Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Abdelghani Oukhaled is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Abdelghani Oukhaled.


ACS Nano | 2011

Dynamics of completely unfolded and native proteins through solid-state nanopores as a function of electric driving force.

Abdelghani Oukhaled; Benjamin Cressiot; Laurent Bacri; Manuela Pastoriza-Gallego; Jean-Michel Betton; Eric Le Bourhis; Ralf Jede; J. Gierak; L. Auvray

We report experimentally the dynamic properties of the entry and transport of unfolded and native proteins through a solid-state nanopore as a function of applied voltage, and we discuss the experimental data obtained as compared to theory. We show an exponential increase in the event frequency of current blockades and an exponential decrease in transport times as a function of the electric driving force. The normalized current blockage ratio remains constant or decreases for folded or unfolded proteins, respectively, as a function of the transmembrane potential. The unfolded protein is stretched under the electric driving force. The dwell time of native compact proteins in the pore is almost 1 order of magnitude longer than that of unfolded proteins, and the event frequency for both protein conformations is low. We discuss the possible phenomena hindering the transport of proteins through the pores, which could explain these anomalous dynamics, in particular, electro-osmotic counterflow and protein adsorption on the nanopore wall.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2012

Sensing Proteins through Nanopores: Fundamental to Applications

Abdelghani Oukhaled; Laurent Bacri; Manuela Pastoriza-Gallego; Jean-Michel Betton

Proteins subjected to an electric field and forced to pass through a nanopore induce blockades of ionic current that depend on the protein and nanopore characteristics and interactions between them. Recent advances in the analysis of these blockades have highlighted a variety of phenomena that can be used to study protein translocation and protein folding, to probe single-molecule catalytic reactions in order to obtain kinetic and thermodynamic information, and to detect protein-antibody complexes, proteins with DNA and RNA aptamers, and protein-pore interactions. Nanopore design is now well controlled, allowing the development of future biotechnologies and medicine applications.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2012

Wild Type, Mutant Protein Unfolding and Phase Transition Detected by Single-Nanopore Recording

Céline Merstorf; Benjamin Cressiot; Manuela Pastoriza-Gallego; Abdelghani Oukhaled; Jean-Michel Betton; Loïc Auvray

Understanding protein folding remains a challenge. A difficulty is to investigate experimentally all the conformations in the energy landscape. Only single molecule methods, fluorescence and force spectroscopy, allow observing individual molecules along their folding pathway. Here we observe that single-nanopore recording can be used as a new single molecule method to explore the unfolding transition and to examine the conformational space of native or variant proteins. We show that we can distinguish unfolded states from partially folded ones with the aerolysin pore. The unfolding transition curves of the destabilized variant are shifted toward the lower values of the denaturant agent compared to the wild type protein. The dynamics of the partially unfolded wild type protein follows a first-order transition. The denaturation curve obtained with the aerolysin pore is similar to that obtained with the α-hemolysin pore. The nanopore geometry or net charge does not influence the folding transition but changes the dynamics.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2011

Dynamics of colloids in single solid-state nanopores.

Laurent Bacri; Abdelghani Oukhaled; B. Schiedt; G. Patriarche; Eric Le Bourhis; J. Gierak; L. Auvray

We use solid-state nanopores to study the dynamics of single electrically charged colloids through nanopores as a function of applied voltage. We show that the presence of a single colloid inside of the pore changes the pore resistance, in agreement with theory. The normalized ionic current blockade increases with the applied voltage and remains constant when the electrical force increases even more. We observe short and long events of current blockades. Their durations are associated, respectively, with low and high current variation. The ratio of long events increases with the electrical force. The events frequency increases exponentially as a function of applied voltage and saturates at high voltage. The dwelling time decreases exponentially at low and medium voltages when the electrical force increases. At large voltages, this time decreases inversely proportionally to the applied voltage. The long events are associated with translocation events. We show that the dynamics of colloids through the nanopore is governed mainly by two mechanisms, by the free-energy barrier at relatively low and medium voltages and by the electrophoresis mechanism at high voltage.


