Jordi Molgó

Jordi Molgó
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Jordi verified their affiliation via an institutional email.
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Jordi verified their affiliation via an institutional email.
  • D.D.S., PhD, SciD
  • Emeritus CNRS Director of Research at CEA Paris-Saclay - Etablissement de Saclay

Emeritus CNRS Director of Research at CEA-Saclay (EMR CNRS n° 9004)

About

548
Publications
53,065
Reads
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15,395
Citations
Current institution
CEA Paris-Saclay - Etablissement de Saclay
Current position
  • Emeritus CNRS Director of Research
Additional affiliations
September 2015 - present
CNRS (French National Center for Scientific Research)
Position
  • Emeritus CNRS Research Director
Description
  • Université Paris-Saclay, CEA (for French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission), Institut des Sciences du Vivant Frédéric Joliot, Equipe de Recherche Labellisée CNRS n° 9004, Département Médicaments et Technologies pour la Santé, Service d’Ingénierie Moléculaire pour la Santé (SIMoS), Bâtiment 152, Point courrier 24, F-91191 Gif sur Yvette, France
January 2002 - September 2014
Laboratoire de Neurobiologie & Développement
Position
  • Directeur de Recherche at CNRS
January 1985 - present
French National Centre for Scientific Research
Position
  • Centre national de la recherche scientifique

Publications

Publications (548)
Article
Full-text available
Therapy-induced senescence (TIS) alters calcium (Ca²⁺) flux and Mitochondria-ER Contact Sites (MERCS), revealing critical vulnerabilities in senescent cells. In this study, TIS was induced using Doxorubicin and Etoposide, resulting in an increased MERCS contact surface but a significant reduction in ER-mitochondria Ca²⁺ flux. Mechanistically, TIS c...
Article
Full-text available
Blepharospasm is a focal cranial dystonia resulting in the hyperactivity of periocular muscles. Botulinum neurotoxin type-A (BoNT/A), which blocks quantal acetylcholine (ACh) release at the neuromuscular junction (NMJ), has demonstrated its efficacy in the symptomatic treatment of blepharospasm, but in 14 out of the 360 treated patients, BoNT/A was...
Article
Botulinum neurotoxin type-A (BoNT/A), which blocks quantal acetylcholine (ACh) release at the neuromuscular junction (NMJ), has demonstrated its efficacy in the symptomatic treatment of blepharospasm. In 3.89% of patients treated for blepharospasm at Tenon Hospital, BoNT/A was no longer effective in relieving the patient's symptoms, and a partial u...
Article
Cancer is the second leading cause of death worldwide. >90 % of cancer-related deaths are due to metastasis, a process that depends on the ability of cancer cells to leave the primary tumor, migrate, and colonize different tissues. Inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor (IP3R)-mediated Ca2+ signaling plays an essential role in maintaining the homeos...
Preprint
Full-text available
This study investigates the state of calcium (Ca ²⁺ ) flux and Mitochondria-ER contact sites (MERCS) on Therapy-Induced Senescence (TIS). TIS cells-induced by Doxorubicin and Etoposide increase their MERCS contact surface but exhibit a decreased ER-mitochondria Ca ²⁺ flux. TIS cells show decreased levels of IP3R isoforms and a decreased interaction...
Article
Full-text available
Macrocyclic imine phycotoxins are an emerging class of chemical compounds associated with harmful algal blooms and shellfish toxicity. Earlier binding and electrophysiology experiments on nAChR subtypes and their soluble AChBP surrogates evidenced common trends for substantial antagonism, binding affinities, and receptor-subtype selectivity. Earlie...
Article
Full-text available
Brevetoxins (BTXs) constitute a family of lipid-soluble toxic cyclic polyethers mainly produced by Karenia brevis, which is the main vector for a foodborne syndrome known as neurotoxic shellfish poisoning (NSP) in humans. To prevent health risks associated with the consumption of contaminated shellfish in France, the French Agency for Food, Environ...
Article
Full-text available
The development of the neuromuscular junction (NMJ) requires dynamic trans-synaptic coordination orchestrated by secreted factors, including Wnt family morphogens. To investigate how these synaptic cues in NMJ development are transduced, particularly in the regulation of acetylcholine receptor (AChR) accumulation in the postsynaptic membrane, we ex...
Article
Full-text available
Calcium is an important second messenger regulating a bioenergetic response to the workloads triggered by neuronal activation. In embryonic mouse cortical neurons using glucose as only fuel, activation by NMDA elicits a strong workload (ATP demand) dependent on Na+ and Ca2+ entry, and stimulates glucose uptake, glycolysis, pyruvate and lactate prod...
Article
Full-text available
Gambierol inhibits voltage-gated K+ (KV) channels in various excitable and non-excitable cells. The purpose of this work was to study the effects of gambierol on single rat fetal (F19–F20) adrenomedullary cultured chromaffin cells. These excitable cells have different types of KV channels and release catecholamines. Perforated whole-cell voltage-cl...
Article
Full-text available
Brevetoxins (BTXs) are marine biotoxins responsible for neurotoxic shellfish poisoning (NSP) after ingestion of contaminated shellfish. NSP is characterized by neurological, gastrointesti-nal and/or cardiovascular symptoms. The main known producer of BTXs is the dinoflagellate Kare-nia brevis, but other microalgae are also suspected to synthesize B...
Article
The scalable synthesis of the oxaquinolizidine marine natural product desmethylxestospongin B is based on the early application of Ireland-Claisen rearrangement, mac-rolactamization, and a late-stage installation of the oxaquino-lizidine units by lactam reduction. The synthesis serves as the source of material to investigate calcium signaling and i...
Article
Full-text available
Massive proliferation of some toxic marine dinoflagellates is responsible for the occurrence of harmful algal blooms and the contamination of fish and shellfish worldwide. Pinnatoxins (PnTx) (A-H) comprise an emerging phycotoxin family belonging to the cyclic imine toxin group. Interest has been focused on these lipophilic, fast-acting and highly p...
Article
Full-text available
The scalable synthesis of the oxaquinolizidine marine natural product desmethylxestospongin B is based on the early application of Ireland–Claisen rearrangement, macrolactamization, and a late‐stage installation of the oxaquinolizidine units by lactam reduction. The synthesis serves as the source of material to investigate calcium signaling and its...
Article
Desmethylxestospongin B (dmXe B) is a complex marine natural product that exhibits unique properties as a modulator of calcium signaling with downstream effects on cancer cell mitochondrial metabolism. We report a scalable total synthesis of dmXe B by a flexible synthetic strategy that allows for control of oxidation levels and stereochemistry at C...
Article
Full-text available
Introduction Les pinnatoxines (PnTX) sont des toxines produites par des micro-algues marines, appelées Vulcanodinium rugosum, qui peuvent s’accumuler dans les coquillages. Résultats Ces biotoxines marines ont été identifiées pour la première fois en France en 2011, à des concentrations élevées, dans des moules de la lagune d’Ingril dans l’Hérault....
Technical Report
En France, de nombreuses toxines non réglementées sont suivies dans le cadre du réseau de veille d’émergence des biotoxines marines dans les coquillages (EMERGTOX) dont le comité de pilotage est présidé par la DGAL et inclut la DGS, la Direction des pêches maritimes et de l'aquaculture (DPMA), Santé publique France, l’Anses, l’Ifremer et la Dire...
Preprint
Calcium is an important second messenger regulating a bioenergetic response to the workloads triggered by neuronal activation. In cortical neurons using glucose as only fuel, activation by NMDA, which elicits a strong workload dependent on Na+ entry, stimulates glucose uptake, glycolysis, pyruvate and lactate production, and OXPHOS in a Ca2+-depend...
Article
Full-text available
T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) is an aggressive hematological malignancy whose chemoresistance and relapse persist as a problem despite significant advances in its chemotherapeutic treatments. Mitochondrial metabolism has emerged as an interesting therapeutic target given its essential role in maintaining bioenergetic and metabolic hom...
Preprint
The development of the neuromuscular junction (NMJ) requires dynamic trans-synaptic coordination orchestrated by secreted factors, including the morphogens of the Wnt family. Yet, how the signal of these synaptic cues is transduced, and particularly during the regulation of acetylcholine receptor (AChR) accumulation in the postsynaptic membrane rem...
Article
Cyclic imine toxins exhibit fast acting neurotoxicity and lethality by respiratory arrest in mice explained by their potent antagonistic activity against muscular nicotinic acetylcholine receptors. We performed a survey of gymnodimine-A, 13-desmethyl spirolide-C, 13,19-didesmethyl spirolide-C, 20-methyl spirolide-G, pinnatoxin-A, pinnatoxin-G, port...
Article
Venom peptides are promising drug leads, but their therapeutic use is often limited by stability and bioavailability issues. In this study, we designed cyclic analogues of α-conotoxin CIA, a potent muscle nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) blocker with a significantly lower affinity at the neuronal α3β2 subtype. Remarkably, all analogues reta...
