Claire Stines-Chaumeil
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
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Featured researches published by Claire Stines-Chaumeil.
Biochemical Journal | 2006
Claire Stines-Chaumeil; François Talfournier; Guy Branlant
Homotetrameric MSDH (methylmalonate semialdehyde dehydrogenase) from Bacillus subtilis catalyses the NAD-dependent oxidation of MMSA (methylmalonate semialdehyde) and MSA (malonate semialdehyde) into PPCoA (propionyl-CoA) and acetyl-CoA respectively via a two-step mechanism. In the present study, a detailed mechanistic characterization of the MSDH-catalysed reaction has been carried out. The results suggest that NAD binding elicits a structural imprinting of the apoenzyme, which explains the marked lag-phase observed in the activity assay. The enzyme also exhibits a half-of-the-sites reactivity, with two subunits being active per tetramer. This result correlates well with the presence of two populations of catalytic Cys302 in both the apo- and holo-enzymes. Binding of NAD causes a decrease in reactivity of the two Cys302 residues belonging to the two active subunits and a pKapp shift from approx. 8.8 to 8.0. A study of the rate of acylation as a function of pH revealed a decrease in the pKapp of the two active Cys302 residues to approx. 5.5. Taken to-gether, these results support a sequential Cys302 activation process with a pKapp shift from approx. 8.8 in the apo-form to 8.0 in the binary complex and finally to approx. 5.5 in the ternary complex. The rate-limiting step is associated with the b-decarboxylation process which occurs on the thioacylenzyme intermediate after NADH release and before transthioesterification. These data also indicate that bicarbonate, the formation of which is enzyme-catalysed, is the end-product of the reaction.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011
François Talfournier; Claire Stines-Chaumeil; Guy Branlant
Methylmalonate-semialdehyde dehydrogenase (MSDH) belongs to the CoA-dependent aldehyde dehydrogenase subfamily. It catalyzes the NAD-dependent oxidation of methylmalonate semialdehyde (MMSA) to propionyl-CoA via the acylation and deacylation steps. MSDH is the only member of the aldehyde dehydrogenase superfamily that catalyzes a β-decarboxylation process in the deacylation step. Recently, we demonstrated that the β-decarboxylation is rate-limiting and occurs before CoA attack on the thiopropionyl enzyme intermediate. Thus, this prevented determination of the transthioesterification kinetic parameters. Here, we have addressed two key aspects of the mechanism as follows: 1) the molecular basis for recognition of the carboxylate of MMSA; and 2) how CoA binding modulates its reactivity. We substituted two invariant arginines, Arg-124 and Arg-301, by Leu. The second-order rate constant for the acylation step for both mutants was decreased by at least 50-fold, indicating that both arginines are essential for efficient MMSA binding through interactions with the carboxylate group. To gain insight into the transthioesterification, we substituted MMSA with propionaldehyde, as both substrates lead to the same thiopropionyl enzyme intermediate. This allowed us to show the following: 1) the pKapp of CoA decreases by ∼3 units upon binding to MSDH in the deacylation step; and 2) the catalytic efficiency of the transthioesterification is increased by at least 104-fold relative to a chemical model. Moreover, we observed binding of CoA to the acylation complex, supporting a CoA-binding site distinct from that of NAD(H).
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011
Jean Velours; Claire Stines-Chaumeil; Johan Habersetzer; Stéphane Chaignepain; Alain Dautant; Daniel Brèthes
Background: The mitochondrial ATP synthase adopts oligomeric structures. Results: Cross-linking between two subunits 6 (a) indicates their proximity in the ATP synthase dimer. Conclusion: Subunit 6 participates in the ATP synthase monomer-monomer interface. Significance: Learning how the ATP synthases assemble is essential for understanding their involvement in the control of the biogenesis of the inner mitochondrial membrane. The involvement of subunit 6 (a) in the interface between yeast ATP synthase monomers has been highlighted. Based on the formation of a disulfide bond and using the unique cysteine 23 as target, we show that two subunits 6 are close in the inner mitochondrial membrane and in the solubilized supramolecular forms of the yeast ATP synthase. In a null mutant devoid of supernumerary subunits e and g that are involved in the stabilization of ATP synthase dimers, ATP synthase monomers are close enough in the inner mitochondrial membrane to make a disulfide bridge between their subunits 6, and this proximity is maintained in detergent extract containing this enzyme. The cross-linking of cysteine 23 located in the N-terminal part of the first transmembrane helix of subunit 6 suggests that this membrane-spanning segment is in contact with its counterpart belonging to the ATP synthase monomer that faces it and participates in the monomer-monomer interface.
