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Dive into the research topics where Christophe Léger is active.

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Featured researches published by Christophe Léger.


Chemical Reviews | 2008

Direct Electrochemistry of Redox Enzymes as a Tool for Mechanistic Studies

Christophe Léger; Patrick Bertrand

This review regards the use of dynamic electrochemistry to study the mechanism of redox enzymes, with exclusive emphasis on the configuration where the protein is adsorbed onto an electrode and electron tranfer is direct.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2010

Relating diffusion along the substrate tunnel and oxygen sensitivity in hydrogenase

Pierre-Pol Liebgott; Fanny Leroux; Bénédicte Burlat; Sébastien Dementin; Carole Baffert; Thomas Lautier; Vincent Fourmond; Pierre Ceccaldi; Christine Cavazza; Isabelle Meynial-Salles; Philippe Soucaille; Juan C. Fontecilla-Camps; Bruno Guigliarelli; Patrick Bertrand; Marc Rousset; Christophe Léger

In hydrogenases and many other redox enzymes, the buried active site is connected to the solvent by a molecular channel whose structure may determine the enzymes selectivity with respect to substrate and inhibitors. The role of these channels has been addressed using crystallography and molecular dynamics, but kinetic data are scarce. Using protein film voltammetry, we determined and then compared the rates of inhibition by CO and O2 in ten NiFe hydrogenase mutants and two FeFe hydrogenases. We found that the rate of inhibition by CO is a good proxy of the rate of diffusion of O2 toward the active site. Modifying amino acids whose side chains point inside the tunnel can slow this rate by orders of magnitude. We quantitatively define the relations between diffusion, the Michaelis constant for H2 and rates of inhibition, and we demonstrate that certain enzymes are slowly inactivated by O2 because access to the active site is slow.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Membrane-bound hydrogenase I from the hyperthermophilic bacterium Aquifex aeolicus: enzyme activation, redox intermediates and oxygen tolerance.

Maria-Eirini Pandelia; Vincent Fourmond; Pascale Tron-Infossi; Elisabeth Lojou; Patrick Bertrand; Christophe Léger; Marie-Thérèse Giudici-Orticoni; Wolfgang Lubitz

The membrane-bound hydrogenase (Hase I) of the hyperthermophilic bacterium Aquifex aeolicus belongs to an intriguing class of redox enzymes that show enhanced thermostability and oxygen tolerance. Protein film electrochemistry is employed here to portray the interaction of Hase I with molecular oxygen and obtain an overall picture of the catalytic activity. Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy integrated with in situ electrochemistry is used to identify structural details of the [NiFe] site and the intermediate states involved in its redox chemistry. We found that the active site coordination is similar to that of standard hydrogenases, with a conserved Fe(CN)(2)CO moiety. However, only four catalytic intermediates could be detected; these correspond structurally to the Ni-B, Ni-SI(a), Ni-C, and Ni-R states of standard hydrogenases. The Ni-SI/Ni-C and Ni-C/Ni-R midpoint potentials are approximately 100 mV more positive than those observed in mesophilic hydrogenases, which may be the reason that A. aeolicus Hase I is more suitable as a catalyst for H(2) oxidation than production. Protein film electrochemistry shows that oxygen inhibits the enzyme by reacting at the active site to form a single species (Ni-B); the same inactive state is obtained under oxidizing, anaerobic conditions. The mechanism of anaerobic inactivation and reactivation in A. aeolicus Hase I is similar to that in standard hydrogenases. However, the reactivation of the former is more than 2 orders of magnitude faster despite the fact that reduction of Ni-B is not thermodynamically more favorable. A scheme for the enzymatic mechanism of A. aeolicus Hase I is presented, and the results are discussed in relation to the proposed models of oxygen tolerance.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Experimental approaches to kinetics of gas diffusion in hydrogenase

Fanny Leroux; Sébastien Dementin; Bénédicte Burlat; Laurent Cournac; Anne Volbeda; Stéphanie Champ; Lydie Martin; Bruno Guigliarelli; Patrick Bertrand; Juan C. Fontecilla-Camps; Marc Rousset; Christophe Léger

