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Dive into the research topics where Armelle Cabin-Flaman is active.

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Featured researches published by Armelle Cabin-Flaman.


Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews | 2007

Functional Taxonomy of Bacterial Hyperstructures

Vic Norris; Tanneke den Blaauwen; Armelle Cabin-Flaman; Roy H. Doi; Rasika M. Harshey; Laurent Jannière; Alfonso Jiménez-Sánchez; Ding Jun Jin; Petra Anne Levin; Eugenia Mileykovskaya; Abraham Minsky; Milton H. Saier; Kirsten Skarstad

SUMMARY The levels of organization that exist in bacteria extend from macromolecules to populations. Evidence that there is also a level of organization intermediate between the macromolecule and the bacterial cell is accumulating. This is the level of hyperstructures. Here, we review a variety of spatially extended structures, complexes, and assemblies that might be termed hyperstructures. These include ribosomal or “nucleolar” hyperstructures; transertion hyperstructures; putative phosphotransferase system and glycolytic hyperstructures; chemosignaling and flagellar hyperstructures; DNA repair hyperstructures; cytoskeletal hyperstructures based on EF-Tu, FtsZ, and MreB; and cell cycle hyperstructures responsible for DNA replication, sequestration of newly replicated origins, segregation, compaction, and division. We propose principles for classifying these hyperstructures and finally illustrate how thinking in terms of hyperstructures may lead to a different vision of the bacterial cell.


Electrophoresis | 2002

Two‐dimensional electrophoresis investigation of short‐term response of flax seedlings to a cold shock

Marc Tafforeau; Marie Claire Verdus; Roland Charlionet; Armelle Cabin-Flaman; Camille Ripoll

The flax, Linum usitatissimum L., is particularly suitable for studying the transduction and long‐term signal storage of environmental signals. To investigate the underlying molecular mechanisms, we have focused on the initial changes in the proteome since these offer the possibility of reflecting the plants history of exposure to stress. In principle, this ‘proteome signature’ might be revealed by two‐dimensional electrophoresis (2‐DE). We have therefore determined the potential of 2‐DE to study the kinetics of changes to the proteome of flax induced by a 1 min cold shock. Protein identification is difficult with flax because of the lack of knowledge of gene sequences. Nevertheless, 2‐DE analysis can be informative providing the significance of changes can be evaluated. We have developed a stringent threshold method to determine the significance of changes in gels obtained with proteins extracted from hypocotyls at different times after cold shock. This allowed us to reliably detect and characterize the kinetics of a set of seven spots that responded to cold shock and that constitute candidates for a proteome signature of long‐term signal storage.


Biochimie | 2002

Hypothesis: hyperstructures regulate initiation in Escherichia coli and other bacteria

Vic Norris; Maurice Demarty; Derek Raine; Armelle Cabin-Flaman; Loïs Le Sceller

Hyperstructures or modules have been proposed to constitute a level of organisation intermediate between macromolecules and whole cells. In this model of intracellular organisation, hyperstructures compete and collaborate for existence within the membrane and cytoplasm. Those directly involved in the cell cycle include initiation, replication and division hyperstructures based on DnaA, SeqA and the 2-minute cluster, respectively. During the run-up to initiation, the mass to DNA ratio increases and, we contend, differential gene expression leads to some hyperstructures becoming more active and stable than others. This results in a drop in the diversity of hyperstructures, some of which release DnaA as they dissociate, and a DnaA-initiation hyperstructure forms. Subsequent DNA replication and cell division generate different daughter cells containing different hyperstructures. This has the advantage of increasing the phenotypic diversity of the population. In developing this model, we also invoke hyperstructures in the partitioning of origins of replication.


Analytical Chemistry | 2011

Combed Single DNA Molecules Imaged by Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry

Armelle Cabin-Flaman; Anne-Françoise Monnier; Yannick Coffinier; Jean-Nicolas Audinot; David Gibouin; Tom Wirtz; Rabah Boukherroub; H.-N. Migeon; Aaron Bensimon; Laurent Jannière; Camille Ripoll; Vic Norris

Studies of replication, recombination, and rearrangements at the level of individual molecules of DNA are often limited by problems of resolution or of perturbations caused by the modifications that are needed for imaging. The Combing-Imaging by Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry (SIMS) (CIS) method helps solve these problems by combining DNA combing, cesium flooding, and quantitative imaging via the NanoSIMS 50. We show here that CIS can reveal, on the 50 nm scale, individual DNA fibers labeled with different, nonradioactive isotopes and, moreover, that it can quantify these isotopes so as to detect and measure the length of one or more short nucleic acid fragments associated with a longer fiber.


