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result(s) for
"Soyer, Magali"
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Aspirin blocks formation of metastatic intravascular niches by inhibiting platelet-derived COX-1/thromboxane A2
by
Gomes, Ana L.
,
Warner, Timothy D.
,
Allen, Philip D.
in
Animal models
,
Animals
,
Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal - pharmacology
2019
Because metastasis is associated with the majority of cancer-related deaths, its prevention is a clinical aspiration. Prostanoids are a large family of bioactive lipids derived from the activity of cyclooxygenase-1 (COX-1) and COX-2. Aspirin impairs the biosynthesis of all prostanoids through the irreversible inhibition of both COX isoforms. Long-term administration of aspirin leads to reduced distant metastases in murine models and clinical trials, but the COX isoform, downstream prostanoid, and cell compartment responsible for this effect are yet to be determined. Here, we have shown that aspirin dramatically reduced lung metastasis through inhibition of COX-1 while the cancer cells remained intravascular and that inhibition of platelet COX-1 alone was sufficient to impair metastasis. Thromboxane A2 (TXA2) was the prostanoid product of COX-1 responsible for this antimetastatic effect. Inhibition of the COX-1/TXA2 pathway in platelets decreased aggregation of platelets on tumor cells, endothelial activation, tumor cell adhesion to the endothelium, and recruitment of metastasis-promoting monocytes/macrophages, and diminished the formation of a premetastatic niche. Thus, platelet-derived TXA2 orchestrates the generation of a favorable intravascular metastatic niche that promotes tumor cell seeding and identifies COX-1/TXA2 signaling as a target for the prevention of metastasis.
Journal Article
Extracellular Bacterial Pathogen Induces Host Cell Surface Reorganization to Resist Shear Stress
by
Mairey, Emilie
,
Dyer, Dave
,
Guadagnini, Stéphanie
in
Bacteremia - microbiology
,
Bacteria
,
Bacterial Adhesion - physiology
2009
Bacterial infections targeting the bloodstream lead to a wide array of devastating diseases such as septic shock and meningitis. To study this crucial type of infection, its specific environment needs to be taken into account, in particular the mechanical forces generated by the blood flow. In a previous study using Neisseria meningitidis as a model, we observed that bacterial microcolonies forming on the endothelial cell surface in the vessel lumen are remarkably resistant to mechanical stress. The present study aims to identify the molecular basis of this resistance. N. meningitidis forms aggregates independently of host cells, yet we demonstrate here that cohesive forces involved in these bacterial aggregates are not sufficient to explain the stability of colonies on cell surfaces. Results imply that host cell attributes enhance microcolony cohesion. Microcolonies on the cell surface induce a cellular response consisting of numerous cellular protrusions similar to filopodia that come in close contact with all the bacteria in the microcolony. Consistent with a role of this cellular response, host cell lipid microdomain disruption simultaneously inhibited this response and rendered microcolonies sensitive to blood flow-generated drag forces. We then identified, by a genetic approach, the type IV pili component PilV as a triggering factor of plasma membrane reorganization, and consistently found that microcolonies formed by a pilV mutant are highly sensitive to shear stress. Our study shows that bacteria manipulate host cell functions to reorganize the host cell surface to form filopodia-like structures that enhance the cohesion of the microcolonies and therefore blood vessel colonization under the harsh conditions of the bloodstream.
Journal Article
Aspirin blocks formation of metastatic intravascular niches by inhibiting platelet-derived COX-1/thromboxane A.sub.2
2019
Because metastasis is associated with the majority of cancer-related deaths, its prevention is a clinical aspiration. Prostanoids are a large family of bioactive lipids derived from the activity of cyclooxygenase-1 (COX-1) and COX-2. Aspirin impairs the biosynthesis of all prostanoids through the irreversible inhibition of both COX isoforms. Long-term administration of aspirin leads to reduced distant metastases in murine models and clinical trials, but the COX isoform, downstream prostanoid, and cell compartment responsible for this effect are yet to be determined. Here, we have shown that aspirin dramatically reduced lung metastasis through inhibition of COX-1 while the cancer cells remained intravascular and that inhibition of platelet COX-1 alone was sufficient to impair metastasis. Thromboxane [A.sub.2] ([TXA.sub.2]) was the prostanoid product of COX- 1 responsible for this antimetastatic effect. Inhibition of the COX-1/[TXA.sub.2] pathway in platelets decreased aggregation of platelets on tumor cells, endothelial activation, tumor cell adhesion to the endothelium, and recruitment of metastasis-promoting monocytes/ macrophages, and diminished the formation of a premetastatic niche. Thus, platelet-derived [TXA.sub.2] orchestrates the generation of a favorable intravascular metastatic niche that promotes tumor cell seeding and identifies COX- 1/[TXA.sub.2] signaling as a target for the prevention of metastasis.
