15 results on '"Chelbi, Sonia T."'
Search Results
2. Regulatory Factor X 7 and its Potential Link to Lymphoid Cancers
- Author
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Fischer, Berenice A., Chelbi, Sonia T., and Guarda, Greta
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The transcription factor Rfx7 limits metabolism of NK cells and promotes their maintenance and immunity
- Author
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Castro, Wilson, Chelbi, Sonia T., Niogret, Charlène, Ramon-Barros, Cristina, Welten, Suzanne P. M., Osterheld, Kevin, Wang, Haiping, Rota, Giorgia, Morgado, Leonor, Vivier, Eric, Raeber, Miro E., Boyman, Onur, Delorenzi, Mauro, Barras, David, Ho, Ping-Chih, Oxenius, Annette, and Guarda, Greta
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Why preeclampsia still exists?
- Author
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Chelbi, Sonia T., Veitia, Reiner A., and Vaiman, Daniel
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- 2013
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5. Serum profile in preeclampsia and intra-uterine growth restriction revealed by iTRAQ technology
- Author
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Auer, Jana, Camoin, Luc, Guillonneau, François, Rigourd, Virginie, Chelbi, Sonia T., Leduc, Marjorie, Laparre, Jérôme, Mignot, Thérèse-Marie, and Vaiman, Daniel
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- 2010
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- View/download PDF
6. Genetic and epigenetic mechanisms collaborate to control SERPINA3 expression and its association with placental diseases
- Author
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Chelbi, Sonia T., Wilson, Melissa L., Veillard, Anne-Clémence, Ingles, Sue A., Zhang, Jim, Mondon, Françoise, Gascoin-Lachambre, Géraldine, Doridot, Ludivine, Mignot, Thérèse-Marie, Rebourcet, Régis, Carbonne, Bruno, Concordet, Jean-Paul, Barbaux, Sandrine, and Vaiman, Daniel
- Published
- 2012
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- View/download PDF
7. Hypoxia-activated genes from early placenta are elevated in Preeclampsia, but not in Intra-Uterine Growth Retardation
- Author
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Danan Jean-Louis, Piumi François, Sapin Vincent, Marceau Geoffrey, Quetin Frédérique, Chelbi Sonia T, Jammes Hélène, Rebourcet Régis, Robert Brigitte, Mignot Thérèse-Marie, Garcès-Duran Alexandra, Mondon Françoise, Vaiman Daniel, Rigourd Virginie, Carbonne Bruno, and Ferré Françoise
- Subjects
Biotechnology ,TP248.13-248.65 ,Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
Abstract Background As a first step to explore the possible relationships existing between the effects of low oxygen pressure in the first trimester placenta and placental pathologies developing from mid-gestation, two subtracted libraries totaling 2304 cDNA clones were constructed. For achieving this, two reciprocal suppressive/subtractive hybridization procedures (SSH) were applied to early (11 weeks) human placental villi after incubation either in normoxic or in hypoxic conditions. The clones from both libraries (1440 hypoxia-specific and 864 normoxia-specific) were spotted on nylon macroarrays. Complex cDNAs probes prepared from placental villi (either from early pregnancy, after hypoxic or normoxic culture conditions, or near term for controls or pathological placentas) were hybridized to the membranes. Results Three hundred and fifty nine clones presenting a hybridization signal above the background were sequenced and shown to correspond to 276 different genes. Nine of these genes are mitochondrial, while 267 are nuclear. Specific expression profiles characteristic of preeclampsia (PE) could be identified, as well as profiles specific of intra-uterine growth retardation (IUGR). Focusing on the chromosomal distribution of the fraction of genes that responded in at least one hybridization experiment, we could observe a highly significant chromosomal clustering of 54 genes into 8 chromosomal regions, four of which containing imprinted genes. Comparative mapping data indicate that these imprinted clusters are maintained in synteny in mice, and apparently in cattle and pigs, suggesting that the maintenance of such syntenies is requested for achieving a normal placental physiology in eutherian mammals. Conclusion We could demonstrate that genes induced in PE were also genes highly expressed under hypoxic conditions (P = 5.10-5), which was not the case for isolated IUGR. Highly expressed placental genes may be in syntenies conserved interspecifically, suggesting that the maintenance of such clusters is requested for achieving a normal placental physiology in eutherian mammals.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Promoter methylation and downregulated expression of the TBX15 gene in ovarian carcinoma.
