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Dive into the research topics where Angelita Simonetti is active.

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Featured researches published by Angelita Simonetti.


Biochimie | 2015

Multiple ways to regulate translation initiation in bacteria: Mechanisms, regulatory circuits, dynamics.

Mélodie Duval; Angelita Simonetti; Isabelle Caldelari; Stefano Marzi

To adapt their metabolism rapidly and constantly in response to environmental variations, bacteria often target the translation initiation process, during which the ribosome assembles on the mRNA. Here, we review different mechanisms of regulation mediated by cis-acting elements, sRNAs and proteins, showing, when possible, their intimate connection with the translational apparatus. Indeed the ribosome itself could play a direct role in several regulatory mechanisms. Different features of the regulatory signals (sequences, structures and their positions on the mRNA) are contributing to the large variety of regulatory mechanisms. Ribosome heterogeneity, variation of individual cells responses and the spatial and temporal organization of the translation process add more layers of complexity. This hampers to define manageable set of rules for bacterial translation initiation control.


The EMBO Journal | 2017

Structures and dynamics of hibernating ribosomes from Staphylococcus aureus mediated by intermolecular interactions of HPF

Iskander Khusainov; Quentin Vicens; Rustam Ayupov; Konstantin S. Usachev; Alexander Myasnikov; Angelita Simonetti; Shamil Z. Validov; Bruno Kieffer; Gulnara Yusupova; Marat Yusupov; Yaser Hashem

In bacteria, ribosomal hibernation shuts down translation as a response to stress, through reversible binding of stress‐induced proteins to ribosomes. This process typically involves the formation of 100S ribosome dimers. Here, we present the structures of hibernating ribosomes from human pathogen Staphylococcus aureus containing a long variant of the hibernation‐promoting factor (SaHPF) that we solved using cryo‐electron microscopy. Our reconstructions reveal that the N‐terminal domain (NTD) of SaHPF binds to the 30S subunit as observed for shorter variants of HPF in other species. The C‐terminal domain (CTD) of SaHPF protrudes out of each ribosome in order to mediate dimerization. Using NMR, we characterized the interactions at the CTD‐dimer interface. Secondary interactions are provided by helix 26 of the 16S ribosomal RNA. We also show that ribosomes in the 100S particle adopt both rotated and unrotated conformations. Overall, our work illustrates a specific mode of ribosome dimerization by long HPF, a finding that may help improve the selectivity of antimicrobials.


Journal of Structural Biology | 2014

Quantifying resolution limiting factors in subtomogram averaged cryo-electron tomography using simulations

Lenard M. Voortman; Miloš Vulović; Massimiliano Maletta; Andreas Voigt; Erik M. Franken; Angelita Simonetti; Peter J. Peters; Lucas J. van Vliet; Bernd Rieger

Cryo-electron tomography (CET) is the only available technique capable of characterizing the structure of biological macromolecules in conditions close to the native state. With the advent of subtomogram averaging, as a post-processing step to CET, resolutions in the (sub-) nanometer range have become within reach. In addition to advances in instrumentation and experiments, the reconstruction scheme has improved by inclusion of more accurate contrast transfer function (CTF) correction methods, better defocus estimation, and better alignments of the tilt-series and subtomograms. To quantify the importance of each contribution, we have split the full process from data collection to reconstruction into different steps. For the purpose of evaluation we have acquired tilt-series of ribosomes in such a way that we could precisely determine the defocus of each macromolecule. Then, we simulated tilt-series using the InSilicoTEM package and applied tomogram reconstruction and subtomogram averaging. Through large scale simulations under different conditions and parameter settings we find that tilt-series alignment is the resolution limiting factor for our experimental data. Using simulations, we find that when this alignment inaccuracy is alleviated, tilted CTF correction improves the final resolution, or equivalently, the same resolution can be achieved using less particles. Furthermore, we predict from which resolution onwards better CTF correction and defocus estimation methods are required. We obtain a final average using 3198 ribosomes with a resolution of 2.2nm on the experimental data. Our simulations suggest that with the same number of particles a resolution of 1.2nm could be achieved by improving the tilt-series alignment.


Proteomics | 2015

Purification of mRNA-programmed translation initiation complexes suitable for mass spectrometry analysis

Johana Chicher; Angelita Simonetti; Lauriane Kuhn; Laure Schaeffer; Philippe Hammann; Gilbert Eriani; Franck Martin

Liquid Chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry (nanoLC‐MS/MS) is a powerful analytical technique for the identification and mass analysis of complex protein mixtures. Here, we present a combination of methods developed for the extensive/deep proteomic analysis of purified ribosome/mRNA particles assembled in rabbit reticulocyte lysate (RRL). Ribosomes are assembled on chimeric biotinylated mRNA–DNA molecules immobilized on streptavidin‐coated beads and incubated with RRL to form initiation complexes. After washing steps, the complexes are trypsin‐digested directly on the beads in semi‐native condition or after their elution from the beads in denaturing Laemmli buffer. The nanoLC‐MS/MS analysis performed on complexes assembled on β‐globin, viral HCV, and histone H4 mRNAs revealed significant differences in initiation factors composition in agreement with models of translation initiation used by these different types of mRNAs. Using Laemmli‐denaturing condition induces release of deeply buried peptides from the ribosome and eukaryotic initiation factor 3 (eIF3) allowing the identification of the nearly complete set of ribosomal proteins.


