👤 Nicolas Cenac

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Sanaa Dekkar, Kamilia Mahloul, Amandine Falco +14 more · 2025 · Journal of biomedical science · BioMed Central · added 2026-04-24
Clinical research has identified stomach dysmotility as a common feature of obesity. However, the specific mechanisms driving gastric emptying dysfunction in patients with obesity remain largely unkno Show more
Clinical research has identified stomach dysmotility as a common feature of obesity. However, the specific mechanisms driving gastric emptying dysfunction in patients with obesity remain largely unknown. In this study, we investigated potential mechanisms by focusing on the homeostasis of gastric smooth muscle. An obese mouse model was established using a high-fat diet (HFD). Immunofluorescence analysis and Western blotting were employed to assess smooth muscle status using stage-specific markers. An in vitro culture model of differentiated human gastric smooth muscle cells (SMCs) was treated with lipids, siRNA-peptide-based nanoparticles and pharmaceutical compounds. Global lipidomic and RNA sequencing analyses were performed. The findings were evaluated in patients with obesity, using gastric samples from individuals who underwent sleeve gastrectomy, to evaluate their clinical relevance. The smooth muscle layers in gastric tissue from both mice fed on a HFD as well as patients with obesity exhibited altered differentiation status. Treatment of differentiated human gastric SMCs with lipids phenocopies these alterations and is associated with increased expression of PDK4 and ANGPTL4. Inhibition of PDK4 or ANGPTL4 upregulation prevents these lipid-induced modifications. PPARD activation stimulates PDK4 and ANGPTL4 upregulation, leading to SMC dedifferentiation. Notably, PDK4 and ANGPTL4 levels correlate with immaturity and alteration of gastric smooth muscle in patients with obesity. Obesity triggers a phenotypic change in gastric SMCs, driven by the activation of the PPARD/PDK4/ANGPTL4 pathway. These mechanistic insights offer potential biomarkers for diagnosing stomach dysmotility in patients with obesity. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1186/s12929-025-01163-5
ANGPTL4
Mathieu Berger, Laura Guiraud, Alexia Dumas +7 more · 2022 · American journal of physiology. Gastrointestinal and liver physiology · added 2026-04-24
Prenatal stress is associated with a high risk of developing adult intestinal pathologies, such as irritable bowel syndrome, chronic inflammation, and cancer. Although epithelial stem cells and progen Show more
Prenatal stress is associated with a high risk of developing adult intestinal pathologies, such as irritable bowel syndrome, chronic inflammation, and cancer. Although epithelial stem cells and progenitors have been implicated in intestinal pathophysiology, how prenatal stress could impact their functions is still unknown. We have investigated the proliferative and differentiation capacities of primitive cells using epithelial crypts isolated from colons of adult male and female mice whose mothers have been stressed during late gestation. Our results show that stem cell/progenitor proliferation and differentiation in vitro are negatively impacted by prenatal stress in male progeny. This is promoted by a reinforcement of the negative proliferative/differentiation control by the protease-activated receptor 2 (PAR2) and the muscarinic receptor 3 (M3), two G protein-coupled receptors present in the crypt. Conversely, prenatal stress does not change in vitro proliferation of colon primitive cells in female progeny. Importantly, this maintenance is associated with a functional switch in the M3 negative control of colonoid growth, becoming proliferative after prenatal stress. In addition, the proliferative role of PAR2 specific to females is maintained under prenatal stress, even though PAR2-targeted stress signals Dusp6 and activated GSK3β are increased, reaching the levels of males. An epithelial serine protease could play a critical role in the activation of the survival kinase GSK3β in colonoids from prenatally stressed female progeny. Altogether, our results show that following prenatal stress, colon primitive cells cope with stress through sexually dimorphic mechanisms that could pave the way to dysregulated crypt regeneration and intestinal pathologies. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1152/ajpgi.00061.2022
DUSP6