Journal of Molecular Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2005

Hypothesis: Chemotaxis in Escherichia coli Results from Hyperstructure Dynamics

Armelle Cabin-Flaman; Camille Ripoll; Milton H. Saier; Vic Norris

Large assemblies of different molecules and macromolecules,termed hyper structures, have been proposed to be the units of an intermediate level of organisation in bacteria. Here we propose a model for chemotaxis in Escherichia coli in which (1) the size and functioning of the chemo-signalling hyper-structure depends not only on the protein constituents but also on cardiolipin and calcium,(2) the coupled transcription, translation and insertion of nascent proteins (transertion) is a potentially powerful influence in determining the size of the chemo-signalling hyper-structure and therefore in affecting its function, and (3) a single transertional hyper-structure is jointly responsible for the synthesis of chemo-signalling and flagellar proteins so as to divorce the size of the chemo-signalling hyper-structure from the transertion of its constituents.


Journal of Microscopy | 1993

Endopolygalacturonase‐gold complex: Parameters influencing the labelling of pectic acid in the cell walls of flax hypocotyl

Armelle Cabin-Flaman; Alain Jauneau; Claudine Morvan; Maurice Demarty

An enzyme/colloidal‐gold complex was prepared using a purified endopolygalacturonase (endoPGH, E.C. 3.2.1.15). Gold particles with a radius of 4·8 nm were prepared. To stabilize the gold particles, it was necessary to add a minimal amount of enzyme (approximately 0·5 μg) at a pH higher than its isoelectric pH. Under these conditions, the number of protein molecules adsorbed per gold particle was approximately one.


PLOS ONE | 2013

50nm-scale localization of single unmodified, isotopically enriched, proteins in cells.

Anthony Delaune; Armelle Cabin-Flaman; Guillaume Legent; David Gibouin; Caroline Smet-Nocca; Fabrice Lefebvre; Arndt Benecke; Marc Vasse; Camille Ripoll

Imaging single proteins within cells is challenging if the possibility of artefacts due to tagging or to recognition by antibodies is to be avoided. It is generally believed that the biological properties of proteins remain unaltered when 14N isotopes are replaced with 15N. 15N-enriched proteins can be localised by dynamic Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry (D-SIMS). We describe here a novel imaging analysis algorithm to detect a few 15N-enriched proteins - and even a single protein - within a cell using D-SIMS. The algorithm distinguishes statistically between a low local increase in 15N isotopic fraction due to an enriched protein and a stochastic increase due to the background. To determine the number of enriched proteins responsible for the increase in the isotopic fraction, we use sequential D-SIMS images in which we compare the measured isotopic fractions to those expected if 1, 2 or more enriched proteins are present. The number of enriched proteins is the one that gives the best fit between the measured and the expected values. We used our method to localise 15N-enriched thymine DNA glycosylase (TDG) and retinoid X receptor α (RXRα) proteins delivered to COS-7 cells. We show that both a single TDG and a single RXRα can be detected. After 4 h incubation, both proteins were found mainly in the nucleus; RXRα as a monomer or dimer and TDG only as a monomer. After 7 h, RXRα was found in the nucleus as a monomer, dimer or tetramer, whilst TDG was no longer in the nucleus and instead formed clusters in the cytoplasm. After 24 h, RXRα formed clusters in the cytoplasm, and TDG was no longer detectable. In conclusion, single unmodified proteins in cells can be counted and localised with 50 nm resolution by combining D-SIMS with our method of analysis.


