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Dive into the research topics where Brigitte Kerfelec is active.

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Featured researches published by Brigitte Kerfelec.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1996

Lipase activation by nonionic detergents. The crystal structure of the porcine lipase-colipase-tetraethylene glycol monooctyl ether complex.

Juan A. Hermoso; David Pignol; Brigitte Kerfelec; Isabelle Crenon; Catherine Chapus; Juan C. Fontecilla-Camps

The crystal structure of the ternary porcine lipase-colipase-tetra ethylene glycol monooctyl ether (TGME) complex has been determined at 2.8 Å resolution. The crystals belong to the cubic space group F23 with a = 289.1 Å and display a strong pseudo-symmetry corresponding to a P23 lattice. Unexpectedly, the crystalline two-domain lipase is found in its open configuration. This indicates that in the presence of colipase, pure micelles of the nonionic detergent TGME are able to activate the enzyme; a process that includes the movement of an N-terminal domain loop (the flap). The effects of TGME and colipase have been confirmed by chemical modification of the active site serine residue using diisopropyl p-nitrophenylphosphate (E600). In addition, the presence of a TGME molecule tightly bound to the active site pocket shows that TGME acts as a substrate analog, thus possibly explaining the inhibitory effect of this nonionic detergent on emulsified substrate hydrolysis at submicellar concentrations. A comparison of the lipase-colipase interactions between our porcine complex and the human-porcine complex (van Tilbeurgh, H., Egloff, M.-P., Martinez, C., Rugani, N., Verger, R., and Cambillau, C. (1993) Nature 362, 814-820) indicates that except for one salt bridge interaction, they are conserved. Analysis of the superimposed complexes shows a 5.4° rotation on the relative position of the N-terminal domains excepting the flap that moves in a concerted fashion with the C-terminal domain. This flexibility may be important for the binding of the complex to the water-lipid interface.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005

Role of the Lid Hydrophobicity Pattern in Pancreatic Lipase Activity

Annick Thomas; Maya Allouche; Frédéric Basyn; Robert Brasseur; Brigitte Kerfelec

Pancreatic lipase is a soluble globular protein that must undergo structural modifications before it can hydrolyze oil droplets coated with bile salts. The binding of colipase and movement of the lipase lid open access to the active site. Mechanisms triggering lid mobility are unclear. The *KNILSQIVDIDGI* fragment of the lid of the human pancreatic lipase is predicted by molecular modeling to be a tilted peptide. Tilted peptides are hydrophobicity motifs involved in membrane fusion and more globally in perturbations of hydrophobic/hydrophilic interfaces. Analysis of this lid fragment predicts no clear consensus of secondary structure that suggests that its structure is not strongly sequence determined and could vary with environment. Point mutations were designed to modify the hydrophobicity profile of the [240–252] fragment and their consequences on the lipase-mediated catalysis were tested. Two mutants, in which the tilted peptide motif was lost, also have poor activity on bile salt-coated oil droplets and cannot be reactivated by colipase. Conversely, one mutant in which a different tilted peptide is created retains colipase dependence. These results suggest that the tilted hydrophobicity pattern of the [240–252] fragment is neither important for colipase binding to lipase, nor for interfacial binding but is important to trigger the maximal catalytic efficiency of lipase in the presence of bile salt.


Chemistry and Physics of Lipids | 1998

The lipase/colipase complex is activated by a micelle: neutron crystallographic evidence.