Hydrogenases, which catalyze H2 to H+ conversion as part of the bioenergetic metabolism of many microorganisms, are among the metalloenzymes for which a gas-substrate tunnel has been described by using crystallography and molecular dynamics. However, the correlation between protein structure and gas-diffusion kinetics is unexplored. Here, we introduce two quantitative methods for probing the rates of diffusion within hydrogenases. One uses protein film voltammetry to resolve the kinetics of binding and release of the competitive inhibitor CO; the other is based on interpreting the yield in the isotope exchange assay. We study structurally characterized mutants of a NiFe hydrogenase, and we show that two mutations, which significantly narrow the tunnel near the entrance of the catalytic center, decrease the rates of diffusion of CO and H2 toward and from the active site by up to 2 orders of magnitude. This proves the existence of a functional channel, which matches the hydrophobic cavity found in the crystal. However, the changes in diffusion rates do not fully correlate with the obstruction induced by the mutation and deduced from the x-ray structures. Our results demonstrate the necessity of measuring diffusion rates and emphasize the role of side-chain dynamics in determining these.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Introduction of Methionines in the Gas Channel Makes [NiFe] Hydrogenase Aero-Tolerant

Sébastien Dementin; Fanny Leroux; Laurent Cournac; Antonio L. De Lacey; Anne Volbeda; Christophe Léger; Bénédicte Burlat; Nicolas Martinez; Stéphanie Champ; Lydie Martin; Oliver Sanganas; Michael Haumann; Victor M. Fernandez; Bruno Guigliarelli; Juan C. Fontecilla-Camps; Marc Rousset

Hydrogenases catalyze the conversion between 2H(+) + 2e(-) and H(2)(1). Most of these enzymes are inhibited by O(2), which represents a major drawback for their use in biotechnological applications. Improving hydrogenase O(2) tolerance is therefore a major contemporary challenge to allow the implementation of a sustainable hydrogen economy. We succeeded in improving O(2) tolerance, which we define here as the ability of the enzyme to resist for several minutes to O(2) exposure, by substituting with methionines small hydrophobic residues strongly conserved in the gas channel. Remarkably, the mutated enzymes remained active in the presence of an O(2) concentration close to that found in aerobic solutions in equilibrium with air, while the wild type enzyme is inhibited in a few seconds. Crystallographic and spectroscopic studies showed that the structure and the chemistry at the active site are not affected by the mutations. Kinetic studies demonstrated that the inactivation is slower and reactivation faster in these mutants. We propose that in addition to restricting O(2) diffusion to the active site of the enzyme, methionine may also interact with bound peroxide and provide an assisted escape route for H(2)O(2) toward the gas channel. These results show for the first time that it is possible to improve O(2)-tolerance of [NiFe] hydrogenases, making possible the development of biohydrogen production systems.


Bioelectrochemistry | 2009

SOAS: a free program to analyze electrochemical data and other one-dimensional signals

Vincent Fourmond; Kevin R. Hoke; Hendrik A. Heering; Carole Baffert; Fanny Leroux; Patrick Bertrand; Christophe Léger

This paper describes an open source program called SOAS, which we developed with the aim of analysing one-dimensional signals. It offers a large set of commands for handling voltammetric and chronoamperometric data, including smoothing signals, differentiation, subtracting baselines, fitting current responses, measuring limiting currents, and searching for peak positions. Although emphasis is on the analysis of electrochemical signals, particularly protein film voltammetry data, SOAS may also prove useful for processing spectra. This free program is available by download from the Internet, and can be installed on computers running any flavor of Unix or Linux, most easily on MacOS X.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Original design of an oxygen-tolerant [NiFe] hydrogenase: major effect of a valine-to-cysteine mutation near the active site.

Pierre-Pol Liebgott; Antonio L. De Lacey; Bénédicte Burlat; Laurent Cournac; Pierre Richaud; Myriam Brugna; Victor M. Fernandez; Bruno Guigliarelli; Marc Rousset; Christophe Léger; Sébastien Dementin

