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Dive into the research topics where Catherine Vénien-Bryan is active.

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Featured researches published by Catherine Vénien-Bryan.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2011

Generation of protein lattices by fusing proteins with matching rotational symmetry

John Sinclair; Karen M. Davies; Catherine Vénien-Bryan; Martin Noble

The self-assembly of supramolecular structures that are ordered on the nanometre scale is a key objective in nanotechnology. DNA and peptide nanotechnologies have produced various two- and three-dimensional structures, but protein molecules have been underexploited in this area of research. Here we show that the genetic fusion of subunits from protein assemblies that have matching rotational symmetry generates species that can self-assemble into well-ordered, pre-determined one- and two-dimensional arrays that are stabilized by extensive intermolecular interactions. This new class of supramolecular structure provides a way to manufacture biomaterials with diverse structural and functional properties.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

The 3-dimensional structure of a hepatitis C virus p7 ion channel by electron microscopy

Philipp Luik; Chee Chew; Jussi Aittoniemi; Jason Chang; Paul Wentworth; Raymond A. Dwek; Philip C. Biggin; Catherine Vénien-Bryan; Nicole Zitzmann

Infection with the hepatitis C virus (HCV) has a huge impact on global health putting more than 170 million people at risk of developing severe liver disease. The HCV encoded p7 ion channel is essential for the production of infectious viruses. Despite a growing body of functional data, little is known about the 3-dimensional (3D) structure of the channel. Here, we present the 3D structure of a full-length viroporin, the detergent-solubilized hexameric 42 kDa form of the HCV p7 ion channel, as determined by single-particle electron microscopy using the random conical tilting approach. The reconstruction of such a small protein complex was made possible by a combination of high-contrast staining, the symmetry, and the distinct structural features of the channel. The orientation of the p7 monomers within the density was established using immunolabeling with N and C termini specific Fab fragments. The density map at a resolution of ≈16 Å reveals a flower-shaped protein architecture with protruding petals oriented toward the ER lumen. This broadest part of the channel presents a comparatively large surface area providing potential interaction sites for cellular and virally encoded ER resident proteins.


Biophysical Journal | 1998

Characterization of the growth of 2D protein crystals on a lipid monolayer by ellipsometry and rigidity measurements coupled to electron microscopy.

Catherine Vénien-Bryan; Pierre-François Lenne; Cécile Zakri; Anne Renault; Alain Brisson; Jean-François Legrand; Bruno Berge

We present here some sensitive optical and mechanical experiments for monitoring the process of formation and growth of two-dimensional (2D) crystals of proteins on a lipid monolayer at an air-water interface. The adsorption of proteins on the lipid monolayer was monitored by ellipsometry measurements. An instrument was developed to measure the shear elastic constant (in plane rigidity) of the monolayer. These experiments have been done using cholera toxin B subunit (CTB) and annexin V as model proteins interacting with a monosialoganglioside (GM1) and dioleoylphosphatidylserine (DOPS), respectively. Electron microscopy observations of the protein-lipid layer transferred to grids were systematically used as a control. We found a good correlation between the measured in-plane rigidity of the monolayer and the presence of large crystalline domains observed by electron microscopy grids. Our interpretation of these data is that the crystallization process of proteins on a lipid monolayer passes through at least three successive stages: 1) molecular recognition between protein and lipid-ligand, i.e., adsorption of the protein on the lipid layer; 2) nucleation and growth of crystalline patches whose percolation is detected by the appearance of a non-zero in-plane rigidity; and 3) annealing of the layer producing a slower increase of the lateral or in-plane rigidity.


FEBS Journal | 2007

Studies of the ATPase activity of the ABC protein SUR1

Heidi de Wet; Michael V. Mikhailov; Constantina Fotinou; Mathias Dreger; Timothy J. Craig; Catherine Vénien-Bryan; Frances M. Ashcroft

The ATP‐sensitive potassium (KATP) channel couples glucose metabolism to insulin secretion in pancreatic β‐cells. It comprises regulatory sulfonylurea receptor 1 and pore‐forming Kir6.2 subunits. Binding and/or hydrolysis of Mg‐nucleotides at the nucleotide‐binding domains of sulfonylurea receptor 1 stimulates channel opening and leads to membrane hyperpolarization and inhibition of insulin secretion. We report here the first purification and functional characterization of sulfonylurea receptor 1. We also compared the ATPase activity of sulfonylurea receptor 1 with that of the isolated nucleotide‐binding domains (fused to maltose‐binding protein to improve solubility). Electron microscopy showed that nucleotide‐binding domains purified as ring‐like complexes corresponding to ∼ 8 momomers. The ATPase activities expressed as maximal turnover rate [in nmol Pi·s−1·(nmol protein)−1] were 0.03, 0.03, 0.13 and 0.08 for sulfonylurea receptor 1, nucleotide‐binding domain 1, nucleotide‐binding domain 2 and a mixture of nucleotide‐binding domain 1 and nucleotide‐binding domain 2, respectively. Corresponding Km values (in mm) were 0.1, 0.6, 0.65 and 0.56, respectively. Thus sulfonylurea receptor 1 has a lower Km than either of the isolated nucleotide‐binding domains, and a lower maximal turnover rate than nucleotide‐binding domain 2. Similar results were found with GTP, but the Km values were lower. Mutation of the Walker A lysine in nucleotide‐binding domain 1 (K719A) or nucleotide‐binding domain 2 (K1385M) inhibited the ATPase activity of sulfonylurea receptor 1 by 60% and 80%, respectively. Beryllium fluoride (Ki 16 µm), but not MgADP, inhibited the ATPase activity of sulfonylurea receptor 1. In contrast, both MgADP and beryllium fluoride inhibited the ATPase activity of the nucleotide‐binding domains. These data demonstrate that the ATPase activity of sulfonylurea receptor 1 differs from that of the isolated nucleotide‐binding domains, suggesting that the transmembrane domains may influence the activity of the protein.