Article
Cyclic imine toxins exhibit fast acting neurotoxicity and lethality by respiratory arrest in mice explained by their potent antagonistic activity against muscular nicotinic acetylcholine receptors. We performed a survey of gymnodimine-A, 13-desmethyl spirolide-C, 13,19-didesmethyl spirolide-C, 20-methyl spirolide-G, pinnatoxin-A, pinnatoxin-G, port...
Article
Full-text available
The marine environment is known to be occupied by microorganisms. The potential toxicity of some of these marine microorganisms, that are capable of producing unknown biotoxins, has always been underestimated. Indeed, these biotoxins may be a threat to human health through the consumption of contaminated seafood and fish. For more than ten years, r...
Article
Full-text available
Spontaneous Ca ²⁺ signaling from the InsP 3 R intracellular Ca ²⁺ release channel to mitochondria is essential for optimal oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) and ATP production. In cells with defective OXPHOS, reductive carboxylation replaces oxidative metabolism to maintain amounts of reducing equivalents and metabolic precursors. To investigate t...
Article
Gambierol is a marine polycyclic ether toxin, first isolated from cultured Gambierdiscus toxicus dinoflagel-lates collected in French Polynesia. The chemical synthesis of gambierol permitted the analyses of its mode of action which includes the selective inhibition of voltage-gated K + (K V) channels. In the present study we investigated the action...
Article
Full-text available
Mitochondria are highly dynamic organelles constantly undergoing fusion and fission. Ca²⁺ regulates many aspects of mitochondrial physiology by modulating the activity of several mitochondrial proteins. We previously showed that inhibition of constitutive IP3R-mediated Ca²⁺ transfer to the mitochondria leads to a metabolic cellular stress and event...
Article
Pinnatoxins (PnTXs) are a group of emerging marine biotoxins produced by the benthic dinoflagellate Vulcanodinium rugosum, currently not regulated in Europe or in any other country in the world. In France, PnTXs were detected for the first time in 2011, in mussels from the Ingril lagoon (South of France, Mediterranean coast). Since then, analyses c...
Book
In recent years, a great interest was developed to synthetize biologically-active natural products of marine origin. This is due to both their complex molecular structures and chemical diversity, and also to their unique biological activities. Among ladder-shaped toxins, gambierol, originally isolated from cultured Gambierdiscus toxicus dinoflagell...
Article
Full-text available
Pinnatoxins (PnTXs) are emerging neurotoxins that were discovered about 30 years ago. They are solely produced by the marine dinoflagellate Vulcanodinium rugosum, and may be transferred into the food chain, as they have been found in various marine invertebrates, including bivalves. No human intoxication has been reported to date although acute tox...
Article
Gambierol is a marine polycyclic ether toxin, first isolated from cultured Gambierdiscus toxicus dinoflagellates collected in French Polynesia. The chemical synthesis of gambierol permitted the analyses of its mode of action which includes the selective inhibition of voltage-gated K⁺ (KV) channels. In the present study we investigated the action of...
Article
Full-text available
Pinnatoxins (PnTXs) A-H constitute an emerging family belonging to the cyclic imine group of phycotoxins. Interest has been focused on these fast-acting and highly-potent toxins because they are widely found in contaminated shellfish. Despite their highly complex molecular structure, PnTXs have been chemically synthetized and demonstrated to act on...
Article
Full-text available
The medical staff is often powerless to treat patients affected by drug abuse or misuse and poisoning. In the case of envenomation, the treatment of choice remains horse sera administration that poses a wealth of other medical conditions and threats. Previously, we have demonstrated that DNA-based aptamers represent powerful neutralizing tools for...
Article
Full-text available
The interruption of endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-mitochondrial Ca2+ communication induces a bioenergetic crisis characterized by an increase of MTOR-independent AMPK-dependent macroautophagic/autophagic flux, which is not sufficient to reestablish the metabolic and energetic homeostasis in cancer cells. Here, we propose that upon ER-mitochondrial Ca2...
Article
Full-text available
Core myopathies are a group of childhood muscle disorders caused by mutations of the ryanodine receptor (RyR1), the Ca2+ release channel of the sarcoplasmic reticulum. These mutations have previously been associated with elevated inositol trisphosphate receptor (IP3R) levels in skeletal muscle myotubes derived from patients. However, the functional...