David Pignol; Juan A. Hermoso; Brigitte Kerfelec; Isabelle Crenon; Catherine Chapus; Juan C. Fontecilla-Camps

The catalytic activity of most lipases depends on the aggregation state of their substrates. It is supposed that lipase activation requires the unmasking and structuring of the enzymes active site through conformational changes involving the presence of oil-in-water droplets. This phenomenon has been called interfacial activation. Here, we report the crystal structure of the pancreatic activated lipase/colipase/micelle complex as determined using the D2O/H2O contrast variation low resolution neutron diffraction method. We find that a disk-shaped micelle interacts extensively with the concave face of colipase (CL) and the distal tip of the C-terminal domain of lipase away from the active site of the enzyme. Such interaction appears to help stabilizing the lipase-CL interaction. Consequently, we conclude that lipase activation is not interfacial but occurs in the aqueous phase and it is mediated by CL and a micelle.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1984

Two-step dissociation of bovine 6S procarboxypeptidase A by dimethylmaleylation

Brigitte Kerfelec; Catherine Chapus; Antoine Puigserver

Reversible condensation of the ternary complex form of bovine pancreatic procarboxypeptidase A with 2,3-dimethyl maleic anhydride was investigated at pH 9.0 and low concentration of reagent over the acylable amino groups. After subsequent modification of only a few lysyl residues, subunit III was found to have been released from the quaternary structure leading to the separation of an apparently native protein devoid of any contaminating subunit II, while dissociation of the remaining binary complex occurred upon further addition of the anhydride. This observation suggests that the electrostatic interactions existing between subunits I and III are more rapidly weakened than those between subunits I and II, probably because fewer lysyl residues are involved and/or there is greater accessibility to the chemical reagent . Although completely inactive on the specific substrates of trypsin, chymotrypsin and elastase, subunit III hydrolyzed p-nitrophenyl acetate at a rate similar to that of chymotrypsin but without any burst of p-nitrophenol, which indicates that the weakly functional active site of the subunit is not quite comparable to that of serine protease zymogens. Subunit III already has some of the functional characteristics of the corresponding active enzymes.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1992

Direct involvement of the C-terminal extremity of pancreatic lipase (403–449) in colipase binding

Catherine Chaillan; Brigitte Kerfelec; Edith Foglizzo; Catherine Chapus

After a selective cleavage of a lipase/colipase cross-linked complex, the colipase has been shown to be bound to a 5 kDa lipase fragment identified as the C-terminal extremity of the chain extending from residue 403 to the C-terminus (Cys 449). The colipase binding site on lipase is therefore localized in a restricted contact area. Moreover, from sequence comparison of lipase from various species, an acidic residue, Glu 440, is likely to be involved in ion pairing with colipase.


FEBS Letters | 2000

Interactions of bile salt micelles and colipase studied through intermolecular nOes

Cyril Dominguez; Corinne Sebban-Kreuzer; Olivier Bornet; Brigitte Kerfelec; Catherine Chapus; Françoise Guerlesquin

Colipase is a small protein (10 kDa), which acts as a protein cofactor for the pancreatic lipase. Various models of the activated ternary complex (lipase–colipase–bile salt micelles) have been proposed using detergent micelles, but no structural information has been established with bile salt micelles. We have investigated the organization of sodium taurodeoxycholate (NaTDC) micelles and their interactions with pig and horse colipases by homonuclear nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. The NMR data supply evidence that the folding of horse colipase is similar to that already described for pig colipase. Intermolecular nuclear Overhauser effects have shown that two conserved aromatic residues interact with NaTDC micelles.


Proteins | 2008

Computational study of colipase interaction with lipid droplets and bile salt micelles.

Brigitte Kerfelec; Maya Allouche; Damien Yann Colin; Marie Hélène Van Eyck; Robert Brasseur; Annick Thomas

Colipase is a key element in the lipase‐catalyzed hydrolysis of dietary lipids. Although devoid of enzymatic activity, colipase promotes the pancreatic lipase activity in physiological intestinal conditions by anchoring the enzyme at the surface of lipid droplets. Analysis of structures of NMR colipase models and simulations of their interactions with various lipid aggregates, lipid droplet, and bile salt micelle, were carried out to determine and to map the lipid binding sites on colipase. We show that the micelle and the oil droplet bind to the same side of colipase 3D structure, mainly the hydrophobic fingers. Moreover, it appears that, although colipase has a single direction of interaction with a lipid interface, it does not bind in a specific way but rather oscillates between different positions. Indeed, different NMR models of colipase insert different fragments of sequence in the interface, either simultaneously or independently. This supports the idea that colipase finger plasticity may be crucial to adapt the lipase activity to different lipid aggregates. Proteins 2008.


