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Dive into the research topics where Bruno Lapeyre is active.

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Featured researches published by Bruno Lapeyre.


The EMBO Journal | 1992

GAR1 is an essential small nucleolar RNP protein required for pre-rRNA processing in yeast.

Jean-Philippe Girard; H Lehtonen; Michèle Caizergues-Ferrer; François Amalric; D Tollervey; Bruno Lapeyre

Among the few proteins of the eukaryotic nucleolus that have been characterized, four proteins, nucleolin, fibrillarin, SSB1 and NSR1, possess a common structural motif, the GAR domain, which is rich in glycine and arginine residues. In order to examine whether the presence of this domain is characteristic of a family of nucleolar proteins, we investigated whether other yeast genes encode proteins containing GAR domains. We report here the sequence and the characterization of a new yeast gene, GAR1, which encodes a protein of 205 residues containing two GAR domains. GAR1 is a non‐ribosomal protein, localized in the yeast nucleolus, which is essential for cell growth. Immunoprecipitation with anti‐GAR1 antibodies shows that GAR1 is associated with a subset of snoRNAs, including snR10 and snR30. Depletion of GAR1 by expression under the control of a regulated GAL promoter, impairs processing of the 35S primary transcript of pre‐rRNA and prevents synthesis of 18S rRNA. GAR1 is thus the fifth member of a family of nucleolar proteins containing GAR domains, and is involved in rRNA metabolism.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1998

Capped mRNA Degradation Intermediates Accumulate in the Yeast spb8-2 Mutant

Bruno Lapeyre; Christine E. Brown; Alan B. Sachs

ABSTRACT mRNA in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is primarily degraded through a pathway that is stimulated by removal of the mRNA cap structure. Here we report that a mutation in the SPB8(YJL124c) gene, initially identified as a suppressor mutation of a poly(A)-binding protein (PAB1) gene deletion, stabilizes the mRNA cap structure. Specifically, we find that thespb8-2 mutation results in the accumulation of capped, poly(A)-deficient mRNAs. The presence of this mutation also allows for the detection of mRNA species trimmed from the 3′ end. These data show that this Sm-like protein family member is involved in the process of mRNA decapping, and they provide an example of 3′-5′ mRNA degradation intermediates in yeast.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2000

The Two Proteins Pat1p (Mrt1p) and Spb8p Interact In Vivo, Are Required for mRNA Decay, and Are Functionally Linked to Pab1p

Claire Bonnerot; Bruno Lapeyre

ABSTRACT We report here the characterization of a bypass suppressor ofpab1Δ which leads to a fourfold stabilization of the unstable MFA2 mRNA. Cloning of the wild-type gene for that suppressor reveals that it is identical to PAT1 (YCR077c), a gene whose product was reported to interact with Top2p.PAT1 is not an essential gene, but its deletion leads to a thermosensitive phenotype. Further analysis has shown thatPAT1 is allelic with mrt1-3, a mutation previously reported to affect decapping and to bypass suppresspab1Δ, as is also the case for dcp1,spb8, and mrt3. Coimmunoprecipitation experiments show that Pat1p is associated with Spb8p. On sucrose gradients, the two proteins cosediment with fractions containing the polysomes. In the absence of Pat1p, however, Spb8p no longer cofractionates with the polysomes, while the removal of Spb8p leads to a sharp decrease in the level of Pat1p. Our results suggest that some of the factors involved in mRNA degradation could be associated with the mRNA that is still being translated, awaiting a specific signal to commit the mRNA to the degradation pathway.


The EMBO Journal | 2002

Trm7p catalyses the formation of two 2′‐O‐methylriboses in yeast tRNA anticodon loop

Lionel Pintard; François Lecointe; Janusz M. Bujnicki; Claire Bonnerot; Henri Grosjean; Bruno Lapeyre

The genome of Saccharomyces cerevisiae encodes three close homologues of the Escherichia coli 2′‐O‐rRNA methyltransferase FtsJ/RrmJ, designated Trm7p, Spb1p and Mrm2p. We present evidence that Trm7p methylates the 2′‐O‐ribose of nucleotides at positions 32 and 34 of the tRNA anticodon loop, both in vivo and in vitro. In a trm7Δ strain, which is viable but grows slowly, translation is impaired, thus indicating that these tRNA modifications could be important for translation efficiency. We discuss the emergence of a family of three 2′‐O‐RNA methyltransferases in Eukaryota and one in Prokaryota from a common ancestor. We propose that each eukaryotic enzyme is located in a different cell compartment, in which it would methylate a different RNA that can adopt a very similar secondary structure.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1990

