Publications by authors named "Jean Girard"

Article Synopsis
  • The global MS population is aging, with peak prevalence observed in individuals aged 55-65, leading to shifts in disease characteristics and progression.
  • Aging impacts the pathophysiology of MS, causing a consistent worsening of disability around age 50, which is independent of prior disease duration.
  • Older MS patients face unique challenges, such as diminished treatment efficacy, increased adverse effects from medications, and a higher burden of comorbidities, necessitating individualized treatment approaches.
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  • GM-CSF plays a significant role in chronic inflammatory diseases like multiple sclerosis (MS) by affecting myeloid cell functions, specifically monocyte-derived macrophages (MDMs) and microglia.
  • The study found that GM-CSF increases IL-15 expression in MDMs from both healthy individuals and MS patients, as well as in human microglia, which may enhance the immune response against MS.
  • Notably, while GM-CSF-stimulated MDMs elevate CD8 T lymphocytes' production of effector molecules, this enhancement occurs independently of IL-15, suggesting that GM-CSF influences myeloid cells through multiple pathways.
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Sterols are biologically important molecules that serve as membrane fluidity regulators and precursors of signaling molecules, either endogenous or involved in biotic interactions. There is currently no model of their biosynthesis pathways in brown algae. Here, we benefit from the availability of genome data and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) sterol profiling using a database of internal standards to build such a model.

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Inferring genome-scale metabolic networks in emerging model organisms is challenged by incomplete biochemical knowledge and partial conservation of biochemical pathways during evolution. Therefore, specific bioinformatic tools are necessary to infer biochemical reactions and metabolic structures that can be checked experimentally. Using an integrative approach combining genomic and metabolomic data in the red algal model Chondrus crispus, we show that, even metabolic pathways considered as conserved, like sterols or mycosporine-like amino acid synthesis pathways, undergo substantial turnover.

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Hormonally active phytochemicals (HAPs) are signaling molecules produced by plants that alter hormonal signaling in animals, due to consumption or environmental exposure. To date, HAPs have been investigated mainly in terrestrial ecosystems. To gain a full understanding of the origin and evolution of plant-animal interactions, it is necessary also to study these interactions in the marine environment, where the major photosynthetic lineages are very distant from the terrestrial plants.

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Aberrant histone methylation profile is reported to correlate with the development and progression of NAFLD during obesity. However, the identification of specific epigenetic modifiers involved in this process remains poorly understood. Here, we identify the histone demethylase Plant Homeodomain Finger 2 (Phf2) as a new transcriptional co-activator of the transcription factor Carbohydrate Responsive Element Binding Protein (ChREBP).

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Excessive circulating glucagon levels have been reported in all forms of diabetes, clinical or experimental. The hyperglucagonemia of diabetes results from an excessive secretion of the hormone secondary from a deficit in insulin secretion and/or a dysfunction of various cells within the islets of Langerhans (somatostatin) leading to the notion of "paracrinopathy". Hyperglucagonemia contributes to the fasting and postprandial hyperglycemia in diabetic patients through an increased hepatic glucose production (mainly gluconeogenesis).

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While the physiological benefits of the fibroblast growth factor 21 (FGF21) hepatokine are documented in response to fasting, little information is available on Fgf21 regulation in a glucose-overload context. We report that peroxisome-proliferator-activated receptor α (PPARα), a nuclear receptor of the fasting response, is required with the carbohydrate-sensitive transcription factor carbohydrate-responsive element-binding protein (ChREBP) to balance FGF21 glucose response. Microarray analysis indicated that only a few hepatic genes respond to fasting and glucose similarly to Fgf21.

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Kidney plays an important role in glucose homeostasis, both in the post-absorptive and postprandial period. Kidney produces glucose by gluconeogenesis in the renal cortex and uses glucose for covering energy needs of the medulla. Kidney participates also to the reabsorption of filtered glucose in order the terminal urine was devoided of glucose, as long as blood glucose did not exceed 180mg/dL.

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Unlabelled: Carbohydrate responsive element binding protein (ChREBP) is central for de novo fatty acid synthesis under physiological conditions and in the context of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease. We explored its contribution to alcohol-induced steatosis in a mouse model of binge drinking as acute ethanol (EtOH) intoxication has become an alarming health problem. Within 6 hours, ChREBP acetylation and its recruitment onto target gene promoters were increased in liver of EtOH-fed mice.

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Adult skeletal muscle is a dynamic, remarkably plastic tissue, which allows myofibers to switch from fast/glycolytic to slow/oxidative types and to increase mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation (mFAO) capacity and vascularization in response to exercise training. mFAO is the main muscle energy source during endurance exercise, with carnitine palmitoyltransferase 1 (CPT1) being the key regulatory enzyme. Whether increasing muscle mFAO affects skeletal muscle physiology in adulthood actually remains unknown.

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Glucose is an energy source that also controls the expression of key genes involved in energetic metabolism through the glucose-signaling transcription factor carbohydrate response element-binding protein (ChREBP). ChREBP has recently emerged as a central regulator of glycolysis and de novo fatty acid synthesis in liver, but new evidence shows that it plays a broader and crucial role in various processes, ranging from glucolipotoxicity to apoptosis and/or proliferation in specific cell types. However, several aspects of ChREBP activation by glucose metabolites are currently controversial, as well as the effects of activating or inhibiting ChREBP, on insulin sensitivity, which might depend on genetic, dietary or environmental factors.

