ANR 2017 - DEMENTIA

Exploiting genetic biomarkers of neurodegenerative diseases for developing early diagnostic tests and possible treatments

Dementia is a general term for decline in mental ability and cognitive dysfunctions severe enough to interfere with everyday life. Dementia encompasses different but often overlapping pathologies including Alzheimer diseases (60-80% of the diagnosed cases) along with Parkinson’s, Pick’s (also known as frontotemporal degeneration, FTD) and Charcot’s diseases (also known as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, ALS). These neurological disorders occur because nerve cells involved in cognitive functions undergo degeneration. There are currently no convenient, reliable clinical assays and therapeutic approaches to diagnose and treat dementia, which make them a societal issue of utmost importance. A breakthrough came in 2011 when scientists discovered a common genetic basis for two types of dementia, FTD (the second most common cause of early-onset dementia) and ALS. These two diseases, which display considerable pathological overlap, are so intertwined that they are now commonly referred to as FTD/ALS diseases. It was thus discovered that a defect in chromosome 9 (more precisely, in the open reading frame 72 of chromosome 9, so called C9orf72) is responsible for FTD/ALS diseases. This genetic aberration is characterized by the expansion of the hexanucleotide repeat GGGGCC, or d[G4C2], with an average of 2 repeats for healthy people while FTD/ALS patients carry up to thousand repeats. The G4C2-repeats thus represent a reliable genetic biomarker that could help clinicians diagnose FTD/ALS earlier. In this project, named DEMENTIA, we first describe the current state of knowledge on FTD/ALS diseases, from the mechanistic bases of the G4C2-mediated or -promoted neurotoxicity to the therapeutic strategies that are currently investigated to tackle this critical societal issue. We next exploit the wealth of data recently acquired on C9orf72 repeats, with a particular focus on the RNA r[G4C2] repeats that are more readily accessible in nerve cells, with a two-fold purpose: 1- to study precisely the secondary structures they might fold into (i.e., hairpin and/or quadruplexes) in order to decipher the conditions that govern their folding dynamics; we will then exploit these data to develop an in vitro fluorescent assay capable of detecting these structures from cell and RNA extracts for diagnosis purposes; and 2- to exploit this in vitro assay to identify new chemicals that could disrupt these higher-order structures (known to be responsible for neural injuries) to identify new drugs capable of curbing or reversing neurodegeneration, therefore addressing an unmet need for effective therapies to treat dementia. To this end, DEMENTIA relies on the complementarity of the people and the institutes involved (ICMUB at Dijon, Institut Curie at Orsay and IECB at Bordeaux) and is built on the firmly established expertise of the project’s partners, according to a two-way organization that makes it a low-risk, yet ambitious and resolutely interdisciplinary research program.

ANR 2017 - InsidePores

InsidePores
InsidePores proposes an original and low cost approach to elaborate nano-structured inorganic materials (NPs) by a solution process. The novelty relies on the use of dedicated porous supramolecular materials acting as matrixes for template-assisted growth of the NPs. We aim at using the confined space within the supramolecular template to grow metal and metal-oxide materials, which size, shape, and spatial organization will be controlled by the host's porosity.

An essential step of the overall process is the insertion of the molecular precursors of the NPs into the porosity of the matrix. To achieve efficient and fast loading, it is desirable that the incoming guests have weak interactions with the matrix. For this reason, the selected matrixes have the walls of their channels functionalized by chemical groups able to form such weak links with the guests.

InsidePores is an exploratory project dedicated to the optimization of the chemical procedures allowing the preparation of shape and size controlled nano-objects, either as composites (NP@matrixe) or free materials. It focuses primarily on ZnO and targets a material that will exhibit only the excitonic emission in the UV energy range (desirable for UV laser and blue-LED applications). An extension concern metallic NPs of noble metals (Ag, Au...) for the elaboration of plasmonic nanocomposite metamaterials.

ANR 2017 - PLUTON - Development of a test for in situ environmental monitoring of plutonium

