24 results on '"Ploix, C"'
Search Results
2. CNS-immune interactions: a busy two-way street: S32–04
- Author
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Carson, M. J., Ploix, C., Noor, S., Otani, Y., Binder, D. K., Lo, D. D., and Wilson, E. H.
- Published
- 2013
3. Traduire de la scène, pour la scène et sur la scène: L’exemple du Misanthrope de Tony Harrison
- Author
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Ploix, C
- Abstract
La densité de l’intrigue, le rythme de l’enchaînement de l’action, l’originalité de la mise en scène, sont autant de conditions nécessaires au succès d’une pièce de théâtre. Conditions nécessaires, mais non suffisantes : le langage théâtre doit avoir une stylistique bien particulière. Elle doit, entre autres, mener l’action, mettre en valeur la dramaturgie, contribuer à la concentration des effets et corroborer la psychologie des personnages. Il existe un lien indéniable entre l’inefficacité inhérente du langage dramatique, une déclamation artificielle du texte et une mauvaise réception de la pièce.
- Published
- 2018
4. A study of prosody in modern English translations of Molière’s plays
- Author
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Ploix, C and Hawcroft, M
- Abstract
My thesis discusses prosody, in the narrow sense of verse, meter and rhyme, used by modern English translators to revitalise Molière’s comedies in order to make them successful on the modern English-speaking stage. The thesis first discusses the problems and paradoxes of verse translations, and questions the aesthetic equivalence between the alexandrine and blank verse, rhyming couplets and the English dodecasyllable. It points to different cultural associations, and the different reception they have enjoyed on stage. My thesis moves away from the usual criticisms of English verse forms and considers instances where the English and French verse systems can achieve similar dramatic effects and can be more efficient than prose in contributing to the workings of comedy. The reason behind the choice of self-conscious rhyming couplets is to enhance comic effects. Thanks to the use of witty rhymes, translators transform Molière’s situational humour into verbal humour, particularly appealing to English audiences. This style serves both Molière, by introducing his comedies to the commercial stage, and also the translators, who gain more visibility. The thesis then analyses a number of strategies used to advertise the presence of rhymes, by way of a methodical computer-aided quantitative analysis and more traditional stylistic analyses, pointing to striking differences in the poetics of rhyme between Molière and his modern translators. The link between verse form and aesthetics is reasserted in the last chapter of the thesis through the analysis of how particular prosodic systems can have a significant impact on the aesthetics and the dramaturgy of the play. Five case studies of non-standard prosodic systems are examined as well as the case of verse adaptations from prose plays.
- Published
- 2018
5. The Minipig is a Suitable Non-Rodent Model in the Safety Assessment of Single Stranded Oligonucleotides
- Author
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Braendli-Baiocco, A, primary, Festag, M, additional, Dumong-Erichsen, K, additional, Persson, R, additional, Mihatsch, MJ, additional, Fisker, N, additional, Funk, J, additional, Mohr, S, additional, Constien, R, additional, Ploix, C, additional, Brady, K, additional, Berrera, M, additional, Altmann, B, additional, Lenz, B, additional, Albassam, M, additional, Schmitt, G, additional, Weiser, T, additional, Schuler, F, additional, Singer, T, additional, and Tessier, Y, additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Induction and effector phase of allergic lung inflammation is independent of 0121/0119 and LT-beta
- Author
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Ploix, C, Zuberi, RI, Liu, FT, Carson, MJ, and Lo, DD
- Abstract
The chemokines CCL2I and CCLI9, and cell bound TNF family ligand lymphotoxin beta (LTβ), have been associated with numerous chronic inflammatory diseases. A general role in chronic inflammatory diseases cannot be assumed however; in the case of allergic inflammatory disease, CCL21/CCL19 and LTβ have not been associated with the induction, recruitment, or effector function of Th2 cells nor dendritic cells to the lung. We have examined the induction of allergic inflammatory lung disease in mice deficient in CCL21/CCL19 or LTβ and found that both kinds of mice can develop allergic lung inflammation. To control for effects of priming differences in knockout mice, adoptive transfers of Th2 cells were also performed, and they showed that such effector cells had equivalent effects on airway hy per-responsiveness in both knockout background recipients. Moreover, class II positive antigen presenting cells (B cells and CDIIc+ dendritic cells) showed normal recruitment to the peribronchial spaces along with CD4 T cells. Thus, the induction of allergic responses and recruitment of both effector Th2 cells and antigen presenting cells to lung peribronchial spaces can develop independently of CCL21/CCL19 and LTβ. © Ivyspring International Publisher. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2009
7. Effect of anti-C1q antibodies from SLE patients on complement activation
- Author
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Thanei, S., primary, Vanhecke, D., additional, Ploix, C., additional, and Trendelenburg, M., additional
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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8. P103 - Les auto-anticorps anti-récepteur sensible au calcium représentent des marqueurs biologiques spécifiques de l’origine autoimmune de certaines hypoparathyroïdies acquises
- Author
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Mayer, A., primary, Ploix, C., additional, Orgiazzi, J., additional, Desbos, A., additional, Vidal, H., additional, Berger, N., additional, Bienvenu, J., additional, and Fabien, N., additional
- Published
- 2004
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9. Oral administration of cholera toxin B-insulin conjugates protects NOD mice from autoimmune diabetes by inducing CD4+ regulatory T-cells.
- Author
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Ploix, C, primary, Bergerot, I, additional, Durand, A, additional, Czerkinsky, C, additional, Holmgren, J, additional, and Thivolet, C, additional
- Published
- 1999
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10. Hepatitis C virus Infection is Frequently Associated with High Titers of Anti-thyroid Antibodies
- Author
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Ploix, C., primary, Veber, S., additional, Chevallier-Queyron, P., additional, Ritter, J., additional, Bousset, G., additional, Monier, J.C., additional, and Fabien, N., additional
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
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11. Protection against autoimmune diabetes with oral insulin is associated with the presence of IL-4 type 2 T-cells in the pancreas and pancreatic lymph nodes
- Author
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Ploix, C., primary, Bergerot, I., additional, Fabien, N., additional, Perche, S., additional, Moulin, V., additional, and Thivolet, C., additional
- Published
- 1998
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12. Hepatitis C virus Infection is Frequently Associated with High Titers of Anti-thyroid Antibodies
- Author
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G. Bousset, Verber S, Chevallier Queyron P, J. C. Monier, Ritter J, Ploix C, and N. .Fabien
- Subjects
Pharmacology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,education.field_of_study ,biology ,business.industry ,Hepatitis C virus ,Immunology ,Population ,Thyroid ,Autoantibody ,medicine.disease_cause ,Gastroenterology ,Anti-thyroid autoantibodies ,HCV Positive ,Titer ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Immunology and Allergy ,Antibody ,education ,business - Abstract
Objective To assess the implication of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection in the development of autoimmune thyroid response, thyroid autoantibodies were studied in serum of HCV positive patients. Methods Anti-microsomal, anti-thyroperoxidase (anti-TPO) and anti-thyroglobulin antibodies were evaluated in the sera of 100 patients with chronic hepatitis C (53 women and 47 men; mean age = 55±5 years). In parallel, thyroid autoantibodies were investigated in blood samples obtained from two separated control groups: age-matched HCV negative-HBV positive patients (25 women, 25 men; mean age= 47±6 years) and healthy blood donors (29 women and 21 men; mean age= 54±8 years). Results Anti-thyroid antibodies were found more frequently in HCV positive women when compared to the men (8/53= 15.1 % vs 0/47= 0%,.pConclusions This strong association between HCV infection and high levels of anti-thyroid autoantibodies in women outlines the interest of systematic detection of anti-microsomal and/or anti-TPO antibodies in this population.
- Published
- 1999
13. Optimizing Early Clinical Investigations in Cancer Immunotherapy: The Translational Journey of RG6292, a Novel, Selective Treg-Depleting Antibody.
- Author
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Belli S, Amann M, Hutchinson L, Pousse L, Abdolzade-Bavil A, Justies N, Jacobsen B, Ploix C, Tselempi E, Tosevski V, Koll H, Schnetzler G, Boetsch C, and Marrer-Berger E
- Subjects
- Humans, Animals, Interleukin-2 Receptor alpha Subunit immunology, Interleukin-2 Receptor alpha Subunit metabolism, Translational Research, Biomedical methods, Antibodies, Monoclonal pharmacology, Antibodies, Monoclonal pharmacokinetics, Antibodies, Monoclonal therapeutic use, Macaca fascicularis, Neoplasms immunology, Neoplasms drug therapy, Neoplasms therapy, T-Lymphocytes, Regulatory immunology, T-Lymphocytes, Regulatory drug effects, Immunotherapy methods
- Abstract
The multifaceted IL-2/IL-2R biology and its modulation by promising therapeutic agents are highly relevant topics in the cancer immunotherapy field. A novel CD25-Treg-depleting antibody (Vopikitug, RG6292) has been engineered to preserve IL-2 signaling on effector T cells to enhance effector activation and antitumor immunity, and is currently being evaluated in the clinic. The Entry into Human-enabling framework described here investigated the characteristics of RG6292, from in vitro quantification of CD25 and RG6292 pharmacology using human tissues to in vivo assessment of PK/PD/safety relationships in cynomolgus monkeys as non-human primate species (NHP). Fundamental knowledge on CD25 and Treg biology in healthy and diseased tissues across NHP and human highlighted the commonalities between these species in regard to the target biology and demonstrated the conservation of RG6292 properties between NHP and human. The integration of in vitro and in vivo PK/PD/safety data from these species enabled the identification of human relevant safety risks, the selection of the most appropriate safe starting dose and the projection of the pharmacologically-relevant dose range. The first clinical data obtained for RG6292 in patients verified the appropriateness of the described approaches as well as validated the full clinical relevance of the projected safety, PK, and PD profiles from animal to man. This work shows how the integration of mechanistic non-clinical data increases the predictive value for human, allowing efficient transition of drug candidates and optimizations of early clinical investigations., (© 2024 Hoffmann‐La Roche AG. Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics © 2024 American Society for Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics.)
- Published
- 2024
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14. Gut Microbiota Is Associated with Onset and Severity of Type 1 Diabetes in Nonobese Diabetic Mice Treated with Anti-PD-1.
- Author
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Patel S, Becker E, Ploix C, Steiner G, Scepanovic P, Fueth M, de Vera Mudry MC, Eichinger-Chapelon A, Marrer-Berger E, and Claesson MJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Humans, Mice, Glucose, Longitudinal Studies, Mice, Inbred NOD, Neoplasms, Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1, Gastrointestinal Microbiome, Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors adverse effects, Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors pharmacology
- Abstract
Our bodies are home to individual-specific microbial ecosystems that have recently been found to be modified by cancer immunotherapies. The interaction between the gut microbiome and islet autoimmunity leading to type I diabetes (T1D) is well described and highlights the microbiome contribution during the onset and T1D development in animals and humans. As cancer immunotherapies induce gut microbiome perturbations and immune-mediated adverse events in susceptible patients, we hypothesized that NOD mice can be used as a predictive tool to investigate the effects of anti-PD-1 treatment on the onset and severity of T1D, and how microbiota influences immunopathology. In this longitudinal study, we showed that anti-PD-1 accelerated T1D onset, increased glutamic acid decarboxylase-reactive T cell frequency in spleen, and precipitated destruction of β cells, triggering high glucose levels and pancreatic islet reduction. Anti-PD-1 treatment also resulted in temporal microbiota changes and lower diversity characteristic of T1D. Finally, we identified known insulin-resistance regulating bacteria that were negatively correlated with glucose levels, indicating that anti-PD-1 treatment impacts the early gut microbiota composition. Moreover, an increase of mucin-degrading Akkermansia muciniphila points to alterations of barrier function and immune system activation. These results highlight the ability of microbiota to readily respond to therapy-triggered pathophysiological changes as rescuers (Bacteroides acidifaciens and Parabacteroides goldsteinii) or potential exacerbators (A. muciniphila). Microbiome-modulating interventions may thus be promising mitigation strategies for immunotherapies with high risk of immune-mediated adverse events., (Copyright © 2023 The Authors.)