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Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is associated with all features of the metabolic syndrome. Although deposition of excess triglycerides within liver cells, a hallmark of NAFLD, is associated with a loss of insulin sensitivity, it is not clear which cellular abnormality arises first. We have explored this in mice overexpressing carbohydrate responsive element-binding protein (ChREBP).

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Background & Aims: Despite major public health concern, therapy for non-alcoholic fatty liver, the liver manifestation of the metabolic syndrome often associated with insulin resistance (IR), remains elusive. Strategies aiming to decrease liver lipogenesis effectively corrected hepatic steatosis and IR in obese animals. However, they also indirectly increased mitochondrial long-chain fatty acid oxidation (mFAO) by decreasing malonyl-CoA, a lipogenic intermediate, which is the allosteric inhibitor of carnitine palmitoyltransferase 1 (CPT1A), the key enzyme of mFAO.

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Background & Aims: In liver, the glucose-responsive transcription factor ChREBP plays a critical role in converting excess carbohydrates into triglycerides through de novo lipogenesis. Although the importance of ChREBP in glucose sensing and hepatic energy utilization is strongly supported, the mechanism driving its activation in response to glucose in the liver is not fully understood. Indeed, the current model of ChREBP activation, which depends on Serine 196 and Threonine 666 dephosphorylation, phosphatase 2A (PP2A) activity, and xylulose 5-phosphate (X5P) as a signaling metabolite, has been challenged.

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Article Synopsis
  • ChREBP is a crucial protein in the liver that regulates genes involved in sugar and fat metabolism, and inhibiting it in obese mice prevents fatty liver disease.
  • The study explored how O-GlcNAcylation, a process involving the addition of a sugar molecule, affects ChREBP activity; this process is managed by two enzymes, OGT and OGA.
  • Results showed that O-GlcNAcylation stabilizes ChREBP and boosts its activity, leading to increased fat storage in the liver, but enhancing OGA activity can reduce fat buildup and improve metabolic health.
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Background & Aims: The adiponutrin/PNPLA3 (patatin-like phospholipase domain-containing protein 3) variant I148M has recently emerged as an important marker of human fatty liver disease. In order to understand the role of the adiponutrin/PNPLA3 protein, we investigated the regulation of its expression in both human and mouse hepatocytes.

Methods: Adiponutrin/PNPLA3 and lipogenic enzyme expression was determined by real-time PCR analysis in a wide panel of analysis in vivo in the mouse liver and in vitro in murine hepatocytes and human hepatocyte cell lines infected with ChREBP or SREBP1c-expressing adenoviruses.

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Obesity and type 2 diabetes are associated with increased lipogenesis in the liver. This results in fat accumulation in hepatocytes, a condition known as hepatic steatosis, which is a form of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), the most common cause of liver dysfunction in the United States. Carbohydrate-responsive element-binding protein (ChREBP), a transcriptional activator of glycolytic and lipogenic genes, has emerged as a major player in the development of hepatic steatosis in mice.

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The mechanisms underlying the protective effect of monounsaturated fatty acids (e.g. oleate) against the lipotoxic action of saturated fatty acids (e.

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Grb14 belongs to the Grb7 family of molecular adapters and was identified as an inhibitor of insulin signaling. Grb14 binds to activated insulin receptors (IR) and inhibits their catalytic activity. To gain more insight into the Grb14 molecular mechanism of action, we generated various mutants and studied the Grb14-IR interaction using coimmunoprecipitation and bioluminescence resonance energy transfer (BRET) experiments.

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Liver mitochondrial beta-oxidation of LCFAs (long-chain fatty acids) is tightly regulated through inhibition of CPT1A (carnitine palmitoyltransferase 1A) by malonyl-CoA, an intermediate of lipogenesis stimulated by glucose and insulin. Moreover, CPT1A sensitivity to malonyl-CoA inhibition varies markedly depending on the physiopathological state of the animal. In the present study, we asked whether an increase in CPT1A activity solely or in association with a decreased malonyl-CoA sensitivity could, even in the presence of high glucose and insulin concentrations, maintain a sustained LCFA beta-oxidation and/or protect from triacylglycerol (triglyceride) accumulation in hepatocytes.

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Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is the most common chronic liver disease associated with insulin resistance, obesity and type 2 diabetes. Excessive accumulation of triglycerides (TG) is a hallmark of NAFLD and therefore, a better understanding of the steps involved in regulating hepatic TG synthesis might yield novel information regarding the prevention and treatment of NAFLD. In the recent years, the transcription factor ChRepsilonBP has emerged as a major mediator of glucose action on lipogenic genes and as a key determinant of lipid synthesis in vitro.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Lafora disease is a severe epilepsy that typically starts in teenagers and leads to neurodegeneration and death within a decade, marked by the accumulation of abnormal glycogen-like structures called Lafora bodies in various tissues.
  • - Around 50% of Lafora disease cases are caused by mutations in the EPM2A gene, which normally helps regulate glycogen phosphate levels through the protein laforin.
  • - Research on mice without laforin shows that over time, glycogen becomes overly phosphorylated and poorly structured, leading to aggregation that interferes with normal glycogen metabolism.
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The molecular adaptor Grb14 binds in vitro to the activated insulin receptor (IR) and inhibits IR signaling. In this study, we have used rat liver subcellular fractionation to analyze in vivo insulin effects on Grb14 compartmentalization and IR phosphorylation and activity. In control rats, Grb14 was recovered mainly in microsomal and cytosolic fractions, but was also detectable at low levels in plasma membrane and Golgi/endosome fractions.

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