Chernobyl accident fallout and major radioactive water leaks from the damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant arouse concerns regarding the potential radioactive contamination of aquatic systems nearby and set a necessity for a reliable risk assessment tool in case of accidental radioactive discharge in the environment. Determination of trace levels of environmental plutonium, typically at femtomolar concentration levels, and other tetravalent metals requires a thorough radiochemical separation and very sensitive analytical methods. DGT technique (Diffusive Gradient in Thin-films) is widely used for sampling trace metals in various media (water, pore-water of soils and sediments). It has been successfully applied for determining radioisotopes and radioelements (134Cs, 137Cs, U, etc.). For the moment, there is no specific DGT able to discriminate different tetravalent species (An4+) from di or trivalent transition metals. We propose to develop specific An4+ resins usable in various physico-chemical environments (water, pore-water of soils and sediments). For this purpose, it is mandatory to design and select the optimal chelators, which should exhibit very high binding affinity and selectivity towards the tetravalent elements at the pH values of natural waters, over all other metals. The chelator metal binding properties in solution will be characterized from a structural and thermodynamic point of view in order to assess their efficiency in terms of sensitivity and specificity. The next step will be to immobilize these ligands onto organic polymers to afford original chelating resins (i) for analytical separation and (ii) for hitherto unavailable DGT-type devices. The pre-concentration capacities of the analytical DGT tool will be validated with respect to Pu and other tetravalent metals in laboratory (lab tests) and real environmental conditions (field tests). Last but not least, the industrial partner is committed to produce and commercialize the various resins and DGTs. 

Principal Investigator: Dr Michel Meyer

ANR 2017 - ZINELABEL - Site-specific dual-labelling of proteins with tetrazines

Bioconjugates have become essential tools for biomedical research, diagnosis and therapy. A second generation of bioconjugates begins to emerge. It consists in doubly-modified proteins, which have optimized properties and/or open new fields of applications such as bimodal medical imaging or theranostics. For instance, these last years have seen the emergence of bimodal imaging agents based on a biovector labeled with both a fluorescent dye and a chelator for a radiometal (for PET or SPECT), and some of them are used nowadays in clinic for surgery assistance. Some tremendous advances have also been made in the field of Antibody Drug Conjugates (ADC), which became a major class of highly potent drugs for targeted therapy. Attaching two different cytotoxic payloads, or both a drug and an imaging reporter, to an antibody (theranostic), will contribute to the development of improved ADC. 

The development or these new bioconjugates is currently hampered by the technical difficulties associated with their construction. Increasing attention has been paid in the last years to the use of site-specific labeling of antibodies, allowing access to chemically defined constructs, more reproducible procedures, a better control of the degree of labeling, which finally may facilitate approval process. However, in many cases, advanced level of protein engineering is skill required to obtain such bioconjugates. Thus, the development of technologies or procedures able to facilitate the production of such biomolecules should enable the explosion of this next generation of bioconjugates and their translation into the market. These innovative technologies must fulfill several criteria: ideally they should be i) easy to perform, ii) site-specific, iii) tolerant/biocompatible, iv) modular. 

The ZINELABEL project aims at developing a robust, modular, small, ternary platform, so-called dichloro-s-tetrazine, enabling the direct or indirect, site-specific, double-labeling of proteins in fully biocompatible conditions. The reactivity of dichloro-s-tetrazine will be exploited to prepare a library of mono- and di-substituted derivatives, by successive introductions of different moieties (NIR dye, macrocyclic chelator, PEG chain, targeting agent). The capacity of these modified tetrazines to undergo iEDDA click reaction will be studied and these platforms will be used for i) site-specific labeling of an Affibody, ii) dual modification of a protein aptamer targeting HSP70. These proofs of concept will serve at demonstrating the high potential and versatility of the ZINELABEL technology for the easy and efficient dual-labeling of proteins.

ANR 2018 - Butyrylcholinesterase-based fluorescent and/or colorimetric detection of organophosphorus nerve agents

Organophosphorus nerve agents (OP) are highly toxic for human beings and are unfortunately used as chemical warfare agents and pesticides. Considering the serious threat that they represent to the worldwide security and health, much efforts have been devoted to the development of sensitive and selective devices for their detection. Nowadays, none of the developed strategies have led to a detection system that is at the same time sensitive, fast, wearable, robust, reliable, universal and visual. The DetectOP-BChE project aims at developing such a system by designing a warning detection system towards OP and an advanced tool to identify the nature of OP responsible for the alert. The two systems are complementary and will be devised as a single one device. The strategy is based on the highly sensitive, visual and simply operational fluorescent/colorimetric detection approach associated with the characteristics of cholinesterases as excellent, fast and selective biomarkers of OP exposure. This novel OP-detection approach will dramatically decrease the false positive alerts, thus enhancing the reliability of the system, and should allow to reach low detection limits. The DetectOP-BChE devices will be suitable to the French and International Armed Forces for the protection of their military troops as well as for the protection of first rescuers and surrounding civilians in the context of the perverted use of OP in armed conflicts and terrorist attacks. OP being also used as pesticides, the DetectOP-BChE devices will be applicable to the protection of researchers and staff of the chemical industry as well as farmers.

Principal Investigator: Prof. Anthony Romieu

ANR 2018 - JCJC - Fit-Fun - Frontiers in Tetrazine derivatives Functionalization: meta and para selective C–H activation

In the last few years, s-tetrazines have been the object of considerable interest in various fields, which spread out from energetic materials to biomedicine. Despite this significant extent of applications, the synthetic preparation modes of functionalized s-tetrazine remains very limited. They mainly rely on the initial Pinner synthesis of prefunctionalized tetrazine core with serious steric and electronic limitations. The present project aims now at providing new selectivities in C–H activation of s-aryltetrazine core by extending the methods and scope of utilizable transition metals to meta- and para- remote C–H functionalization with electrophilic and nucleophilic reagents: the applied targets span a large domain from molecular materials to bioactive drugs. In-depth mechanistic study will be achieved by analytical electrochemistry and DFT studies, in order to solve the issue of rate limiting step (OA, RE, TM) and reagents compatibility in the reaction process.

Principal investigator: Dr Julien ROGER

ANR 2018 - JCJC - WazaBY - Water-soluble aza-BODIPY platform for multimodal imaging and trackable therapeutics

Among the different disciplines in medical imaging, molecular imaging is an emerging powerful tool, which enables the detection of pathophysiological changes in living subject at the cellular and molecular levels. More particularly, it can be used to perform a fast and accurate diagnosis, or to monitor the success of a treatment. Even if it plays a central role in oncology, the use of molecular imaging opens up an incredible number of possibilities for other medical applications as for cardiovascular diseases, infections, bone disorders, thyroid disorders, brain disorders, gastrointestinal diseases… Among the different molecular imaging methods, optical imaging (OI) is the method of choice for in vitro and ex vivo studies, and is used more and more for small animal imaging studies. It is a non-ionizing technique, which presents the high resolution and the high sensitivity needed for molecular imaging investigations. It is more restricted for clinical applications, due to its tissue limited penetration, but it is of major interest for endoscopy investigations, as well as for fluorescence imaging guided surgery. The increasing interest in OI is also due to two emerging fields: bimodal imaging and trackable therapeutics. Indeed, OI is a modality of choice for bimodal imaging: its high sensitivity is suitable for a coupling to a PET/SPECT probe, which will take over the fluorophore for in vivo imaging. Concerning trackable therapeutics, grafting a fluorescent probe to a therapeutic moiety enables to track in real time the resulting therapeutic in vitro and in vivo, giving crucial information on its biodistribution and its cellular targets.

Aiming at performing in vivo studies, the use of near infrared (NIR) light offers several advantages, such as low absorption coefficient of most of the biomolecules, lower scattering, minimization of autofluorescence signals and risks to disturb the normal metabolism of the biological system to study. It therefore requires the use of called NIR fluorescent probes, which absorb and emit in the “diagnostic window” (between 650 and 900 nm). However, the choice of the fluorescent dye is almost always limited to commonly used cyanines. Despite some advantages, these fluorophores suffer from poor fluorescence efficiency, but above all from a chemical instability, rapid photobleaching, and today, there is no ideal NIR-fluorescent probe suitable enough for biological applications (water-soluble, stable, low toxic…), enabling a large scope of functionalizations, and able to be synthesized in large scale.

We are offering to solve this problematic and to develop a NIR-fluorescent platform displaying the properties above-mentioned, and we are targeting an original and promising family of fluorophores, the aza-BODIPYs, because their synthesis is straightforward, they absorb and emit in the NIR region, they present outstanding chemical and photochemical stability, and can be produced easily in the gram scale. Therefore, the aza-BODIPYs compounds presents all the advantages for biomedical applications, except their high lipophilic character and their very poor solubility. That is why we will develop a simple strategy to solubilize them, and we aim at elaborating a highly funtionalizable water-soluble aza-BODIPY platform, and to design, starting from this platform, new Monomolecular Mutimodal Imaging Probes (MOMIP) and optical metal-based trackable therapeutics. In the scope of the project, we will suggest simple synthetic routes to get access to the water soluble aza-BODIPY platforms, the resulting optical imaging probes, MOMIP and theranostic constructs. The most promising systems will be bioconjugated to different biovectors, and, in the last part, we will demonstrate, through an imaging pilot study, the potential of the new systems.

Principal Investigator: Dr Christine Goze

ANR 2018 - PRC - LuminoManufacOligo - A luminogenic real-time detection system for monitoring enzymatic manufacturing of oligonucleotides

ANR PRC program 2018 is a joint cooperation between ICMUB-DIJON (Prof. Anthony ROMIEU), MEL Molecular Engineering Lab and ICES Institute of Chemical and Engineering Sciences

ANR details

In drug discovery, new modalities are chemical entities (e.g., peptides, oligonucleotides, carbohydrates, …) of intermediate size between small molecule therapeutics and biologics (i.e., proteins, antibodies). They aim at combining the efficient cell intake of small molecules with biologics' ability to interact with large targets like protein-protein interactions. Among these new modalities, oligonucleotides have been investigated during the last 20 years and with currently more than 135 candidates in clinical trials. The medical community expects a wave of oligonucleotide therapeutics reaching the market in the near future. The excitement for these drugs addressing unmet medical needs also raises challenges regarding their manufacturing in large quantities. Oligonucleotide manufacturing is currently performed on solid-phase using the phosphoramidite chemistry and because of the large excess of reagents/solvents and chromatography purifications, it is not an environmentally and economically sustainable process. An alternative strategy, currently under investigation in the industry, is a biocatalyzed synthesis using polymerase enzymes to link nucleotides to each other. In order to ensure the successful completion of the enzymatic step, an analytical method reporting in real-time the advancement of the reaction would be very useful in the manufacturing plant. In this context, the goal of our project is to develop a "Process Analytical Technology" (PAT) tool for the detection of the pyrophosphate ion (PPi) released during the polymerase-catalyzed reaction. PAT tools are very sought after in the manufacturing plant because of the benefits they provide in terms of cost/time savings as well as process safety. Their availability can drive the choice of a process route over another and we believe it is an important aspect of the advanced manufacturing technologies necessary to lead to sustainable processes and industrial innovation/renewal. As we anticipate selectivity issues to differentiate between the detection of PPi over the dNTPs used in the enzymatic reaction, we suggest to break down PPi into more reactive phosphate ions (Pi) and propose three types of reaction-based small molecule luminescent probes to detect/quantify it. The first approach would be to synthesize a conventional fluorescent chemodosimeter from an aniline/phenol-based fluorophore equipped with a suitable Pi-sensitive triggering unit. Fluorescence is restored only after deprotection of the fluorogenic center of the probe by Pi (fluorogenic "OFF-ON" detection). Because in practice it is often difficult to completely switch "OFF" the fluorescence of an aniline/phenol-based fluorophore solely through masking of its amino/hydroxyl group, the second approach we are suggesting is to build in situ the push-pull conjugated backbone of the fluorophore from a "caged" precursor via a chain reaction triggered by Pi. This novel probe design known as "covalent assembly" principle provides reaction-based fluorescent probes with zero background signal, particularly useful for the present application requiring high detection sensitivity. As a third approach, we propose the development of chemiluminescent probes where the excitated state of the emitting species is reached thanks to a chemical reaction instead of external excitation. The absence of excitation removes all background noise from (bio)molecules (and possible damages) in the reaction medium and should result in a further increase in sensitivity. We will do the evaluation of the three types of probes in the presence of Pi and in the context of the enzymatic synthesis of oligonucleotides and identify the optimum candidate(s) for further use. Our ultimate objective will be to provide an analytical tool ready to be translated in the manufacturing plant and potentially be useful to other biotechnology applications requiring the monitoring of polymerase activities (qPCR, DNA sequencing, …)..

Principal investigator: Prof. Anthony ROMIEU (INSTITUT DE CHIMIE MOLECULAIRE DE L'UNIVERSITE DE BOURGOGNE - UMR 6302)

ANR 2019 - PRC - COmPaCt - Catalytic Properties of Molecular Systems Combining Porphyrins and N-Heterocyclic Carbene-Metal Complexes

ANR PRC program 2019 is a joint cooperation between ICMUB-DIJON (Dr Charles DEVILLERS), ICGM and JOLIOT