DNA Research | 2018

Multiple links connect central carbon metabolism to DNA replication initiation and elongation in Bacillus subtilis

Hamid Nouri; Anne-Françoise Monnier; Solveig Fossum-Raunehaug; Monika Maciąg-Dorszyńska; Armelle Cabin-Flaman; François Képès; Grzegorz Węgrzyn; Agnieszka Szalewska-Pałasz; Vic Norris; Kirsten Skarstad; Laurent Jannière

Abstract DNA replication is coupled to growth by an unknown mechanism. Here, we investigated this coupling by analyzing growth and replication in 15 mutants of central carbon metabolism (CCM) cultivated in three rich media. In about one-fourth of the condition tested, defects in replication resulting from changes in initiation or elongation were detected. This uncovered 11 CCM genes important for replication and showed that some of these genes have an effect in one, two or three media. Additional results presented here and elsewhere (Jannière, L., Canceill, D., Suski, C., et al. (2007), PLoS One, 2, e447.) showed that, in the LB medium, the CCM genes important for DNA elongation (gapA and ackA) are genetically linked to the lagging strand polymerase DnaE while those important for initiation (pgk and pykA) are genetically linked to the replication enzymes DnaC (helicase), DnaG (primase) and DnaE. Our work thus shows that the coupling between growth and replication involves multiple, medium-dependent links between CCM and replication. They also suggest that changes in CCM may affect initiation by altering the functional recruitment of DnaC, DnaG and DnaE at the chromosomal origin, and may affect elongation by altering the activity of DnaE at the replication fork. The underlying mechanism is discussed.


Annals of Botany | 2017

Exploring fungus–plant N transfer in a tripartite ant–plant–fungus mutualism

Céline Leroy; Alain Jauneau; Yves Martinez; Armelle Cabin-Flaman; David Gibouin; Jérôme Orivel; Nathalie Séjalon-Delmas

Background and Aims The plant Hirtella physophora, the ant Allomerus decemarticulatus and a fungus, Trimmatostroma sp., form a tripartite association. The ants manipulate both the plant trichomes and the fungus to build galleries under the stems of their host plant used to capture prey. In addition to its structural role, the fungus also improves nutrient uptake by the host plant. But it still remains unclear whether the fungus plays an indirect or a direct role in transferring nutrients to the plant. This study aimed to trace the transfer of N from the fungus to the plants stem tissue. Methods Optical microscopy and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) were used to investigate the presence of fungal hyphae in the stem tissues. Then, a 15N-labelling experiment was combined with a nanoscale secondary-ion mass spectrometry (NanoSIMS 50) isotopic imaging approach to trace the movement of added 15N from the fungus to plant tissues. Key Results The TEM images clearly showed hyphae inside the stem tissue in the cellular compartment. Also, fungal hyphae were seen perforating the wall of the parenchyma cell. The 15N provisioning of the fungus in the galleries resulted in significant enrichment of the 15N signature of the plants leaves 1 d after the 15N-labelling solution was deposited on the fungus-bearing trap. Finally, NanoSIMS imaging proved that nitrogen was transferred biotrophically from the fungus to the stem tissue. Conclusions This study provides evidence that the fungi are connected endophytically to an ant-plant system and actively transfer nitrogen from 15N-labelling solution to the plants stem tissues. Overall, this study underlines how complex the trophic structure of ant-plant interactions is due to the presence of the fungus and provides insight into the possibly important nutritional aspects and tradeoffs involved in myrmecophyte-ant mutualisms.


F1000Research | 2016

Combining combing and secondary ion mass spectrometry to study DNA on chips using (13)C and (15)N labeling.

Armelle Cabin-Flaman; Anne-Francoise Monnier; Yannick Coffinier; Jean-Nicolas Audinot; David Gibouin; Tom Wirtz; Rabah Boukherroub; H.-N. Migeon; Aaron Bensimon; Laurent Jannière; Camille Ripoll; Victor Norris

Dynamic secondary ion mass spectrometry ( D-SIMS) imaging of combed DNA – the combing, imaging by SIMS or CIS method – has been developed previously using a standard NanoSIMS 50 to reveal, on the 50 nm scale, individual DNA fibers labeled with different, non-radioactive isotopes in vivo and to quantify these isotopes. This makes CIS especially suitable for determining the times, places and rates of DNA synthesis as well as the detection of the fine-scale re-arrangements of DNA and of molecules associated with combed DNA fibers. Here, we show how CIS may be extended to 13C-labeling via the detection and quantification of the 13C 14N - recombinant ion and the use of the 13C: 12C ratio, we discuss how CIS might permit three successive labels, and we suggest ideas that might be explored using CIS.

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H.-N. Migeon

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Anne-Françoise Monnier

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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