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Dive into the research topics where Bruno Franzetti is active.

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Featured researches published by Bruno Franzetti.


EMBO Reports | 2004

Adaptation to extreme environments: macromolecular dynamics in bacteria compared in vivo by neutron scattering

Moeava Tehei; Bruno Franzetti; Dominique Madern; Margaret Ginzburg; Ben Zion Ginzburg; Marie-Thérèse Giudici-Orticoni; Mireille Bruschi; Giuseppe Zaccai

Mean macromolecular dynamics was quantified in vivo by neutron scattering in psychrophile, mesophile, thermophile and hyperthermophile bacteria. Root mean square atomic fluctuation amplitudes determining macromolecular flexibility were found to be similar for each organism at its physiological temperature (∼1 Å in the 0.1 ns timescale). Effective force constants determining the mean macromolecular resilience were found to increase with physiological temperature from 0.2 N/m for the psychrophiles, which grow at 4°C, to 0.6 N/m for the hyperthermophiles (85°C), indicating that the increase in stabilization free energy is dominated by enthalpic rather than entropic terms. Larger resilience allows macromolecular stability at high temperatures, while maintaining flexibility within acceptable limits for biological activity.


The EMBO Journal | 2002

Tetrahedral aminopeptidase: a novel large protease complex from archaea

Bruno Franzetti; Guy Schoehn; J.-F. Hernandez; M. Jaquinod; Rob W. H. Ruigrok; Giuseppe Zaccai

A dodecameric protease complex with a tetrahedral shape (TET) was isolated from Haloarcula marismortui, a salt‐loving archaeon. The 42 kDa monomers in the complex are homologous to metal‐binding, bacterial aminopeptidases. TET has a broad aminopeptidase activity and can process peptides of up to 30–35 amino acids in length. TET has a central cavity that is accessible through four narrow channels (<17 Å wide) and through four wider channels (21 Å wide). This architecture is different from that of all the proteolytic complexes described to date that are made up by rings or barrels with a single central channel and only two openings.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Neutron scattering reveals extremely slow cell water in a Dead Sea organism

Moeava Tehei; Bruno Franzetti; Kathleen Wood; Frank Gabel; Elisa Fabiani; Marion Jasnin; Michaela Zamponi; Dieter Oesterhelt; Giuseppe Zaccai; Margaret Ginzburg; Ben-Zion Ginzburg

Intracellular water dynamics in Haloarcula marismortui, an extremely halophilic organism originally isolated from the Dead Sea, was studied by neutron scattering. The water in centrifuged cell pellets was examined by means of two spectrometers, IN6 and IN16, sensitive to motions with time scales of 10 ps and 1 ns, respectively. From IN6 data, a translational diffusion constant of 1.3 × 10−5 cm2 s−1 was determined at 285 K. This value is close to that found previously for other cells and close to that for bulk water, as well as that of the water in the 3.5 M NaCl solution bathing the cells. A very slow water component was discovered from the IN16 data. At 285 K the water-protons of this component displays a residence time of 411 ps (compared with a few ps in bulk water). At 300 K, the residence time dropped to 243 ps and was associated with a translational diffusion of 9.3 × 10−8 cm2 s−1, or 250 times lower than that of bulk water. This slow water accounts for ≈76% of cell water in H. marismortui. No such water was found in Escherichia coli measured on BSS, a neutron spectrometer with properties similar to those of IN16. It is hypothesized that the slow mobility of a large part of H. marismortui cell water indicates a specific water structure responsible for the large amounts of K+ bound within these extremophile cells.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Fast Two-Dimensional NMR Spectroscopy of High Molecular Weight Protein Assemblies

Carlos Amero; Paul Schanda; M. Asunción Durá; Isabel Ayala; Dominique Marion; Bruno Franzetti; Bernhard Brutscher; Jérôme Boisbouvier

An optimized NMR experiment that combines the advantages of methyl-TROSY and SOFAST-HMQC has been developed. It allows the recording of high quality methyl (1)H-(13)C correlation spectra of protein assemblies of several hundreds of kDa in a few seconds. The SOFAST-methyl-TROSY-based experiment offers completely new opportunities for the study of structural and dynamic changes occurring in molecular nanomachines while they perform their biological function in vitro.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005

Neutron scattering reveals the dynamic basis of protein adaptation to extreme temperature

Moeava Tehei; Dominique Madern; Bruno Franzetti; Giuseppe Zaccai

To explore protein adaptation to extremely high temperatures, two parameters related to macromolecular dynamics, the mean square atomic fluctuation and structural resilience, expressed as a mean force constant, were measured by neutron scattering for hyperthermophilic malate dehydrogenase from Methanococcus jannaschii and a mesophilic homologue, lactate dehydrogenase from Oryctolagus cunniculus (rabbit) muscle. The root mean square fluctuations, defining flexibility, were found to be similar for both enzymes (1.5 Å) at their optimal activity temperature. Resilience values, defining structural rigidity, are higher by an order of magnitude for the high temperature-adapted protein (0.15 Newtons/meter for O. cunniculus lactate dehydrogenase and 1.5 Newtons/meter for M. jannaschii malate dehydrogenase). Thermoadaptation appears to have been achieved by evolution through selection of appropriate structural rigidity in order to preserve specific protein structure while allowing the conformational flexibility required for activity.


