Christian Chalut
University of Toulouse
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Featured researches published by Christian Chalut.
PLOS Pathogens | 2009
Catherine Astarie-Dequeker; Laurent Le Guyader; Wladimir Malaga; Fam-Ky Seaphanh; Christian Chalut; André Lopez; Christophe Guilhot
Phthiocerol dimycocerosates (DIM) are major virulence factors of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), in particular during the early step of infection when bacilli encounter their host macrophages. However, their cellular and molecular mechanisms of action remain unknown. Using Mtb mutants deleted for genes involved in DIM biosynthesis, we demonstrated that DIM participate both in the receptor-dependent phagocytosis of Mtb and the prevention of phagosomal acidification. The effects of DIM required a state of the membrane fluidity as demonstrated by experiments conducted with cholesterol-depleting drugs that abolished the differences in phagocytosis efficiency and phagosome acidification observed between wild-type and mutant strains. The insertion of a new cholesterol-pyrene probe in living cells demonstrated that the polarity of the membrane hydrophobic core changed upon contact with Mtb whereas the lateral diffusion of cholesterol was unaffected. This effect was dependent on DIM and was consistent with the effect observed following DIM insertion in model membrane. Therefore, we propose that DIM control the invasion of macrophages by Mtb by targeting lipid organisation in the host membrane, thereby modifying its biophysical properties. The DIM-induced changes in lipid ordering favour the efficiency of receptor-mediated phagocytosis of Mtb and contribute to the control of phagosomal pH driving bacilli in a protective niche.
PLOS Pathogens | 2013
Patricia Martin; Ingrid Marcq; Giuseppe Magistro; Marie Penary; Christophe Garcie; Delphine Payros; Michèle Boury; Maïwenn Olier; Jean-Philippe Nougayrède; Marc Audebert; Christian Chalut; Sören Schubert; Eric Oswald
In Escherichia coli, the biosynthetic pathways of several small iron-scavenging molecules known as siderophores (enterobactin, salmochelins and yersiniabactin) and of a genotoxin (colibactin) are known to require a 4′-phosphopantetheinyl transferase (PPTase). Only two PPTases have been clearly identified: EntD and ClbA. The gene coding for EntD is part of the core genome of E. coli, whereas ClbA is encoded on the pks pathogenicity island which codes for colibactin. Interestingly, the pks island is physically associated with the high pathogenicity island (HPI) in a subset of highly virulent E. coli strains. The HPI carries the gene cluster required for yersiniabactin synthesis except for a gene coding its cognate PPTase. Here we investigated a potential interplay between the synthesis pathways leading to the production of siderophores and colibactin, through a functional interchangeability between EntD and ClbA. We demonstrated that ClbA could contribute to siderophores synthesis. Inactivation of both entD and clbA abolished the virulence of extra-intestinal pathogenic E. coli (ExPEC) in a mouse sepsis model, and the presence of either functional EntD or ClbA was required for the survival of ExPEC in vivo. This is the first report demonstrating a connection between multiple phosphopantetheinyl-requiring pathways leading to the biosynthesis of functionally distinct secondary metabolites in a given microorganism. Therefore, we hypothesize that the strict association of the pks island with HPI has been selected in highly virulent E. coli because ClbA is a promiscuous PPTase that can contribute to the synthesis of both the genotoxin and siderophores. The data highlight the complex regulatory interaction of various virulence features with different functions. The identification of key points of these networks is not only essential to the understanding of ExPEC virulence but also an attractive and promising target for the development of anti-virulence therapy strategies.
PLOS Pathogens | 2012
Cécile Leblanc; Thomas Prudhomme; Guillaume Tabouret; Aurélie Ray; Sophie Burbaud; Stéphanie Cabantous; Lionel Mourey; Christophe Guilhot; Christian Chalut
The cell envelope of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the causative agent of tuberculosis in humans, contains lipids with unusual structures. These lipids play a key role in both virulence and resistance to the various hostile environments encountered by the bacteria during infection. They are synthesized by complex enzymatic systems, including type-I polyketide synthases and type-I and -II fatty acid synthases, which require a post-translational modification to become active. This modification consists of the covalent attachment of the 4′-phosphopantetheine moiety of Coenzyme A catalyzed by phosphopantetheinyl transferases (PPTases). PptT, one of the two PPTases produced by mycobacteria, is involved in post-translational modification of various type-I polyketide synthases required for the formation of both mycolic acids and lipid virulence factors in mycobacteria. Here we identify PptT as a new target for anti-tuberculosis drugs; we address all the critical issues of target validation to demonstrate that PptT can be used to search for new drugs. We confirm that PptT is essential for the growth of M. bovis BCG in vitro and show that it is required for persistence of M. bovis BCG in both infected macrophages and immunodeficient mice. We generated a conditional expression mutant of M. tuberculosis, in which the expression of the pptT gene is tightly regulated by tetracycline derivatives. We used this construct to demonstrate that PptT is required for the replication and survival of the tubercle bacillus during the acute and chronic phases of infection in mice. Finally, we developed a robust and miniaturized assay based on scintillation proximity assay technology to search for inhibitors of PPTases, and especially of PptT, by high-throughput screening. Our various findings indicate that PptT meets the key criteria for being a therapeutic target for the treatment of mycobacterial infections.
