Alexandre Olry
University of Lorraine
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Featured researches published by Alexandre Olry.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002
Alexandre Olry; Sandrine Boschi-Muller; Michel Marraud; Sarah Sanglier-Cianférani; Alain Van Dorsselear; Guy Branlant
PILB has been described as being involved in the virulence of bacteria of Neisseria genus. The PILB protein is composed of three subdomains. In the present study, the central subdomain (PILB-MsrA), the C terminus subdomain (PILB-MsrB), and the fused subdomain (PILB-MsrA/MsrB) of N. meningitidiswere produced as folded entities. The central subdomain shows a methionine sulfoxide reductase A (MsrA) activity, whereas PILB-MsrB displays a methionine sulfoxide reductase B (MsrB) activity. The catalytic mechanism of PILB-MsrB can be divided into two steps: 1) an attack of the Cys-494 on the sulfur atom of the sulfoxide substrate, leading to formation of a sulfenic acid intermediate and release of 1 mol of methionine/mol of enzyme and 2) a regeneration of Cys-494 via formation of an intradisulfide bond with Cys-439 followed by reduction with thioredoxin. The study also shows that 1) MsrA and MsrB display opposite stereoselectivities toward the sulfoxide function; 2) the active sites of both Msrs, particularly MsrB, are rather adapted for binding protein-bound MetSO more efficiently than free MetSO; 3) the carbon Cα is not a determining factor for efficient binding to both Msrs; and 4) the presence of the sulfoxide function is a prerequisite for binding to Msrs. The fact that the two Msrs exhibit opposite stereoselectivities argues for a structure of the active site of MsrBs different from that of MsrAs. This is further supported by the absence of sequence homology between the two Msrs in particular around the cysteine that is involved in formation of the sulfenic acid derivative. The fact that the catalytic mechanism takes place through formation of a sulfenic acid intermediate for both Msrs supports the idea that sulfenic acid chemistry is a general feature in the reduction of sulfoxides by thiols.
Phytochemistry Reviews | 2006
Sylvie Kandel; Vincent Sauveplane; Alexandre Olry; L. Diss; I. Benveniste; Franck Pinot
In plants, hydroxy-fatty acid production is mainly the result of enzymatic reactions catalyzed by cytochrome P450 dependent fatty acid hydroxylases. One can distinguish ω-hydroxylases that catalyze the hydroxylation of the terminal methyl of aliphatics acids (ω position) and sub-terminal or in-chain hydroxylases that oxidize carbons in the chain (ω-n position). Since both types of enzymes were discovered about three decades ago, the majority of investigations have focused on the CYP94 and CYP86 families, which mediate ω-hydroxylations. The activities of ω-hydroxylases in cutin synthesis have been clearly established, but the studies of LCR (LACERATA) and att1 (aberrant induction of type three genes), which are the first Arabidopsis thaliana mutants with alterations in coding sequences of CYP86A8 and CYP86A2, show that these types of ω-hydroxylases can be involved in many aspects of plant development. The existence of different ω-hydroxylases in plants with distinct regulation patterns suggests that these enzymes mediate diverse biological processes. Much less information concerning in-chain hydroxylases is available despite the fact that they were initially reported along with ω-hydroxylases. This lack of information might be explained by the very few examples of sub-terminal hydroxy-fatty acids described in plants. We present here the best characterized fatty acid hydroxylases and we discuss their possible roles in plant defense and development, fatty acid catabolism, plant reproduction and detoxification.
Plant Physiology | 2014
Ryosuke Munakata; Tsuyoshi Inoue; Takao Koeduka; Fazeelat Karamat; Alexandre Olry; Akifumi Sugiyama; Kojiro Takanashi; Audray Dugrand; Yann Froelicher; Ryo Tanaka; Yoshihiro Uto; Hitoshi Hori; Jun-ichi Azuma; Alain Hehn; Frédéric Bourgaud; Kazufumi Yazaki
A prenyltransferase gene from lemon encodes a membrane-bound geranyl diphosphate-specific prenyltransferase for coumarin, which produces a novel compound, 8-geranylumbelliferone, in citrus species. Prenyl residues confer divergent biological activities such as antipathogenic and antiherbivorous activities on phenolic compounds, including flavonoids, coumarins, and xanthones. To date, about 1,000 prenylated phenolics have been isolated, with these compounds containing various prenyl residues. However, all currently described plant prenyltransferases (PTs) have been shown specific for dimethylallyl diphosphate as the prenyl donor, while most of the complementary DNAs encoding these genes have been isolated from the Leguminosae. In this study, we describe the identification of a novel PT gene from lemon (Citrus limon), ClPT1, belonging to the homogentisate PT family. This gene encodes a PT that differs from other known PTs, including flavonoid-specific PTs, in polypeptide sequence. This membrane-bound enzyme was specific for geranyl diphosphate as the prenyl donor and coumarin as the prenyl acceptor. Moreover, the gene product was targeted to plastid in plant cells. To our knowledge, this is the novel aromatic PT specific to geranyl diphosphate from citrus species.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007
Fabrice Neiers; Sanjiv Sonkaria; Alexandre Olry; Sandrine Boschi-Muller; Guy Branlant
Methionine sulfoxide reductases (Msrs) are antioxidant repair enzymes that catalyze the thioredoxin-dependent reduction of methionine sulfoxide back to methionine. The Msr family is composed of two structurally unrelated classes of enzymes named MsrA and MsrB, which display opposite stereoselectivities toward the S and R isomers of the sulfoxide function, respectively. Both classes of Msr share a similar three-step chemical mechanism involving first a reductase step that leads to the formation of a sulfenic acid intermediate. In this study, the invariant amino acids of Neisseria meningitidis MsrB involved in the reductase step catalysis and in substrate binding have been characterized by the structure-function relationship approach. Altogether the results show the following: 1) formation of the MsrB-substrate complex leads to an activation of the catalytic Cys-117 characterized by a decreased pKapp of ∼2.7 pH units; 2) the catalytic active MsrB form is the Cys-117-/His-103+ species with a pKapp of 6.6 and 8.3, respectively; 3) His-103 and to a lesser extent His-100, Asn-119, and Thr-26 (via a water molecule) participate in the stabilization of the polarized form of the sulfoxide function and of the transition state; and 4) Trp-65 is essential for the catalytic efficiency of the reductase step by optimizing the position of the substrate in the active site. A scenario for the reductase step is proposed and discussed in comparison with that of MsrA.
Protein Science | 2005
Alexandre Olry; Sandrine Boschi-Muller; Hong Yu; Daniel Burnel; Guy Branlant
Methionine sulfoxide reductases B (MsrBs) catalyze the reduction of methionine‐R‐sulfoxide via a three‐step chemical mechanism including a reductase step, formation of an intradisulfide bond followed by a thioredoxin recycling process. Fifty percent of the MsrBs, including the Escherichia coli enzyme, possess a metal binding site composed of two CXXC motifs of unknown function. It is located on the opposite side of the active site. The overexpressed E. coli MsrB tightly binds one atom of zinc/iron. Substitution of the cysteines of E. coli MsrB results in complete loss of bound metal and reductase activity, and leads to a low‐structured conformation of the protein as shown by CD, fluorescence, and DSC experiments. Introduction of the two CXXC motifs in Neisseria meningitidis MsrB domain leads to a MsrB that tightly binds one atom of zinc/iron, shows a strongly increased thermal stability and displays a reductase activity similar to that of the wild‐type but lacking thioredoxin recycling activity. These results demonstrate the stabilizing effect of the metal and the existence of a preformed metal binding site in the nonbound metal MsrB. The data also indicate that metal binding to N. meningitidis MsrB induces subtle structural modifications, which prevent formation of a competent binary complex between oxidized MsrB and reduced thioredoxin but not between reduced MsrB and substrate. The fact that the E. coli and the N. meningitidis MsrBs exhibit a similar thermal stability suggests the existence of other structural factors in the nonbound metal MsrBs that compensate the metal bound stabilizing effect.
BMC Plant Biology | 2012
Fazeelat Karamat; Alexandre Olry; Sébastien Doerper; Guilhem Vialart; Pascaline Ullmann; Danièle Werck-Reichhart; Frédéric Bourgaud; Alain Hehn
BackgroundFuranocoumarins are molecules with proven therapeutic properties and are produced in only a small number of medicinal plant species such as Ruta graveolens. In vivo, these molecules play a protective role against phytophageous insect attack. Furanocoumarins are members of the phenylpropanoids family, and their biosynthetic pathway is initiated from p-coumaroyl coA. The enzymes belonging to the CYP98A cytochrome P450 family have been widely described as being aromatic meta-hydroxylases of various substrates, such as p-coumaroyl ester derivatives, and are involved in the synthesis of coumarins such as scopoletin. In furanocoumarin-producing plants, these enzymes catalyze the step directly downstream of the junction with the furanocoumarin biosynthetic pathway and might indirectly impact their synthesis.ResultsIn this work, we describe the cloning and functional characterization of the first CYP98A encoding gene isolated from R. graveolens. Using Nicotiana benthamiana as a heterologous expression system, we have demonstrated that this enzyme adds a 3-OH to p-coumaroyl ester derivatives but is more efficient to convert p-coumaroyl quinate into chlorogenic acid than to metabolize p-coumaroyl shikimate. Plants exposed to UV-B stress showed an enhanced expression level of the corresponding gene. The R. graveolens cyp98a22 open reading frame and the orthologous Arabidopsis thaliana cyp98a3 open reading frame were overexpressed in stable transgenic Ruta plants. Both plant series were analyzed for their production of scopoletin and furanocoumarin. A detailed analysis indicates that both genes enhance the production of furanocoumarins but that CYP98A22, unlike CYP98A3, doesn’t affect the synthesis of scopoletin.ConclusionsThe overexpression of CYP98A22 positively impacts the concentration of furanocoumarins in R. graveolens. This gene is therefore a valuable tool to engineer plants with improved therapeutical values that might also be more resistant to phytophageous insects.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Audray Dugrand-Judek; Alexandre Olry; Alain Hehn; Gilles Costantino; Patrick Ollitrault; Yann Froelicher; Frédéric Bourgaud
Citrus plants are able to produce defense compounds such as coumarins and furanocoumarins to cope with herbivorous insects and pathogens. In humans, these chemical compounds are strong photosensitizers and can interact with medications, leading to the “grapefruit juice effect”. Removing coumarins and furanocoumarins from food and cosmetics imply additional costs and might alter product quality. Thus, the selection of Citrus cultivars displaying low coumarin and furanocoumarin contents constitutes a valuable alternative. In this study, we performed ultra-performance liquid chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry analyses to determine the contents of these compounds within the peel and the pulp of 61 Citrus species representative of the genetic diversity all Citrus. Generally, Citrus peel contains larger diversity and higher concentrations of coumarin/furanocoumarin than the pulp of the same fruits. According to the chemotypes found in the peel, Citrus species can be separated into 4 groups that correspond to the 4 ancestral taxa (pummelos, mandarins, citrons and papedas) and extended with their respective secondary species descendants. Three of the 4 ancestral taxa (pummelos, citrons and papedas) synthesize high amounts of these compounds, whereas mandarins appear practically devoid of them. Additionally, all ancestral taxa and their hybrids are logically organized according to the coumarin and furanocoumarin pathways described in the literature. This organization allows hypotheses to be drawn regarding the biosynthetic origin of compounds for which the biogenesis remains unresolved. Determining coumarin and furanocoumarin contents is also helpful for hypothesizing the origin of Citrus species for which the phylogeny is presently not firmly established. Finally, this work also notes favorable hybridization schemes that will lead to low coumarin and furanocoumarin contents, and we propose to select mandarins and Ichang papeda as Citrus varieties for use in creating species devoid of these toxic compounds in future breeding programs.
Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2002
Brice Kauffmann; Frédérique Favier; Alexandre Olry; Sandrine Boschi-Muller; Philippe Carpentier; Guy Branlant; André Aubry
Peptide methionine sulfoxide reductases (Msr) are ubiquitous enzymes that catalyse the reduction of free and protein-bound methionine sulfoxide back to methionine via sulfenic acid chemistry. Two classes of Msrs, MsrA and MsrB, have been described. The fact that the two Msrs display opposite stereoselectivities and have no sequence identity suggests that there is no structural similarity between the two classes. No three-dimensional structure of a MsrB is known. In the present report, the MsrB subdomain of Neisseria meningitidis PILB was used to grow orthorhombic crystals by the hanging-drop vapour-diffusion technique. The crystals belong to space group P2(1)2(1)2(1), with unit-cell parameters a = 44.0, b = 118.6, c = 138.5 A. Crystals of selenomethionine-substituted MsrB were grown under the same conditions in order to use the MAD method for structure determination. Three diffraction data sets at 1.8 A resolution were collected. The positions of the Se atoms were determined and should result in a full structure determination.
New Phytologist | 2016
Ryosuke Munakata; Alexandre Olry; Fazeelat Karamat; Vincent Courdavault; Akifumi Sugiyama; Yoshiaki Date; Célia Krieger; Prisca Silie; Emilien Foureau; Nicolas Papon; Jérémy Grosjean; Kazufumi Yazaki; Frédéric Bourgaud; Alain Hehn
In Apiaceae, furanocoumarins (FCs) are plant defence compounds that are present as linear or angular isomers. Angular isomers appeared during plant evolution as a protective response to herbivores that are resistant to linear molecules. Isomeric biosynthesis occurs through prenylation at the C6 or C8 position of umbelliferone. Here, we report cloning and functional characterization of two different prenyltransferases, Pastinaca sativa prenyltransferase 1 and 2 (PsPT1 and PsPT2), that are involved in these crucial reactions. Both enzymes are targeted to plastids and synthesize osthenol and demethylsuberosin (DMS) using exclusively umbelliferone and dimethylallylpyrophosphate (DMAPP) as substrates. Enzymatic characterization using heterologously expressed proteins demonstrated that PsPT1 is specialized for the synthesis of the linear form, demethylsuberosin, whereas PsPT2 more efficiently catalyses the synthesis of its angular counterpart, osthenol. These results are the first example of a complementary prenyltransferase pair from a single plant species that is involved in synthesizing defensive compounds. This study also provides a better understanding of the molecular mechanisms governing the angular FC biosynthetic pathway in apiaceous plants, which involves two paralogous enzymes that share the same phylogenetic origin.
BMC Evolutionary Biology | 2015
Bjørn Dueholm; Célia Krieger; Damian Paul Drew; Alexandre Olry; Tsunashi Kamo; Olivier Taboureau; Corinna Weitzel; Frédéric Bourgaud; Alain Hehn; Henrik Toft Simonsen
BackgroundLarge proliferations of cytochrome P450 encoding genes resulting from gene duplications can be termed as ‘blooms’, providing genetic material for the genesis and evolution of biosynthetic pathways. Furanocoumarins are allelochemicals produced by many of the species in Apiaceaous plants belonging to the Apioideae subfamily of Apiaceae and have been described as being involved in the defence reaction against phytophageous insects.ResultsA bloom in the cytochromes P450 CYP71AJ subfamily has been identified, showing at least 2 clades and 6 subclades within the CYP71AJ subfamily. Two of the subclades were functionally assigned to the biosynthesis of furanocoumarins. Six substrate recognition sites (SRS1-6) important for the enzymatic conversion were investigated in the described cytochromes P450 and display significant variability within the CYP71AJ subfamily. Homology models underline a significant modification of the accession to the iron atom, which might explain the difference of the substrate specificity between the cytochromes P450 restricted to furanocoumarins as substrates and the orphan CYP71AJ.ConclusionTwo subclades functionally assigned to the biosynthesis of furanocoumarins and four other subclades were identified and shown to be part of two distinct clades within the CYP71AJ subfamily. The subclades show significant variability within their substrate recognition sites between the clades, suggesting different biochemical functions and providing insights into the evolution of cytochrome P450 ‘blooms’ in response to environmental pressures.