Mesenchymal stem cells home to injured tissues when co‐infused with hematopoietic cells to treat a radiation‐induced multi‐organ failure syndromeAlain Chapel, Jean‐Marc Bertho, Morad Bensidhoum et al.|The Journal of Gene Medicine|2003 BACKGROUND: Recent studies have suggested that ex vivo expansion of autologous hematopoietic cells could be a therapy of choice for the treatment of bone marrow failure. We investigated the potential of a combined infusion of autologous ex vivo expanded hematopoietic cells with mesenchymal (MSCs) for the treatment of multi-organ failure syndrome following irradiation in a non-human primate model. METHODS: Hematopoietic cells and MSCs were expanded from bone marrow aspirates. MSCs were transduced with the gene encoding for the green fluorescent protein (e-GFP), in order to track them following infusion. Twelve animals were studied. Nine animals received total-body irradiation at 8 Gy from a neutron/gamma source thus resulting in heterogeneous exposure; three animals were sham-irradiated. The animals were treated with expanded hematopoietic stem cells and MSCs, expanded hematopoietic stem cells alone, or MSCs alone. Unmanipulated bone marrow cell transplants were used as controls. RESULTS: Depending on the neutron/gamma ratio, an acute radiation sickness of varying severity but of similar nature resulted. GFP-labeled cells were found in the injured muscle, skin, bone marrow and gut of the treated animals via PCR up to 82 days post-infusion. CONCLUSIONS: This is the first evidence of expanded MSCs homing in numerous tissues following a severe multi-organ injury in primates. Localization of the transduced MSCs correlated to the severity and geometry of irradiation. A repair process was observed in various tissues. The plasticity potential of the MSCs and their contribution to the repair process in vivo remains to be studied.
Multi-target-directed phenol–triazole ligands as therapeutic agents for Alzheimer's diseaseclick chemistry, highlights the influence of R-group modification on ligand-Aβ interactions and neuroprotective effects. Overall, this study demonstrates that the phenol-triazole ligand scaffold can target multiple factors associated with AD, thus warranting further therapeutic development.
Lanthanide-based tools for the investigation of cellular environmentsÉmilie Mathieu, Agnès Sipos, Ellen Demeyere et al.|Chemical Communications|2018 Biological probes constructed from lanthanides can provide a variety of readout signals, such as the luminescence of Eu(iii), Tb(iii), Yb(iii), Sm(iii) and Dy(iii), and the proton relaxation enhancement of Gd(iii) and Eu(ii). For numerous applications the intracellular delivery of the lanthanide probe is essential. Here, we review the methods for the intracellular delivery of non-targeted complexes (i.e. where the overall complex structure enhances cellular uptake), as well as complexes attached to a targeting unit (i.e. to a peptide or a small molecule) that facilitates delivery. The cellular applications of lanthanide-based supramolecules (dendrimers, metal organic frameworks) are covered briefly. Throughout, we emphasize the techniques that can confirm the intracellular localization of the lanthanides and those that enable the determination of the fate of the probes once inside the cell. Finally, we highlight methods that have not yet been applied in the context of lanthanide-based probes, but have been successful in the intracellular delivery of other metal-based probes.
Coordination Environment-Controlled Photoinduced Electron Transfer Quenching in Luminescent Europium ComplexesDániel Kovács, Émilie Mathieu, Salauat R. Kiraev et al.|Journal of the American Chemical Society|2020 The quenching of sensitized Eu(III) luminescence by photoinduced electron transfer from the excited light-harvesting antenna to Eu(III) was investigated. A series of complexes incorporating different metal binding sites and thus having varying Eu(III)/Eu(II) reduction potentials were prepared. The complexes were fully characterized using a combination of single-crystal X-ray crystallography and paramagnetic 1H NMR spectroscopy, the results of which support the structural similarity of the complexes. The redox and photophysical behavior of the Eu(III) center and the light-harvesting antenna were studied using cyclic voltammetry and steady-state and time-resolved emission spectroscopy on the nanosecond and millisecond time scales. The contribution of photoinduced electron transfer to the overall reduction of the Eu(III) luminescence quantum yield was found to be comparable and, in many cases, larger than the quenching caused by well-established processes such as coupling to X–H oscillators. These results suggest that the elimination or mitigation of photoinduced electron transfer could substantially improve the emissive properties of the widely used Eu(III)-based emitters.
Evaluation of the compounds commonly known as superoxide dismutase and catalase mimics in cellular modelsAmandine Vincent, Marion Thauvin, Elodie Quévrain et al.|Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry|2021