Publications by authors named "Patrick Bruneval"

In 1965, Kerley pioneered histomorphometry of bone as an aging method. The technique has been modified by several authors, and some have used computer-assisted image analysis. Undecalcified bone sections used in these methods are obtained with a diamond wafer saw or by grinding the sections manually or automatically with abrasive paper.

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Collapsing glomerulopathy is an aggressive kidney disease with rapid progression toward end-stage renal disease. Rare cases of de novo collapsing glomerulopathy have been reported during the post-transplant course and, in some instances, have been associated with renal graft vascular lesions. This finding raises the important question of whether ischemia could induce podocyte transdifferentiation, a hypothesis supported by evidence of hypoxia-inducible factor-dependent podocyte proliferation in HIV-associated nephropathy.

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Tissue kallikrein is the main kinin-forming enzyme in mammals, and differences in kinin levels are thought to be a contributing factor to diabetic nephropathy. Here, we determined the role of the kallikrein-kinin system in the pathogenesis of streptozotocin-induced diabetic nephropathy in wild-type and tissue kallikrein-knockout mice. All diabetic mice developed similar hyperglycemia, but the knockout mice had a significant two-fold increase in albuminuria compared to the wild-type mice before and after blood pressure elevation.

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A role for the immune system in controlling the progression of solid tumors has been established in several mouse models. However, the effect of immune responses and tumor escape on patient prognosis in the context of human cancer is poorly understood. Here, we investigate the cellular and molecular parameters that could describe in situ immune responses in human colorectal cancer according to clinical parameters of metastatic lymph node or distant organ invasion (META- or META+ patients).

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The kallikrein kinin system (KKS) is involved in arterial and renal functions. It may have an antihypertensive effect in both essential and secondary forms of hypertension. The role of the KKS in the development of two-kidneys, one-clip (2K1C) hypertension, a high-renin model, was investigated in mice rendered deficient in tissue kallikrein (TK) and kinins by TK gene inactivation (TK-/-) and in their wild-type littermates (TK+/+).

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Article Synopsis
  • The study explores the cardioprotective effects of a modified XIAP protein (PTD-BIR3/RING) in mice, focusing on its potential to reduce heart damage during and after a heart attack.
  • Administration of PTD-BIR3/RING significantly decreased heart tissue damage (infarct size) when given before and during reperfusion.
  • The mechanism involves inhibiting key proteins involved in the apoptosis process, indicating that PTD-BIR3/RING could be a promising therapeutic approach for heart protection during ischemic events.
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Background: Seven years of experimental research provided a valuable tracheal substitute, the aortic allograft, which can promote the regeneration of epithelium and cartilage. In human application, both fresh and preserved aortic allografts could be used. The optimal method of aortic allograft preservation remains to be evaluated.

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Aims: We investigated whether rapid cooling instituted by total liquid ventilation (TLV) improves cardiac and mitochondrial function in rabbits submitted to ischaemia-reperfusion.

Methods And Results: Rabbits were chronically instrumented with a coronary artery occluder and myocardial ultrasonic crystals for assessment of segment length-shortening. Two weeks later they were re-anaesthetized and underwent either a normothermic 30-min coronary artery occlusion (CAO) (Control group, n = 7) or a comparable CAO with cooling initiated by a 10-min hypothermic TLV and maintained by a cold blanket placed on the skin.

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Sarcoidosis is characterized by a disproportionate Th1 granulomatous immune response in involved organs. It is also associated with both peripheral and intratissular regulatory T cell (Treg) expansion. These cells exhibit powerful antiproliferative activity, yet do not completely inhibit the production of either tumor necrosis factor-alpha or interferon-gamma.

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Background: Ventricular assistance device (VAD) implantation provides large ventricular core biopsies available for pathological assessment. We present here the pathological data from 60 apex removed during a 7-year-period in a single institution.

Results: The most frequent specific lesions were ischemic myocardial damage.

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The purpose of this study was to determine whether an external magnet field can induce preferential trafficking of magnetically labeled Huh7 hepatoma cells to the liver following liver cell transplantation. Huh7 hepatoma cells were labeled with anionic magnetic nanoparticles (AMNP) and tagged with a fluorescent membrane marker (PKH67). Iron-uptake was measured by magnetophoresis.