- Author
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GOZZI, GAIA, CHELBI, SONIA T., MANNI, PAOLA, ALBERTI, LOREDANA, FONDA, SERGIO, SAPONARO, SARA, FABBIANI, LUCA, RIVASI, FRANCESCO, BENHATTAR, JEAN, and LOSI, LORENA
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METHYLATION , *DOWNREGULATION , *OVARIAN cancer , *PROTEIN expression , *HAPLOTYPES - Abstract
TBX15 is a gene involved in the development of mesodermal derivatives. As the ovaries and the female reproductive system are of mesodermal origin, the aim of the present study was to determine the methylation status of the TBX15 gene promoter and the expression levels of TBX15 in ovarian carcinoma, which is the most lethal and aggressive type of gynecological tumor, in order to determine the role of TBX15 in the pathogenesis of ovarian carcinoma. This alteration could be used to predict tumor development, progression, recurrence and therapeutic effects. The study was conducted on 80 epithelial ovarian carcinoma and 17 control cases (normal ovarian and tubal tissues). TBX15 promoter methylation was first determined by pyrosequencing following bisulfite modification, then by cloning and sequencing, in order to obtain information about the epigenetic haplotype. Immunohistochemical analysis was performed to evaluate the correlation between the methylation and protein expression levels. Data revealed a statistically significant increase of the TBX15 promoter region methylation in 82% of the tumor samples and in various histological subtypes. Immunohistochemistry showed an inverse correlation between methylation levels and the expression of the TBX15 protein. Furthermore, numerous tumor samples displayed varying degrees of intratumor heterogeneity. Thus, the present study determined that ovarian carcinoma typically expresses low levels of TBX15 protein, predominantly due to an epigenetic mechanism. This may have a role in the pathogenesis of ovarian carcinoma independent of the histological subtype. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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- View/download PDF
9. NLRC5, a promising new entry in tumor immunology.
- Author
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Chelbi, Sonia T. and Guarda, Greta
- Subjects
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TUMOR immunology , *CANCER immunotherapy , *T cells - Abstract
The recent use of T cell-based cancer immunotherapies, such as adoptive T-cell transfer and checkpoint blockade, yields increasing clinical benefit to patients with different cancer types. However, decrease of MHC class I expression is a common mechanism transformed cells take advantage of to evade CD8+ T cell-mediated antitumor responses, negatively impacting on the outcome of immunotherapies. Hence, there is an urgent need to develop novel approaches to overcome this limitation. NLRC5 has been recently described as a key transcriptional regulator controlling expression of MHC class I molecules. In this commentary, we summarize and put into perspective a study by Rodriguez and colleagues recently published in Oncoimmunology, addressing the role of NLRC5 in melanoma. The authors demonstrate that NLRC5 overexpression in B16 melanoma allows to recover MHC class I expression, rising tumor immunogenicity and counteracting immune evasion. Possible ways of manipulating NLRC5 activity in tumors will be discussed. Highlighting the therapeutic potential of modulating NLRC5 levels, this publication also encourages evaluation of NLRC5, and by extension MHC class I pathway, as clinical biomarker to select personalized immunotherapeutic strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. miR-34a expression, epigenetic regulation, and function in human placental diseases.
- Author
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Doridot, Ludivine, Houry, Dorothée, Gaillard, Harald, Chelbi, Sonia T., Barbaux, Sandrine, and Vaiman, Daniel
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- 2014
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11. STOX1 Overexpression in Choriocarcinoma Cells Mimics Transcriptional Alterations Observed in Preeclamptic Placentas.
- Author
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Rigourd, Virginie, Chauvet, Caroline, Chelbi, Sonia T., Rebourcet, Régis, Mondon, Françoise, Letourneur, Franck, Mignot, Thérèse-Marie, Barbaux, Sandrine, and Vaiman, Daniel
- Subjects
CHORIOCARCINOMA ,PREGNANCY ,PLACENTA ,GENETIC mutation ,PREECLAMPSIA ,HYPERTENSION ,GENETIC polymorphisms ,CELL lines ,CHROMATIN ,GONADOTROPIN - Abstract
Background: Mutations in STOX1 were proposed to be causal for predisposing to preeclampsia, a hypertensive disorder originating from placental defects, affecting up to 10% of human pregnancies. However, after the first study published in 2005 three other groups have dismissed the polymorphism described in the first paper as a causal mutation. Methodology and Principal Findings: In the present study, we have produced a choriocarcinoma cell line overexpressing STOX1. This overexpression results in transcriptional modification of 12.5% of the genes, some of them being direct targets as shown by chromatin immunoprecipitation. STOX1 overexpression correlates strongly and specifically with transcriptomic alterations in preeclamptic placentas (r = 0.30, p = 9.10
-7 ). Numerous known key modulators of preeclampsia (such as Endoglin, Syncytin, human chorionic gonadotrophin -hCG-, and Glial Cell Missing Homolog -GCM1-) were modified in these transformed choriocarcinoma cells. Conclusions: Our results contribute to reconcile contradictory data concerning the involvement of STOX1 in preeclampsia. In addition, they strongly suggest that anomalies in STOX1 expression are associated with the onset of preeclampsia, thus indicating that this gene should be the target of future studies. Our cellular model could constitute an invaluable resource for studying specific aspects of this human disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Expressional and epigenetic alterations of placental serine protease inhibitors: SERPINA3 is a potential marker of preeclampsia.
