Publications by authors named "Karine Gombert"

Fluorescence imaging techniques could be used in different ways to study the interaction of aptamers with biological systems from cell culture to animal models. Here, we present the methods developed in our laboratory for fluorescently labeled aptamers, study their internalization inside living cells using time-lapse microscopy, and monitor their biodistribution in mice bearing subcutaneous xenograft tumors using planar fluorescence imaging and fluorescence diffuse optical tomography (fDOT).

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Background: Cell-SELEX is now widely used for the selection of aptamers against cell surface biomarkers. However, despite negative selection steps using mock cells, this method sometimes results in aptamers against undesirable targets that are expressed both on mock and targeted cells. Studying these junk aptamers might be useful for further applications than those originally envisaged.

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Polydiacetylene (PDA) micelles coated with either carboxylate-, ammonium-, or methoxy-polyethyleneglycol (PEG) chains were assembled and loaded with a fluorescent dye (DiO). Their interaction with MCF-7 human breast tumor cells was investigated by epi-fluorescence microscopy and fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) to determine their internalization pathway and intracellular fate. It was found that the ionic character of the micelles influenced their internalization kinetics through a caveolae-mediated pathway and that all micelle types behaved somewhat similarly inside cells.

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In vivo tumor targeting and drug delivery properties of small polymerized polydiacetylene (PDA) micelles (∼10 nm) is investigated in a murine MDA-MB-231 xenograft model of breast cancer. Three micelles with different surface coatings are synthesized and tested for their ability to passively target tumor through the enhanced permeability and retention effect. After injection (24 h), fluorescence diffuse optical tomographic imaging indicates a tumor uptake of nearly 3% of the injected dose for the micelles with a 2 kDa poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG)-coating (PDA-PEG2000).

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Purpose: 6-[(18)F]Fluoro-3,4-dihydroxy-L-phenylalanine (6-[(18)F]F-L-DOPA) is increasingly used for PET imaging of neuroendocrine tumours. In this study, we investigated the use of 6-[(18)F]F-L-DOPA to detect and to monitor the progression of medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) in a genetically engineered mouse model of multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2A (MEN2A).

Methods: Dynamic [(18)F]FDG and 6-[(18)F]F-L-DOPA small animal PET scans were acquired during 60 or 90 min in 8- to 20-month-old MEN2A transgenic mice.

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The present study aims at investigating the mechanism by which membrane-type 4 matrix metalloproteinase (MT4-MMP), a membrane-anchored MMP expressed by human breast tumour cells promotes the metastatic dissemination into lung. We applied experimental (intravenous) and spontaneous (subcutaneous) models of lung metastasis using human breast adenocarcinoma MDA-MB-231 cells overexpressing or not MT4-MMP. We found that MT4-MMP does not affect lymph node colonization nor extravasation of cells from the bloodstream, but increases the intravasation step leading to metastasis.

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We have designed new nanoprobes applicable for both positron emission tomography (PET) and optical fluorescence in vivo imaging. Fluorine-18, which is commonly used for clinical imaging, has been coupled to phospholipid quantum dot (QD) micelles. This probe was injected in mice and we demonstrated that its dynamic quantitative whole body biodistribution and pharmacokinetics could be monitored using PET as well as the kinetics of their cellular uptake using in vivo fibered confocal fluorescence imaging.

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Binding of aptamers is dependent on their target conformation, which in turn is conditioned by the target's environment. Therefore, selection of aptamers against the active forms of membrane proteins could require their correct membrane insertion in order to maintain their native conformation. Here, we compare different SELEX strategies to identify aptamers against the mutated form of the membrane receptor tyrosine kinase RET(C634Y).

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Targeting large transmembrane molecules, including receptor tyrosine kinases, is a major pharmacological challenge. Specific oligonucleotide ligands (aptamers) can be generated for a variety of targets through the iterative evolution of a random pool of sequences (SELEX). Nuclease-resistant aptamers that recognize the human receptor tyrosine kinase RET were obtained using RET-expressing cells as targets in a modified SELEX procedure.

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