ACS Nano | 2015

High-Resolution Size-Discrimination of Single Nonionic Synthetic Polymers with a Highly Charged Biological Nanopore

Gerhard Baaken; Ibrahim Halimeh; Laurent Bacri; Abdelghani Oukhaled; Jan C. Behrends

Electrophysiological studies of the interaction of polymers with pores formed by bacterial toxins (1) provide a window on single molecule interaction with proteins in real time, (2) report on the behavior of macromolecules in confinement, and (3) enable label-free single molecule sensing. Using pores formed by the staphylococcal toxin α-hemolysin (aHL), a particularly pertinent observation was that, under high salt conditions (3-4 M KCl), the current through the pore is blocked for periods of hundreds of microseconds to milliseconds by poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) oligomers (degree of polymerization approximately 10-60). Notably, this block showed monomeric sensitivity on the degree of polymerization of individual oligomers, allowing the construction of size or mass spectra from the residual current values. Here, we show that the current through the pore formed by aerolysin (AeL) from Aeromonas hydrophila is also blocked by PEG but with drastic differences in the voltage-dependence of the interaction. In contrast to aHL, AeL strongly binds PEG at high transmembrane voltages. This fact, which is likely related to AeLs highly charged pore wall, allows discrimination of polymer sizes with particularly high resolution. Multiple applications are now conceivable with this pore to screen various nonionic or charged polymers.


Nanoscale | 2016

Probing driving forces in aerolysin and α-hemolysin biological nanopores: electrophoresis versus electroosmosis

Mordjane Boukhet; Fabien Piguet; Hadjer Ouldali; Manuela Pastoriza-Gallego; Abdelghani Oukhaled

The transport of macromolecules through nanopores is involved in many biological functions and is today at the basis of promising technological applications. Nevertheless the interpretation of the dynamics of the macromolecule/nanopore interaction is still misunderstood and under debate. At the nanoscale, inside biomimetic channels under an external applied voltage, electrophoresis, which is the electric force acting on electrically charged molecules, and electroosmotic flow (EOF), which is the fluid transport associated with ions, contribute to the direction and magnitude of the molecular transport. In order to decipher the contribution of the electrophoresis and electroosmotic flow, we explored the interaction of small, rigid, neutral molecules (cyclodextrins) and flexible, non-ionic polymers (poly(ethylene glycol), PEG) that can coordinate cations under appropriate experimental conditions, with two biological nanopores: aerolysin (AeL) and α-hemolysin (aHL). We performed experiments using two electrolytes with different ionic hydration (KCl and LiCl). Regardless of the nature of the nanopore and of the electrolyte, cyclodextrins behaved as neutral analytes. The dominant driving force was attributed to EOF, acting in the direction of the anion flow and stronger in LiCl than in KCl. The same qualitative behaviour was observed for PEGs in LiCl. In contrast, in KCl, PEGs behaved as positively charged polyelectrolytes through both AeL and aHL. Our results are in agreement with theoretical predictions about the injection of polymers inside a confined geometry (ESI). We believe our results to be of significant importance for better control of the dynamics of analytes of different nature through biological nanopores.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2014

Electroosmosis through α‑Hemolysin That Depends on Alkali Cation Type

Fabien Piguet; Françoise Discala; Marie-France Breton; Laurent Bacri; Abdelghani Oukhaled

We demonstrate experimentally the existence of an electroosmotic flow (EOF) through the wild-type nanopore of α-hemolysin in a large range of applied voltages and salt concentrations for two different salts, LiCl and KCl. EOF controls the entry frequency and residence time of small neutral molecules (β-cyclodextrins, βCD) in the nanopore. The strength of EOF depends on the applied voltage, on the salt concentration, and, interestingly, on the nature of the cations in solution. In particular, EOF is stronger in the presence of LiCl than KCl. We interpret our results with a simple theoretical model that takes into account the pore selectivity and the solvation of ions. A stronger EOF in the presence of LiCl is found to originate essentially in a stronger anionic selectivity of the pore. Our work provides a new and easy way to control EOF in protein nanopores, without resorting to chemical modifications of the pore.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2011