Hydrogenases are efficient biological catalysts of H(2) oxidation and production. Most of them are inhibited by O(2), and a prerequisite for their use in biotechnological applications under air is to improve their oxygen tolerance. We have previously shown that exchanging the residue at position 74 in the large subunit of the oxygen-sensitive [NiFe] hydrogenase from Desulfovibrio fructosovorans could impact the reaction of the enzyme with O(2) (Dementin, S.; J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2009, 131, 10156-10164; Liebgott, P. P.; Nat. Chem. Biol. 2010, 6, 63-70). This residue, a valine in the wild-type enzyme, located at the bottleneck of the gas channel near the active site, has here been exchanged with a cysteine. A thorough characterization using a combination of kinetic, spectroscopic (EPR, FTIR), and electrochemical studies demonstrates that the V74C mutant has features of the naturally occurring oxygen-tolerant membrane-bound hydrogenases (MBH). The mutant is functional during several minutes under O(2), has impaired H(2)-production activity, and has a weaker affinity for CO than the WT. Upon exposure to O(2), it is converted into the more easily reactivatable inactive form, Ni-B, and this inactive state reactivates about 20 times faster than in the WT enzyme. Control experiments carried out with the V74S and V74N mutants indicate that protonation of the position 74 residue is not the reason the mutants reactivate faster than the WT enzyme. The electrochemical behavior of the V74C mutant toward O(2) is intermediate between that of the WT enzyme from D. fructosovorans and the oxygen-tolerant MBH from Aquifex aeolicus.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Understanding and Tuning the Catalytic Bias of Hydrogenase

Abbas Abou Hamdan; Sébastien Dementin; Pierre-Pol Liebgott; Oscar Gutiérrez-Sanz; Pierre Richaud; Antonio L. De Lacey; Marc Rousset; Patrick Bertrand; Laurent Cournac; Christophe Léger

When enzymes are optimized for biotechnological purposes, the goal often is to increase stability or catalytic efficiency. However, many enzymes reversibly convert their substrate and product, and if one is interested in catalysis in only one direction, it may be necessary to prevent the reverse reaction. In other cases, reversibility may be advantageous because only an enzyme that can operate in both directions can turnover at a high rate even under conditions of low thermodynamic driving force. Therefore, understanding the basic mechanisms of reversibility in complex enzymes should help the rational engineering of these proteins. Here, we focus on NiFe hydrogenase, an enzyme that catalyzes H(2) oxidation and production, and we elucidate the mechanism that governs the catalytic bias (the ratio of maximal rates in the two directions). Unexpectedly, we found that this bias is not mainly determined by redox properties of the active site, but rather by steps which occur on sites of the proteins that are remote from the active site. We evidence a novel strategy for tuning the catalytic bias of an oxidoreductase, which consists in modulating the rate of a step that is limiting only in one direction of the reaction, without modifying the properties of the active site.


Nature Chemistry | 2014

The oxidative inactivation of FeFe hydrogenase reveals the flexibility of the H-cluster

Vincent Fourmond; Claudio Greco; Kateryna Sybirna; Carole Baffert; Po-hung Wang; Pierre Ezanno; Marco Montefiori; Maurizio Bruschi; Isabelle Meynial-Salles; Philippe Soucaille; Jochen Blumberger; Hervé Bottin; Luca De Gioia; Christophe Léger

Nature is a valuable source of inspiration in the design of catalysts, and various approaches are used to elucidate the mechanism of hydrogenases, the enzymes that oxidize or produce H2. In FeFe hydrogenases, H2 oxidation occurs at the H-cluster, and catalysis involves H2 binding on the vacant coordination site of an iron centre. Here, we show that the reversible oxidative inactivation of this enzyme results from the binding of H2 to coordination positions that are normally blocked by intrinsic CO ligands. This flexibility of the coordination sphere around the reactive iron centre confers on the enzyme the ability to avoid harmful reactions under oxidizing conditions, including exposure to O2. The versatile chemistry of the diiron cluster in the natural system might inspire the design of novel synthetic catalysts for H2 oxidation.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2013

O2-independent formation of the inactive states of NiFe hydrogenase

Abbas Abou Hamdan; Bénédicte Burlat; Oscar Gutiérrez-Sanz; Pierre-Pol Liebgott; Carole Baffert; Antonio L. De Lacey; Marc Rousset; Bruno Guigliarelli; Christophe Léger; Sébastien Dementin

We studied the mechanism of aerobic inactivation of Desulfovibrio fructosovorans nickel-iron (NiFe) hydrogenase by quantitatively examining the results of electrochemistry, EPR and FTIR experiments. They suggest that, contrary to the commonly accepted mechanism, the attacking O(2) is not incorporated as an active site ligand but, rather, acts as an electron acceptor. Our findings offer new ways toward the understanding of O(2) inactivation and O(2) tolerance in NiFe hydrogenases.

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Carole Baffert

Aix-Marseille University

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Hervé Bottin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Marc Rousset

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Patrick Bertrand

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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