- Published
- 2023
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15. Liver-Targeted Anti-HBV Single-Stranded Oligonucleotides with Locked Nucleic Acid Potently Reduce HBV Gene Expression In Vivo.
- Author
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Javanbakht H, Mueller H, Walther J, Zhou X, Lopez A, Pattupara T, Blaising J, Pedersen L, Albæk N, Jackerott M, Shi T, Ploix C, Driessen W, Persson R, Ravn J, Young JAT, and Ottosen S
- Abstract
Chronic hepatitis B infection (CHB) is an area of high unmet medical need. Current standard-of-care therapies only rarely lead to a functional cure, defined as durable hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) loss following treatment. The goal for next generation CHB therapies is to achieve a higher rate of functional cure with finite treatment duration. To address this urgent need, we are developing liver-targeted single-stranded oligonucleotide (SSO) therapeutics for CHB based on the locked nucleic acid (LNA) platform. These LNA-SSOs target hepatitis B virus (HBV) transcripts for RNase-H-mediated degradation. Here, we describe a HBV-specific LNA-SSO that effectively reduces intracellular viral mRNAs and viral antigens (HBsAg and HBeAg) over an extended time period in cultured human hepatoma cell lines that were infected with HBV with mean 50% effective concentration (EC
50 ) values ranging from 1.19 to 1.66 μM. To achieve liver-specific targeting and minimize kidney exposure, this LNA-SSO was conjugated to a cluster of three N-acetylgalactosamine (GalNAc) moieties that direct specific binding to the asialoglycoprotein receptor (ASGPR) expressed specifically on the surface of hepatocytes. The GalNAc-conjugated LNA-SSO showed a strikingly higher level of potency when tested in the AAV-HBV mouse model as compared with its non-conjugated counterpart. Remarkably, higher doses of GalNAc-conjugated LNA-SSO resulted in a rapid and long-lasting reduction of HBsAg to below the detection limit for quantification, i.e., by 3 log10 (p < 0.0003). This antiviral effect depended on a close match between the sequences of the LNA-SSO and its HBV target, indicating that the antiviral effect is not due to non-specific oligonucleotide-driven immune activation. These data support the development of LNA-SSO therapeutics for the treatment of CHB infection., (Copyright © 2018 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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16. Assessing single-stranded oligonucleotide drug-induced effects in vitro reveals key risk factors for thrombocytopenia.
