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Dive into the research topics where Agathe Martinez is active.

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Featured researches published by Agathe Martinez.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2009

(l)- or (d)-Valine tert-butylamide grafted on permethylated β-cyclodextrin derivatives as new mixed binary chiral selectors: Versatile tools for capillary gas chromatographic enantioseparation

O. Stephany; F. Dron; Séverine Tisse; Agathe Martinez; Jean-Marc Nuzillard; Valérie Peulon-Agasse; Pascal Cardinael; Jean-Philippe Bouillon

This work deals with the synthesis of two mixed binary chiral selectors prepared by grafting (L)- or (D)-valine tert-butylamide on permethylated cyclodextrin macrocycle. The enantioselective properties of the new chiral selectors diluted in OV11 polysiloxane (35% phenyl- and 65% methylsiloxane) were investigated by means of injections of 117 racemic mixtures. The mixed chiral selectors with (L)-valine and, to a lesser extent with (D)-valine, were found to have an improved enantioselectivity toward amino acid derivatives by comparison to permethylated cyclodextrin. The enantioseparation capability of these new chiral selectors has proven to be slightly less efficient than Chirasil-L-Val (Alltech) for amino acid derivatives, but it has been extended to include terpenes, lactones, esters, aliphatic compounds and aryl alcohols.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2012

Metabolomics reveals simultaneous influences of plant defence system and fungal growth in Botrytis cinerea-infected Vitis vinifera cv. Chardonnay berries

Young-Shick Hong; Agathe Martinez; Gérard Liger-Belair; Philippe Jeandet; Jean-Marc Nuzillard; Clara Cilindre

Botrytis cinerea is a fungal plant pathogen of grape berries, leading to economic and quality losses in wine production. The global metabolite changes induced by B. cinerea infection in grape have not been established to date, even though B. cinerea infection is known to cause significant changes in chemicals or metabolites. In order to better understand metabolic mechanisms linked to the infection process and to identify the metabolites associated with B. cinerea infection, (1)H NMR spectroscopy was used in global metabolite profiling and multivariate statistical analysis of berries from healthy and botrytized bunches. Pattern recognition methods, such as principal component analysis, revealed clear metabolic discriminations between healthy and botrytized berries of botrytized bunches and healthy berries of healthy bunches. Significantly high levels of proline, glutamate, arginine, and alanine, which are accumulated upon plant stress, were found in healthy and botrytized berries of botrytized bunches. Moreover, largely degraded phenylpropanoids, flavonoid compounds, and sucrose together with markedly produced glycerol, gluconic acid, and succinate, all being directly associated with B. cinerea growth, were only found in botrytized berries of botrytized bunches. This study reports that B. cinerea infection causes significant metabolic changes in grape berry and highlights that both the metabolic perturbations associated with the plant defence system and those directly derived from fungal pathogen growth should be considered to better understand the interaction between metabolic variation and biotic pathogen stress in plants.


Magnetic Resonance in Chemistry | 2012

High‐resolution and high‐sensitivity 2D homonuclear J‐resolved NMR spectroscopy

Agathe Martinez; Flavien Bourdreux; Emmanuel Riguet; Jean-Marc Nuzillard

This paper describes the implementation of the pure absorption ALPESTRE processing of 2D homonuclear J‐resolved NMR spectra. The method relies on the computation of the missing information at negative evolution times by means of backward linear prediction. The paper also shows that resolution can be improved by application of time‐symmetric apodization functions. The resulting spectra clearly display negative peaks at F2 chemical shifts that correspond to strong coupling artifacts, thus making it possible to identify them as such. The processing scripts are freely available for downloading, use and modification. Copyright


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

UV-Induced TA Photoproducts: Formation and Hydrolysis in Double-Stranded DNA

Saâdia Asgatay; Agathe Martinez; Stéphanie Coantic-Castex; Dominique Harakat; Coralie Philippe; Thierry Douki; Pascale Clivio

Hydrolysis of TA photoproduct leads to two derivatives presenting different formation kinetic profiles depending on the oligomer content. The formation efficiency of TA photoproducts in UV-C-irradiated DNA slightly exceeds the formation of the trans,syn cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer at TT sites.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2017

Generation of ε,ε-difluorinated metal-pentadienyl species through lanthanide-mediated C-F activation

Tarun Kumar; Fabien Massicot; Dominique Harakat; Sylviane Chevreux; Agathe Martinez; Klaudia Bordolinska; Preethanuj Preethalayam; Radhakrishnan Kokkuvayil Vasu; Jean-Bernard Behr; Jean-Luc Vasse; Florian Jaroschik

Heavy metal on Lewis acid: The combination of lanthanide metals and AlCl3 has been employed for selective single C-F activation in benzofulvenes comprising an exocyclic CF3 substituent. Intermediate ϵ,ϵ-difluorinated metal-dienyl species react with a large variety of aldehydes in a highly regio- and diastereoselective fashion to afford 1,1-disubstituted indenes bearing a difluorovinyl group. These new building blocks have been further transformed through a hydrogenation-cyclization process into fluorinated heterocyclic spiro compounds.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2010

An alternative scheme for the multiplexed acquisition of 1D and 2D NMR spectra.

