Publications by authors named "Hauet T"

 : Among strategies to limit ischemia/reperfusion (IR) injuries in transplantation, cell therapy using stem cells to condition/repair transplanted organs appears promising. We hypothesized that using a cell therapy based on extracellular vesicles (EVs) derived from urine progenitor cells (UPCs) during hypothermic and normothermic machine perfusion can prevent IR-related kidney damage. We isolated and characterized porcine UPCs and their extracellular vesicles (EVs).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The COVID-19 outbreak caused saturations of hospitals, highlighting the importance of early patient triage to optimize resource prioritization. Herein, our objective was to test if high definition metabolomics, combined with ML, can improve prognostication and triage performance over standard clinical parameters using COVID infection as an example. Using high resolution mass spectrometry, we obtained metabolomics profiles of patients and combined them with clinical parameters to design machine learning (ML) algorithms predicting severity (herein determined as the need for mechanical ventilation during patient care).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We present a MgB-based Microwave Kinetic Inductance Detector (MKID) featuring a quality factor Q ~ 10 and noise equivalent power NEP ~ 10 W/Hz at 2 K. In comparison to YBCO-based MKIDs, the MgB detector shows greater sensitivity to both temperature and magnetic field, a result of its two-gap nature and relatively low critical Hc2 field. Our data indicate that MgB is more advantageous for MKID applications at temperatures lower than 3 K.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

ORGAN CONSERVATION AND TRANSPORTATION MODALITIES. Organ preservation in transplantation is an essential step in the graft journey between the donor and the recipient. The modalities of preservation have become a major element in this process given the evolution of donors in terms of age and associated comorbidities.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Organ transplantation improves life expectancy and quality for patients with severe organ failure, with donors often coming from brain death cases.
  • Due to organ shortages, criteria for donor selection are expanding to include donors after circulatory death, though this raises concerns about the quality of the organs.
  • The review highlights ischemia-reperfusion injury as a key issue during transplants, exploring how thrombo-inflammation and coagulation impact this injury, while assessing anticoagulant therapies for better outcomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Green and digital transitions will induce tremendous demand for metals and semiconductors. This raises concerns about the availability of materials in the rather near future. Addressing this challenge requires an unprecedented effort to discover new materials that are more sustainable and also to expand their functionalities beyond conventional material limits.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Cross-species immunological incompatibilities have hampered pig-to-human xenotransplantation, but porcine genome engineering recently enabled the first successful experiments. However, little is known about the immune response after the transplantation of pig kidneys to human recipients. We aimed to precisely characterise the early immune responses to the xenotransplantation using a multimodal deep phenotyping approach.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Over the past thirty years, the complexity of the αβ-T cell compartment has been enriched by the identification of innate-like T cells (ITCs), which are composed mainly of invariant natural killer T (iNKT) cells and mucosal-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells. Based on animal studies using ischemia-reperfusion (IR) models, a key role has been attributed to iNKT cells in close connection with the alarmin/cytokine interleukin (IL)-33, as early sensors of cell-stress in the initiation of acute sterile inflammation. Here we have investigated whether the new concept of a biological axis of circulating iNKT cells and IL-33 applies to humans, and may be extended to other ITC subsets, namely MAIT and γδ-T cells, in the acute sterile inflammation sequence occurring during liver transplant (LT).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Although metabolomics continues to expand in many domains of research, methodological issues such as sample type, extraction and analytical protocols have not been standardized, impeding proper comparison between studies and future research.

Methods: In the present study, five solvent-based and solid-phase extraction methods were investigated in both plasma and serum. All these extracts were analyzed using four liquid chromatography coupled with high resolution mass spectrometry (LC-MS) protocols, either in reversed or normal-phase and with both types of ionization.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Despite recent advances in exfoliated vdW ferromagnets, the widespread application of 2D magnetism requires a Curie temperature (T) above room temperature as well as a stable and controllable magnetic anisotropy. Here we demonstrate a large-scale iron-based vdW material FeGeTe with the T reaching ~530 K. We confirmed the high-temperature ferromagnetism by multiple characterizations.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Through kidney transplantation, ischemia/reperfusion is known to induce tissular injury due to cell energy shortage, oxidative stress, and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress. ER stress stems from an accumulation of unfolded or misfolded proteins in the lumen of ER, resulting in the unfolded protein response (UPR). Adaptive UPR pathways can either restore protein homeostasis or can turn into a stress pathway leading to apoptosis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This Special Issue aims to highlight new avenues in the management of Ischemia/Reperfusion (I/R) injury [...

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The shortage of organs for transplantation has led health professionals to look for alternative sources of donors. One of the avenues concerns donors who have died after circulatory arrest. This is a special situation because the organs from these donors are exposed to warm ischaemia-reperfusion lesions that are unavoidable during the journey of the organs from the donor to the moment of transplantation in the recipient.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objectives: Due to the increased prevalence of obesity in the world, bariatric surgeries are on the rise and necessitate life-long surveillance for deficiencies; hence the recommended vitamin supplementation in these patients. However, inadequate multivitamin supplementation may induce vitamin B6 overload.