- Author
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Sewing S, Roth AB, Winter M, Dieckmann A, Bertinetti-Lapatki C, Tessier Y, McGinnis C, Huber S, Koller E, Ploix C, Reed JC, Singer T, and Rothfuss A
- Subjects
- Bone Marrow drug effects, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay, Flow Cytometry, Humans, Oligonucleotides chemistry, Oligonucleotides metabolism, Platelet Activation drug effects, Platelet Membrane Glycoproteins metabolism, Protein Binding, Risk Factors, Surface Plasmon Resonance, Oligonucleotides adverse effects, Thrombocytopenia chemically induced
- Abstract
Single-stranded oligonucleotides (ON) comprise a promising therapeutic platform that enables selective modulation of currently undruggable targets. The development of novel ON drug candidates has demonstrated excellent efficacy, but in certain cases also some safety liabilities were reported. Among them are events of thrombocytopenia, which have recently been evident in late stage trials with ON drugs. The underlying mechanisms are poorly understood and the risk for ON candidates causing such events cannot be sufficiently assessed pre-clinically. We investigated potential thrombocytopenia risk factors of ONs and implemented a set of in vitro assays to assess these risks. Our findings support previous observations that phosphorothioate (PS)-ONs can bind to platelet proteins such as platelet collagen receptor glycoprotein VI (GPVI) and activate human platelets in vitro to various extents. We also show that these PS-ONs can bind to platelet factor 4 (PF4). Binding to platelet proteins and subsequent activation correlates with ON length and connected to this, the number of PS in the backbone of the molecule. Moreover, we demonstrate that locked nucleic acid (LNA) ribosyl modifications in the wings of the PS-ONs strongly suppress binding to GPVI and PF4, paralleled by markedly reduced platelet activation. In addition, we provide evidence that PS-ONs do not directly affect hematopoietic cell differentiation in culture but at higher concentrations show a pro-inflammatory potential, which might contribute to platelet activation. Overall, our data confirm that certain molecular attributes of ONs are associated with a higher risk for thrombocytopenia. We propose that applying the in vitro assays discussed here during the lead optimization phase may aid in deprioritizing ONs with a potential to induce thrombocytopenia.
- Published
- 2017
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17. From the Cover: The Minipig is a Suitable Non-Rodent Model in the Safety Assessment of Single Stranded Oligonucleotides.
- Author
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Braendli-Baiocco A, Festag M, Dumong Erichsen K, Persson R, Mihatsch MJ, Fisker N, Funk J, Mohr S, Constien R, Ploix C, Brady K, Berrera M, Altmann B, Lenz B, Albassam M, Schmitt G, Weiser T, Schuler F, Singer T, and Tessier Y
- Subjects
- Animals, Area Under Curve, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Female, Oligonucleotides administration & dosage, Oligonucleotides pharmacokinetics, Swine, Tissue Distribution, Toxicokinetics, Models, Animal, Oligonucleotides toxicity, Swine, Miniature
- Abstract
Non-human primates (NHPs) are currently considered to be the non-rodent species of choice for the preclinical safety assessment of single-stranded oligonucleotide (SSO) drugs. We evaluated minipigs as a potential alternative to NHPs to test the safety of this class of compounds. Four different phosphorothioated locked nucleic acid-based SSOs (3 antisense and 1 anti-miR), all with known safety profiles, were administered to minipigs using similar study designs and read-outs as in earlier NHP studies with the same compounds. The studies included toxicokinetic investigations, in-life monitoring, clinical and anatomic pathology. In the minipig, we demonstrated target engagement by the SSOs where relevant, and a similar toxicokinetic behavior in plasma, kidney, and liver when compared with NHPs. Clinical tolerability was similar between minipig and NHPs. For the first time, we showed similar and dose-dependent effects on the coagulation and complement cascade after intravenous dosing similar to those observed in NHPs. Similar to NHPs, morphological changes were seen in proximal tubular epithelial cells of the kidney, Kupffer cells, hepatocytes, and lymph nodes. Minipigs appeared more sensitive to the high-dose kidney toxicity of most of the selected SSOs than NHPs. No new target organ or off-target toxicities were identified in the minipig. The minipig did not predict the clinical features of human injection site reactions better than the NHPs, but histopathological similarities were observed between minipigs and NHPs. We conclude that there is no impediment, as default, to the use of minipigs as the non-rodent species in SSO candidate non-clinical safety packages., (© The Author 2017. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society of Toxicology.)
- Published
- 2017
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18. Is an in vitro whole blood cytokine assay useful to detect the potential risk of severe infusion reaction of monoclonal antibody pharmaceuticals?
