Publications by authors named "Vasseur C"

Article Synopsis
  • The ovarian follicle's development relies on factors from both the blood and follicular cells, with extracellular vesicles (EVs) playing a crucial role in communication within the follicle.
  • Recent findings indicate that EVs are involved in follicular development and disorders like polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), with different protein patterns seen in EVs from follicular fluid (FF) and plasma.
  • sEVs from normal patients enhance steroid hormone secretion in granulosa cells, while those from PCOS patients fail to do so, indicating that PCOS alters granulosa cell functions, including inflammation and steroid production.
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Environmental exposure to endocrine disruptors, such as pesticides, could contribute to a decline of human fertility. Glyphosate (GLY) is the main component of Glyphosate Based Herbicides (GBHs), which are the most commonly herbicides used in the world. Various animal model studies demonstrated its reprotoxicity.

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Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) is a common cofactor in enzyme-catalyzed reactions that involve hydride transfers. In contrast, urocanase and urocanase-like enzymes use NAD for covalent electrophilic catalysis. Deciphering avenues by which this unusual catalytic strategy has diversified by evolution may point to approaches for the design of novel enzymes.

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Ergothioneine is a sulfur-containing metabolite that is produced by bacteria and fungi, and is absorbed by plants and animals as a micronutrient. Ergothioneine reacts with harmful oxidants, including singlet oxygen and hydrogen peroxide, and may therefore protect cells against oxidative stress. Herein we describe two enzymes from actinobacteria that cooperate in the specific oxidative degradation of ergothioneine.

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Lifestyle, environment and excess body weight are not only associated with an increased risk of metabolic disorders, such as type 2 diabetes, but also to other pathological processes, such as infertility. A hormone produced mainly by the liver called fibroblast growth factor 21 (FGF21) is closely linked to the energy status and is increased in patients suffering from obesity or insulin resistance. Recently, FGF21 has been shown to be associated with female fertility disorders, but no or few data about the role of FGF21 on human male fertility has been described.

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Relatively unstable cyclic imines, generated in situ from their corresponding alicyclic amines via oxidation of their lithium amides with simple ketone oxidants, engage aryllithium compounds containing a leaving group on an -methylene functionality to provide polycyclic isoindolines in a single operation. The scope of this transformation includes pyrrolidine, piperidine, azepane, azocane, and piperazines.

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Glyphosate (G), also known as -(phosphonomethyl)glycine is the declared active ingredient of glyphosate-based herbicides (GBHs) such as Roundup largely used in conventional agriculture. It is always used mixed with formulants. G acts in particular on the shikimate pathway, which exists in bacteria, for aromatic amino acids synthesis, but this pathway does not exist in vertebrates.

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Alpha haemoglobin-stabilising protein (AHSP) is a key chaperone synthesised in red blood cell (RBC) precursors. Many studies have reported AHSP as a potential biomarker of various diseases. AHSP gene expression has been studied in detail, but little is known about AHSP protein levels in RBCs.

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Background: Blood transfusion remains a key treatment for managing occlusive episodes and painful crises in sickle-cell disease (SCD). In that clinical context, red blood cells (RBCs) from donors and transfused to patients, may be affected by plasma components in the recipients' blood. Senescence lesion markers appear on the red cells after transfusion, shortening the RBC lifespan in circulation.

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Purpose: The aim of this study was to compare intrathecal 1% chloroprocaine with 2% hyperbaric prilocaine in the setting of ambulatory knee arthroscopy. We hypothesized that complete resolution of the sensory block was faster with chloroprocaine.

Methods: Eighty patients scheduled for knee arthroscopy were included in this prospective randomized double-blind study.

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Problem: Continuous failures to achieve a pregnancy despite effective embryo transfers is extremely distressing for couples. In consequence, many adjuvant therapies to IVF have been proposed to achieve an "ideal" immune environment. We here focus on Intralipid® therapy (IL) reported to have immunosuppressive properties on NK cells.