Molecular cloning of Xenopus fibrillarin, a conserved U3 small nuclear ribonucleoprotein recognized by antisera from humans with autoimmune disease

Bruno Lapeyre; Paolo Mariottini; Colette Mathieu; P Ferrer; F Amaldi; François Amalric; Michèle Caizergues-Ferrer

Autoantibodies against U3 small nuclear ribonucleoprotein are associated with scleroderma autoimmune disease. They were shown to react with fibrillarin, a 34- to 36-kilodalton protein that has been detected in all eukaryotes tested from humans to yeasts. We isolated a 1.6-kilobase cDNA encoding fibrillarin from a Xenopus laevis cDNA library. The protein contains a 79-residue-long Gly-Arg-rich domain in its N-terminal region and a putative RNA-binding domain with ribonucleoprotein consensus sequence in its central portion. This is the first report of cloning of fibrillarin, and the deduced protein sequence is in agreement with the involvement of the protein in a ribonucleoprotein particle.


Biochemical Journal | 2009

The NRAMP6 metal transporter contributes to cadmium toxicity

Rémy Cailliatte; Bruno Lapeyre; Jean-François Briat; Stéphane Mari; Catherine Curie

NRAMP (natural resistance-associated macrophage protein) homologues are evolutionarily conserved bivalent metal transporters. In Arabidopsis, AtNRAMP3 and AtNRAMP4 play a key role in iron nutrition of the germinating plantlet by remobilizing vacuolar iron stores. In the present paper we describe the molecular and physiological characterization of AtNRAMP6. AtNRAMP6 is predominantly expressed in the dry seed embryo and to a lesser extent in aerial parts. Its promoter activity is found diffusely distributed in cotyledons and hypocotyl, as well as in the vascular tissue region of leaf and flower. We show that the AtNRAMP6 transcript coexists with a partially spliced isoform in all shoot cell types tested. When expressed in yeast, AtNRAMP6, but not its misspliced derivative, increased sensitivity to cadmium without affecting cadmium content in the cell. Likewise, Arabidopsis transgenic plants overexpressing AtNRAMP6 were hypersensitive to cadmium, although plant cadmium content remained unchanged. Consistently, a null allele of AtNRAMP6, named nramp6-1, was more tolerant to cadmium toxicity, a phenotype that was reverted by expressing AtNRAMP6 in the mutant background. We used an AtNRAMP6::HA (where HA is haemagglutinin) fusion, shown to be functional in yeast, to demonstrate through immunoblot analysis of membrane fractions and immunofluorescence localization that, in yeast cells, AtNRAMP6 is targeted to a vesicular-shaped endomembrane compartment distinct from the vacuole or mitochondria. We therefore propose that AtNRAMP6 functions as an intracellular metal transporter, whose presence, when modified, is likely to affect distribution/availability of cadmium within the cell.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1988

Structure of the mouse nucleolin gene. The complete sequence reveals that each RNA binding domain is encoded by two independent exons.

Henri-Marc Bourbon; Bruno Lapeyre; François Amalric

Nucleolin is a multifunctional nucleolar protein involved in the synthesis, packaging and maturation of pre-rRNA in eukaryotic cells. We describe the molecular organization and complete sequence of the mouse nucleolin gene, the first higher eukaryotic gene encoding a protein that is both an RNA binding protein involved in rRNA processing and a specific nucleolar protein. The nucleolin gene extends over 9000 base-pairs and is split into 14 exons that encode the 706 amino acid residues of the protein. The promoter sequence is G + C-rich (67% G + C) with four G/C boxes, it lacks bona fide TATA and CAAT boxes and shows capping site heterogeneity. The existence of pyrimidine-rich motifs, similar to those found in the promoter of ribosomal protein genes, could be relevant to the co-regulation of genes whose products are involved in ribosome biogenesis. Nucleolin contains four RNA binding domains, each about 80 amino acid residues long, which include the 11-residue core ribonucleoprotein consensus motif. Each domain is encoded by two exons, with an intervening sequence interrupting the conserved core motif at roughly the same amino acid position. This latter result suggests that the RNA binding domains are composed of two independent subdomains, whose functions remain to be determined.


