Claire Monge
Joseph Fourier University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Claire Monge.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008
Tatiana K. Rostovtseva; Kely L. Sheldon; Elnaz Hassanzadeh; Claire Monge; Valdur Saks; Sergey M. Bezrukov; Dan L. Sackett
Regulation of mitochondrial outer membrane (MOM) permeability has dual importance: in normal metabolite and energy exchange between mitochondria and cytoplasm and thus in control of respiration, and in apoptosis by release of apoptogenic factors into the cytosol. However, the mechanism of this regulation, dependent on the voltage-dependent anion channel (VDAC), the major channel of MOM, remains controversial. A long-standing puzzle is that in permeabilized cells, adenine nucleotide translocase (ANT) is less accessible to cytosolic ADP than in isolated mitochondria. We solve this puzzle by finding a missing player in the regulation of MOM permeability: the cytoskeletal protein tubulin. We show that nanomolar concentrations of dimeric tubulin induce voltage-sensitive reversible closure of VDAC reconstituted into planar phospholipid membranes. Tubulin strikingly increases VDAC voltage sensitivity and at physiological salt conditions could induce VDAC closure at <10 mV transmembrane potentials. Experiments with isolated mitochondria confirm these findings. Tubulin added to isolated mitochondria decreases ADP availability to ANT, partially restoring the low MOM permeability (high apparent Km for ADP) found in permeabilized cells. Our findings suggest a previously unknown mechanism of regulation of mitochondrial energetics, governed by VDAC and tubulin at the mitochondria–cytosol interface. This tubulin–VDAC interaction requires tubulin anionic C-terminal tail (CTT) peptides. The significance of this interaction may be reflected in the evolutionary conservation of length and anionic charge in CTT throughout eukaryotes, despite wide changes in the exact sequence. Additionally, tubulins that have lost significant length or anionic character are only found in cells that do not have mitochondria.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2010
Valdur Saks; Rita Guzun; Natalja Timohhina; Kersti Tepp; Minna Varikmaa; Claire Monge; Nathalie Beraud; Tuuli Kaambre; Andrey V. Kuznetsov; Lumme Kadaja; Margus Eimre; Enn Seppet
The aim of this review is to analyze the results of experimental research of mechanisms of regulation of mitochondrial respiration in cardiac and skeletal muscle cells in vivo obtained by using the permeabilized cell technique. Such an analysis in the framework of Molecular Systems Bioenergetics shows that the mechanisms of regulation of energy fluxes depend on the structural organization of the cells and interaction of mitochondria with cytoskeletal elements. Two types of cells of cardiac phenotype with very different structures were analyzed: adult cardiomyocytes and continuously dividing cancerous HL-1 cells. In cardiomyocytes mitochondria are arranged very regularly, and show rapid configuration changes of inner membrane but no fusion or fission, diffusion of ADP and ATP is restricted mostly at the level of mitochondrial outer membrane due to an interaction of heterodimeric tubulin with voltage dependent anion channel, VDAC. VDAC with associated tubulin forms a supercomplex, Mitochondrial Interactosome, with mitochondrial creatine kinase, MtCK, which is structurally and functionally coupled to ATP synthasome. Due to selectively limited permeability of VDAC for adenine nucleotides, mitochondrial respiration rate depends almost linearly upon the changes of cytoplasmic ADP concentration in their physiological range. Functional coupling of MtCK with ATP synthasome amplifies this signal by recycling adenine nucleotides in mitochondria coupled to effective phosphocreatine synthesis. In cancerous HL-1 cells this complex is significantly modified: tubulin is replaced by hexokinase and MtCK is lacking, resulting in direct utilization of mitochondrial ATP for glycolytic lactate production and in this way contributing in the mechanism of the Warburg effect. Systemic analysis of changes in the integrated system of energy metabolism is also helpful for better understanding of pathogenesis of many other diseases.