Journal of Biomolecular NMR | 2011

A systematic mutagenesis-driven strategy for site-resolved NMR studies of supramolecular assemblies

Carlos Amero; M. Asunción Durá; Marjolaine Noirclerc-Savoye; Arnaud Perollier; Benoit Gallet; Michael J. Plevin; Thierry Vernet; Bruno Franzetti; Jérôme Boisbouvier

Obtaining sequence-specific assignments remains a major bottleneck in solution NMR investigations of supramolecular structure, dynamics and interactions. Here we demonstrate that resonance assignment of methyl probes in high molecular weight protein assemblies can be efficiently achieved by combining fast NMR experiments, residue-type-specific isotope-labeling and automated site-directed mutagenesis. The utility of this general and straightforward strategy is demonstrated through the characterization of intermolecular interactions involving a 468-kDa multimeric aminopeptidase, PhTET2.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

An archaeal peptidase assembles into two different quaternary structures: A tetrahedron and a giant octahedron.

Guy Schoehn; Frédéric M. D. Vellieux; M. Asunción Durá; Véronique Receveur-Bréchot; Céline M. S. Fabry; Rob W. H. Ruigrok; Christine Ebel; Alain Roussel; Bruno Franzetti

Cellular proteolysis involves large oligomeric peptidases that play key roles in the regulation of many cellular processes. The cobalt-activated peptidase TET1 from the hyperthermophilic Archaea Pyrococcus horikoshii (PhTET1) was found to assemble as a 12-subunit tetrahedron and as a 24-subunit octahedral particle. Both quaternary structures were solved by combining x-ray crystallography and cryoelectron microscopy data. The internal organization of the PhTET1 particles reveals highly self-compartmentalized systems made of networks of access channels extended by vast catalytic chambers. The two edifices display aminopeptidase activity, and their organizations indicate substrate navigation mechanisms different from those described in other large peptidase complexes. Compared with the tetrahedron, the octahedron forms a more expanded hollow structure, representing a new type of giant peptidase complex. PhTET1 assembles into two different quaternary structures because of quasi-equivalent contacts that previously have only been identified in viral capsids.


Extremophiles | 2015

Microbial diversity and adaptation to high hydrostatic pressure in deep-sea hydrothermal vents prokaryotes

Mohamed Jebbar; Bruno Franzetti; Eric Girard; Philippe Oger

Prokaryotes inhabiting in the deep sea vent ecosystem will thus experience harsh conditions of temperature, pH, salinity or high hydrostatic pressure (HHP) stress. Among the fifty-two piezophilic and piezotolerant prokaryotes isolated so far from different deep-sea environments, only fifteen (four Bacteria and eleven Archaea) that are true hyper/thermophiles and piezophiles have been isolated from deep-sea hydrothermal vents; these belong mainly to the Thermococcales order. Different strategies are used by microorganisms to thrive in deep-sea hydrothermal vents in which “extreme” physico-chemical conditions prevail and where non-adapted organisms cannot live, or even survive. HHP is known to impact the structure of several cellular components and functions, such as membrane fluidity, protein activity and structure. Physically the impact of pressure resembles a lowering of temperature, since it reinforces the structure of certain molecules, such as membrane lipids, and an increase in temperature, since it will also destabilize other structures, such as proteins. However, universal molecular signatures of HHP adaptation are not yet known and are still to be deciphered.


Molecular Microbiology | 2009

The structural and biochemical characterizations of a novel TET peptidase complex from Pyrococcus horikoshii reveal an integrated peptide degradation system in hyperthermophilic Archaea.

M. Asunción Durá; Eva Rosenbaum; Amédé Larabi; Frank Gabel; Frédéric M. D. Vellieux; Bruno Franzetti

The structure of a 468 kDa peptidase complex from the hyperthermophile Pyrococcus horikoshii has been solved at 1.9 Å resolution. The monomer contains the M42 peptidase typical catalytic domain, and a dimerization domain that allows the formation of dimers that assemble as a 12‐subunit self‐compartmentalized tetrahedron, similar to those described for the TET peptidases. The biochemical analysis shows that the enzyme is cobalt‐activated and cleaves peptides by a non‐processive mechanism. Consequently, this protein represents the third TET peptidase complex described in P. horikoshii, thereby called PhTET3. It is a lysyl aminopeptidase with a strong preference for basic residues, which are poorly cleaved by PhTET1 and PhTET2. The structural analysis of PhTET3 and its comparison with PhTET1 and PhTET2 unravels common features explaining the general mode of action of the TET molecular machines as well as differences that can be associated with strong substrate discriminations. The question of the stability of the TET assemblies under extreme temperatures has been addressed. PhTET3 displays its maximal activity at 95°C and small‐angle neutron scattering experiments at 90°C demonstrate the absence of quaternary structure alterations after extensive incubation times. In conclusion, PhTETs are complementary peptide destruction machines that may play an important role in the metabolism of P. horikoshii.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2014

Small-angle neutron scattering reveals the assembly mode and oligomeric architecture of TET, a large, dodecameric aminopeptidase.

Alexandre Appolaire; Eric Girard; Matteo Colombo; M. Asunción Durá; Martine Moulin; Michael Härtlein; Bruno Franzetti; Frank Gabel

The present work illustrates that small-angle neutron scattering, deuteration and contrast variation, combined with in vitro particle reconstruction, constitutes a very efficient approach to determine subunit architectures in large, symmetric protein complexes. In the case of the 468 kDa heterododecameric TET peptidase machine, it was demonstrated that the assembly of the 12 subunits is a highly controlled process and represents a way to optimize the catalytic efficiency of the enzyme.

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Dive into the Bruno Franzetti's collaboration.

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M. Asunción Durá

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Eric Girard

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Frank Gabel

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Giuseppe Zaccai

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Carlos Amero

Universidad Autónoma del Estado de Morelos

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Dominique Madern

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Isabel Ayala

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jérôme Boisbouvier

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Marjolaine Noirclerc-Savoye

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Philippe Oger

École normale supérieure de Lyon

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