- Author
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Iwata Y, Harada A, Hara T, Kubo C, Inoue T, Tabo M, Ploix C, Manigold T, Hinton H, and Mishima M
- Subjects
- Alemtuzumab, Antibodies, Monoclonal administration & dosage, Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized administration & dosage, Biomarkers blood, Blood Cells immunology, Blood Cells metabolism, Humans, Infusions, Parenteral, Panitumumab, Reproducibility of Results, Risk Assessment, Antibodies, Monoclonal toxicity, Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized toxicity, Blood Cells drug effects, Cytokines blood, Toxicity Tests methods
- Abstract
After the life-threatening cytokine release syndrome (CRS) occurred in the clinical study of the anti-CD28 monoclonal antibody (mAb) TGN1412, in vitro cytokine release assays using human blood cells have been proposed for non-clinical evaluation of the potential risk of CRS. Two basic assay formats are frequently used: human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) with immobilized mAbs, and whole blood with aqueous mAbs. However, the suitability of the whole blood cytokine assay (WBCA) has been questioned, because an unrealistically large sample size would be required to detect the potential risk of CRS induced by TGN1412, which has low sensitivity. We performed a WBCA using peripheral blood obtained from 68 healthy volunteers to compare two high risk mAbs, the TGN1412 analogue anti-CD28 superagonistic mAb (CD28SA) and the FcγR-mediated alemutuzumab, with a low risk mAb, panitumumab. Based on the cytokine measurements in this study, the sample size required to detect a statistically significant increase in cytokines with 90% power and 5% significance was determined to be n = 9 for CD28SA and n = 5 for alemtuzumab. The most sensitive marker was IL-8. The results suggest that WBCA is a practical test design that can warn of the potential risk of FcγR-mediated alemtuzumab and T-cell activating CD28SA but, because there was apparently a lower response to CD28SA, it cannot be used as a risk-ranking tool. WBCA is suggested to be a helpful tool for identifying potential FcγR-mediated hazards, but further mechanistic understanding of the response to CD28SA is necessary before applying it to T cell-stimulating mAbs.
- Published
- 2016
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19. A real-time impedance-based screening assay for drug-induced vascular leakage.
- Author
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Kustermann S, Manigold T, Ploix C, Skubatz M, Heckel T, Hinton H, Weiser T, Singer T, Suter L, and Roth A
- Subjects
- Electric Impedance, Endothelial Cells pathology, Endothelium, Vascular pathology, Fibroblasts drug effects, Fibroblasts pathology, Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells, Humans, Time Factors, Toxicity Tests instrumentation, Capillary Permeability drug effects, Drugs, Investigational toxicity, Endothelial Cells drug effects, Endothelium, Vascular drug effects, Models, Biological, Toxicity Tests methods
- Abstract
Vascular leakage is a serious side effect of therapies based on monoclonal antibodies or cytokines which may lead to life-threatening situations. With the steady increase of new drug development programs for large molecules, there is an urgent need for reliable tools to assess this potential liability of new medicines in a rapid and cost-effective manner. Using human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) as a model for endothelium, we established an impedance-based assay measuring the integrity of the endothelial cell monolayer in real time. We could demonstrate that the HUVEC monolayer in our system was a relevant model as cells expressed major junctional proteins known to be responsible for maintaining tightness as well as receptors targeted by molecules known to induce vascular leakage in vivo. We assessed the time-dependent loss of barrier function using impedance and confirmed that signals obtained corresponded well to those from standard transwell assays. We assayed a series of reference molecules which led to the expected change of barrier integrity. A nonspecific cytotoxic effect could be excluded by using human fibroblasts as a nonresponder cell line. Finally, we could show reversibility of vascular permeability induced by histamine, IL-1β, or TNF-α by coincubation with established antagonists, further demonstrating relevance of this new model. Taken together, our results suggest that impedance in combination with HUVECs as a specific model can be applied to assess clinically relevant vascular leakage on an in vitro level.
- Published
- 2014
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20. Induction and effector phase of allergic lung inflammation is independent of CCL21/CCL19 and LT-beta.