ANR details

In the context of increasing energy demands and environmental problems, using photocatalysis and electrocatalysis to obtain valuable chemicals or fuels is receiving increasing attention and will probably become a ubiquitous challenge in the future. Porphyrins and N-heterocyclic carbenes (NHC) are two important classes of ligands in the field of catalysis, because they are able to form strong bonds with transition metals ions in low and high oxidation states. The proposal “COmPaCt” aims at combining these two kinds of ligands within unimolecular systems and to study their catalytic, photocatalytic and electrocatalytic properties. Different NHC-metal complexes will be synthesized to cover a broad range of possible reactions. The opportunity to observe cooperative effects between porphyrins and NHC-metal complexes will notably be investigated according to their binding modes. In a first time, we will investigate the modulation of the electronic and catalytic properties of NHC-metal complexes by tuning the electronic properties of the neighbouring porphyrins in different ways: coordination of metal ions in porphyrin cores, protonation of free base porphyrins, oxidation/reduction of (metallo)porphyrins, pi-stacking interactions with other pi-conjugated molecules. This study will allow the identification of molecular systems offering null, weak or strong interactions between porphyrins and peripheral NHC-metal complexes. In a second time, these compounds will be used for applications in photocatalysis. Several systems combining photocatalysis and transition metal catalysis were reported in the literature, but none of them uses simultaneously porphyrins and NHC-metal complexes. Here, porphyrins will be used as visible-light harvesting units able to perform photoinduced energy and/or electron transfer reactions with the peripheral NHC-metal complexes. Different light-driven chemical reactions will be investigated like C-C and C-N cross-coupling reactions or small molecules activation reactions (CO2 reduction, proton reduction, H2O activation reactions), with the aim to see if synergistic effects can be observed when combining porphyrins and NHC-metal complexes within all-in-one unimolecular systems. These synergistic effects could yield photocatalytic systems with enhanced efficiency or having new or unexpected reactivity compared to the corresponding bimolecular systems. Advanced photophysical studies using different steady-state and time-resolved techniques will be performed to understand the mechanisms at work. Finally, the versatility of the chemistry of porphyrins and NHC ligands allowed us to obtain cofacial porphyrin dimers assembled from NHC-metal bonds. As a part of this project, we are seeking to explore the possibility of using these new molecular objects for applications in electrocatalysis. Cofacial cobalt- and iron-porphyrin dimers will be synthesized and their electrocatalytic properties towards O2 and CO2 reduction reactions will be investigated. The nature of the NHC ligands and the assembling metal ions will modulate the porphyrin-porphyrin distance, a very important parameter to ensure that both face-to-face metalloporphyrins can act in a cooperative way.

Principal investigator: Dr Sébastien RICHETER (Institut de chimie moléculaire et des matériaux - Institut Charles Gerhardt Montpellier)

ANR 2019 - PRCI - DualmAb - Dual labeling (PET and fluorescence) of antibodies targeting endothelin 1 receptors

ANR PRC program 2019 is a joint cooperation between ICMUB-DIJON (Prof. Franck DENAT), JOLIOT Institut des sciences du vivant FRÉDÉRIC-JOLIOT, INM Institut des Neurosciences de Montpellier, Kaer Labs KAER LABS, and SHFJ Imagerie Moléculaire In Vivo

ANR details

Glioblastoma (GBM), the most aggressive form of glial tumors (overall survival 2-3 years), represent more than 50% of brain cancer. In the standard of care of treatment, the main option is the surgical resection but because of the infiltrating property of GBM and the difficulty to differentiate healthy from malignant tissues using white-light microscopy, a complete resection is achieved only in a minority of patients. To overcome this limitation, we propose in the DualmAb project to develop new antibody-based bimodal imaging agents allowing i) the pre-operative detection and staging of the tumor thanks to Positron Emission Tomography (PET) imaging and ii) the intra-operative delineation of the tumor margins thanks to fluorescence (Fluorescence Guided Surgery). To do so, we will target the endothelin 1 receptors (ET1R) – overexpressed in Glioblastoma cancer stem cells (GSC) – using two new antibodies as targeting vectors. In order to obtain chemically-defined conjugates, we will synthesize MonOmolecular Multimodal Imaging Probes (MOMIP), containing both a fluorescent dye and a chelator for a positron emitter radiometal on a single platform, that will be attached to the antibodies using site-specific bioconjugation techniques. In addition to the probes and bioconjugates preparation, we will gain deeper insight on the distribution pattern of ET1R in a large series of GSC cell lines mainly established by our clinician partner from patient biopsies (different grades of glioblastoma). In vitro evaluation of the radioimmunoconjugates (affinity, aggregation, stability) will allow us to select the most promising agents that will undergo further investigations. Optical and PET imaging studies on mice bearing human GSC subcutaneous xenografts will be performed to assess the in vivo behavior of the conjugates (tumor accumulation and pharmacokinetics). Besides, our industry partner will develop key technologies to deliver a fluorescence imaging device adapted to glioblastoma guided surgery, allowing us to assess the potential of the two best agents in an orthotopic model. This project will generate innovative tools and new insights against a new glioblastoma target. By providing a detailed topographic mapping of gliomas, it will contribute to a better monitoring (prognosis, diagnosis, and recurrence) and care (guided-surgery) for these incurable tumors.

Principal investigator:  Prof. Franck DENAT (ICMUB - UMR 6302)

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