Bertrand Plainchont; Agathe Martinez; Séverine Tisse; Jean-Philippe Bouillon; Jean-Michel Wieruszeski; Guy Lippens; Damien Jeannerat; Jean-Marc Nuzillard

Spin system selective 1D (1)H, 2D DQF-COSY and 2D HSQC NMR spectra were recorded in order to fully assign the (1)H and (13)C 1D NMR spectra of an asymmetrical beta-cyclodextrin derivative. Instead of individually accessing the seven sugar anomeric protons by means of long multiplet selective pulses, only short region selective pulses were used. The simultaneously selected anomeric protons were differentiated by allowing their magnetization to evolve under the sole effect of the chemical shift interaction. In each experiment, the seven recorded spectra were linear combinations of the seven desired ones. The combination coefficients were measured and used to obtain almost perfectly separated sugar unit sub-spectra. This multiplexed acquisition scheme resulted in a time gain factor of about 2.


Journal of Natural Products | 2015

Exploiting the Complementarity between Dereplication and Computer-Assisted Structure Elucidation for the Chemical Profiling of Natural Cosmetic Ingredients: Tephrosia purpurea as a Case Study

Jane Hubert; Sébastien Chollet; Sylvain Purson; Romain Reynaud; Dominique Harakat; Agathe Martinez; Jean-Marc Nuzillard; Jean-Hugues Renault

The aqueous-ethanolic extract of Tephrosia purpurea seeds is currently exploited in the cosmetic industry as a natural ingredient of skin lotions. The aim of this study was to chemically characterize this ingredient by combining centrifugal partition extraction (CPE) as a fractionation tool with two complementary identification approaches involving dereplication and computer-assisted structure elucidation. Following two rapid fractionations of the crude extract (2 g), seven major compounds namely, caffeic acid, quercetin-3-O-rutinoside, ethyl galactoside, ciceritol, stachyose, saccharose, and citric acid, were unambiguously identified within the CPE-generated simplified mixtures by a recently developed (13)C NMR-based dereplication method. The structures of four additional compounds, patuletin-3-O-rutinoside, kaempferol-3-O-rutinoside, guaiacylglycerol 8-vanillic acid ether, and 2-methyl-2-glucopyranosyloxypropanoic acid, were automatically elucidated by using the Logic for Structure Determination program based on the interpretation of 2D NMR (HSQC, HMBC, and COSY) connectivity data. As more than 80% of the crude extract mass was characterized without need for tedious and labor-intensive multistep purification procedures, the identification tools involved in this work constitute a promising strategy for an efficient and time-saving chemical profiling of natural extracts.


Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part A | 2013

Encapsulation of contrast imaging agents by polypropyleneimine-based dendrimers.

S. Balieu; C. Cadiou; Agathe Martinez; Jean-Marc Nuzillard; J.-B. Oudart; François-Xavier Maquart; F. Chuburu; Sandrine Bouquillon

Polypropyleneimines (PPIs) functionalized by glycerol-based entities are prepared and characterized by diffusion-ordered spectroscopy NMR. Showing low cytotoxicity against MRC5 fibroblasts, their encapsulation capacities of gadolinium complexes was evaluated. T(1) measurements were performed to determine the relaxivity of the encapsulated gadopentetate dimeglumine (GdBOPTA) in dendrimers of fourth and fifth generation (GD-PPI-4 and GD-PPI-5). Comparison of the GdBOPTA relaxivity and the relaxivity of GdBOPTA-loaded dendrimers showed a slight increase of the gadolinium chelate relaxivity.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Use of the NEO strategy (Nucleophilic addition/Epoxide Opening) for the synthesis of a new C-galactoside ester analogue of KRN 7000

Aline Banchet-Cadeddu; Agathe Martinez; Stéphane Guillarme; Véronique Parietti; Fanny Monneaux; Eric Henon; Jean-Hugues Renault; Jean-Marc Nuzillard; Arnaud Haudrechy

Our goal in the search for potentially bioactive analogues of KRN 7000 was to design an easy synthetic approach to a library of analogues using a strategy recently developed in our laboratory based on a Nucleophilic addition followed by an Epoxide Opening (the NEO strategy). Through the use of a common pivotal structure, a new C-galactoside ester analogue (23) was synthesized which showed an encouraging T(H)2 biased response during preliminary biological tests.


Journal of Separation Science | 2013

Gradient elution method in centrifugal partition chromatography for the separation of a complex sophorolipid mixture obtained from Candida bombicola yeasts

Alexis Kotland; Imane Hadef; Jean-Hugues Renault; Mahmoud Hamzaoui; Agathe Martinez; Nicolas Borie; Arnaud Guilleret; Romain Reynaud; Jane Hubert

Sophorolipids represent an important class of natural surfactants with a variety of environmental, cosmetic, and pharmaceutical applications. Despite their promising physicochemical and biological properties, the use of sophorolipids is hampered by the lack of information regarding their individual structure-activity relationships. The major difficulty in isolating pure sophorolipids arises from the high complexity of crude fermentation media composition and from their strong structural similarities. In this work, a centrifugal partition chromatography method was developed in an original gradient elution mode for the separation of sophorolipids produced by the yeast Candida bombicola. Experiments were realized by using three sets of solvent systems composed of n-heptane, ethyl acetate, n-butanol, methanol, and water in different proportions. The separation was performed at 5 mL/min in the ascending mode by increasing progressively the polarity of the organic mobile phase. In these conditions, more than 80% of the sophorolipids present in the initial crude fermentation extract were eluted successively from the most hydrophobic lactone forms to the most hydrophilic acid forms. The structures of the isolated sophorolipids were further elucidated by HPLC and NMR analyses.

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Dominique Harakat

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jean-Marc Nuzillard

University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne

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Jean-Hugues Renault

University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne

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Florian Jaroschik

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Eric Henon

University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne

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Jane Hubert

University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne

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Arnaud Haudrechy

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jean-Luc Vasse

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Fabien Massicot

University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne

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