FEBS Journal | 2010
Roxane Siméone; Mathieu Léger; Patricia Constant; Wladimir Malaga; Hedia Marrakchi; Mamadou Daffé; Christophe Guilhot; Christian Chalut
Phthiocerol and phthiodiolone dimycocerosates (DIMs) and phenolic glycolipids (PGLs) are complex lipids located at the cell surface of Mycobacterium tuberculosis that play a key role in the pathogenicity of tuberculosis. Most of the genes involved in the biosynthesis of these compounds are clustered on a region of the M. tuberculosis chromosome, the so‐called DIM + PGL locus. Among these genes, four ORFs encode FadD proteins, which activate and transfer biosynthetic intermediates onto various polyketide synthases that catalyze the formation of these lipids. In this study, we investigated the roles of FadD22, FadD26 and FadD29 in the biosynthesis of DIMs and related compounds. Biochemical characterization of the lipids produced by a spontaneous Mycobacterium bovis BCG mutant harboring a large deletion within fadD26 revealed that FadD26 is required for the production of DIMs but not of PGLs. Additionally, using allelic exchange recombination, we generated an unmarked M. tuberculosis mutant containing a deletion within fadD29. Biochemical analyses of this strain revealed that, like fadD22, this gene encodes a protein that is specifically involved in the biosynthesis of PGLs, indicating that both FadD22 and FadD29 are responsible for one particular reaction in the PGL biosynthetic pathway. These findings were also supported by in vitro enzymatic studies showing that these enzymes have different properties, FadD22 displaying a p‐hydroxybenzoyl‐AMP ligase activity, and FadD29 a fatty acyl‐AMP ligase activity. Altogether, these data allowed us to precisely define the functions fulfilled by the various FadD proteins encoded by the DIM + PGL cluster.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2007
Roxane Simeone; Patricia Constant; Christophe Guilhot; Mamadou Daffé; Christian Chalut
Phthiocerol dimycocerosates (DIM) and phenolglycolipids (PGL) are functionally important surface-exposed lipids of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Their biosynthesis involves the products of several genes clustered in a 70-kb region of the M. tuberculosis chromosome. Among these products is PpsD, one of the modular type I polyketide synthases responsible for the synthesis of the lipid core common to DIM and PGL. Bioinformatic analyses have suggested that this protein lacks a functional enoyl reductase activity domain required for the synthesis of these lipids. We have identified a gene, Rv2953, that putatively encodes an enoyl reductase. Mutation in Rv2953 prevents conventional DIM formation and leads to the accumulation of a novel DIM-like product. This product is unsaturated between C-4 and C-5 of phthiocerol. Consistently, complementation of the mutant with a functional pks15/1 gene from Mycobacterium bovis BCG resulted in the accumulation of an unsaturated PGL-like substance. When an intact Rv2953 gene was reintroduced into the mutant strain, the phenotype reverted to the wild type. These findings indicate that Rv2953 encodes a trans-acting enoyl reductase that acts with PpsD in phthiocerol and phenolphthiocerol biosynthesis.
FEBS Journal | 2007
Roxane Simeone; Patricia Constant; Wladimir Malaga; Christophe Guilhot; Mamadou Daffé; Christian Chalut
Phthiocerol dimycocerosates and related compounds are important molecules in the biology of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, playing a key role in the permeability barrier and in pathogenicity. Both phthiocerol dimycocerosates, the major compounds, and phthiodiolone dimycocerosates, the minor constituents, are found in the cell envelope of M. tuberculosis, but their specific roles in the biology of the tubercle bacillus have not been established yet. According to the current model of their biosynthesis, phthiocerol is produced from phthiodiolone through a two‐step process in which the keto group is first reduced and then methylated. We have previously identified the methyltransferase enzyme that is involved in this process, encoded by the gene Rv2952 in M. tuberculosis. In this study, we report the construction and biochemical analyses of an M. tuberculosis strain mutated in gene Rv2951c. This mutation prevents the formation of phthiocerol and phenolphthiocerol derivatives, but leads to the accumulation of phthiodiolone dimycocerosates and glycosylated phenolphthiodiolone dimycocerosates. These results provide the formal evidence that Rv2951c encodes the ketoreductase catalyzing the reduction of phthiodiolone and phenolphthiodiolone to yield phthiotriol and phenolphthiotriol, which are the substrates of the methyltransferase encoded by gene Rv2952. We also compared the resistance to SDS and replication in mice of the Rv2951c mutant, deficient in synthesis of phthiocerol dimycocerosates but producing phthiodiolone dimycocerosates, with those of a wild‐type strain and a mutant without phthiocerol and phthiodiolone dimycocerosates. The results established the functional redundancy between phthiocerol and phthiodiolone dimycocerosates in both the protection of the mycobacterial cell and the pathogenicity of M. tuberculosis in mice.
