Christiane Durieux
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
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Featured researches published by Christiane Durieux.
Biophysical Journal | 2001
Isabelle Gautier; Marc Tramier; Christiane Durieux; Jacques Coppey; Robert Pansu; Jean-Claude Nicolas; Klaus Kemnitz; Maı̈té Coppey-Moisan
Fluorescence anisotropy decay microscopy was used to determine, in individual living cells, the spatial monomer-dimer distribution of proteins, as exemplified by herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase (TK) fused to green fluorescent protein (GFP). Accordingly, the fluorescence anisotropy dynamics of two fusion proteins (TK27GFP and TK366GFP) was recorded in the confocal mode by ultra-sensitive time-correlated single-photon counting. This provided a measurement of the rotational time of these proteins, which, by comparing with GFP, allowed the determination of their oligomeric state in both the cytoplasm and the nucleus. It also revealed energy homo-transfer within aggregates that TK366GFP progressively formed. Using a symmetric dimer model, structural parameters were estimated; the mutual orientation of the transition dipoles of the two GFP chromophores, calculated from the residual anisotropy, was 44.6 +/- 1.6 degrees, and the upper intermolecular limit between the two fluorescent tags, calculated from the energy transfer rate, was 70 A. Acquisition of the fluorescence steady-state intensity, lifetime, and anisotropy decay in the same cells, at different times after transfection, indicated that TK366GFP was initially in a monomeric state and then formed dimers that grew into aggregates. Picosecond time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy microscopy opens a promising avenue for obtaining structural information on proteins in individual living cells, even when expression levels are very low.
Biophysical Journal | 2002
Marc Tramier; Isabelle Gautier; Tristan Piolot; Sylvie Ravalet; Klaus Kemnitz; Jacques Coppey; Christiane Durieux; Vincent Mignotte; Maïté Coppey-Moisan
By using a novel time- and space-correlated single-photon counting detector, we show that fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) between cyan fluorescent protein (CFP) and yellow fluorescent protein (YFP) fused to herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase (TK) monomers can be used to reveal homodimerization of TK in the nucleus and cytoplasm of live cells. However, the quantification of energy transfer was limited by the intrinsic biexponential fluorescence decay of the donor CFP (lifetimes of 1.3 +/- 0.2 ns and 3.8 +/- 0.4 ns) and by the possibility of homodimer formation between two TK-CFP. In contrast, the heterodimerization of the transcriptional factor NF-E2 in the nucleus of live cells was quantified from the analysis of the fluorescence decays of GFP in terms of 1) FRET efficiency between GFP and DsRed chromophores fused to p45 and MafG, respectively, the two subunits of NF-E2 (which corresponds to an interchromophoric distance of 39 +/- 1 A); and 2) fractions of GFP-p45 bound to DsRed-MafG (constant in the nucleus, varying in the range of 20% to 70% from cell to cell). The picosecond resolution of the fluorescence kinetics allowed us to discriminate between very short lifetimes of immature green species of DsRed-MafG and that of GFP-p45 involved in FRET with DsRed-MafG.
Optics Express | 2005
Valentina Emiliani; Dan Cojoc; Enrico Ferrari; V. Garbin; Christiane Durieux; Maïté Coppey-Moisan; Enzo Di Fabrizio
A new method to perform simultaneously three dimensional optical sectioning and optical manipulation is presented. The system combines a multi trap optical tweezers with a video microscope to enable axial scanning of living cells while maintaining the trapping configuration at a fixed position. This is achieved compensating the axial movement of the objective by shaping the wave front of the trapping beam with properly diffractive optical elements displayed on a computer controlled spatial light modulator. Our method has been validated in three different experimental configurations. In the first, we decouple the position of a trapping plane from the axial movements of the objective and perform optical sectioning of a circle of beads kept on a fixed plane. In a second experiment, we extend the method to living cell microscopy by showing that mechanical constraints can be applied on the dorsal surface of a cell whilst performing its fluorescence optical sectioning. In the third experiment, we trapped beads in a three dimensional geometry and perform, always through the same objective, an axial scan of the volume delimited by the beads.