Journal of Bioenergetics and Biomembranes | 2009
Natalia Timohhina; Rita Guzun; Kersti Tepp; Claire Monge; Minna Varikmaa; Heiki Vija; Peeter Sikk; Tuuli Kaambre; Dan L. Sackett; Valdur Saks
The aim of this study was to measure energy fluxes from mitochondria in isolated permeabilized cardiomyocytes. Respiration of permeabilized cardiomyocytes and mitochondrial membrane potential were measured in presence of MgATP, pyruvate kinase – phosphoenolpyruvate and creatine. ATP and phosphocreatine concentrations in medium surrounding cardiomyocytes were determined. While ATP concentration did not change in time, mitochondria effectively produced phosphocreatine (PCr) with PCr/O2 ratio equal to 5.68 ± 0.14. Addition of heterodimeric tubulin to isolated mitochondria was found to increase apparent Km for exogenous ADP from 11 ± 2 µM to 330 ± 47 µM, but creatine again decreased it to 23 ± 6 µM. These results show directly that under physiological conditions the major energy carrier from mitochondria into cytoplasm is PCr, produced by mitochondrial creatine kinase (MtCK), which functional coupling to adenine nucleotide translocase is enhanced by selective limitation of permeability of mitochondrial outer membrane within supercomplex ATP Synthasome-MtCK-VDAC-tubulin, Mitochondrial Interactosome.
Canadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology | 2009
Claire Monge; Nathalie Beraud; Kersti Tepp; Sophie Pelloux; Siham ChahbounS. Chahboun; Tuuli Kaambre; Lumme Kadaja; Mart Roosimaa; Andres Piirsoo; Yves Tourneur; Andrey V. Kuznetsov; Valdur SaksV. Saks; Enn SeppetE. Seppet
Comparative analysis of the bioenergetic parameters of adult rat cardiomyocytes (CM) and HL-1 cells with very different structure but similar cardiac phenotype was carried out with the aim of revealing the importance of the cell structure for regulation of its energy fluxes. Confocal microscopic analysis showed very different mitochondrial arrangement in these cells. The cytochrome content per milligram of cell protein was decreased in HL-1 cells by a factor of 7 compared with CM. In parallel, the respiratory chain complex activities were decreased by 4-8 times in the HL-1 cells. On the contrary, the activities of glycolytic enzymes, hexokinase (HK), and pyruvate kinase (PK) were increased in HL-1 cells, and these cells effectively transformed glucose into lactate. At the same time, the creatine kinase (CK) activity was significantly decreased in HL-1 cells. In conclusion, the results of this study comply with the assumption that in contrast to CM in which oxidative phosphorylation is a predominant provider of ATP and the CK system is a main carrier of energy from mitochondria to ATPases, in HL-1 cells the energy metabolism is based mostly on the glycolytic reactions coupled to oxidative phosphorylation through HK.
Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry | 2008
Claire Monge; Nathalie Beraud; Andrey V. Kuznetsov; Tatiana K. Rostovtseva; Dan L. Sackett; Uwe Schlattner; Marko Vendelin; Valdur Saks
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2009
Rita Guzun; Natalja Timohhina; Kersti Tepp; Claire Monge; Tuuli Kaambre; Peeter Sikk; Andrey V. Kuznetsov; Christophe Pison; Valdur Saks
Molecular System Bioenergetics: Energy for Life | 2007
Valdur Saks; Claire Monge; Tiia Anmann; Petras P. Dzeja
Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry | 2010
Karen Guerrero; Claire Monge; Anna Brückner; Ülo Puurand; Lumme Kadaja; Tuuli Kaambre; Enn Seppet; Valdur Saks
Biophysical Journal | 2009
Claire Monge; Alexei Grichine; Tatiana K. Rostovtseva; Dan L. Sackett; Andrey V. Kuznetsov; Valdur Saks
Wiley Encyclopedia of Chemical Biology | 2009
Valdur Saks; Claire Monge; Rita Guzun; Petras P. Dzeja; Theo Wallimann