Analytical Chemistry | 2014
Ling Zhang; Rebeca Miranda-Castro; Claire Stines-Chaumeil; Nicolas Mano; Guobao Xu; Franco̧is Mavre; Benoît Limoges
A highly sensitive electroanalytical method for determination of PQQ in solution down to subpicomolar concentrations is proposed. It is based on the heterogeneous reconstitution of the PQQ-dependent glucose dehydrogenase (PQQ-GDH) through the specific binding of its pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ) cofactor to the apoenzyme anchored on an electrode surface. It is shown from kinetics analysis of both the enzyme catalytic responses and enzyme surface-reconstitution process (achieved by cyclic voltammetry under redox-mediated catalysis) that the selected immobilization strategy (i.e., through an avidin/biotin linkage) is well-suited to immobilize a nearly saturated apoenzyme monolayer on the electrode surface with an almost fully preserved PQQ binding properties and catalytic activity. From measurement of the overall rate constants controlling the steady-state catalytic current responses of the surface-reconstituted PQQ-GDH and determination of the PQQ equilibrium binding (Kb = 2.4 × 10(10) M(-1)) and association rate (kon = 2 × 10(6) M(-1) s(-1)) constants with the immobilized apoenzyme, the analytical performances of the method could be rationally evaluated, and the signal amplification for PQQ detection down to the picomolar levels is well-predicted. These performances outperform by several orders of magnitude the direct electrochemical detection of PQQ in solution and by 1 to 2 orders the detection limits previously achieved by UV-vis spectroscopic detection of the homogeneous PQQ-GDH reconstitution.
Biochimie Open | 2017
Claire Stines-Chaumeil; Elodie Roussarie; Nicolas Mano
Multicopper oxidases (MCOs) catalyzed two half reactions (linked by an intramolecular electron transfer) through a Ping-Pong mechanism: the substrate oxidation followed by the O2 reduction. MCOs have been characterized in details in solution or immobilized on electrode surfaces. The nature of the rate-limiting steps, which is controversial in the literature, is discussed in this mini review for both cases. Deciphering such rate-limiting steps is of particular importance to efficiently use MCOs in any applications requiring the reduction of O2 to water.
Journal of Biotechnology | 2016
Sébastien Gounel; Jad Rouhana; Claire Stines-Chaumeil; Marine Cadet; Nicolas Mano
Aggregation of recombinant proteins into inclusion bodies (IBs) is the main problem of the expression of multicopper oxidase in Escherichia coli. It is usually attributed to inefficient folding of proteins due to the lack of copper and/or unavailability of chaperone proteins. The general strategies reported to overcome this issue have been focused on increasing the intracellular copper concentration. Here we report a complementary method to optimize the expression in E. coli of a promising Bilirubin oxidase (BOD) isolated from Bacillus pumilus. First, as this BOD has a disulfide bridge, we switched E.coli strain from BL21 (DE3) to Origami B (DE3), known to promote the formation of disulfide bridges in the bacterial cytoplasm. In a second step, we investigate the effect of co-expression of chaperone proteins on the protein production and specific activity. Our strategy allowed increasing the final amount of enzyme by 858% and its catalytic rate constant by 83%.
Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2004
Hélène Dubourg; Claire Stines-Chaumeil; Claude Didierjean; François Talfournier; Sophie Rahuel-Clermont; Guy Branlant; André Aubry
Methylmalonate-semialdehyde dehydrogenase from Bacillus subtilis was cloned and overexpressed in Escherichia coli. Suitable crystals for X-ray diffraction experiments were obtained by the hanging-drop vapour-diffusion method using ammonium sulfate as precipitant. The crystals belong to space group P2(1)2(1)2(1), with unit-cell parameters a = 195.2, b = 192.5, c = 83.5 A, and contain one tetramer per asymmetric unit. X-ray diffraction data were collected to 2.5 A resolution using a synchrotron-radiation source. The crystal structure was solved by the molecular-replacement method.
Enzyme and Microbial Technology | 2019
Armand Roucher; Elodie Roussarie; Régis M. Gauvin; Jad Rouhana; Sébastien Gounel; Claire Stines-Chaumeil; Nicolas Mano; Rénal Backov
We present a new heterogeneous biocatalyst based on the grafting of Bilirubin Oxidase from Bacillus pumilus into macrocellular Si(HIPE) materials dedicated to water treatment. Due to the host intrinsic high porosity and monolithic character, on-line catalytic process is reached. We thus used this biocatalyst toward uni-axial flux decolorizations of Congo Red and Remazol Brilliant Blue (RBBR) at two different pH (4 and 8.2), both in presence or absence of redox mediator. In absence of redox mediators, 40% decolorization efficiency was reached within 24 h at pH 4 for Congo Red and 80% for RBBR at pH 8.2 in 24 h. In presence of 10μM ABTS, it respectively attained 100% efficiency after 2h and 12h. We have also demonstrated that non-toxic species were generated upon dyes decolorization. These results show that unlike laccases, this new biocatalyst exhibits excellent decolorization properties over a wide range of pH. Beyond, this enzymatic-based heterogeneous catalyst can be reused during two months being simply stored at room temperature while maintaining its decolorization efficiency. This study shows that this biocatalyst is a promising and robust candidate toward wastewater treatments, both in acidic and alkaline conditions where in the latter efficient decolorization strategies were still missing.
Chemical Communications | 2014
Emilie Tremey; Emmanuel Suraniti; Olivier Courjean; Sébastien Gounel; Claire Stines-Chaumeil; Frédéric Louërat; Nicolas Mano
ChemElectroChem | 2017
Emilie Tremey; Claire Stines-Chaumeil; Sébastien Gounel; Nicolas Mano