The EMBO Journal | 2002

MRM2 encodes a novel yeast mitochondrial 21S rRNA methyltransferase

Lionel Pintard; Janusz M. Bujnicki; Bruno Lapeyre; Claire Bonnerot

Mitochondria of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae assemble their ribosomes from ribosomal proteins, encoded by the nuclear genome (with one exception), and rRNAs of 15S and 21S, encoded by the mitochondrial genome. Unlike cytoplasmic rRNA, which is highly modified, mitochondrial rRNA contains only three modified nucleotides: a pseudouridine (Ψ2918) and two 2′‐O‐methylated riboses (Gm2270 and Um2791) located at the peptidyl transferase centre of 21S rRNA. We demonstrate here that the yeast nuclear genome encodes a mitochondrial protein, named Mrm2, which is required for methylating U2791 of 21S rRNA, both in vivo and in vitro. Deletion of the MRM2 gene causes thermosensitive respiration and leads to rapid loss of mitochondrial DNA. We propose that Mrm2p belongs to a new class of three eukaryotic RNA‐modifying enzymes and is the orthologue of FtsJ/RrmJ, which methylates a nucleotide of the peptidyl transferase centre of Escherichia coli 23S rRNA that is homologous to U2791 of 21S rRNA. Our data suggest that this universally conserved modified nucleotide plays an important function in vivo, possibly by inducing conformational rearrangement of the peptidyl transferase centre.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2000

Spb1p is a yeast nucleolar protein associated with Nop1p and Nop58p that is able to bind S-adenosyl-L-methionine in vitro.

Lionel Pintard; Dieter Kressler; Bruno Lapeyre

ABSTRACT We present here the characterization of SPB1, an essential yeast gene that is required for ribosome synthesis. A cold-sensitive allele for that gene (referred to here asspb1-1) had been previously isolated as a suppressor of a mutation affecting the poly(A)-binding protein gene (PAB1) and a thermosensitive allele (referred to here asspb1-2) was isolated in a search for essential genes required for gene silencing in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The two mutants are able to suppress the deletion of PAB1, and they both present a strong reduction in their 60S ribosomal subunit content. In an spb1-2 strain grown at the restrictive temperature, processing of the 27S pre-rRNA into mature 25S rRNA and 5.8S is completely abolished and production of mature 18S is reduced, while the abnormal 23S species is accumulated. Spb1p is a 96.5-kDa protein that is localized to the nucleolus. Coimmunoprecipitation experiments show that Spb1p is associated in vivo with the nucleolar proteins Nop1p and Nop5/58p. Protein sequence analysis reveals that Spb1p possesses a putative S-adenosyl-l-methionine (AdoMet)-binding domain, which is common to the AdoMet-dependent methyltransferases. We show here that Spb1p is able to bind [3H]AdoMet in vitro, suggesting that it is a novel methylase, whose possible substrates will be discussed.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998

Gar1p Binds to the Small Nucleolar RNAs snR10 and snR30 in Vitro through a Nontypical RNA Binding Element

Claudia Bagni; Bruno Lapeyre

The nucleolar proteins Gar1p and fibrillarin possess a typical nucleolar glycine/arginine-rich domain and belong to ribonucleoprotein particles. Both proteins are essential for yeast cell growth and are required for pre-rRNA processing. In addition, Gar1p is involved in pre-rRNA pseudouridylation, whereas fibrillarin is required for pre-rRNA methylation. Gar1p and fibrillarin are each associated with a different subset of the small nucleolar RNAs (snoRNAs). Gar1p is co-immunoprecipitated with the H/ACA family of snoRNAs, whereas fibrillarin is co-immunoprecipitated with the C/D family. However, attempts to demonstrate direct interactions between fibrillarin and snoRNAs have failed, and such interactions between Gar1p and the H/ACA snoRNAs had not yet been reported. Among the H/ACA snoRNAs associated with Gar1p, one can distinguish a large group of snoRNAs that are not essential in yeast and serve as guides for pseudouridine synthesis onto the pre-rRNA molecule. In contrast, the two snoRNAs snR10 and snR30 are required for normal cell growth and for pre-rRNA cleavage. We show here that Gar1p interacts in vitro directly and specifically with these two snoRNAs. Deletion analysis of Gar1p indicates that a major RNA binding element, which is extremely well conserved throughout evolution, lies in the middle of the protein. However, this domain alone binds poorly to the target RNAs and an accessory domain is required to restore efficient binding. The accessory domain can be either one of the glycine/arginine-rich domains or a second element of the core of the protein that is highly conserved between different species.

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Michèle Caizergues-Ferrer

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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François Amalric

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jean-Philippe Girard

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Claire Bonnerot

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Colette Mathieu

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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D Tollervey

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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F Amaldi

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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François Lecointe

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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