RNA Biology | 2017

ABCE1: A special factor that orchestrates translation at the crossroad between recycling and initiation

Eder Mancera-Martínez; Jailson Brito Querido; Leoš Shivaya Valášek; Angelita Simonetti; Yaser Hashem

ABSTRACT For many years initiation and termination of mRNA translation have been studied separately. However, a direct link between these 2 isolated stages has been suggested by the fact that some initiation factors also control termination and can even promote ribosome recycling; i.e. the last stage where post-terminating 80S ribosomes are split to start a new round of initiation. Notably, it is now firmly established that, among other factors, ribosomal recycling critically requires the NTPase ABCE1. However, several earlier reports have proposed that ABCE1 also somehow participates in the initiation complex assembly. Based on an extended analysis of our recently published late-stage 48S initiation complex from rabbit, here we provide new mechanistic insights into this putative role of ABCE1 in initiation. This point of view represents the first structural evidence in which the regulatory role of the recycling factor ABCE1 in initiation is discussed and establishes a corner stone for elucidating the interplay between ABCE1 and several initiation factors during the transit from ribosomal recycling to formation of the elongation competent 80S initiation complex.


Biochemical Journal | 2013

Rapid purification of ribosomal particles assembled on histone H4 mRNA: a new method based on mRNA-DNA chimaeras.

Lydia Prongidi-Fix; Laure Schaeffer; Angelita Simonetti; Sharief Barends; Jean-François Ménétret; Bruno P. Klaholz; Gilbert Eriani; Franck Martin

Detailed knowledge of the structure of the ribosomal particles during their assembly on mRNA is a prerequisite for understanding the intricate translation initiation process. In vitro preparation of eukaryotic translation initiation complexes is limited by the rather tricky assembly from individually purified ribosomal subunits, initiation factors and initiator tRNA. In order to directly isolate functional complexes from living cells, methods based on affinity tags have been developed which, however, often suffer from non-specific binding of proteins and/or RNAs. In the present study we present a novel method designed for the purification of high-quality ribosome/mRNA particles assembled in RRL (rabbit reticulocyte lysate). Chimaerical mRNA-DNA molecules, consisting of the full-length mRNA ligated to a biotinylated desoxy-oligonucleotide, are immobilized on streptavidin-coated beads and incubated with RRL to form initiation complexes. After a washing step, the complexes are eluted by specific DNase I digestion of the DNA moiety of the chimaera, releasing initiation complexes in native conditions. Using this simple and robust purification setup, 80S particles properly programmed with full-length histone H4 mRNA were isolated with the expected ribosome/mRNA molar ratio of close to 1. We show that by using this novel approach purified ribosomal particles can be obtained that are suitable for biochemical and structural studies, in particular single-particle cryo-EM (cryo-electron microscopy). This purification method thus is a versatile tool for the isolation of fully functional RNA-binding proteins and macromolecular RNPs.


Structure | 2017

The cryo-EM Structure of a Novel 40S Kinetoplastid-Specific Ribosomal Protein

Jailson Brito Querido; Eder Mancera-Martínez; Quentin Vicens; Anthony Bochler; Johana Chicher; Angelita Simonetti; Yaser Hashem

Kinetoplastids are potentially lethal protozoan pathogens affecting more than 20 million people worldwide. There is a critical need for more specific targets for the development of safer anti-kinetoplastid therapeutic molecules that can replace the scarce and highly cytotoxic current drugs. The kinetoplastid ribosome represents a potential therapeutic target due to its relative structural divergence when compared with its human counterpart. However, several kinetoplastid-specific ribosomal features remain uncharacterized. Here, we present the near-atomic cryoelectron microscopy structure of a novel bona fide kinetoplastid-specific ribosomal (r-) protein (KSRP) bound to the ribosome. KSRP is an essential protein located at the solvent face of the 40S subunit, where it binds and stabilizes kinetoplastid-specific domains of rRNA, suggesting its role in ribosome integrity. KSRP also interacts with the r-protein eS6 at a region that is only conserved in kinetoplastids. The kinetoplastid-specific ribosomal environment of KSRP provides a promising target for the design of safer anti-kinetoplastidian drugs.


Molecular Cell | 2016

eIF3 Peripheral Subunits Rearrangement after mRNA Binding and Start-Codon Recognition.

Angelita Simonetti; Jailson Brito Querido; Alexander Myasnikov; Eder Mancera-Martínez; Adeline Renaud; Lauriane Kuhn; Yaser Hashem


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2018

Structural Insights into the Role of Diphthamide on Elongation Factor 2 in mRNA Reading-Frame Maintenance.

Simone Pellegrino; Natalia Demeshkina; Eder Mancera-Martínez; Sergey Melnikov; Angelita Simonetti; Alexander Myasnikov; Marat Yusupov; Gulnara Yusupova; Yaser Hashem


Archive | 2016

eIF3b relocated to the intersubunit face to interact with eIF1 and below the eIF2 ternary-complex. from the structure of a partial yeast 48S preinitiation complex in closed conformation.

Angelita Simonetti; J. Brito Querido; Alexander Myasnikov; Eder Mancera-Martínez; A. Renaud; Lauriane Kuhn; Yaser Hashem

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Yaser Hashem

University of Strasbourg

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Lauriane Kuhn

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Franck Martin

University of Strasbourg

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Gilbert Eriani

University of Strasbourg

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Johana Chicher

University of Strasbourg

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