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Juxtaglomerular-cell tumor (JGCT), first described in 1967, is a rare tumor of the kidney that derives from specialized smooth-muscle cells of the wall of the glomerular afferent arteriole. Less than 100 cases have been published, mainly as single-case reports or small series. JGCTs are considered benign, but the clinical follow-up has been short in most reported cases.

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Background: Drugs targeting the VEGF pathway are associated with renal adverse events, including proteinuria, hypertension and thrombotic microangiopathy (TMA). Most cases of TMA are reported secondary to bevacizumab. It was shown recently that sunitinib, a small molecule inhibiting several tyrosine kinase receptors, including VEGF receptors, can also induce proteinuria, hypertension and biological features of TMA.

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Background: The specific mTor inhibitor sirolimus has been implicated in the pathogenesis of renal glomerular lesions and nephrotic syndrome appearance after transplantation. Podocyte injury and focal segmental glomerulosclerosis have been related to sirolimus therapy in some patients but the pathways underlying these lesions remain hypothetical.

Methods: To go further in the comprehension of these mechanisms, primary cultures of human podocytes were exposed to therapeutic-range concentrations of sirolimus.

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Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are reported to be immune privileged. We assessed whether their transplantation (Tx) could create a suppressive microenvironment mitigating rejection of coinjected human embryonic stem cells (hESCs). Three weeks after ligation-induced myocardial infarction, 40 immunocompetent rats received 150 microl of cardiac-specified hESCs (5 x 10(6)), MSCs (5 x 10(6)), hESC + MSC (5 x 10(6) for each), or control medium.

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Although adult kidney cells are quiescent, enlargement of specific populations of epithelial cells occurs during repair and adaptive processes. A prerequisite to the development of regenerative therapeutics is to identify the mechanisms and factors that control the size of specific populations of renal cells. Unfortunately, in most cases, it is unknown whether the growth of cell populations results from transdifferentiation or proliferation and whether proliferating cells derive from epithelial cells or from circulating or resident progenitors.

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Background And Aims: Regional alterations in ventricular mechanical functions are a primary determinant for the risk of myocardial injuries in various cardiomyopathies. The serum response factor (SRF) is a transcription factor regulating contractile and cytoskeletal genes and may play an important role in the remodelling of myocardium at the cellular level.

Methods: Using Desmin-Cre transgenic mice, we generated a model of mosaic inactivation of a floxed-Srf allele in the heart to analyze the consequence of regional alterations of SRF-mediated functions in the myocardium.

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Critical leg ischemia is associated with a high risk of amputation when revascularization is not possible. Cell therapy based on bone marrow-derived mononuclear cells or with peripheral mononuclear cells, collected after stimulation with G-CSF has been used in an attempt to stimulate angiogenesis. Although several studies have raised the hope that such cell therapy may be effective in critical leg ischemia, no direct demonstration of angiogenesis induced by bone marrow-derived mononuclear cell/peripheral mononuclear cell injection has been reported in man.

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Interleukin (IL)-15 is a proinflammatory cytokine, as it induces the production of inflammatory cytokines [IL-6, tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha), IL-17, etc.]. A correlation between high intratumoral IL-15 concentrations and poor clinical outcome in lung and head and neck cancer patients has been recently reported.

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Background: Therapeutic use of unfractionated heparin and low molecular weight heparins (LMWHs) is limited by hemorrhagic adverse effects. We compared the antithrombotic effect of LMW fucoidan (LMWF) and LMWH in an experimental model.

Methods: Thrombosis was induced in femoral arteries of male New Zealand White rabbits by in situ induction of endothelial apoptosis with staurosporine (10(-5)M for 30 min).

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Objective: Epidemiological and experimental studies have led to the hypothesis of fetal origin of adult diseases, suggesting that some adult diseases might be determined before birth by altered fetal development. We have previously demonstrated in the rat that in utero exposure to maternal diabetes impairs renal development leading to a reduction in nephron number. Little is known on the long-term consequences of in utero exposure to maternal diabetes.

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