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Featured researches published by Annie Rousselet.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1976

Study of the transverse diffusion of spin labelled phospholipids in biological membranes. I. Human red blood cells

Annie Rousselet; Claudine Guthmann; Jean Matricon; Alain Bienvenüe; Philippe F. Devaux

Spin labeled analogs of phosphatidylcholine were used to study the transverse diffusion (flip-flop) of phospholipids in the erythrocyte membrane. The nitroxide spin label was placed either on the beta acyl chain or on the choline group. These labeled phosphatidylcholine molecules were incorporated into the membrane by incubation of the red cells at 22 degrees C with sonicated spin-labed phosphatidylcholine vesicles from which all traces of free fatty acids and lyso derivatives were carefully removed by bovine serum albumin treatment. This incorporation did not provide any change in the morphology of the cell as indicated by scanning electron microscopy. When spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine, having a nitroxide on the beta chain but near the polar head-group, was incorporated into the erythrocyte membrane, ascorbate treatment at 0 degrees C allows selective reduction of the signal coming from the outer layer of the membrane. When the label was on the polar head-group, the inner content of the erythrocyte rapidly reduced the label facing the cytoplasm, thus creaging a spontaneous anisotropy of the labeling. The anisotropic distribution of spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine in the erythrocyte membrane was found to be stable at 22 and 37 degrees C for more than 4 h. It is therefore concluded that the rate of outside-inside and inside-outside transition is so slow that the anisotropic distribution of the phospholipids in the erythrocyte membrane can be maintained during cell life.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Non-Newtonian viscosity of Escherichia coli suspensions.

Jérémie Gachelin; Gastón Miño; Helene Berthet; Anke Lindner; Annie Rousselet; Eric Clément

The viscosity of an active suspension of E. coli bacteria is determined experimentally as a function of the shear rate using a Y-shaped microfluidic channel. From the relative suspension viscosity, we identify rheological thickening and thinning regimes as well as situations at low shear rate where the viscosity of the bacteria suspension can be lower than the viscosity of the suspending fluid. In addition, bacteria concentration and velocity profiles in the bulk are directly measured in the microchannel.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1979

Free fatty acids and esters can be immobilized by receptor rich membranes from torpedo marmorata but not phospholipid acyl chains

Annie Rousselet; Philippe F. Devaux; Karel W. A. Wirtz

A long chain spin labeled fatty acid and the corresponding ester have been introduced into receptor rich membranes from Torpedo Marmorata. Superimposed to a mobile component, typical of the lipid phase, a strongly immobilized component is seen on the ESR spectra, both at low temperature (−4°C) and at room temperature. An estimation of the amount of immobilized signal as a function of the concentration of spin label in the membrane shows that a saturation is reached which corresponds to approximately twice the concentration of receptor protein. In the same membranes, a spin labeled phosphatidylcholine was introduced by the release of the phosphatidylcholine analog from purified phosphatidylcholine exchange protein, preloaded with this spin label. No immobilized component is seen in this latter case even at low temperatures. Therefore the immobilized component seen with the fatty acid cannot be considered as reporting on an immobilized boundary layer of phospholipids surrounding the proteins. We attribute the immobilized signal seen with fatty acids and esters to a particular interaction of amphiphilic molecules with the cholinergic receptor protein. Very likely this effect can be associated with the local anaesthetic effect detected previously with this fatty acid.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1981

Effects of temperature, lipid modification and pH on the mobility of the major proteins of the receptor-rich membranes from Torpedo marmorata