- Author
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Ploix C, Zuberi RI, Liu FT, Carson MJ, and Lo DD
- Subjects
- Animals, Chemokine CCL19 genetics, Chemokine CCL21 genetics, Crosses, Genetic, Lymphotoxin-beta genetics, Mice, Mice, Inbred BALB C, Mice, Knockout, Mice, Mutant Strains, Ovalbumin immunology, Pneumonia metabolism, Pneumonia pathology, Respiratory Hypersensitivity metabolism, Respiratory Hypersensitivity pathology, Chemokine CCL19 deficiency, Chemokine CCL21 deficiency, Lymphotoxin-beta deficiency, Pneumonia immunology, Respiratory Hypersensitivity immunology
- Abstract
The chemokines CCL21 and CCL19, and cell bound TNF family ligand lymphotoxin beta (LTbeta), have been associated with numerous chronic inflammatory diseases. A general role in chronic inflammatory diseases cannot be assumed however; in the case of allergic inflammatory disease, CCL21/CCL19 and LTbeta have not been associated with the induction, recruitment, or effector function of Th2 cells nor dendritic cells to the lung. We have examined the induction of allergic inflammatory lung disease in mice deficient in CCL21/CCL19 or LTbeta and found that both kinds of mice can develop allergic lung inflammation. To control for effects of priming differences in knockout mice, adoptive transfers of Th2 cells were also performed, and they showed that such effector cells had equivalent effects on airway hyper-responsiveness in both knockout background recipients. Moreover, class II positive antigen presenting cells (B cells and CD11c+ dendritic cells) showed normal recruitment to the peribronchial spaces along with CD4 T cells. Thus, the induction of allergic responses and recruitment of both effector Th2 cells and antigen presenting cells to lung peribronchial spaces can develop independently of CCL21/CCL19 and LTbeta.
- Published
- 2009
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21. Calcium-sensing receptor autoantibodies are relevant markers of acquired hypoparathyroidism.
- Author
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Mayer A, Ploix C, Orgiazzi J, Desbos A, Moreira A, Vidal H, Monier JC, Bienvenu J, and Fabien N
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Biomarkers, Child, Female, Humans, Hypoparathyroidism diagnosis, Immunoblotting, Male, Middle Aged, Autoantibodies blood, Hypoparathyroidism immunology, Receptors, Calcium-Sensing immunology
- Abstract
We investigated the presence of autoantibodies (aAbs) directed against the parathyroid gland in 17 patients with spontaneous isolated acquired hypoparathyroidism. Fourteen patients with acquired hypoparathyroidism (AH) associated with type I or II autoimmune polyendocrinopathy syndrome were also tested in comparison with a control group of 68 subjects without AH, including patients with other autoimmune diseases and healthy blood donors. aAbs against parathyroid tissue were screened using an indirect immunofluorescence technique on primate parathyroid tissue and human parathyroid adenoma. aAbs against the calcium-sensing receptor (CaSR) were analyzed using an immunoblotting assay with the recombinant extracellular domain of the human CaSR as antigen. Seven of the 31 patients with AH were positive for CaSR aAbs. Five of the positive sera were obtained from the group with isolated AH. The two other positive sera were from patients with autoimmune polyendocrinopathy syndrome. The sensitivity of the immunoblotting technique was higher than that of both the radioimmunological test using the extracellular domain of the CaSR and the indirect immunofluorescence technique. There were no positive sera in the control group. In conclusion, using an immunoblotting assay, we demonstrate the presence of CaSR aAbs in about one third of the patients with isolated AH, pointing out the value of detecting such aAbs to assess the autoimmune origin of the disease.
- Published
- 2004
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22. A ligand for the chemokine receptor CCR7 can influence the homeostatic proliferation of CD4 T cells and progression of autoimmunity.