Applied Physics Letters | 2003
Valentina Emiliani; Daniele Sanvitto; Marc Tramier; T. Piolot; Zdeněk Petrášek; Klaus Kemnitz; Christiane Durieux; Maïté Coppey-Moisan
The use of a time- and space-correlated single-photon counting detector enables us to perform fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy in living cells with a temporal resolution of less than 100 ps and a spatial resolution of 500 nm. Two-dimensional (2D) maps of the fluorescence lifetimes and the corresponding prefactors are extracted by the use of a fitting program based on the Levenberg–Marquardt algorithm (Globals Unlimited). We applied this technique to extract 2D maps of protein localization in multilabeled living cells and to study protein–protein interaction by fluorescence resonance energy transfer.
Methods in Enzymology | 2003
Marc Tramier; Tristan Piolot; Isabelle Gautier; Vincent Mignotte; Jacques Coppey; Klaus Kemnitz; Christiane Durieux; Maïté Coppey-Moisan
Publisher Summary The purpose of this chapter is to provide information on the homo-fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) versus hetero-FRET to probe homodimers in living cells. FRET is a nonradiative phenomenon in which energy is transferred from a donor fluorophore to an acceptor chromophore with an efficiency that depends on the distance between the two chromophores, the extent of overlap between the donor emission and acceptor excitation spectra, the quantum yield of the donor, and the relative orientation of the donor and acceptor. For homo-FRET, because the photophysical properties of the two donor molecules are the same, the excitation energy is reversibly transferred between the fluorescent tags. Time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy monitors any process that changes the polarization of the emitted fluorescence during the excited state. Consequently, the fluorescence anisotropy decay depends on (1) rotational movements of the fluorescent molecules and (2) energy transfer taking place within the fluorescence time scale. In addition, according to the type of interaction, hetero-or homodimer, the methodology, hetero- or homo-FRET, must be judiciously chosen to obtain the best information about structural data within the macromolecular complex.
Biophysical Journal | 2000
Marc Tramier; Klaus Kemnitz; Christiane Durieux; Jacques Coppey; Patrick Denjean; Robert Pansu; Maïté Coppey-Moisan
Physical parameters, describing the state of chromatinized DNA in living mammalian cells, were revealed by in situ fluorescence dynamic properties of ethidium in its free and intercalated states. The lifetimes and anisotropy decays of this cationic chromophore were measured within the nuclear domain, by using the ultra-sensitive time-correlated single-photon counting technique, confocal microscopy, and ultra-low probe concentrations. We found that, in living cells: 1) free ethidium molecules equilibrate between extracellular milieu and nucleus, demonstrating that the cation is naturally transported into the nucleus; 2) the intercalation of ethidium into chromatinized DNA is strongly inhibited, with relaxation of the inhibition after mild (digitonin) cell treatment; 3) intercalation sites are likely to be located in chromatin DNA; and 4) the fluorescence anisotropy relaxation of intercalated molecules is very slow. The combination of fluorescence kinetic and fluorescence anisotropy dynamics indicates that the torsional dynamics of nuclear DNA is highly restrained in living cells.
Biophysical Journal | 2009
Myriam Allioux-Guérin; Delphine Icard-Arcizet; Christiane Durieux; Sylvie Hénon; François Gallet; Jean-Claude Mevel; Marie-Jo Masse; Marc Tramier; Maïté Coppey-Moisan
We investigate the dynamic response of single cells to weak and local rigidities, applied at controlled adhesion sites. Using multiple latex beads functionalized with fibronectin, and each trapped in its own optical trap, we study the reaction in real time of single 3T3 fibroblast cells to asymmetrical tensions in the tens of pN x microm(-1) range. We show that the cell feels a rigidity gradient even at this low range of tension, and over time develops an adapted change in the force exerted on each adhesion site. The rate at which force increases is proportional to trap stiffness. Actomyosin recruitment is regulated in space and time along the rigidity gradient, resulting in a linear relationship between the amount of recruited actin and the force developed independently in trap stiffness. This time-regulated actomyosin behavior sustains a constant and rigidity-independent velocity of beads inside the traps. Our results show that the strengthening of extracellular matrix-cytoskeleton linkages along a rigidity gradient is regulated by controlling adhesion area and actomyosin recruitment, to maintain a constant deformation of the extracellular matrix.
