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Dive into the research topics where Bertrand Arnou is active.

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Featured researches published by Bertrand Arnou.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Purified E255L mutant SERCA1a and purified PFATP6 are sensitive to SERCA-type inhibitors but insensitive to artemisinins

Delphine Cardi; Alexandre Pozza; Bertrand Arnou; Estelle Marchal; Johannes D. Clausen; Jens Peter Andersen; Sanjeev Krishna; Jesper V. Møller; Marc le Maire; Christine Jaxel

The antimalarial drugs artemisinins have been described as inhibiting Ca2+-ATPase activity of PfATP6 (Plasmodium falciparum ATP6) after expression in Xenopus oocytes. Mutation of an amino acid residue in mammalian SERCA1 (Glu255) to the equivalent one predicted in PfATP6 (Leu) was reported to induce sensitivity to artemisinin in the oocyte system. However, in the present experiments, we found that artemisinin did not inhibit mammalian SERCA1a E255L either when expressed in COS cells or after purification of the mutant expressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Moreover, we found that PfATP6 after expression and purification from S. cerevisiae was insensitive to artemisinin and significantly less sensitive to thapsigargin and 2,5-di(tert-butyl)-1,4-benzohydroquinone than rabbit SERCA1 but retained higher sensitivity to cyclopiazonic acid, another type of SERCA1 inhibitor. Although mammalian SERCA and purified PfATP6 appear to have different pharmacological profiles, their insensitivity to artemisinins suggests that the mechanism of action of this class of drugs on the calcium metabolism in the intact cell is complex and cannot be ascribed to direct inhibition of PfATP6. Furthermore, the successful purification of PfATP6 affords the opportunity to develop new antimalarials by screening for inhibitors against PfATP6.


Biochemistry | 2009

Structural studies of langerin and Birbeck granule: a macromolecular organization model.

Michel Thépaut; Jenny Valladeau; Alessandra Nurisso; Richard A. Kahn; Bertrand Arnou; Corinne Vivès; Sem Saeland; Christine Ebel; Carine Monnier; Colette Dezutter-Dambuyant; Anne Imberty; Franck Fieschi

Dendritic cells, a sentinel immunity cell lineage, include different cell subsets that express various C-type lectins. For example, epidermal Langerhans cells express langerin, and some dermal dendritic cells express DC-SIGN. Langerin is a crucial component of Birbeck granules, the Langerhans cell hallmark organelle, and may have a preventive role toward HIV, by its internalization into Birbeck granules. Since langerin carbohydrate recognition domain (CRD) is crucial for HIV interaction and Birbeck granule formation, we produced the CRD of human langerin and solved its structure at 1.5 A resolution. On this basis gp120 high-mannose oligosaccharide binding has been evaluated by molecular modeling. Hydrodynamic studies reveal a very elongated shape of recombinant langerin extracellular domain (ECD). A molecular model of the langerin ECD, integrating the CRD structure, has been generated and validated by comparison with hydrodynamic parameters. In parallel, Langerhans cells were isolated from human skin. From their analysis by electron microscopy and the langerin ECD model, an ultrastructural organization is proposed for Birbeck granules. To delineate the role of the different langerin domains in Birbeck granule formation, we generated truncated and mutated langerin constructs. After transfection into a fibroblastic cell line, we highlighted, in accordance with our model, the role of the CRD in the membrane zipping occurring in BG formation as well as some contribution of the cytoplasmic domain. Finally, we have shown that langerin ECD triggering with a specific mAb promotes global rearrangements of LC morphology. Our results open the way to the definition of a new membrane deformation mechanism.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Crystal Structure of D351A and P312A Mutant Forms of the Mammalian Sarcoplasmic Reticulum Ca2+-ATPase Reveals Key Events in Phosphorylation and Ca2+ Release

Alexandre Marchand; Anne-Marie Lund Winther; Peter Joakim Holm; Claus Olesen; Cédric Montigny; Bertrand Arnou; Philippe Champeil; Johannes D. Clausen; Bente Vilsen; Jens Peter Andersen; Poul Nissen; Christine Jaxel; Jesper Møller; Marc le Maire

In recent years crystal structures of the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase (SERCA1a), stabilized in various conformations with nucleotide and phosphate analogs, have been obtained. However, structural analysis of mutant forms would also be valuable to address key mechanistic aspects. We have worked out a procedure for affinity purification of SERCA1a heterologously expressed in yeast cells, producing sufficient amounts for crystallization and biophysical studies. We present here the crystal structures of two mutant forms, D351A and P312A, to address the issue whether the profound functional changes seen for these mutants are caused by major structural changes. We find that the structure of P312A with ADP and \batchmode \documentclass[fleqn,10pt,legalpaper]{article} \usepackage{amssymb} \usepackage{amsfonts} \usepackage{amsmath} \pagestyle{empty} \begin{document} \(\mathrm{AlF}_{4}^{-}\) \end{document} bound (3.5-Å resolution) and D351A with AMPPCP or ATP bound (3.4- and 3.7-Å resolution, respectively) deviate only slightly from the complexes formed with that of wild-type ATPase. ATP affinity of the D351A mutant was very high, whereas the affinity for cytosolic Ca2+ was similar to that of the wild type. We conclude from an analysis of data that the extraordinary affinity of the D351A mutant for ATP is caused by the electrostatic effects of charge removal and not by a conformational change. P312A exhibits a profound slowing of the Ca2+-translocating Ca2E1P→E2P transition, which seems to be due to a stabilization of Ca2E1P rather than a destabilization of E2P. This can be accounted for by the strain that the Pro residue induces in the straight M4 helix of the wild type, which is removed upon the replacement of Pro312 with alanine in P312A.