Journal Article
The Bicarbonate Transporter Is Essential for Bacillus anthracis Lethality
2008
In the pathogenic bacterium Bacillus anthracis, virulence requires induced expression of the anthrax toxin and capsule genes. Elevated CO2/bicarbonate levels, an indicator of the host environment, provide a signal ex vivo to increase expression of virulence factors, but the mechanism underlying induction and its relevance in vivo are unknown. We identified a previously uncharacterized ABC transporter (BAS2714-12) similar to bicarbonate transporters in photosynthetic cyanobacteria, which is essential to the bicarbonate induction of virulence gene expression. Deletion of the genes for the transporter abolished induction of toxin gene expression and strongly decreased the rate of bicarbonate uptake ex vivo, demonstrating that the BAS2714-12 locus encodes a bicarbonate ABC transporter. The bicarbonate transporter deletion strain was avirulent in the A/J mouse model of infection. Carbonic anhydrase inhibitors, which prevent the interconversion of CO2 and bicarbonate, significantly affected toxin expression only in the absence of bicarbonate or the bicarbonate transporter, suggesting that carbonic anhydrase activity is not essential to virulence factor induction and that bicarbonate, and not CO2, is the signal essential for virulence induction. The identification of this novel bicarbonate transporter essential to virulence of B. anthracis may be of relevance to other pathogens, such as Streptococcus pyogenes, Escherichia coli, Borrelia burgdorferi, and Vibrio cholera that regulate virulence factor expression in response to CO2/bicarbonate, and suggests it may be a target for antibacterial intervention.
Journal Article
Posttranslational Modification of Pili upon Cell Contact Triggers N. meningitidis Dissemination
by
Imhaus, Anne-Flore
,
Duménil, Guillaume
,
Martin, Patricia
in
Aggregation
,
Bacteria
,
Bacterial Adhesion
2011
The Gram-negative bacterium Neisseria meningitidis asymptomatically colonizes the throat of 10 to 30% of the human population, but throat colonization can also act as the port of entry to the blood (septicemia) and then the brain (meningitis). Colonization is mediated by filamentous organelles referred to as type IV pili, which allow the formation of bacterial aggregates associated with host cells. We found that proliferation of N. meningitidis in contact with host cells increased the transcription of a bacterial gene encoding a transferase that adds phosphoglycerol onto type IV pili. This unusual posttranslational modification specifically released type IV pili-dependent contacts between bacteria. In turn, this regulated detachment process allowed propagation of the bacterium to new colonization sites and also migration across the epithelium, a prerequisite for dissemination and invasive disease.
