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Featured researches published by Cécile Bouton.


ChemBioChem | 2006

Monitoring in Real Time with a Microelectrode the Release of Reactive Oxygen and Nitrogen Species by a Single Macrophage Stimulated by its Membrane Mechanical Depolarization

Christian Amatore; Stéphane Arbault; Cécile Bouton; Karen Coffi; Jean-Claude Drapier; Hala Ghandour; Yuehong Tong

Macrophages are key cells of the immune system. During phagocytosis, the macrophage engulfs a foreign bacterium, virus, or particle into a vacuole, the phagosome, wherein oxidants are produced to neutralize and decompose the threatening element. These oxidants derive from in situ production of superoxide and nitric oxide by specific enzymes. However, the chemical nature and sequence of release of these compounds is far from being completely determined. The aim of the present work was to study the fundamental mechanism of oxidant release by macrophages at the level of a single cell, in real time and quantitatively. The tip of a microelectrode was positioned at a micrometric distance from a macrophage in a culture to measure oxidative‐burst release by the cell when it was submitted to physical stimulation. The ensuing release of electroactive reactive oxygen and nitrogen species was detected by amperometry and the exact nature of the compounds was characterized through comparison with in vitro electrochemical oxidation of H2O2, ONOO−, NO., and NO2− solutions. These results enabled the calculation of time variations of emission flux for each species and the reconstruction of the original flux of production of primary species, O2.− and NO., by the macrophage.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Regulation of peroxiredoxins by nitric oxide in immunostimulated macrophages.

Alexandre Diet; Kahina Abbas; Cécile Bouton; Blanche Guillon; Flora Tomasello; Simon Fourquet; Michel B. Toledano; Jean-Claude Drapier

Reactive oxygen species and nitric oxide (NO) are capable of both mediating redox-sensitive signal transduction and eliciting cell injury. The interplay between these messengers is quite complex, and intersection of their signaling pathways as well as regulation of their fluxes requires tight control. In this regard, peroxiredoxins (Prxs), a recently identified family of six thiol peroxidases, are central because they reduce H2O2, organic peroxides, and peroxynitrite. Here we provide evidence that endogenously produced NO participates in protection of murine primary macrophages against oxidative and nitrosative stress by inducing Prx I and VI expression at mRNA and protein levels. We also show that NO prevented the sulfinylation-dependent inactivation of 2-Cys Prxs, a reversible overoxidation that controls H2O2 signaling. In addition, studies using macrophages from sulfiredoxin (Srx)-deficient mice indicated that regeneration of 2-Cys Prxs to the active form was dependent on Srx. Last, we show that NO increased Srx expression and hastened Srx-dependent recovery of 2-Cys Prxs. We therefore propose that modulation by NO of Prx expression and redox state, as well as up-regulation of Srx expression, constitutes a novel pathway that contributes to antioxidant response and control of H2O2-mediated signal transduction in mammals.


FEBS Journal | 2009

Frataxin deficiency causes upregulation of mitochondrial Lon and ClpP proteases and severe loss of mitochondrial Fe–S proteins

Blanche Guillon; Anne-Laure Bulteau; Marie Wattenhofer-Donzé; Stéphane Schmucker; Bertrand Friguet; Hélène Puccio; Jean-Claude Drapier; Cécile Bouton

Friedreich ataxia (FRDA) is a rare hereditary neurodegenerative disease characterized by progressive ataxia and cardiomyopathy. The cause of the disease is a defect in mitochondrial frataxin, an iron chaperone involved in the maturation of Fe–S cluster proteins. Several human diseases, including cardiomyopathies, have been found to result from deficiencies in the activity of specific proteases, which have important roles in protein turnover and in the removal of damaged or unneeded protein. In this study, using the muscle creatine kinase mouse heart model for FRDA, we show a clear progressive increase in protein levels of two important mitochondrial ATP‐dependent proteases, Lon and ClpP, in the hearts of muscle creatine kinase mutants. These proteases have been shown to degrade unfolded and damaged proteins in the matrix of mitochondria. Their upregulation, which was triggered at a mid‐stage of the disease through separate pathways, was accompanied by an increase in proteolytic activity. We also demonstrate a simultaneous and significant progressive loss of mitochondrial Fe–S proteins with no substantial change in their mRNA level. The correlative effect of Lon and ClpP upregulation on loss of mitochondrial Fe–S proteins during the progression of the disease may suggest that Fe–S proteins are potential targets of Lon and ClpP proteases in FRDA.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Iron Regulatory Protein 1 Outcompetes Iron Regulatory Protein 2 in Regulating Cellular Iron Homeostasis in Response to Nitric Oxide

Agnieszka Styś; Bruno Galy; Rafał R. Starzyński; Ewa Smuda; Jean-Claude Drapier; Paweł Lipiński; Cécile Bouton