The EMBO Journal | 2013

SERCA mutant E309Q binds two Ca 2+ ions but adopts a catalytically incompetent conformation

Johannes D. Clausen; Maike Bublitz; Bertrand Arnou; Cédric Montigny; Christine Jaxel; Jesper Møller; Poul Nissen; Jens Peter Andersen; Marc le Maire

The sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum Ca2+‐ATPase (SERCA) couples ATP hydrolysis to transport of Ca2+. This directed energy transfer requires cross‐talk between the two Ca2+ sites and the phosphorylation site over 50 Å distance. We have addressed the mechano‐structural basis for this intramolecular signal by analysing the structure and the functional properties of SERCA mutant E309Q. Glu309 contributes to Ca2+ coordination at site II, and a consensus has been that E309Q only binds Ca2+ at site I. The crystal structure of E309Q in the presence of Ca2+ and an ATP analogue, however, reveals two occupied Ca2+ sites of a non‐catalytic Ca2E1 state. Ca2+ is bound with micromolar affinity by both Ca2+ sites in E309Q, but without cooperativity. The Ca2+‐bound mutant does phosphorylate from ATP, but at a very low maximal rate. Phosphorylation depends on the correct positioning of the A‐domain, requiring a shift of transmembrane segment M1 into an ‘up and kinked position’. This transition is impaired in the E309Q mutant, most likely due to a lack of charge neutralization and altered hydrogen binding capacities at Ca2+ site II.


Biochemistry | 2008

Use of glycerol-containing media to study the intrinsic fluorescence properties of detergent-solubilized native or expressed SERCA1a.

Cédric Montigny; Bertrand Arnou; Estelle Marchal; Philippe Champeil

Rapid irreversible inactivation of Ca (2+)-free states of detergent-solubilized SERCA1a (sarco-endoplasmic reticulum calcium ATPase 1a) has so far prevented the use of Trp fluorescence for functional characterization of this ATPase after its solubilization in various detergents. Here we show that using 20-40% glycerol for protection makes this fluorescence characterization possible. Most of the ligand-induced Trp fluorescence changes previously demonstrated to occur for SERCA1a embedded in native sarcoplasmic reticulum membranes were observed in the combined presence of glycerol and detergent, although the results greatly depended on the detergent used, namely, octaethylene glycol mono- n-dodecyl ether (C 12E 8) or dodecyl maltoside (DDM). In particular, at pH 6, we found a C 12E 8-dependent unexpectedly huge reduction in SERCA1a affinity for Ca (2+). We suggest that a major reason for the different effects of the two detergents is that high concentrations of C 12E 8, but not of DDM, slow down the E2 to E1 transition in solubilized and delipidated SERCA1a. Independently of the characterization of the specific effects of various detergents on SR vesicles, our results open the way to functional characterization by Trp fluorescence of heterologously expressed and purified mutants of SERCA1a in the presence of detergent, without their preliminary reconstitution into liposomes. As an example, we used the E309Q mutant to demonstrate our previous suspicion that Ca (2+) binding to Site I of SERCA1a in fact slightly reduces Trp fluorescence, and consequently that the rise in this fluorescence generally observed when two Ca (2+) ions bind to WT SERCA1a mainly reflects Ca (2+) binding at Site II of SERCA1a.


Structure | 2016

Crystal Structure of the Vanadate-Inhibited Ca(2+)-ATPase.

Johannes D. Clausen; Maike Bublitz; Bertrand Arnou; Claus Olesen; Jens Peter Andersen; Jesper Møller; Poul Nissen

Vanadate is the hallmark inhibitor of the P-type ATPase family; however, structural details of its inhibitory mechanism have remained unresolved. We have determined the crystal structure of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase with bound vanadate in the absence of Ca(2+). Vanadate is bound at the catalytic site as a planar VO3(-) in complex with water and Mg(2+) in a dephosphorylation transition-state-like conformation. Validating bound VO3(-) by anomalous difference Fourier maps using long-wavelength data we also identify a hitherto undescribed Cl(-) site near the dephosphorylation site. Crystallization was facilitated by trinitrophenyl (TNP)-derivatized nucleotides that bind with the TNP moiety occupying the binding pocket that normally accommodates the adenine of ATP, rationalizing their remarkably high affinity for E2P-like conformations of the Ca(2+)-ATPase. A comparison of the configurations of bound nucleotide analogs in the E2·VO3(-) structure with that in E2·BeF3(-) (E2P ground state analog) reveals multiple binding modes to the Ca(2+)-ATPase.


Biochemistry | 2008

Mitochondrial bovine ADP/ATP carrier in detergent is predominantly monomeric but also forms multimeric species.

Hugues Nury; Florence Manon; Bertrand Arnou; Marc le Maire; Eva Pebay-Peyroula; Christine Ebel


Biochemistry | 2005

Subunits of the yeast mitochondrial ADP/ATP carrier: cooperation within the dimer.

Vincent Postis; Bertrand Arnou; Guy J.-M. Lauquin; Véronique Trézéguet


Biochemistry | 2008

Two residues of a conserved aromatic ladder of the mitochondrial ADP/ATP carrier are crucial to nucleotide transport.

Claudine David; Bertrand Arnou; Jean-Frédéric Sanchez; Ludovic Pelosi; Gérard Brandolin; Guy J.-M. Lauquin; Véronique Trézéguet


Biochemistry | 2005

Valine 181 is critical for the nucleotide exchange activity of human mitochondrial ADP/ATP carriers in yeast

Véronique Trézéguet; Claudine David; Vincent Postis; Bertrand Arnou; Eva Pebay-Peyroula; Gérard Brandolin; Guy J.-M. Lauquin

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Poul Nissen

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Guy J.-M. Lauquin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Véronique Trézéguet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Christine Ebel

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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