Methods: We reviewed all vitamin B6 dosages at the university hospitals of Poitiers, Tours, Bordeaux, and Limoges for the past 5 to 8 years.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose Of Review: The emerging field of molecular predictive medicine is aiming to change the traditional medical approach in renal transplantation. Many studies have explored potential biomarker molecules with predictive properties in renal transplantation, issued from omics research. Herein, we review the biomarker molecules of four technologies (i.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Organ transplantation remains the treatment of last resort in case of failure of a vital organ (lung, liver, heart, intestine) or non-vital organ (essentially the kidney and pancreas) for which supplementary treatments exist. It remains the best alternative both in terms of quality-of-life and life expectancy for patients and of public health expenditure. Unfortunately, organ shortage remains a widespread issue, as on average only about 25% of patients waiting for an organ are transplanted each year.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Using drugs to treat COVID-19 symptoms may induce adverse effects and modify patient outcomes. These adverse events may be further aggravated in obese patients, who often present different illnesses such as metabolic-associated fatty liver disease. In Rennes University Hospital, several drug such as hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) have been used in the clinical trial HARMONICOV to treat COVID-19 patients, including obese patients.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Since the demonstration of its involvement in cell proliferation, the eukaryotic initiation factor 5A (eIF5A) has been studied principally in relation to the development and progression of cancers in which the isoform A2 is mainly expressed. However, an increasing number of studies report that the isoform A1, which is ubiquitously expressed in normal cells, exhibits novel molecular features that reveal its new relationships between cellular functions and organ homeostasis. At a first glance, eIF5A can be regarded, among other things, as a factor implicated in the initiation of translation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: M101 is an extracellular hemoglobin isolated from a marine lugworm and is present in the medical device HEMO life®. The clinical investigation OXYOP was a paired kidney analysis (n = 60) designed to evaluate the safety and performance of HEMO life® used as an additive to preservation solution in renal transplantation. The secondary efficacy endpoints showed less delayed graft function (DGF) and better renal function in the HEMO life® group but due to the study design cold ischemia time (CIT) was longer in the contralateral kidneys.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Renal ischaemia reperfusion (I/R) leads to oxidative stress, inflammation, and organ failure, with macrophages playing a key role in clearing cell debris through the receptor MerTK.
  • This study compared natural MerTK mutant rats (RCS) and wild type rats (WT) to understand MerTK’s impact on kidney damage following I/R induced by clamping renal arteries.
  • Findings from various analyses suggest that exploring MerTK's role could enhance our understanding of kidney injury and recovery processes in renal I/R models.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Ischemia and reperfusion injury is an early inflammatory process during liver transplantation that impacts on graft function and clinical outcomes. Interleukin (IL)-33 is a danger-associated molecular pattern involved in kidney ischemia/reperfusion injury and several liver diseases. The aims were to assess whether IL-33 was released as an alarmin responsible for ischemia/reperfusion injury in a mouse model of warm hepatic ischemia, and whether this hypothesis could also apply in the setting of human liver transplantation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a worldwide public health issue affecting 14% of the general population. However, research focusing on CKD mechanisms/treatment is limited because of a lack of animal models recapitulating the disease physiopathology, including its complications. We analyzed the effects of a three-week diet rich in sodium oxalate (OXA diet) on rats and showed that, compared to controls, rats developed a stable CKD with a 60% reduction in glomerular filtration rate, elevated blood urea levels and proteinuria.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Normothermic machine perfusion (NMP) protocols using blood-based solutions are commonly used in the assessment of kidneys before transplantation. This procedure is, nevertheless, limited by blood availability and warrants the search for alternatives. We compared a blood-based solution with a serum-like preservation solution (Aqix) enriched with colloids with and without red blood cells (RBCs).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Rho family GTPases are molecular switches best known for their pivotal role in dynamic regulation of the actin cytoskeleton, but also of cellular morphology, motility, adhesion and proliferation. The prototypic members of this family (RhoA, Rac1 and Cdc42) also contribute to the normal kidney function and play important roles in the structure and function of various kidney cells including tubular epithelial cells, mesangial cells and podocytes. The kidney's vital filtration function depends on the structural integrity of the glomerulus, the proximal portion of the nephron.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Disorders characterized by ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) are the most common causes of debilitating diseases and death in stroke, cardiovascular ischemia, acute kidney injury or organ transplantation. In the latter example the I/R step defines both the amplitude of the damages to the graft and the functional recovery outcome. During transplantation the kidney is subjected to blood flow arrest followed by a sudden increase in oxygen supply at the time of reperfusion.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF