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Dive into the research topics where Ahmed Bentaleb is active.

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Featured researches published by Ahmed Bentaleb.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Rubber Elongation Factor (REF), a Major Allergen Component in Hevea brasiliensis Latex Has Amyloid Properties

Karine Berthelot; Sophie Lecomte; Yannick Estevez; Bénédicte Coulary-Salin; Ahmed Bentaleb; Christophe Cullin; Alain Deffieux; Frédéric Peruch

REF (Hevb1) and SRPP (Hevb3) are two major components of Hevea brasiliensis latex, well known for their allergenic properties. They are obviously taking part in the biosynthesis of natural rubber, but their exact function is still unclear. They could be involved in defense/stress mechanisms after tapping or directly acting on the isoprenoid biosynthetic pathway. The structure of these two proteins is still not described. In this work, it was discovered that REF has amyloid properties, contrary to SRPP. We investigated their structure by CD, TEM, ATR-FTIR and WAXS and neatly showed the presence of β-sheet organized aggregates for REF, whereas SRPP mainly fold as a helical protein. Both proteins are highly hydrophobic but differ in their interaction with lipid monolayers used to mimic the monomembrane surrounding the rubber particles. Ellipsometry experiments showed that REF seems to penetrate deeply into the monolayer and SRPP only binds to the lipid surface. These results could therefore clarify the role of these two paralogous proteins in latex production, either in the coagulation of natural rubber or in stress-related responses. To our knowledge, this is the first report of an amyloid formed from a plant protein. This suggests also the presence of functional amyloid in the plant kingdom.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2015

Columnar Liquid‐Crystalline Dinaphthoperylenetetracarboxdiimides

Marli Ferreira; Edivandro Girotto; Ahmed Bentaleb; Elizabeth A. Hillard; Hugo Gallardo; Fabien Durola; Harald Bock

Although the double Friedel-Crafts acylation of arenes with ethyl chloroglyoxylate is hindered by the strongly deactivating effect of the first-entering glyoxylic substituent, the double reaction is successful with the reactive arene perylene under long reaction times and with concomitant ester hydrolysis. The reaction is regiospecific, giving the 3,9-regioisomer exclusively. This perylenylenediglyoxylic acid is condensed first with o-bromophenylacetic acid and then with α-branched alkylamines to yield the title compounds. Whilst the corresponding tetraalkyl esters only show monotropic mesophases, these diimides show enantiotropic columnar mesophases that can be maintained at room temperature if racemically branched alkyl chains of moderate size are used. A palladium-induced C-C bond migration during the build-up of the arene system leads to an isomeric side product of reduced symmetry that can be isolated by aggregation-controlled chromatographic separation. The HOMO and LUMO energies of the title compounds are considerably higher than those of established perylenetetracarboxdiimides.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2015

Plank-Shaped Column-Forming Mesogens with Substituents on One Side Only

Edivandro Girotto; Marli Ferreira; Parantap Sarkar; Ahmed Bentaleb; Elizabeth A. Hillard; Hugo Gallardo; Fabien Durola; Harald Bock

Prolonged glyoxylation of pyrenyl-1-glyoxylic acid ethyl ester leads to a mixture of isomers with polar pyrenylene-1,8-diglyoxylic acid as the main product, whereas the centrosymmetric 1,6-isomer is obtained in good yield from the corresponding dibromopyrene. Perkin condensations followed by Pd-catalyzed cyclizations lead to isomeric dinaphthopyrene-tetracarboxdiimides that self-assemble into columnar liquid crystals of hexagonal and rectangular symmetry, of which the rectangular mesophases have unusually elongated unit cells. The cisoid diimides with both alkylimide substituents on the same side of the oblong arene system show a much greater tendency to self-assemble into fluid stacks of disks than their centrosymmetric isomers. With racemically branched alkyl substituents, uniform vertical surface alignment of the columns in the high-temperature hexagonal mesophase is resilient to cycling through the lower-temperature rectangular and crystalline phases.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2016

Stabilization of the Columnar Mesophase of Perylenediimide by Racemic Triple Tails.

Deise M. Pereira de Oliveira Santos; Marilia G. Belarmino Cabral; Ahmed Bentaleb; Rodrigo Cristiano; Hugo Gallardo; Fabien Durola; Harald Bock

Whereas perylene tetracarboxdiimides derived from amino-n-alkanes if at all only show monotropic (thermodynamically unstable) mesogenic self-assembly, the hexagonal columnar liquid crystalline state can be stabilized over a broad temperature range with doubly branched, doubly racemic alkyl residues. An improved tendency to homeotropic surface orientation is observed, and the orientation of the liquid crystalline domains is maintained upon cycling through the crystalline state at room temperature.


Langmuir | 2016

Triggering the Mechanical Release of Mineralized Pickering Emulsion-Based Capsules

Marion Baillot; Ahmed Bentaleb; Eric Laurichesse; Véronique Schmitt; Rénal Backov

Taking advantage of the benefit of Pickering-based emulsions and sol-gel chemistry, we synthesized mineralized Pickering emulsion-based capsules constituted of a dodecane core and a siliceous shell. To trigger the oily core mechanical release, we first made use of the one-step polycondensation synthesis path, reaching limited shell thickness from 43 to 115 nm with a resistance against the application of an external pressure from 0.5 to 6 MPa. When addressing a sequential mineralization route, we were able to reach both better shell homogeneity and higher values of shell thickness from 85 to 135 nm associated with a shell breaking pressure varying from 1.2 to 10 MPa. In this last configuration, the shell homogeneity and thickness are acting cooperatively toward enhancing the shell mechanical toughness and the associated effective breaking pressure of the dodecane@SiO2 core-shell particles.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2016