Structure | 2010

Conformational Changes During the Gating of a Potassium Channel Revealed by Structural Mass Spectrometry

Sayan Gupta; Vassiliy N. Bavro; Rhijuta D'Mello; Stephen J. Tucker; Catherine Vénien-Bryan; Mark R. Chance

Potassium channels are dynamic proteins that undergo large conformational changes to regulate the flow of K(+) ions across the cell membrane. Understanding the gating mechanism of these channels therefore requires methods for probing channel structure in both their open and closed conformations. Radiolytic footprinting is used to study the gating mechanism of the inwardly-rectifying potassium channel KirBac3.1. The purified protein stabilized in either open or closed conformations was exposed to focused synchrotron X-ray beams on millisecond timescales to modify solvent accessible amino acid side chains. These modifications were identified and quantified using high-resolution mass spectrometry. The differences observed between the closed and open states were then used to reveal local conformational changes that occur during channel gating. The results provide support for a proposed gating mechanism of the Kir channel and demonstrate a method of probing the dynamic gating mechanism of other integral membrane proteins and ion channels.


The EMBO Journal | 2010

Separating speed and ability to displace roadblocks during DNA translocation by FtsK

Estelle Crozat; Adrien Meglio; Jean-François Allemand; Claire E Chivers; Mark Howarth; Catherine Vénien-Bryan; Ian Grainge; David J. Sherratt

FtsK translocates dsDNA directionally at >5 kb/s, even under strong forces. In vivo, the action of FtsK at the bacterial division septum is required to complete the final stages of chromosome unlinking and segregation. Despite the availability of translocase structures, the mechanism by which ATP hydrolysis is coupled to DNA translocation is not understood. Here, we use covalently linked translocase subunits to gain insight into the DNA translocation mechanism. Covalent trimers of wild‐type subunits dimerized efficiently to form hexamers with high translocation activity and an ability to activate XerCD‐dif chromosome unlinking. Covalent trimers with a catalytic mutation in the central subunit formed hexamers with two mutated subunits that had robust ATPase activity. They showed wild‐type translocation velocity in single‐molecule experiments, activated translocation‐dependent chromosome unlinking, but had an impaired ability to displace either a triplex oligonucleotide, or streptavidin linked to biotin‐DNA, during translocation along DNA. This separation of translocation velocity and ability to displace roadblocks is more consistent with a sequential escort mechanism than stochastic, hand‐off, or concerted mechanisms.


Biophysical Journal | 1999

Surface-Induced Polymerization of Actin

Anne Renault; Pierre-François Lenne; Cécile Zakri; Achod Aradian; Catherine Vénien-Bryan; François Amblard

Living cells contain a very large amount of membrane surface area, which potentially influences the direction, the kinetics, and the localization of biochemical reactions. This paper quantitatively evaluates the possibility that a lipid monolayer can adsorb actin from a nonpolymerizing solution, induce its polymerization, and form a 2D network of individual actin filaments, in conditions that forbid bulk polymerization. G- and F-actin solutions were studied beneath saturated Langmuir monolayers containing phosphatidylcholine (PC, neutral) and stearylamine (SA, a positively charged surfactant) at PC:SA = 3:1 molar ratio. Ellipsometry, tensiometry, shear elastic measurements, electron microscopy, and dark-field light microscopy were used to characterize the adsorption kinetics and the interfacial polymerization of actin. In all cases studied, actin follows a monoexponential reaction-limited adsorption with similar time constants (approximately 10(3) s). At a longer time scale the shear elasticity of the monomeric actin adsorbate increases only in the presence of lipids, to a 2D shear elastic modulus of mu approximately 30 mN/m, indicating the formation of a structure coupled to the monolayer. Electron microscopy shows the formation of a 2D network of actin filaments at the PC:SA surface, and several arguments strongly suggest that this network is indeed causing the observed elasticity. Adsorption of F-actin to PC:SA leads more quickly to a slightly more rigid interface with a modulus of mu approximately 50 mN/m.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Evidence for the Assembly of a Bacterial Tripartite Multidrug Pump with a Stoichiometry of 3:6:3