Journal of Microscopy | 2004
Marc Tramier; Klaus Kemnitz; Christiane Durieux; Maı̈té Coppey-Moisan
Time‐resolved microspectrofluorometry in live cells, based on time‐ and space‐correlated single‐photon counting, is a novel method to acquire spectrally resolved fluorescence decays, simultaneously in 256 wavelength channels. The system is calibrated with a full width at half maximum (FWHM) of 90 ps for the temporal resolution, a signal‐to‐noise ratio of 106, and a spectral resolution of 30 (Δλ/Λ). As an exemple, complex fluorescence dynamics of ethidium and cyan fluorescent protein (CFP) in live cells are presented. Free and DNA intercalated forms of ethidium are simultaneously distinguishable by their relative lifetime (1.7 ns and 21.6 ns) and intensity spectra (shift of 7 nm). By analysing the complicated spectrally resolved fluorescence decay of CFP, we propose a fluorescence kinetics model for its excitation/desexcitation process. Such detailed studies under the microscope and in live cells are very promising for fluorescence signal quantification.
Experimental Cell Research | 2003
Isabelle Gautier; Jacques Coppey; Christiane Durieux
Early events of apoptosis following HSV-1 infection were investigated at the single-cell level using intensified fluorescence digital-imaging microscopy. The results provide evidence that infection of differentiated ND7 neuronlike cells by HSV-1 triggers detectable alterations indicative of physiological changes associated with the early stages of apoptosis. Less than 1 h after infection with HSV-1 (KOS strain) or K26GFP (GFP being fused to HSV-1 capsid protein VP26) we observed (i) moderate decrease in mitochondrial membrane potential (about 20%), (ii) exposure of phosphatidyl serine, (iii) morphological change in the mitochondria that became spherical instead of filamentous, and (iv) activation of caspase-8. Within 3 h changes reverted to normal, which indicated that apoptosis was counteracted very early following HSV-1 infection. Similar results were obtained with KOS-TK27GFP, lacking TK and UL24 proteins, suggesting that TK and UL24 play no role in apoptosis. In Vero cells mitochondrial changes characteristic of the apoptotic process were not observed following HSV-1 infection. The UV-inactivated K26GFP had the capacity to induce apoptosis in neuronlike cells. This real-time multiparametric analysis, in combination with relevant viral mutants, could be a useful approach for dissecting the roles of various viral genes in modulating apoptotic pathways during infection.
Neuroreport | 2000
Isabelle Gautier; Virginie Geeraert; Jacques Coppey; Maïté Coppey-Moisan; Christiane Durieux
The effects of various degrees of perturbation of the mitochondrial membrane potential (mtΔψ) on apoptosis was investigated by intensified fluorescence digital-imaging microscopy on neuron-like cells, ND7. MtΔψ was either decreased by 40% by the protonophore carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone (FCCP 100 nM, 15 min) or completely collapsed (FCCP 10 μM, 60 min). A moderate decrease of mtΔψ induced a reduction of mitochondrial NADH, followed by exposure of phosphatidyl serine and then by chromatin condensation, 36% of nuclei being condensed 60 min after FCCP treatment. During these stages, mitochondrion morphology was fully preserved. In contrast, no chromatin condensation was observed after a rapid and total dissipation of mtΔψ. These results suggest that a partial decrease of mtΔψ would allow mitochondrial functions required to trigger apoptosis to be sustained.