- Author
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Chelbi, Sonia T., Mondon, Françoise, Jammes, Hélène, Buffat, Christophe, Mignot, Thérèse Marie, Tost, Jorg, Busato, Florence, Gut, Ivo, Rebourcet, Régis, Laissue, Paul, Tsatsaris, Vassili, Goffinet, Françoise, Rigourd, Virginie, Carbonne, Bruno, Ferré, Françoise, Vaiman, Daniel, Mondon, Françoise, Jammes, Hélène, Mignot, Thérèse-Marie, and Rebourcet, Régis
- Abstract
Preeclampsia is the major pregnancy-induced hypertensive disorder. It modifies the expression profile of placental genes, including several serine protease inhibitors (SERPINs). The objective of this study was to perform a systematic expression analysis of these genes in normal and pathological placentas and to pinpoint epigenetic alterations inside their promoter regions. Expression of 18 placental SERPINs was analyzed by quantitative RT-PCR on placentas from pregnancies complicated by preeclampsia, intrauterine growth restriction, or both and was compared with normal controls. SERPINA3, A5, A8, B2, B5, and B7 presented significant differences in expression in >or=1 pathological situation. In parallel, the methylation status of the CpG islands located in their promoter regions was studied on a sample of control and preeclamptic placentas. Ten SERPIN promoters were either totally methylated or totally unmethylated, whereas SERPINA3, A5, and A8 presented complex methylation profiles. For SERPINA3, the analysis was extended to 81 samples and performed by pyrosequencing. For the SERPINA3 CpG island, the average methylation level was significantly diminished in preeclampsia and growth restriction. The hypomethylated CpGs were situated at putative binding sites for developmental and stress response (hypoxia and inflammation) factors. Our results provide one of the first observations of a specific epigenetic alteration in human placental diseases and provide new potential markers for an early diagnosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Hypoxia-activated genes from early placenta are elevated in Preeclampsia, but not in Intra-Uterine Growth Retardation.
- Author
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Vaiman, Daniel, Mondon, Françoise, Garcès-Duran, Alexandra, Mignot, Thérése- Marie, Robert, Brigitte, Rebourcet, Régis, Jammes, Hélène, Chelbi, Sonia T, Quetin, Frédérique, Marceau, Geoffrey, Sapin, Vincent, Piumi, François, Danan, Jean-Louis, Rigourd, Virginie, Carbonne, Bruno, and Ferré, Françoise
- Subjects
PREECLAMPSIA ,HYPOXEMIA ,PREGNANCY ,DNA ,CLONING ,NUCLEIC acid hybridization - Abstract
Background: As a first step to explore the possible relationships existing between the effects of low oxygen pressure in the first trimester placenta and placental pathologies developing from mid-gestation, two subtracted libraries totaling 2304 cDNA clones were constructed. For achieving this, two reciprocal suppressive/subtractive hybridization procedures (SSH) were applied to early (11 weeks) human placental villi after incubation either in normoxic or in hypoxic conditions. The clones from both libraries (1440 hypoxia-specific and 864 normoxia-specific) were spotted on nylon macroarrays. Complex cDNAs probes prepared from placental villi (either from early pregnancy, after hypoxic or normoxic culture conditions, or near term for controls or pathological placentas) were hybridized to the membranes. Results: Three hundred and fifty nine clones presenting a hybridization signal above the background were sequenced and shown to correspond to 276 different genes. Nine of these genes are mitochondrial, while 267 are nuclear. Specific expression profiles characteristic of preeclampsia (PE) could be identified, as well as profiles specific of intra-uterine growth retardation (IUGR). Focusing on the chromosomal distribution of the fraction of genes that responded in at least one hybridization experiment, we could observe a highly significant chromosomal clustering of 54 genes into 8 chromosomal regions, four of which containing imprinted genes. Comparative mapping data indicate that these imprinted clusters are maintained in synteny in mice, and apparently in cattle and pigs, suggesting that the maintenance of such syntenies is requested for achieving a normal placental physiology in eutherian mammals. Conclusion: We could demonstrate that genes induced in PE were also genes highly expressed under hypoxic conditions (P = 5.10-5), which was not the case for isolated IUGR. Highly expressed placental genes may be in syntenies conserved interspecifically, suggesting that the maintenance of such clusters is requested for achieving a normal placental physiology in eutherian mammals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Distinct DNA Methylation Profiles in Ovarian Tumors: Opportunities for Novel Biomarkers.