Annie Rousselet; Jean Cartaud; Philippe F. Devaux

The factors influencing the overall mobility of the major proteins of the acetylcholine receptor-rich membranes from Torpedo marmorata have been investigated by saturation transfer ESR spectroscopy and the lateral distribution of these proteins has been studied by electron microscopy. A spin-labelled derivative of maleimide, 3-maleimido-2,2,5,5-tetramethyl-1-pyrrolidinyloxyl (MSL), was used under various conditions of incubation, enabling us to attach it mainly to either an extrinsic protein of 43 kdaltons, or an intrinsic protein (40 kdaltons) bearing the alpha-toxin-binding site. (1) The direct reaction of MSL with the membrane fragments resulted in almost exclusive labelling of the 43 kdalton protein, an extrinsic protein located on the inner face of the receptor-rich membranes. (2) After the free SH groups were blocked with N-ethylmaleimide and the disulfide bridges opened with the reducing agent dithiothreitol, MSL reacted with both the 40 and 43 kdalton proteins (6.0 +/- 0.6 MSL molecules per alpha-toxin-binding site). (3) After the latter labelling procedure membranes were exposed to pH 11, resulting in extraction of the 43 kdalton protein and leaving 2.2 +/- 0.4 MSL molecules per alpha-toxin-binding site; sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis performed with N-[14C] ethylmaleimide suggested that MSL was bound mainly to the 40 kdalton polypeptide chain of the acetylcholine receptor. The following conclusions were made with the native and alkaline-treated membranes: In the native membranes, saturation transfer ESR does not reveal any significant protein rotational diffusion (rotational correlation time tau C greater than 1 ms). Temperature variations and/or lipid modifications obtained by fusion of exogenous lipids and/or cholesterol exchange have little influence on the saturation transfer ESR spectra. Electron microscopy reveals that upon lipid addition, proteins remain in the form of clusters while areas depleted of proteins appear. On the other hand, alkaline treatment strikingly enhances the motion of the MSL-labelled proteins in the membrane (100 less than or equal to tau c less than or equal to 120 microseconds). Furthermore, the rotational diffusion of the MSL-labelled proteins (mainly the 40 kdalton protein) becomes sensitive to temperature, lipid composition and the lipid-to-proteins ratio. Electron microscopy shows that alkaline extraction does not cause large reorganization of the acetylcholine receptor in the plane of the membrane. However, when phospholipids are added to pH 11 treated membranes, a dispersion of the receptor and rosettes is observed. In contrast, cholesterol enrichment of the latter membranes induces clustering of the receptor immobilization as judged by saturation transfer ESR. Upon reassociation of the pH 11 soluble proteins with the alkaline-treated membranes, the restriction of the acetylcholine receptor rotational mobility is also restored (tau c greater than or equal to 1 ms).


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Non-Newtonian viscosity of E-coli suspensions

Jérémie Gachelin; Gastón Miño; Helene Berthet; Anke Lindner; Annie Rousselet; Eric Clément

The viscosity of an active suspension of E. coli bacteria is determined experimentally as a function of the shear rate using a Y-shaped microfluidic channel. From the relative suspension viscosity, we identify rheological thickening and thinning regimes as well as situations at low shear rate where the viscosity of the bacteria suspension can be lower than the viscosity of the suspending fluid. In addition, bacteria concentration and velocity profiles in the bulk are directly measured in the microchannel.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Non-Newtonian Viscosity ofEscherichia coliSuspensions

Jérémie Gachelin; Gastón Miño; Helene Berthet; Anke Lindner; Annie Rousselet; Eric Clément

The viscosity of an active suspension of E. coli bacteria is determined experimentally as a function of the shear rate using a Y-shaped microfluidic channel. From the relative suspension viscosity, we identify rheological thickening and thinning regimes as well as situations at low shear rate where the viscosity of the bacteria suspension can be lower than the viscosity of the suspending fluid. In addition, bacteria concentration and velocity profiles in the bulk are directly measured in the microchannel.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2012

Structures formed by ultrasonic standing waves in active fluids and suspensions

Mauricio Hoyos; Angélica Castro; Eric Clément; Annie Rousselet; Despina Bazou; Wei Wang; Thomas E. Mallouk

The acoustic radiation force concentrates particulate materials at the nodes or antinodes of an ultrasonic standing wave (USW), in function of different physicochemical parameters: size, shape, density or elastic properties. Thus, frequencies from 0.5 to 10 MHz are adapted for manipulating micron-sized particles, cells, bacteria, vesicles, drops, bubbles and even colloidal species. The interaction of different species with the ultrasonic radiation field generates levitation, aggregation or coalescence. In this presentation, new behaviors will be presented in active fluids: bacteria bath and self-propelled metallic micro-cylinders. Leaving bacteria in culture medium undergoing the USW field show a dynamics inducing complex structures. USW propel, rotate, align and assemble metallic micro-rods (2 µm long and 330 nm diameter) in water as well as in solutions of high ionic strength, generating “self-acoustophoresis”. Finally, new possibilities for controlling aggregation forming 2D and 3D particle and cancer ...


Physical Review Letters | 2011

Enhanced Diffusion due to Active Swimmers at a Solid Surface

Gastón Miño; Thomas E. Mallouk; Thierry Darnige; Mauricio Hoyos; Jeremy Dauchet; Jocelyn Dunstan; Rodrigo Soto; Yang Wang; Annie Rousselet; Eric Clément


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1976

Study of the transverse diffusion of spin-labeled phospholipids in biological membranes. II. Inner mitochondrial membrane of rat liver: use of phosphatidylcholine exchange protein.

Annie Rousselet; Annette Colbeau; Paulette M. Vignais; Philippe F. Devaux


Biochemistry | 1977

Fluidity of the lipids next to the acetylcholine receptor protein of Torpedo membrane fragments. Use of amphiphilic reversible spin-labels

Alain Bienvenue; Annie Rousselet; Gabor Kato; Philippe F. Devaux

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Eric Clément

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Philippe F. Devaux

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Thomas E. Mallouk

Pennsylvania State University

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Angélica Castro

École Normale Supérieure

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