Columnar Liquid‐Crystalline Dibenzopentacenodithiophenes by Photocyclization

Marilia G. Belarmino Cabral; Deise M. Pereira de Oliveira Santos; Ahmed Bentaleb; Elizabeth A. Hillard; Rodrigo Cristiano; Hugo Gallardo; Fabien Durola; Harald Bock

The twofold glyoxylic Perkin reaction of perylene-3,9-diglyoxylic acid with thiophene-diacetic acid followed by oxidative photocylization and reaction with α-branched primary alkylamines yields columnar liquid-crystalline diimides with two sulfur atoms in the condensed arene system. A broad temperature range of the hexagonal columnar mesophase is induced by racemic doubly branched alkyl chains. The HOMO and LUMO energy levels of these thiophene-derived diimides qualify them as electron donors with respect to perylene diimides.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2016

Hevea brasiliensis prohevein possesses a conserved C-terminal domain with amyloid-like properties in vitro.

Karine Berthelot; Sophie Lecomte; Bénédicte Coulary-Salin; Ahmed Bentaleb; Frédéric Peruch

Prohevein is a wound-induced protein and a main allergen from latex of Hevea brasiliensis (rubber tree). This 187 amino-acid protein is cleaved in two fragments: a N-terminal 43 amino-acids called hevein, a lectin bearing a chitin-binding motif with antifungal properties and a C-terminal domain (C-ter) far less characterized. We provide here new insights on the characteristics of prohevein, hevein and C-terminal domain. Using complementary biochemical (ThT/CR/chitin binding, agglutination) and structural (modeling, ATR-FTIR, TEM, WAXS) approaches, we show that this domain clearly displays all the characteristics of an amyloid-like proteins in vitro, that could confer agglutination activity in synergy with its chitin-binding activity. Additionally, this C-ter domain is highly conserved and present in numerous plant prohevein-like proteins or pathogenesis-related (PR and WIN) proteins. This could be the hallmark of the eventual presence of proteins with amyloid properties in plants, that could potentially play a role in defense through aggregation properties.


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

From Mesomorphic Phosphine Oxide to Clustomesogens Containing Molybdenum and Tungsten Octahedral Cluster Cores

Viorel Cîrcu; Yann Molard; Maria Amela-Cortes; Ahmed Bentaleb; P. Barois; Vincent Dorcet; Stéphane Cordier

New clustomesogens (i.e., metal atom clusters containing liquid crystalline (LC) materials) have been obtained by grafting neutral cyanobiphenyl (CB)- or cholesteryl-containing tailor-made dendritic mesomorphic triphenylphosphine oxide ligands on luminescent (M6 Cl(i) 8 )(4+) octahedral cluster cores (M=Mo, W). The LC properties were studied by a combination of polarizing optical microscopy (POM), differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), and X-ray powder diffraction analyses. While the organic ligands showed various mesophase types ranging from nematic, SmA columnar (SmACol ), SmA, and SmC phases, it turned out that the corresponding clustomesogens formed layered phases (SmA) over a wide range of temperatures that depend on the nature and density of mesogenic groups employed. Intrinsic luminescence properties of the cluster precursors are preserved over the entire range of LC phase existence.


Liquid Crystals | 2016

Synthesis and mesomorphic behaviour of unsymmetrical tetracatenar [1,2,3]-triazole derivatives

Soraya Benallou; Salima Saidi-Besbes; Eric Grelet; Ahmed Bentaleb; Abdelhamid Elaissari; Géraldine Agusti; Aicha Derdour

ABSTRACT New nonsymmetric four-chained and three-chained [1,2,3]-triazole derivatives were synthesised. Their phase behaviours were investigated by differential scanning calorimetry, polarised optical microscopy and X-ray diffraction analyses. The tetracatenar derivatives show a columnar mesophase and a lamellar crystalline phase. The effects of the length of the terminal alkoxy chain and the nature of the terminal group attached to the side phenyltriazole unit of the mesogenic core are discussed. GRAPHICAL ABSTRACT


Liquid Crystals | 2016

A single parameter determines mesophase transitions in Swollen Liquid Crystals

Natacha Kinadjian; Frédéric Nallet; Isabelle Ly; Ahmed Bentaleb; Rénal Backov; Eric Prouzet

ABSTRACT We report how the control of a single parameter, the co-surfactant, determines the phase transitions of oil-in-water swollen liquid crystals (SLCs) prepared with cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB), from cubic to hexagonal, lamellar, and finally sponge-like structures. SLCs are complex mixtures (surfactant + co-surfactant + water + salt + oil) usually prepared to form hexagonal mesophases, with cell parameters tunable between 3 and 30 nm. These hexagonal mesophases were successfully used as nanoreactors to prepare a broad range of nanostructured materials. Because the potential of these mesophases as adaptive nanoreactors has not been extended to other liquid crystal geometries than the hexagonal, we studied in a first step the structure evolution of SLCs made with CTAB, cyclohexane, pentanol-1, water and different stabilising salts. We used small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), polarised light microscopy and Freeze-Fracture TEM to provide a partial phase diagram and list the different mesophases obtained as a function of composition. We report that the adjustment of a single parameter, the co-surfactant (pentanol-1), determines the phase transition between cubic, hexagonal, lamellar, and sponge-like structures, all other parameters such as the nature and concentration of salt, or amount of oil being constant. GRAPHICAL ABSTRACT

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Harald Bock

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Fabien Durola

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Elizabeth A. Hillard

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Rodrigo Cristiano

Federal University of Paraíba

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Bosi Mao

University of Bordeaux

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