Article
Full-text available
Prorocentrolides are members of the cyclic imine phycotoxins family. Their chemical structure includes a 26-membered carbo-macrocycle and a 28-membered macrocyclic lactone arranged around a hexahydroisoquinoline that incorporates the characteristic cyclic imine group. Six prorocentrolides are already known. However, their mode of action remains und...
Article
The Chinese bird spider huwentoxin-IV (HwTx-IV) is well-known to be a highly potent blocker of NaV1.7 subtype of voltage-gated sodium (NaV) channels, a genetically validated analgesic target, and thus promising as a potential lead molecule for the development of novel pain therapeutics. In the present study, the interaction between HwTx-IV and NaV1...
Article
Full-text available
Medical means to save the life of human patients affected by drug abuse, envenomation or critical poisoning are currently limited. While the compounds at risks are most often well identified, particularly for bioterrorism, chemical intervention to counteract the toxic effects of the ingested/injected compound(s) is restricted to the use of antibodi...
Article
Full-text available
Acidic ostreolysin A/pleurotolysin B (OlyA/PlyB, formerly known as ostreolysin (Oly), and basic 20 kDa equinatoxins (EqTs) are cytolytic proteins isolated from the edible mushroom Pleurotus ostreatus and the sea anemone Actinia equina, respectively. Both toxins, although from different sources, share many similar biological activities: (i) colloid-...
Preprint
Full-text available
Acidic ostreolysin A/pleurotolysin B (OlyA/PlyB, formerly known as ostreolysin (Oly), and basic 20 kDa equinatoxins (EqTs) are cytolytic proteins isolated from the edible mushroom Pleurotus ostreatus and the sea anemone Actinia equina, respectively. Both toxins, although from different sources, share many similar biological activities: (i) colloid-...
Article
We present an overview of the toxicological profile of the fast‐acting, lipophilic macrocyclic imine toxins, an emerging family of organic compounds associated with algal blooms, shellfish contamination and neurotoxicity. Worldwide, shellfish contamination incidents are expanding; therefore, the significance of these toxins for the shellfish food i...
Preprint
Full-text available
Acidic ostreolysin A/pleurotolysin B (OlyA/PlyB, formerly known as ostreolysin (Oly), and basic 20 kDa equinatoxins (EqTs) are cytolytic proteins isolated from the edible mushroom Pleurotus ostreatus and the sea anemone Actinia equine, respectively. Both toxins, although from different sources, share many similar biological activities: (i) colloid-...
Chapter
Confocal laser scanning microscopy was used to image at high resolution single living myelinated axons isolated from the frog sciatic nerve. Before imaging, the nerve fibres were exposed to the fluorescent styryl dye FM1-43 and thereafter rinsed with dye-free solution. This procedure, which consistently stained nerve membranes for several hours, wa...
Article
Full-text available
The cyclic imine toxin 20-methyl spirolide G (20-meSPX-G), produced by the toxigenic dinoflagellate Alexandrium ostenfeldii/Alexandrium peruvianum, has been previously reported to contaminate shellfish in various European coastal locations, as revealed by mouse toxicity bioassay. The aim of the present study was to determine its toxicological profi...
Article
Full-text available
Summary In the absence of low-level ER-to-mitochondrial Ca 2+ transfer, ATP levels fall, and AMPK-dependent, mTOR-independent autophagy is induced as an essential survival mechanism in many cell types. Here, we demonstrate that tumorigenic cancer cell lines, transformed primary human fibroblasts, and tumors in vivo respond similarly but that autoph...
Article
Full-text available
The collagen ColQ anchors acetylcholinesterase (AChE) in the synaptic cleft of the neuromuscular junction (NMJ). It also binds MuSK and perlecan/dystroglycan, 2 signaling platforms of the postsynaptic domain. Mutations in ColQ cause a congenital myasthenic syndrome (CMS) with AChE deficiency. Because the absence of AChE does not fully explain the c...
Article
Full-text available
In the absence of low-level ER-to-mitochondrial Ca(2+) transfer, ATP levels fall, and AMPK-dependent, mTOR-independent autophagy is induced as an essential survival mechanism in many cell types. Here, we demonstrate that tumorigenic cancer cell lines, transformed primary human fibroblasts, and tumors in vivo respond similarly but that autophagy is...
Chapter
In this chapter, available evidence on the toxicological profile of spirolides and other lipophilic cyclic imine toxins is reviewed, highlighting their chemical structure, the phytoplankton species involved in their production, their pharmacokinetics/toxicokinetics and experimental toxicity, and their molecular targets and mechanisms of action. The...