In mammals, iron regulatory proteins (IRPs) 1 and 2 posttranscriptionally regulate expression of genes involved in iron metabolism, including transferrin receptor 1, the ferritin (Ft) H and L subunits, and ferroportin by binding mRNA motifs called iron responsive elements (IREs). IRP1 is a bifunctional protein that mostly exists in a non-IRE-binding, [4Fe-4S] cluster aconitase form, whereas IRP2, which does not assemble an Fe-S cluster, spontaneously binds IREs. Although both IRPs fulfill a trans-regulatory function, only mice lacking IRP2 misregulate iron metabolism. NO stimulates the IRE-binding activity of IRP1 by targeting its Fe-S cluster. IRP2 has also been reported to sense NO, but the intrinsic function of IRP1 and IRP2 in NO-mediated regulation of cellular iron metabolism is controversial. In this study, we exposed bone marrow macrophages from Irp1−/− and Irp2−/− mice to NO and showed that the generated apo-IRP1 was entirely responsible for the posttranscriptional regulation of transferrin receptor 1, H-Ft, L-Ft, and ferroportin. The powerful action of NO on IRP1 also remedies the defects of iron storage found in IRP2-null bone marrow macrophages by efficiently reducing Ft overexpression. We also found that NO-dependent IRP1 activation, resulting in increased iron uptake and reduced iron sequestration and export, maintains enough intracellular iron to fuel the Fe-S cluster biosynthetic pathway for efficient restoration of the citric acid cycle aconitase in mitochondria. Thus, IRP1 is the dominant sensor and transducer of NO for posttranscriptional regulation of iron metabolism and participates in Fe-S cluster repair after exposure to NO.


PLOS ONE | 2009

The First Cellular Models Based on Frataxin Missense Mutations That Reproduce Spontaneously the Defects Associated with Friedreich Ataxia

Nadège Calmels; Stéphane Schmucker; Marie Wattenhofer-Donzé; Alain Martelli; Nadège Vaucamps; Laurence Reutenauer; Nadia Messaddeq; Cécile Bouton; Michel Koenig; Hélène Puccio

Background Friedreich ataxia (FRDA), the most common form of recessive ataxia, is due to reduced levels of frataxin, a highly conserved mitochondrial iron-chaperone involved in iron-sulfur cluster (ISC) biogenesis. Most patients are homozygous for a (GAA)n expansion within the first intron of the frataxin gene. A few patients, either with typical or atypical clinical presentation, are compound heterozygous for the GAA expansion and a micromutation. Methodology We have developed a new strategy to generate murine cellular models for FRDA: cell lines carrying a frataxin conditional allele were used in combination with an EGFP-Cre recombinase to create murine cellular models depleted for endogenous frataxin and expressing missense-mutated human frataxin. We showed that complete absence of murine frataxin in fibroblasts inhibits cell division and leads to cell death. This lethal phenotype was rescued through transgenic expression of human wild type as well as mutant (hFXNG130V and hFXNI154F) frataxin. Interestingly, cells expressing the mutated frataxin presented a FRDA-like biochemical phenotype. Though both mutations affected mitochondrial ISC enzymes activities and mitochondria ultrastructure, the hFXNI154F mutant presented a more severe phenotype with affected cytosolic and nuclear ISC enzyme activities, mitochondrial iron accumulation and an increased sensitivity to oxidative stress. The differential phenotype correlates with disease severity observed in FRDA patients. Conclusions These new cellular models, which are the first to spontaneously reproduce all the biochemical phenotypes associated with FRDA, are important tools to gain new insights into the in vivo consequences of pathological missense mutations as well as for large-scale pharmacological screening aimed at compensating frataxin deficiency.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

RNA Silencing of Mitochondrial m-Nfs1 Reduces Fe-S Enzyme Activity Both in Mitochondria and Cytosol of Mammalian Cells

Cédric Fosset; Marie-Jeanne Chauveau; Blanche Guillon; Frédéric Canal; Jean-Claude Drapier; Cécile Bouton

In prokaryotes and yeast, the general mechanism of biogenesis of iron-sulfur (Fe-S) clusters involves activities of several proteins among which IscS and Nfs1p provide, through cysteine desulfuration, elemental sulfide for Fe-S core formation. Although these proteins have been well characterized, the role of their mammalian homolog in Fe-S cluster biogenesis has never been evaluated. We report here the first functional study that implicates the putative cysteine desulfurase m-Nfs1 in the biogenesis of both mitochondrial and cytosolic mammalian Fe-S proteins. Depletion of m-Nfs1 in cultured fibroblasts through small interfering RNA-based gene silencing significantly inhibited the activities of mitochondrial NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) and succinate-ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex II) of the respiratory chain, as well as aconitase of the Krebs cycle, with no alteration in their protein levels. Activity of cytosolic xanthine oxidase, which holds a [2Fe-2S] cluster, was also specifically reduced, and iron-regulatory protein-1 was converted from its [4Fe-4S] aconitase form to its apo- or RNA-binding form. Reduction of Fe-S enzyme activities occurred earlier and more markedly in the cytosol than in mitochondria, suggesting that there is a mechanism that primarily dedicates m-Nfs1 to the biogenesis of mitochondrial Fe-S clusters in order to maintain cell survival. Finally, depletion of m-Nfs1, which conferred on apo-IRP-1 a high affinity for ferritin mRNA, was associated with the down-regulation of the iron storage protein ferritin.