FEBS Letters | 1988

Subunit III of ruminant procarboxypeptidase A-S6 complexes and pancreatic proteases E a new family of pancreatic serine endopeptidases?

Christian Cambillau; Brigitte Kerfelec; Martine Sciaky; Catherine Chapus

Subunit III (BSIII) of the bovine ternary complex of procarboxypeptidase A‐S6 (PCPA‐S6), a defective serine endopeptidase‐like protein, actively synthesized by the pancreas of some ruminant species, is highly homologous to human protease E (HPE). Both proteins possess the same atypical disulfide bridge in position 98–99b. They are structurally related to porcine elastase 1 and human elastase 2 (about 56% identity). However, in contrast to those two enzymes which have an overall positive net charge, BSIII and HPE are negatively charged. Three‐dimensional models of BSIII and HPE have been constructed from the crystallographic structure of porcine pancreatic elastase 1. The inhibitor‐binding site for TFAI in these three proteins seems to be very similar; the atypical disulfide bridge does not seem to be involved in this binding site. The specific structural features of BSIII and HPE strongly support the assumption that BSIII is a truncated protease E and that both proteins belong to a separate serine endopeptidase family.


FEBS Letters | 1990

Further studies on the human pancreatic binary complexes involving procarboxypeptidase A.

Maxime Moulard; Thierry Michon; Brigitte Kerfelec; Catherine Chapus

In contrast to procarboxypeptidase B which has always been reported to be secreted by the pancreas as a monomer, procarboxypeptidase A occurs as a monomer and/or associated to one or two functionally different proteins, depending on the species. Recent studies showed that, in the human pancreatic secretion, procarboxypeptidase A is mainly secreted as a 44 kDa protein involved in at least three different binary complexes. As previously reported, two of these complexes associated procarboxypeptidase A to either a glycosylated truncated protease E or zymogen E. In this paper, we identified proelastase 2 as the partner of procarboxypeptidase A in the third complex, thus reporting for the first time the occurrence of a proelastase 2/procarboxypeptidase A binary complex in vertebrates. Moreover, from N‐terminal sequence analyses, the 44 kDa procarboxypeptidase A involved in these complexes was identified as being of the A1 type. Only one type of procarboxypeptidase B, the B1 type, has been detected in the analyzed pancreatic juices, thus emphasizing the previously observed genetic differences between individuals.


FEBS Letters | 1989

Identification of a procarboxypeptidase A-truncated protease E binary complex in human pancreatic juice

Maxime Moulard; Brigitte Kerfelec; Bernard Mallet; Catherine Chapus

The characterization, in human pancreatic juice, of a binary complex associating procarboxypeptidase A with a 32 kDa inactive glycoprotein (G32) is reported in this paper. Free G32 was isolated after dissociation of the binary complex. N‐terminal sequence analysis revealed a complete homology between this protein and human protease E (HPE 1), except for the two strongly hydrophobic N‐terminal residues (Val‐Val) which are missing in G32. This protein might be a truncated protease E highly analogous to the subunit III of the ruminant procarboxypeptidase A‐S6 ternary complex. The analogy with bovine subunit III is further supported by interspecies reassociation experiments showing that bovine procarboxypeptidase A can specifically bind human G32.

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Dive into the Brigitte Kerfelec's collaboration.

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Catherine Chapus

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Isabelle Crenon

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Edith Foglizzo

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Juan A. Hermoso

Spanish National Research Council

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David Pignol

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Antoine Puigserver

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Simone Granon

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Christian Cambillau

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jacques Bonicel

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Juan C. Fontecilla-Camps

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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