Cellular Microbiology | 2017
Jacques Augenstreich; Ainhoa Arbués; Roxane Simeone; Evert Haanappel; Alice Wegener; Fadel Sayes; Fabien Le Chevalier; Christian Chalut; Wladimir Malaga; Christophe Guilhot; Roland Brosch; Catherine Astarie-Dequeker
Although phthiocerol dimycocerosates (DIM) are major virulence factors of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), the causative agent of human tuberculosis, little is known about their mechanism of action. Localized in the outer membrane of mycobacterial pathogens, DIM are predicted to interact with host cell membranes. Interaction with eukaryotic membranes is a property shared with another virulence factor of Mtb, the early secretory antigenic target EsxA (also known as ESAT‐6). This small protein, which is secreted by the type VII secretion system ESX‐1 (T7SS/ESX‐1), is involved in phagosomal rupture and cell death induced by virulent mycobacteria inside host phagocytes. In this work, by the use of several knock‐out or knock‐in mutants of Mtb or Mycobacterium bovis BCG strains and different cell biological assays, we present conclusive evidence that ESX‐1 and DIM act in concert to induce phagosomal membrane damage and rupture in infected macrophages, ultimately leading to host cell apoptosis. These results identify an as yet unknown function for DIM in the infection process and open up a new research field for the study of the interaction of lipid and protein virulence factors of Mtb.
Chemistry & Biology | 2014
Sabine Gavalda; Fabienne Bardou; Françoise Laval; Cécile Bon; Wladimir Malaga; Christian Chalut; Christophe Guilhot; Lionel Mourey; Mamadou Daffé; Annaïk Quémard
Mycolate-containing compounds constitute major strategic elements of the protective coat surrounding the tubercle bacillus. We have previously shown that FAAL32-Pks13 polyketide synthase catalyzes the condensation reaction, which produces α-alkyl β-ketoacids, direct precursors of mycolic acids. In contrast to the current biosynthesis model, we show here that Pks13 catalyzes itself the release of the neosynthesized products and demonstrate that this function is carried by its thioesterase-like domain. Most importantly, in agreement with the prediction of a trehalose-binding pocket in its catalytic site, this domain exhibits an acyltransferase activity and transfers Pks13s products onto an acceptor molecule, mainly trehalose, leading to the formation of the trehalose monomycolate precursor. Thus, this work allows elucidation of the hinge step of the mycolate-containing compound biosynthesis pathway. Above all, it highlights a unique mechanism of transfer of polyketide synthase products in mycobacteria, which is distinct from the conventional intervention of the discrete polyketide-associated protein (Pap)-type acyltransferases.
Tuberculosis | 2016
Christian Chalut
Mycobacteria produce a large variety of surface-exposed lipids with unusual structures. Some of these compounds are ubiquitously present in mycobacteria and play an important role in the structural organization of the cell envelope, while others are species-specific. The biosynthesis of most of these lipids requires modular polyketide synthases (PKS) or non-ribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPS) that are intracellular, suggesting that the assembly of these compounds takes place in the cytosolic compartment or near the inner leaflet of the plasma membrane. The molecular mechanisms that mediate the export of these lipid components across the cell envelope remain poorly understood. Mycobacterial membrane protein Large (MmpL) transporters, a subclass of Resistance-Nodulation-Cell Division (RND) transporters, appear to play a major role in this process, acting as scaffold proteins that couple lipid synthesis and transport. Recent studies have shown that this family of transporters also contributes to siderophore secretion in Mycobacterium tuberculosis. The goal of this review is to provide the most recent advances in our understanding of the molecular mechanisms involved in lipid and siderophore transport mediated by MmpL transporters.
Chemistry & Biology | 2016
Sophie Burbaud; Françoise Laval; Anne Lemassu; Mamadou Daffé; Christophe Guilhot; Christian Chalut
Mycobacteria synthesize a variety of structurally related glycolipids with major biological functions. Common themes have emerged for the biosynthesis of these glycolipids, including several families of proteins. Genes encoding these proteins are usually clustered on bacterial chromosomal islets dedicated to the synthesis of one glycolipid family. Here, we investigated the function of a cluster of five genes widely distributed across non-tuberculous mycobacteria. Using defined mutant analysis and in-depth structural characterization of glycolipids from wild-type or mutant strains of Mycobacterium smegmatis and Mycobacterium abscessus, we established that they are involved in the formation of trehalose polyphleates (TPP), a family of compounds originally described in Mycobacterium phlei. Comparative genomics and lipid analysis of strains distributed along the mycobacterial phylogenetic tree revealed that TPP is synthesized by a large number of non-tuberculous mycobacteria. This work unravels a novel glycolipid biosynthetic pathway in mycobacteria and extends the spectrum of bacteria that produce TPP.