Article
Spiroimine phycotoxins are macrocyclic marine neurotoxins that are found in contaminated shellfish [1,2]. Most of them are strong antagonists of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs), with high affinity and selectivity on different subtypes [3].In this study, we used different ligand- and structure-based molecular modeling methods to identify...
Article
Full-text available
Homocysteine-inducible, endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress-inducible, ubiquitin-like domain member 1 (HERPUD1), an ER resident protein, is upregulated in response to ER stress and Ca(2+) homeostasis deregulation. HERPUD1 exerts cytoprotective effects in various models, but its role during oxidative insult remains unknown. The aim of this study was t...
Article
Full-text available
Disconnection of a cell from its epithelial neighbours and the formation of a mesenchymal phenotype are associated with profound changes in the distribution of cellular components and the formation of new cellular polarity. We observed a dramatic redistribution of IP3Rs and STIM1-competent ER-PM junctions when pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC...
Article
Full-text available
Significance The sympathetic nervous system regulates basic body functions such as heartbeat, blood pressure, and gland activities. Whereas hormone secretion from the adrenal medulla modulates these processes systemically, local and fast responses can be mediated by direct sympathetic innervation. Although many effects of the sympathetic system on...
Chapter
Botulinum (BoNT) and tetanus (TeNT) neurotoxins are potent toxins responsible for flaccid and spastic paralysis, respectively. BoNTs are divided into types and subtypes according to their immunological properties and amino acid sequence variations, whereas only one type of TeNT has been characterized. BoNTs associate with nontoxic proteins to form...
Article
Botulinum neurotoxins (BoNTs) are responsible for severe flaccid paralysis (botulism) which in most cases enter the organism via the digestive tract and then disseminate into the blood or lymph circulation to target autonomic and motor nerve endings. The passage way of BoNTs alone or in complex forms with associated non-toxic proteins through the e...
Chapter
In this chapter, available evidence on the toxicological profile of spirolides and other lipophilic cyclic imine toxins is reviewed, highlighting their chemical structure, the phytoplankton species involved in their production, their pharmacokinetics/toxicokinetics and experimental toxicity, and their molecular targets and mechanisms of action. The...
Article
Spirolides are a large family of lipophilic marine toxins produced by dinoflagellates which have been detected in contaminated shellfish. Among them, 13,19-didesmethyl and 13-desmethyl spirolide C phycotoxins are widely distributed and their mode of action need to be clearly defined. In order to further characterize the pharmacological profiles of...
Article
Pinnatoxins are macrocyclic imine phycotoxins associated with algal blooms and shellfish toxicity. Functional analysis of pinnatoxin A and pinnatoxin G by binding and voltage-clamp electrophysiology on membrane-embedded neuronal α7, α4β2, α3β2, and muscle-type α12βγδ nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) reveals high-affinity binding and poten...
Article
Full-text available
The muscle-specific kinase MuSK is one of the key molecules orchestrating neuromuscular junction (NMJ) formation. MuSK interacts with the Wnt morphogens, through its Frizzled-like domain (cysteine-rich domain [CRD]). Dysfunction of MuSK CRD in patients has been recently associated with the onset of myasthenia, common neuromuscular disorders mainly...
Article
Reference treatment of advanced prostate cancer (PCa) relies on pharmacological or surgical androgen deprivation therapy. However, it is only temporarily efficient as tumor cells inevitably adapt to the low testosterone environment and become hormone-refractory (HRPCa). We observed that androgen removal in HRPCa-derived LNCaP cells causes different...
Article
Introduction: Short-term plasticity of synaptic function is an important physiological control of transmitter release. Short-term plasticity can be regulated by intracellular calcium released by ryanodine and inositol triphosphate (IP3) receptors, but the role of these receptors at the neuromuscular junction is understood incompletely. Methods:...
Article
Full-text available
Introduction: Short-term plasticity of synaptic function is an important physiological control of transmitter release. Short-term plasticity can be regulated by intracellular calcium released by ryanodine and inositol triphosphate (IP3) receptors, but the role of these receptors at the neuromuscular junction is understood incompletely. Methods: We...
Article
Full-text available
Pinnatoxins belong to an emerging class of potent fast-acting marine toxins of the cyclic imine group, and are known to exert a selective potent antagonistic action on neuronal-and muscle-type nicotinic acetylcholine receptors. Studies on their biological effects have been favored by the development of robust synthetic approaches. In the present wo...

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