- Author
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Ploix C, Lo D, and Carson MJ
- Subjects
- Adoptive Transfer, Animals, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes transplantation, Chemokine CCL21, Chemokines, CC genetics, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 pathology, Disease Progression, Flow Cytometry, Homeostasis, Ligands, Lymphopenia immunology, Mice, Mice, Inbred BALB C, Mice, Transgenic, Pancreas immunology, Pancreas pathology, Receptors, CCR7, Receptors, Chemokine metabolism, Autoimmunity, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, Chemokines, CC physiology, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 immunology, Lymphocyte Activation, Receptors, Chemokine agonists
- Abstract
Homeostasis of T cell numbers in the periphery implies an ability of lymphocytes to sense cell numbers. Although the mechanisms are unknown, we find that the chemokine CCL21 (also known as TCA4, SLC, 6Ckine), a ligand for the chemokine receptor CCR7, can regulate homeostasis of CD4 (but not CD8) T cells. In the absence of CCR7 ligands, transferred CD4 T cells failed to expand in lymphopenic hosts, whereas in the presence of CCL21 overexpression, homeostatic CD4 T cell proliferation occurred even in nonlymphopenic recipients. Ag-specific CD4 T cells transferred into Ag-expressing mice proliferated and induced autoimmunity only in lymphopenic recipients. Pancreatic expression of CCL21 was sufficient to replace the requirement for lymphopenia in the progression of autoimmune disease. These results suggest that CD4 T cells use local concentrations of CCR7 ligands as an index of T cell steady state numbers and that homeostatic expansion of the T cell population may be a contributing factor in the development of autoimmune disease.
- Published
- 2001
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23. Fighting Bax: towards a Parkinson's disease therapy.
- Author
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Ploix C and Spier AD
- Subjects
- Animals, Humans, Nerve Degeneration physiopathology, Parkinson Disease physiopathology, bcl-2-Associated X Protein, Nerve Degeneration therapy, Parkinson Disease therapy, Proto-Oncogene Proteins physiology, Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-bcl-2
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
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24. A cholera toxoid-insulin conjugate as an oral vaccine against spontaneous autoimmune diabetes.
- Author
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Bergerot I, Ploix C, Petersen J, Moulin V, Rask C, Fabien N, Lindblad M, Mayer A, Czerkinsky C, Holmgren J, and Thivolet C
- Subjects
- Administration, Oral, Adoptive Transfer, Animals, Cell Movement, Female, Islets of Langerhans immunology, Lymph Nodes immunology, Mice, Mice, Inbred NOD, T-Lymphocytes immunology, T-Lymphocytes transplantation, Toxoids therapeutic use, Vibrio cholerae, Cholera Toxin, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 prevention & control, Immunoconjugates therapeutic use, Immunosuppression Therapy, Insulin therapeutic use
- Abstract
Mucosally induced immunological tolerance is an attractive strategy for preventing or treating illnesses resulting from untoward inflammatory immune reactions against self- or non-self-antigens. Oral administration of relevant autoantigens and allergens has been reported to delay or suppress onset of clinical disease in a number of experimental autoimmune and allergic disorders. However, the approach often requires repeated feeding of large amounts of tolerogens over long periods and is only partly effective in animals already systemically sensitized to the ingested antigen such as in animals already harboring autoreactive T cells, and thus presumably also in humans with an autoimmune disease. We have recently shown that oral administration of microgram amounts of antigen coupled to cholera toxin B subunit (CTB), can effectively suppress systemic T cell reactivity in naive as well as in immune animals. We now report that feeding small amounts (2-20 microg) of human insulin conjugated to CTB can effectively suppress beta cell destruction and clinical diabetes in adult nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice. The protective effect could be transferred by T cells from CTB-insulin-treated animals and was associated with reduced lesions of insulitis. Furthermore, adoptive co-transfer experiments involving injection of Thy-1,2 recipients with diabetogenic T cells from syngeneic mice and T cells from congenic Thy-1,1 mice fed with CTB-insulin demonstrated a selective recruitment of Thy-1,1 donor cells in the peripancreatic lymph nodes concomitant with reduced islet cell infiltration. These results suggest that protection against autoimmune diabetes can be achieved by feeding minute amounts of a pancreas islet cell autoantigen linked to CTB and appears to involve the selective migration and retention of protective T cells into lymphoid tissues draining the site of organ injury.
- Published
- 1997
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