Thamarai K. Janganan; Vassiliy N. Bavro; Li Zhang; Dijana Matak-Vinkovic; Nelson P. Barrera; Catherine Vénien-Bryan; Carol V. Robinson; Maria Inês Borges-Walmsley; Adrian R. Walmsley

The multiple transferable resistance (mTR) pump from Neisseria gonorrhoeae MtrCDE multidrug pump is assembled from the inner and outer membrane proteins MtrD and MtrE and the periplasmic membrane fusion protein MtrC. Previously we established that while there is a weak interaction of MtrD and MtrE, MtrC binds with relatively high affinity to both MtrD and MtrE. MtrD conferred antibiotic resistance only when it was expressed with MtrE and MtrC, suggesting that these proteins form a functional tripartite complex in which MtrC bridges MtrD and MtrE. Furthermore, we demonstrated that MtrC interacts with an intraprotomer groove on the surface of MtrE, inducing channel opening. However, a second groove is apparent at the interface of the MtrE subunits, which might also be capable of engaging MtrC. We have now established that MtrC can be cross-linked to cysteines placed in this interprotomer groove and that mutation of residues in the groove impair the ability of the pump to confer antibiotic resistance by locking MtrE in the closed channel conformation. Moreover, MtrE K390C forms an intermolecular disulfide bond with MtrC E149C locking MtrE in the open channel conformation, suggesting that a functional salt bridge forms between these residues during the transition from closed to open channel conformations. MtrC forms dimers that assemble into hexamers, and electron microscopy studies of single particles revealed that these hexamers are arranged into ring-like structures with an internal aperture sufficiently large to accommodate the MtrE trimer. Cross-linking of single cysteine mutants of MtrC to stabilize the dimer interface in the presence of MtrE, trapped an MtrC-MtrE complex with a molecular mass consistent with a stoichiometry of 3:6 (MtrE3MtrC6), suggesting that dimers of MtrC interact with MtrE, presumably by binding to the two grooves. As both MtrE and MtrD are trimeric, our studies suggest that the functional pump is assembled with a stoichiometry of 3:6:3.


Biophysical Journal | 2000

Synchrotron Radiation Diffraction from Two-Dimensional Protein Crystals at the Air/Water Interface

Pierre-François Lenne; Bruno Berge; Anne Renault; Cécile Zakri; Catherine Vénien-Bryan; Sébastien Courty; Fabrice Balavoine; Wilma Bergsma-Schutter; Alain Brisson; G. Grübel; Nathalie Boudet; Oleg Konovalov; Jean-François Legrand

Protein structure determination by classical x-ray crystallography requires three-dimensional crystals that are difficult to obtain for most proteins and especially for membrane proteins. An alternative is to grow two-dimensional (2D) crystals by adsorbing proteins to ligand-lipid monolayers at the surface of water. This confined geometry requires only small amounts of material and offers numerous advantages: self-assembly and ordering over micrometer scales is easier to obtain in two dimensions; although fully hydrated, the crystals are sufficiently rigid to be investigated by various techniques, such as electron crystallography or micromechanical measurements. Here we report structural studies, using grazing incidence synchrotron x-ray diffraction, of three different 2D protein crystals at the air-water interface, namely streptavidine, annexin V, and the transcription factor HupR. Using a set-up of high angular resolution, we observe narrow Bragg reflections showing long-range crystalline order in two dimensions. In the case of streptavidin the angular range of the observed diffraction corresponds to a resolution of 10 A in plane and 14 A normal to the plane. We show that this approach is complementary to electron crystallography but without the need for transfer of the monolayer onto a grid. Moreover, as the 2D crystals are accessible from the buffer solution, the formation and structure of protein complexes can be investigated in situ.


Structure | 2002

Three-Dimensional Structure of Phosphorylase Kinase at 22 Å Resolution and Its Complex with Glycogen Phosphorylase b

Catherine Vénien-Bryan; Edward M Lowe; Nicolas Boisset; Kenneth W. Traxler; Louise N. Johnson; Gerald M. Carlson

Phosphorylase kinase (PhK) integrates hormonal and neuronal signals and is a key enzyme in the control of glycogen metabolism. PhK is one of the largest of the protein kinases and is composed of four types of subunit, with stoichiometry (alphabetagammadelta)(4) and a total MW of 1.3 x 10(6). PhK catalyzes the phosphorylation of inactive glycogen phosphorylase b (GPb), resulting in the formation of active glycogen phosphorylase a (GPa) and the stimulation of glycogenolysis. We have determined the three-dimensional structure of PhK at 22 A resolution by electron microscopy with the random conical tilt method. We have also determined the structure of PhK decorated with GPb at 28 A resolution. GPb is bound toward the ends of each of the lobes with an apparent stoichiometry of four GPb dimers per (alphabetagammadelta)(4) PhK. The PhK/GPb model provides an explanation for the formation of hybrid GPab intermediates in the PhK-catalyzed phosphorylation of GPb.

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Jens Dietrich

Technical University of Berlin

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Fabrice Balavoine

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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