photodynamic therapy in a different way than does radiotherapy.
Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B-biology | 1997
Sabine Eléouet; Jérôme Carré; Véronique Vonarx; Dain Heyman; Youenn Lajat; Thierry Patrice
Endogenously generated protoporphyrin IX (PpIX) from exogenous delta-aminolevulinic acid (ALA) has the photodynamic capacity to inactive cancer cells of different origins. The aim of this study was to characterize the ability of normal lymphocytes to transform ALA into PpIX in order to appreciate through further studies changes in pathologic lymphocytes. We investigated in this study PpIX synthesis by normal human lymphocytes using a confocal laser microspectrofluorometer. Live lymphocytes were identified by monoclonal antibody fluorescent labeling. B and T lymphocytes synthesized PpIX (80-100 counts), with a maximum being reached after 4 h ALA incubation. When T subpopulations of lymphocytes were labeled, T4 and T8 changes in fluorescence kinetics were similar, reaching a maximum after 5 h ALA incubation. The influence of monoclonal antibody labeling on this delayed increase for maximum fluorescence is considered. Phytohemagglutinin (PHA, incubation for 72 h) lymphocyte stimulation induced a 100% increase in PpIX fluorescence for T lymphocytes, whereas pokeweed mitogen activation produced an increase of about 50% in the B- or T-lymphocyte signal. Finally, the scanning fluorescence image clearly indicated the inhomogeneity of cytoplasmic ALA-induced PpIX fluorescence, which was probably due to the distribution of mitochondria. The influence of this heterogeneity on PpIX photosensitivity effects is discussed.
Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B-biology | 2002
Ludovic Bourré; Sonia Thibaut; Amélie Briffaud; Nathalie Rousset; Sabine Eléouet; Youenn Lajat; Thierry Patrice
Research in Experimental Medicine | 1999
Nathalie Rousset; Véronique Vonarx; Sabine Eléouet; Jérôme Carré; Ludovic Bourré; Youenn Lajat; Thierry Patrice
Pharmacological Research | 2002
Ludovic Bourré; Sonia Thibaut; Amélie Briffaud; Youenn Lajat; Thierry Patrice