Journal Article
Early sequence of events triggered by the interaction of Neisseria meningitidis with endothelial cells
by
Millien, Corinne
,
Lagache, Thibault
,
Imhaus, Anne‐Flore
in
Bacteria
,
Bacterial Adhesion
,
Bacterial Proteins - metabolism
2014
Summary Neisseria meningitidis is a bacterium responsible for severe sepsis and meningitis. Following type IV pilus‐mediated adhesion to endothelial cells, bacteria proliferating on the cellular surface trigger a potent cellular response that enhances the ability of adhering bacteria to resist the mechanical forces generated by the blood flow. This response is characterized by the formation of numerous 100 nm wide membrane protrusions morphologically related to filopodia. Here, a high‐resolution quantitative live‐cell fluorescence microscopy procedure was designed and used to study this process. A farnesylated plasma membrane marker was first detected only a few seconds after bacterial contact, rapidly followed by actin cytoskeleton reorganization and bulk cytoplasm accumulation. The bacterial type IV pili‐associated minor pilin PilV is necessary for the initiation of this cascade. Plasma membrane composition is a key factor as cholesterol depletion with methyl‐β‐cyclodextrin completely blocks the initiation of the cellular response. In contrast membrane deformation does not require the actin cytoskeleton. Strikingly, plasma membrane remodelling undermicrocolonies is also independent of common intracellular signalling pathways as cellular ATP depletion is not inhibitory. This study shows that bacteria‐induced plasma membrane reorganization is a rapid event driven by a direct cross‐talk between type IV pili and the plasma membrane rather than by the activation of an intracellular signalling pathway that would lead to actin remodelling.
Journal Article
RhoC and ROCKs regulate cancer cell interactions with endothelial cells
by
Riou, Philippe
,
Colomba, Audrey
,
Reymond, Nicolas
in
Blood platelets
,
Cancer
,
cancer metastasis
2015
RhoC is a member of the Rho GTPase family that is implicated in cancer progression by stimulating cancer cell invasiveness. Here we report that RhoC regulates the interaction of cancer cells with vascular endothelial cells (ECs), a crucial step in the metastatic process. RhoC depletion by RNAi reduces PC3 prostate cancer cell adhesion to ECs, intercalation between ECs as well as transendothelial migration in vitro. Depletion of the kinases ROCK1 and ROCK2, two known RhoC downstream effectors, similarly decreases cancer interaction with ECs. RhoC also regulates the extension of protrusions made by cancer cells on vascular ECs in vivo. Transient RhoC depletion is sufficient to reduce both early PC3 cell retention in the lungs and experimental metastasis formation in vivo. Our results indicate RhoC plays a central role in cancer cell interaction with vascular ECs, which is a critical event for cancer progression.
•RhoC acts in cancer cells to mediate their interaction with endothelial cells in vitro and in vivo.•RhoC regulates cancer cell attachment to and insertion between endothelial cells prior to transendothelial migration.•The RhoC effectors ROCK1 and ROCK2 act similarly to regulate cancer cell interaction with endothelial cells.•Transient RhoC depletion is sufficient to reduce cancer cell survival in lung blood vessels and metastasis formation.
Journal Article
The Bicarbonate Transporter Is Essential for Bacillus anthracis Lethality
by
Hoch, James A
,
Perego, Marta
,
Soyer, Magali
in
ABC transporters
,
Anthrax
,
Bacterial infections
2008
In the pathogenic bacterium Bacillus anthracis, virulence requires induced expression of the anthrax toxin and capsule genes. Elevated CO2/bicarbonate levels, an indicator of the host environment, provide a signal ex vivo to increase expression of virulence factors, but the mechanism underlying induction and its relevance in vivo are unknown. We identified a previously uncharacterized ABC transporter (BAS2714-12) similar to bicarbonate transporters in photosynthetic cyanobacteria, which is essential to the bicarbonate induction of virulence gene expression. Deletion of the genes for the transporter abolished induction of toxin gene expression and strongly decreased the rate of bicarbonate uptake ex vivo, demonstrating that the BAS2714-12 locus encodes a bicarbonate ABC transporter. The bicarbonate transporter deletion strain was avirulent in the A/J mouse model of infection. Carbonic anhydrase inhibitors, which prevent the interconversion of CO2 and bicarbonate, significantly affected toxin expression only in the absence of bicarbonate or the bicarbonate transporter, suggesting that carbonic anhydrase activity is not essential to virulence factor induction and that bicarbonate, and not CO2, is the signal essential for virulence induction. The identification of this novel bicarbonate transporter essential to virulence of B. anthracis may be of relevance to other pathogens, such as Streptococcus pyogenes, Escherichia coli, Borrelia burgdorferi, and Vibrio cholera that regulate virulence factor expression in response to CO2/bicarbonate, and suggests it may be a target for antibacterial intervention.
Journal Article