- Author
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Losi, Lorena, Fonda, Sergio, Saponaro, Sara, Chelbi, Sonia T., Lancellotti, Cesare, Gozzi, Gaia, Alberti, Loredana, Fabbiani, Luca, Botticelli, Laura, and Benhattar, Jean
- Subjects
OVARIAN tumors ,DNA methylation ,BIOLOGICAL tags ,GERM cell tumors ,OVARIAN epithelial cancer ,DNA repair ,TUMOR treatment - Abstract
Aberrant methylation of multiple promoter CpG islands could be related to the biology of ovarian tumors and its determination could help to improve treatment strategies. DNA methylation profiling was performed using the Methylation Ligation-dependent Macroarray (MLM), an array-based analysis. Promoter regions of 41 genes were analyzed in 102 ovarian tumors and 17 normal ovarian samples. An average of 29% of hypermethylated promoter genes was observed in normal ovarian tissues. This percentage increased slightly in serous, endometrioid, and mucinous carcinomas (32%, 34%, and 45%, respectively), but decreased in germ cell tumors (20%). Ovarian tumors had methylation profiles that were more heterogeneous than other epithelial cancers. Unsupervised hierarchical clustering identified four groups that are very close to the histological subtypes of ovarian tumors. Aberrant methylation of three genes (
BRCA1 ,MGMT , andMLH1 ), playing important roles in the different DNA repair mechanisms, were dependent on the tumor subtype and represent powerful biomarkers for precision therapy. Furthermore, a promising relationship between hypermethylation ofMGMT ,OSMR ,ESR1 , andFOXL2 and overall survival was observed. Our study of DNA methylation profiling indicates that the different histotypes of ovarian cancer should be treated as separate diseases both clinically and in research for the development of targeted therapies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. DNA methylation profiling of esophageal adenocarcinoma using Methylation Ligation-dependent Macroarray (MLM).
- Author
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Guilleret, Isabelle, Losi, Lorena, Chelbi, Sonia T., Fonda, Sergio, Bougel, Stéphanie, Saponaro, Sara, Gozzi, Gaia, Alberti, Loredana, Braunschweig, Richard, and Benhattar, Jean
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DNA methylation , *ADENOCARCINOMA , *CANCER cells , *PARAFFIN wax , *FORMALDEHYDE , *WNT proteins - Abstract
Most types of cancer cells are characterized by aberrant methylation of promoter genes. In this study, we described a rapid, reproducible, and relatively inexpensive approach allowing the detection of multiple human methylated promoter genes from many tissue samples, without the need of bisulfite conversion. The Methylation Ligation-dependent Macroarray (MLM), an array-based analysis, was designed in order to measure methylation levels of 58 genes previously described as putative biomarkers of cancer. The performance of the design was proven by screening the methylation profile of DNA from esophageal cell lines, as well as microdissected formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tissues from esophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC). Using the MLM approach, we identified 32 (55%) hypermethylated promoters in EAC, and not or rarely methylated in normal tissues. Among them, 21promoters were found aberrantly methylated in more than half of tumors. Moreover, seven of them ( ADAMTS18 , APC , DKK2 , FOXL2 , GPX3 , TIMP3 and WIF1 ) were found aberrantly methylated in all or almost all the tumor samples, suggesting an important role for these genes in EAC. In addition, dysregulation of the Wnt pathway with hypermethylation of several Wnt antagonist genes was frequently observed. MLM revealed a homogeneous pattern of methylation for a majority of tumors which were associated with an advanced stage at presentation and a poor prognosis. Interestingly, the few tumors presenting less methylation changes had a lower pathological stage. In conclusion, this study demonstrated the feasibility and accuracy of MLM for DNA methylation profiling of FFPE tissue samples. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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