Publications by authors named "Poullain M"

In the present study, the temporal dynamics of the main vector of Leishmania braziliensis, Nyssomyia whitmani, was measured by monthly captures of phlebotominae sandflies during 5 consecutive years (from 2011 to 2016) in the Paranaense region of South America. The captures were performed in environments where the human-vector contact risk is high: domiciliary and peridomiciliary environments in a rural area endemic of tegumentary leishmaniasis. Nyssomyia whitmani was recorded as the dominant species of the phlebotominae ensemble in all domiciliary and peridomiciliary environments (House, Chicken Shed, Pigsty, and Forest Edge).

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In an attempt to harmonize clinical practices among francophone hematopoietic stem cell transplantation centers, the Francophone Society of Bone Marrow Transplantation and Cellular Therapy (SFGM-TC) held its eleventh annual workshop series in September 2020 in Lille. This event brought together practitioners from across Europe. Our article discusses the updates and modifications for the 2021 version of the national patient follow-up care logbook.

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Objectives: Sulfamethoxazole and trimethoprim have been used for decades, yet high dosages are rarely reported. We aimed to measure blood concentrations of both molecules in this situation.

Methods: Between 2002 and 2010, 22 patients received two tablets of co-trimoxazole three times a day, equivalent to a daily dosage of 2400 mg of sulfamethoxazole and 480 mg of trimethoprim.

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New active drugs are needed for the treatment of primary brain tumors in both children and adults. S16020 is a cytotoxic olivacine derivative that inhibits topoisomerase II. The aim of the study was to determine its antitumor activity in athymic mice bearing subcutaneous medulloblastoma (IGRM33, 34, 57) and glioblastoma (IGRG88, 93, 121) xenografts treated at an advanced stage of tumor growth in comparison with that of doxorubicin.

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S 16020, a new 9-OH olivacine derivative, is a novel topoisomerase II inhibitor with activity in cell lines presenting the classical multidrug resistance phenotype. This report summarizes, in addition to pharmacokinetic data, the whole phase I clinical experience of S 16020 using three different infusion schedules. Asthenia and skin toxicity were the main side effects.

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Fotemustine (Muphoran, S10036), a nitrosourea derivative active in the treatment of malignant melanoma and primary brain tumors, was evaluated in combination with the free radicals cytoprotective agent amifostine (Ethyol, WR-2721) and its alkaline phosphatase (AP)-generated active metabolite WR-1065 in four human melanoma (RPMI-7950, SK-MEL2, SK-MEL5 and WM-115) and lung fibroblast (MRC-5) cell lines. No difference in AP activity was found among the melanoma cell lines, but AP was found to be significantly higher in MRC-5. For combination experiments, cell lines were first exposed to amifostine or WR-1065 for 15 min and then exposed to fotemustine for two cell doubling times.

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The combination of a novel topoisomerase II inhibitor, S16020, and ionizing radiation (IR) was investigated with the aim of assessing normal tissue tolerance using a mouse mucosal lip model and antitumor activity in a human carcinoma (HEP2) cell line. No increase of acute mucosal reactions was seen when combining S16020 with IR as compared with IR alone. Using clonogenic cell survival assay, a marked enhancement of HEP2 cell killing was found when S16020 was combined with irradiation.

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Background: S9788 and PSC833 were developped as P-glycoprotein (Pgp) blockers and found to act additionally on daunorubicin subcellular distribution, involving different putative targets. On this basis, combinations of S9788 and PSC833 were evaluated in Pgp-expressing MCF7(DXR) cells in which we recently demonstrated that daunorubicin was sequestered in Golgi vesicles (Bour-Dill et al.: Cytometry, 39: 16-25, 2000).

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S 16020 is a new olivacine derivative which has been shown to intercalate into DNA and to stabilize the cleavable complex formed by DNA and purified topoisomerase II. The aim of the present study was to estimate the impact of time exposure on the in vitro activity of S 16020. This was done on seven cancer cell lines of human origin (head and neck, kidney, and ovary).

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Inherent or acquired resistance to multiple natural drugs, termed multidrug resistance (MDR), represents a major obstacle to chemotherapy. Expression of P-glycoprotein (P-gp) in MCF7mdr and MCF7R resistant cells was detected by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and Western blot analysis. MCF7R, but not the MDR1 gene-transfected MCF7mdr cells, expressed multidrug-related protein (MRP) concomitantly.

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Purpose: The objective of this work was to assess, in vitro, the passage of P-glycoprotein dependent drugs across brain capillary endothelial cells, when these drugs are associated with a reversing agent.

Methods: An in vitro model of the blood-brain barrier consisting of a coculture of brain capillary endothelial cells and astrocytes was used.

Results: We demonstrate that P-glycoprotein expression is upregulated by the presence of astrocytes.

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Fotemustine is a chloroethylnitrosourea with antitumor activity in disseminated melanoma and adult primary brain tumors. Because new drugs are required for the treatment of medulloblastoma in children, we evaluated the preclinical antitumor activity of fotemustine in four s.c.

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A triazinoaminopiperidine derivative synthesized as a modulator of multidrug resistance, S9788, was investigated in the human breast adenocarcinoma MCF7DXR cell line expressing P-glycoprotein. In addition to being less sensitive to daunorubicin, the resistant cell line showed dramatic alterations in the subcellular distribution of daunorubicin, as observed via fluorescence microscopy and quantified via tritiated daunorubicin nuclear distribution analysis. Compared to verapamil and cyclosporin A at 2 and 5 mumol/liter, S9788 proved to be more potent in restoring the cellular accumulation and the subcellular distribution of daunorubicin in the resistant cells.

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S9788 modulating resistance effect has been investigated on the activity of THP-DOX against multidrug-resistant K562R cells and compared to that of cyclosporin A and verapamil. Intracellular THP-DOX distribution and particulary its intranuclear concentration, with or without modulators, has been measured using confocal laser microspectrofluorometry. The kinetics of intranuclear accumulation of THP-DOX (1 microM in the medium), as a function of time, were rapid in K562S and K562R cells.

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Cryopreserved hepatocytes from various animal species and human beings were tested for their ability to survive and function in primary culture. The freeze/thaw protocol primarily designed for rat hepatocytes was used with slight modifications for the cells of all other species; it consisted of suspending parenchymal cells in the Leibovitz L15 medium containing 10% fetal calf serum and 10% to 16% dimethyl sulfoxide. After transient storage at 4 degrees C cell suspensions were transferred to -20 degrees C and then to -70 degrees C before being plunged in liquid nitrogen.

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Hepatocytes isolated from adult rat livers were hypothermically preserved for 24 or 48 hr before being plated under conventional culture conditions. They were stored either in the Leibovitz medium, a cell culture medium with and without polyethylene glycol (PEG), a compound known to suppress ischemia-induced cell swelling, or in the University of Wisconsin solution, the most effective solution for cold organ preservation. After 24 or 48 hr of storage at 4.

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The effects of three liquid diets, differing only in the molecular form of the nitrogen source (whole whey proteins, WP; trypsic whey protein hydrolysate, WPH, and amino-acid mixture, AAM) were studied on the mucosa morphology and brush border hydrolase (BBH) activities (disaccharidases, peptidases) of the ileum of normally fed male Wistar rats (controls) and during refeeding of rats starved for 72h. All three diets produced repair of the fasting induced mucosal atrophy; the AAM diet gave the most rapid response and highest villus height (p < 0.01).

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Adaptive changes in enzyme expression and cell proliferation occur in the small intestine of the suckling rat at the beginning of the 3rd postnatal week. This physiological adaptation can be modulated by factors including diet or glucocorticoids. We have previously described an intestinal growth-stimulating fraction derived from the remnant small bowel after resection and found that enteral nutrition is critical for its detection.

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Efficient treatment of deep denutrition should promote the restoration of normal intestinal villous structure and the return to a positive nitrogen balance. To determine whether the plasma measurement of lipoproteins could serve as sensitive indexes of villous architecture and/or nitrogen balance, these parameters were compared in rats starved for three days and refed three types of diets containing either whey proteins (WP), whey protein hydrolysate (WPH), or amino acids, known to differ in their capacity to promote restoration of normal villous architecture. Starvation lowered the concentration of triglycerides and phospholipids but not cholesterol.

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The effects of alimentary whey proteins given, as whole proteins (WP), controlled trypsin and chymotrypsin hydrolysate oligopeptides (WPH), or a free amino acid mixture (AAM), on growth, nitrogen retention, and steatorrhea were assessed in 24 Wistar rats (250 to 300 g) after 72 hr of starvation and 24 to 96 hr of realimentation and in 24 controls. The three diets had the same caloric, nitrogen, vitamin, and mineral contents. Rats had free access to the liquid diets.

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The effects of starvation (72 h) and refeeding with three liquid diets, differing only in the molecular form of the nitrogen source (whole whey proteins, WP; tryptic whey protein hydrolysate, WPH; and amino acid mixture, AAM), on the jejunal mucosal morphology and brush border enzyme activities (sucrase, S; maltase, M; and neutral aminopeptidase, NA) of male Wistar rats were studied. All three diets produced repair of the fasting-induced mucosal atrophy; the WP diet gave the most rapid growth with maximum villus height (VH) and protein content after 48 h (p less than 0.01).

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A chronological study was carried out on 50 male Wistar rats (350 g) to determine the effects of 3 days of fasting and 16 h to 9 days of refeeding on the morphology of jejunal and ileal mucosa (villus, crypt and enterocyte heights; number of mitosis), on some aspects of their functional adaptation (sucrase, maltase, protein) and on nitrogen and lipid absorptions. Three days of fasting resulted in weight loss (12 p. 100), in a jejunal mucosa atrophy (villus height: 376 +/- 18 vs.

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