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Article Synopsis
  • Dispersal limitation in animals is thought to decrease with body size, but this study suggests it may actually increase for large, flightless oribatid mites on young trees due to limited aerial dispersal abilities.
  • By connecting branches of young trees to those of old trees, researchers suppressed dispersal limitation and found an increase in community evenness and larger mean body size of mites on young tree branches.
  • The findings indicate that larger body sizes can negatively impact colonization and survival, suggesting that even in connected habitats, larger flightless invertebrates may struggle to disperse effectively.
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A piezoelectric plate, poled along its thickness and supporting on its top and bottom surfaces a periodic grating of electrodes, is considered. An analytical model allowing band structure calculation is derived for the first symmetrical mode propagating along the length of the plate. Analytical results show that an electrical Bragg (EB) bandgap can be observed for this mode, depending on the electrical boundary conditions applied on the electrodes.

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The severity of β-thalassaemia (β-thal) intermedia is mainly correlated to the degree of imbalanced α/non α-globin chain synthesis. The phenotypic diversity of β-thal depends on this imbalance and reflects all possible combinations of α- and β-globin genotypes, levels of fetal haemoglobin (HbF) and co-inheritance of other modulating factors. This study aimed to demonstrate the validity of a new surrogate of α/non α-globin biosynthetic ratio by measuring the soluble α-Hb pool in lysed red blood cells.

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Rivers are known to be major contributors to eutrophication in marine coastal waters, but little is known on the short-term impact of freshwater surges on the structure and functioning of the marine plankton community. The effect of adding river water, reducing the salinity by 15 and 30%, on an autumn plankton community in a Mediterranean coastal lagoon (Thau Lagoon, France) was determined during a 6-day mesocosm experiment. Adding river water brought not only nutrients but also chlorophyceans that did not survive in the brackish mesocosm waters.

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The process of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) contributes to cancer progression, with activation of transcription factors leading to loss of epithelial characteristics and acquirement of mesenchymal properties. We analyzed in human prostate cancer (PCa) the expression of EMT markers at the different stages of PCa natural history, and evaluated its clinical significance. The expression of the key EMT transcription factor Zeb1, together with E-cadherin, vimentin, and N-cadherin, was evaluated by immunohistochemistry on tissue microarrays containing samples of normal prostate (n = 58), clinically localized cancer (CLC) (n = 242), castration-resistant PCa (CRPC) (n = 48), and metastases (n = 43).

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Alpha-hemoglobin stabilizing protein (AHSP), described as a chaperone of alpha-hemoglobin (α-Hb), is synthesized at a high concentration in the erythroid precursors. AHSP specifically recognizes the G and H helices of α-Hb and forms a stable complex with free α-Hb until its association with the partner β-subunits. Unlike the free β-Hb which are soluble and form homologous tetramers, freshly synthesized α-Hb chains are highly unstable molecular species which precipitate and generate reactive oxygen species within the erythrocyte precursors of the bone marrow leading to apoptosis and ineffective erythropoiesis.

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β-Thalassemia is a genetic disease caused by a defect in the production of the β-like globin chain. More than 200 known different variants can lead to the disease and are mainly found in populations that have been exposed to malaria parasites. We recently described a duplication of four nucleotides in the first exon of β-globin gene in several families of patients living in Nord-Pas-de-Calais (France).

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Alpha-Hemoglobin Stabilizing Protein (AHSP) binds to α-hemoglobin (α-Hb) or α-globin and maintains it in a soluble state until its association with the β-Hb chain partner to form Hb tetramers. AHSP specifically recognizes the G and H helices of α-Hb. To investigate the degree of interaction of the various regions of the α-globin H helix with AHSP, this interface was studied by stepwise elimination of regions of the α-globin H helix: five truncated α-Hbs α-Hb1-138, α-Hb1-134, α-Hb1-126, α-Hb1-123, α-Hb1-117 were co-expressed with AHSP as two glutathione-S-transferase (GST) fusion proteins.

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