PLOS ONE | 2018

Dysfunction in the mitochondrial Fe-S assembly machinery leads to formation of the chemoresistant truncated VDAC1 isoform without HIF-1α activation

Ioana Ferecatu; Frédéric Canal; Lucilla Fabbri; Nathalie M. Mazure; Cécile Bouton; Marie-Pierre Golinelli-Cohen

Biogenesis of iron-sulfur clusters (ISC) is essential to almost all forms of life and involves complex protein machineries. This process is initiated within the mitochondrial matrix by the ISC assembly machinery. Cohort and case report studies have linked mutations in ISC assembly machinery to severe mitochondrial diseases. The voltage-dependent anion channel (VDAC) located within the mitochondrial outer membrane regulates both cell metabolism and apoptosis. Recently, the C-terminal truncation of the VDAC1 isoform, termed VDAC1-ΔC, has been observed in chemoresistant late-stage tumor cells grown under hypoxic conditions with activation of the hypoxia-response nuclear factor HIF-1α. These cells harbored atypical enlarged mitochondria. Here, we show for the first time that depletion of several proteins of the mitochondrial ISC machinery in normoxia leads to a similar enlarged mitochondria phenotype associated with accumulation of VDAC1-ΔC. This truncated form of VDAC1 accumulates in the absence of HIF-1α and HIF-2α activations and confers cell resistance to drug-induced apoptosis. Furthermore, we show that when hypoxia and siRNA knock-down of the ISC machinery core components are coupled, the cell phenotype is further accentuated, with greater accumulation of VDAC1-ΔC. Interestingly, we show that hypoxia promotes the downregulation of several proteins (ISCU, NFS1, FXN) involved in the early steps of mitochondrial Fe-S cluster biogenesis. Finally, we have identified the mitochondria-associated membrane (MAM) localized Fe-S protein CISD2 as a link between ISC machinery downregulation and accumulation of anti-apoptotic VDAC1-ΔC. Our results are the first to associate dysfunction in Fe-S cluster biogenesis with cleavage of VDAC1, a form which has previously been shown to promote tumor resistance to chemotherapy, and raise new perspectives for targets in cancer therapy.


Biochemistry | 2018

The H2O2-Resistant Fe–S Redox Switch MitoNEET Acts as a pH Sensor To Repair Stress-Damaged Fe–S Protein

Cécile Mons; Thomas Botzanowski; Anton Nikolaev; Petra Hellwig; Sarah Cianférani; Ewen Lescop; Cécile Bouton; Marie-Pierre Golinelli-Cohen

Human mitoNEET (mNT) is the first identified Fe-S protein of the mammalian outer mitochondrial membrane. Recently, we demonstrated the involvement of mNT in a specific cytosolic pathway dedicated to the reactivation of oxidatively damaged cytosolic aconitase by cluster transfer. In vitro studies using apo-ferredoxin (FDX) reveal that mNT uses an Fe-based redox switch mechanism to regulate the transfer of its cluster. Using the gold standard cluster recipient protein, FDX, we show that this transfer is direct and that only one of the two mNT clusters is transferred when the second one is decomposed. Combining complementary biophysical and biochemical approaches, we show that pH affects both the sensitivity of the cluster to O2 and dimer stability. Around physiological cytosolic pH, the ability of mNT to transfer its cluster is tightly regulated by the pH. Finally, mNT is extremely resistant to H2O2 compared to ISCU and SufB, two other Fe-S cluster transfer proteins, which is consistent with its involvement in a repair pathway of stress-damaged Fe-S proteins. Taken together, our results suggest that the ability of mNT to transfer its cluster to recipient proteins is not only controlled by the redox state of its cluster but also tightly modulated by the pH of the cytosol. We propose that when pathophysiological conditions such as cancer and neurodegenerative diseases dysregulate cellular pH homeostasis, this pH-dependent regulation of mNT is lost, as is the regulation of cellular pathways under the control of mNT.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2005

Friedreich ataxia: the oxidative stress paradox

Hervé Seznec; Delphine Simon; Cécile Bouton; Laurence Reutenauer; Ariane Hertzog; Pawel Golik; Vincent Procaccio; Manisha Patel; Jean-Claude Drapier; Michel Koenig; Hélène Puccio


Biochemistry | 2003

Peroxynitrite and nitric oxide differently target the iron-sulfur cluster and amino acid residues of human Iron regulatory protein 1

Emmanuelle Soum; Xavier Brazzolotto; Charilaos Goussias; Cécile Bouton; Jean-Marc Moulis; Tony A. Mattioli; Jean-Claude Drapier

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Jean-Claude Drapier

Institut de Chimie des Substances Naturelles

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Marie-Pierre Golinelli-Cohen

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Alexandre Diet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Blanche Guillon

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Christian Amatore

École Normale Supérieure

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Frédéric Canal

Paris Descartes University

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Hala Ghandour

École Normale Supérieure

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