Discrimination of neutral oligosaccharides through a nanopore

Laurent Bacri; Abdelghani Oukhaled; Erven Hemon; Fenseth Banzouzi Bassafoula; Loïc Auvray; Régis Daniel

The detection of oligosaccharides at the single-molecule level was investigated using a protein nanopore device. Neutral oligosaccharides of various molecular weights were translocated through a single α-hemolysin nanopore and their nano-transit recorded at the single-molecule level. The translocation of maltose and dextran oligosaccharides featured by 1→4 and 1→6 glycosidic bonds respectively was studied in an attempt to discriminate oligosaccharides according to their polymerization degree and glycosidic linkages. Oligosaccharides were translocated through a free diffusion regime indicating that they adopted an extended conformation during their translocation in the nanopore. The dwell time increased with molecular mass, suggesting the usefulness of nanopore as a molecular sizing device.


Nano Letters | 2015

Biomimetic Nanotubes Based on Cyclodextrins for Ion-Channel Applications.

Hajar Mamad-Hemouch; Hassen Ramoul; Mohammad Abou Taha; Laurent Bacri; Cécile Huin; Cédric Przybylski; Abdelghani Oukhaled; Bénédicte Thiebot; G. Patriarche; Nathalie Jarroux

Biomimetic membrane channels offer a great potential for fundamental studies and applications. Here, we report the fabrication and characterization of short cyclodextrin nanotubes, their insertion into membranes, and cytotoxicity assay. Mass spectrometry and high-resolution transmission electron microscopy were used to confirm the synthesis pathway leading to the formation of short nanotubes and to describe their structural parameters in terms of length, diameter, and number of cyclodextrins. Our results show the control of the number of cyclodextrins threaded on the polyrotaxane leading to nanotube synthesis. Structural parameters obtained by electron microscopy are consistent with the distribution of the number of cyclodextrins evaluated by mass spectrometry from the initial polymer distribution. An electrophysiological study at single molecule level demonstrates the ion channel formation into lipid bilayers, and the energy penalty for the entry of ions into the confined nanotube. In the presence of nanotubes, the cell physiology is not altered.


Scientific Reports | 2016

High Temperature Extends the Range of Size Discrimination of Nonionic Polymers by a Biological Nanopore

Fabien Piguet; Hadjer Ouldali; Françoise Discala; Marie-France Breton; Jan C. Behrends; Abdelghani Oukhaled

We explore the effect of temperature on the interaction of polydisperse mixtures of nonionic poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) polymers of different average molar masses with the biological nanopore α-hemolysin. In contrast with what has been previously observed with various nanopores and analytes, we find that, for PEGs larger than a threshold molar mass (2000 g/mol, PEG 2000), increasing temperature increases the duration of the PEG/nanopore interaction. In the case of PEG 3400 the duration increases by up to a factor of 100 when the temperature increases from 5 °C to 45 °C. Importantly, we find that increasing temperature extends the polymer size range of application of nanopore-based single-molecule mass spectrometry (Np-SMMS)-type size discrimination. Indeed, in the case of PEG 3400, discrimination of individual molecular species of different monomer number is impossible at room temperature but is achieved when the temperature is raised to 45 °C. We interpret our observations as the consequence of a decrease of PEG solubility and a collapse of PEG molecules with higher temperatures. In addition to expanding the range of application of Np-SMMS to larger nonionic polymers, our findings highlight the crucial role of the polymer solubility for the nanopore detection.

Collaboration


Dive into the Abdelghani Oukhaled's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Laurent Bacri

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Manuela Pastoriza-Gallego

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Fabien Piguet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hadjer Ouldali

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Loïc Auvray

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

G. Patriarche

Université Paris-Saclay

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge