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Dive into the research topics where Claude Portier is active.

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Featured researches published by Claude Portier.


The EMBO Journal | 2001

PNPase autocontrols its expression by degrading a double‐stranded structure in the pnp mRNA leader

Anne‐Charlotte Jarrige; Nathalie Mathy; Claude Portier

Polynucleotide phosphorylase synthesis is autocontrolled at a post‐transcriptional level in an RNase III‐dependent mechanism. RNase III cleaves a long stem–loop in the pnp leader, which triggers pnp mRNA instability, resulting in a decrease in the synthesis of polynucleotide phosphorylase. The staggered cleavage by RNase III removes the upper part of the stem–loop structure, creating a duplex with a short 3′ extension. Mutations or high temperatures, which destabilize the cleaved stem–loop, decrease expression of pnp, while mutations that stabilize the stem increase expression. We propose that the dangling 3′ end of the duplex created by RNase III constitutes a target for polynucleotide phosphorylase, which binds to and degrades the upstream half of this duplex, hence inducing pnp mRNA instability. Consistent with this interpretation, a pnp mRNA starting at the downstream RNase III processing site exhibits a very low level of expression, regardless of the presence of polynucleotide phosphorylase. Moreover, using an in vitro synthesized pnp leader transcript, it is shown that polynucleotide phosphorylase is able to digest the duplex formed after RNase III cleavage.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1986

Initiation, attenuation and RNase III processing of transcripts from the Escherichia coli operon encoding ribosomal protein S15 and polynucleotide phosphorylase☆

Philippe Régnier; Claude Portier

The rpsO gene of Escherichia coli, which encodes ribosomal protein S15 is located at 69 minutes on the chromosome. It is adjacent to the pnp gene, which encodes polynucleotide phosphorylase. The two genes are separated by 249 nucleotides and are transcribed in the same direction. We report here in vivo S1 nuclease mapping and in vitro transcription experiments that demonstrate that rpsO and pnp are cotranscribed from a promoter P1, located 108 nucleotides upstream from rpsO, and that another promoter P2, located between the two genes 158 nucleotides upstream from pnp, also directs the transcription of pnp. Transcription from P1 can either terminate at the terminator t1 identified in vivo and in vitro, 18 nucleotides downstream from rpsO, or transcribe through t1 and into pnp. Comparison of the transcripts synthesized in wild-type and RNase III-deficient strains of E. coli shows that all the P1 readthrough transcripts and P2 transcripts are cleaved by RNase III. Two specific cuts are made by RNase III in a double-stranded structure about 100 nucleotides upstream rpsO. We also found that some transcripts of this operon start 47 nucleotides downstream from rpsO, in the region of t1. No promoter has been identified in this region. This mRNA is attributed to an endonucleolytic cleavage of the polycistronic transcripts and the location of the cut is named M. The order of the transcription signals and of the maturation sites in relation to rpsO and pnp can be summarized as follows: P1, rpsO, t1, M, P2, RNase III-processing sites, pnp. The possible roles of mRNA processing events in the expression of rpsO-pnp operon are discussed.


The EMBO Journal | 1992

E.coli polynucleotide phosphorylase expression is autoregulated through an RNase III-dependent mechanism.

M Robert-Le Meur; Claude Portier

It has been previously shown that the pnp messenger RNAs are cleaved by RNase III at the 5′ end and that these cleavages induce a rapid decay of these messengers. A translational fusion between pnp and lacZ was introduced into the chromosome of a delta lac strain to study the expression of pnp. In the presence of increased cellular concentrations of polynucleotide phosphorylase, the level of the hybrid beta‐galactosidase is repressed, whereas the synthesis rate of the corresponding message is not significantly affected. In the absence of pnp, the level of the hybrid protein increases strongly. Thus, polynucleotide phosphorylase is post‐transcriptionally autocontrolled. However, autocontrol is totally abolished in strains where the RNase III site on the pnp message has been deleted or in strains devoid of RNase III. These results suggest that polynucleotide phosphorylase requires RNase III cleavages to autoregulate the translation of its message. Other mutations in the ribosome binding site region support the hypothesis that this 3′ to 5′ processive enzyme could recognize a specific repressor binding site at the 5′ end of pnp mRNA. Implications of these results on the mechanism of regulation and on messenger degradation are discussed.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2000

Crystal structure of the S15-rRNA complex.

Alexei Nikulin; Alexander Serganov; Eric Ennifar; Svetlana Tishchenko; Natalia Nevskaya; William Shepard; Claude Portier; Maria Garber; Bernard Ehresmann; Chantal Ehresmann; Stanislav Nikonov; Philippe Dumas

In bacterial ribosomes, the small (30S) ribosomal subunit is composed of 16S rRNA and 21 distinct proteins. Ribosomal protein S15 is of particular interest because it binds primarily to 16S rRNA and is required for assembly of the small subunit and for intersubunit association, thus representing a key element in the assembly of a whole ribosome. Here we report the 2.8 Å resolution crystal structure of the highly conserved S15–rRNA complex. Protein S15 interacts in the minor groove with a G-U/G-C motif and a three-way junction. The latter is constrained by a conserved base triple and stacking interactions, and locked into place by magnesium ions and protein side chains, mainly through interactions with the unique three-dimensional geometry of the backbone. The present structure gives insights into the dual role of S15 in ribosome assembly and translational regulation.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2002

Mutational Analysis of Polynucleotide Phosphorylase from Escherichia coli

Anne‐Charlotte Jarrige; Dominique Brechemier-Baey; Nathalie Mathy; Ophélie Duché; Claude Portier

Polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNPase), a homotrimeric exoribonuclease present in bacteria, is involved in mRNA degradation. In Escherichia coli, expression of this enzyme is autocontrolled at the translational level. We introduced about 30 mutations in the pnp gene by site-directed mutagenesis, most of them in phylogenetically conserved residues, and determined their effects on the three catalytic activities of PNPase, phosphorolysis, polymerisation and phosphate exchange, as well as on the efficiency of translational repression. The data are presented and discussed in the light of the crystallographic structure of PNPase from Streptomyces antibioticus. The results show that both PNPase activity and the presence of the KH and S1 RNA-binding domains are required for autocontrol. Deletions of these RNA-binding domains do not abolish any of the three catalytic activities, indicating that they are contained in a domain independent of the catalytic centre. Moreover, the catalytic centre was located around the tungsten-binding site identified by crystallography. Some mutations affect the three catalytic activities differently, an observation consistent with the presence of different subsites.


Molecular Microbiology | 1999

A novel mutation in the KH domain of polynucleotide phosphorylase affects autoregulation and mRNA decay in Escherichia coli.

Jaime García-Mena; Asis Das; Alejandra Sánchez-Trujillo; Claude Portier; Cecilia Montañez

Polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNPase) is a key 3′–5′ exonuclease for mRNA decay in bacteria. Here, we report the isolation of a novel mutant of Escherichia coli PNPase that affects autogenous control and mRNA decay. We show that the inactivation of PNPase by a transposon insertion increases the half‐life of galactokinase mRNA encoded by a plasmid. When the bacteriophage lambda int gene retroregulator (sib/tI ) is placed between pgal and galK, it severely diminishes galactokinase expression because of transcription termination. The expression of galK from this construct is increased by a single base mutation, sib1, which causes a partial readthrough of transcription at tI. We have used this plasmid system with sib1 to select E. coli mutants that depress galK expression. Genetic and molecular analysis of one such mutant revealed that it contains a mutation in the pnp gene, which encodes the PNPase catalytic subunit α. The mutation responsible (pnp‐71 ) has substituted a highly conserved glycine residue in the KH domain of PNPase with aspartate. We show that this G‐570D substitution causes a higher accumulation of the α‐subunit as a result of defective autoregulation, thereby increasing the PNPase activity in the cell. The purified mutant α‐subunit shows the same electrophoretic mobility in denaturing gels as the wild‐type subunit, as expected. However, the mutant protein present in crude extracts displays an altered electrophoretic mobility in non‐denaturing gels that is indicative of a novel enzyme complex. We present a model for how the pnp‐71 mutation might affect autoregulation and mRNA decay based on the postulated role of the KH domain in RNA–protein and protein–protein interactions.


Nucleic Acids Research | 1995

MOLECULAR DISSECTION OF THE PSEUDOKNOT GOVERNING THE TRANSLATIONAL REGULATION OF ESCHERICHIA COLI RIBOSOMAL PROTEIN S15

Claude Philippe; Lionel Bénard; Claude Portier; Eric Westhof; Bernard Ehresmann; Chantal Ehresmann

The ribosomal protein S15 controls its own translation by binding to a mRNA region overlapping the ribosome binding site. That region of the mRNA can fold in two mutually exclusive conformations that are in dynamic equilibrium: a structure with two hairpins and a pseudoknot. A mutational analysis provided evidence for the existence and requirement of the pseudoknot for translational control in vivo and S15 recognition in vitro. In this study, we used chemical probing to analyze the structural consequences of mutations and their effect on the stem-loop/pseudoknot equilibrium. Interactions between S15 and the pseudoknot structure were further investigated by footprinting experiments. These data, combined with computer modelling and the previously published data on S15 binding and in vivo control, provide important clues on pseudoknot formation and S15 recognition. An unexpected result is that the relevant control element, here the pseudoknot form, can exist in a variety of topologically equivalent structures recognizable and shapable by S15. S15 sits on the deep groove of the co-axial stack and makes contacts with both stems, shielding the bridging adenine. The only specific sequence determinants are found in the helix common to the pseudoknot and the hairpin structures.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2001

Increased Expression of Escherichia coli Polynucleotide Phosphorylase at Low Temperatures Is Linked to a Decrease in the Efficiency of Autocontrol

N. Mathy; A.-C. Jarrige; M. Robert-Le Meur; Claude Portier

Polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNPase) synthesis is translationally autocontrolled via an RNase III-dependent mechanism, which results in a tight correlation between protein level and messenger stability. In cells grown at 18 degrees C, the amount of PNPase is twice that found in cells grown at 30 degrees C. To investigate whether this effect was transcriptional or posttranscriptional, the expression of a set of pnp-lacZ transcriptional and translational fusions was analyzed in cells grown at different temperatures. In the absence of PNPase, there was no increase in pnp-lacZ expression, indicating that the increase in pnp expression occurs at a posttranscriptional level. Other experiments clearly show that increased pnp expression at low temperature is only observed under conditions in which the autocontrol mechanism of PNPase is functional. At low temperature, the destabilizing effect of PNPase on its own mRNA is less efficient, leading to a decrease in repression and an increase in the expression level.


Molecular Microbiology | 2004

Specific recognition of rpsO mRNA and 16S rRNA by Escherichia coli ribosomal protein S15 relies on both mimicry and site differentiation

Nathalie Mathy; Olivier Pellegrini; Alexander Serganov; Dinshaw J. Patel; Chantal Ehresmann; Claude Portier

The ribosomal protein S15 binds to 16S rRNA, during ribosome assembly, and to its own mRNA (rpsO mRNA), affecting autocontrol of its expression. In both cases, the RNA binding site is bipartite with a common subsite consisting of a G•U/G‐C motif. The second subsite is located in a three‐way junction in 16S rRNA and in the distal part of a stem forming a pseudoknot in Escherichia coli rpsO mRNA. To determine the extent of mimicry between these two RNA targets, we determined which amino acids interact with rpsO mRNA. A plasmid carrying rpsO (the S15 gene) was mutagenized and introduced into a strain lacking S15 and harbouring an rpsO–lacZ translational fusion. Analysis of deregulated mutants shows that each subsite of rpsO mRNA is recognized by a set of amino acids known to interact with 16S rRNA. In addition to the G•U/G‐C motif, which is recognized by the same amino acids in both targets, the other subsite interacts with amino acids also involved in contacts with helix H22 of 16S rRNA, in the region adjacent to the three‐way junction. However, specific S15–rpsO mRNA interactions can also be found, probably with A(−46) in loop L1 of the pseudoknot, demonstrating that mimicry between the two targets is limited.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2002

Do mRNA and rRNA Binding Sites of E. coli Ribosomal Protein S15 Share Common Structural Determinants

Alexander Serganov; Eric Ennifar; Claude Portier; Bernard Ehresmann; Chantal Ehresmann

Escherichia coli ribosomal protein S15 recognizes two RNA targets: a three-way junction in 16S rRNA and a pseudoknot structure on its own mRNA. Binding to mRNA occurs when S15 is expressed in excess over its rRNA target, resulting in an inhibition of translation start. The sole apparent similarity between the rRNA and mRNA targets is the presence of a G-U/G-C motif that contributes only modestly to rRNA binding but is essential for mRNA. To get more information on the structural determinants used by S15 to bind its mRNA target as compared to its rRNA site, we used site-directed mutagenesis, substitution by nucleotide analogs, footprinting experiments on both RNA and protein, and graphic modeling. The size of the mRNA-binding site could be reduced to 45 nucleotides, without loss of affinity. This short RNA preferentially folds into a pseudoknot, the formation of which depends on magnesium concentration and temperature. The size of the loop L2 that bridges the two stems of the pseudoknot through the minor groove could not be reduced below nine nucleotides. Then we showed that the pseudoknot recognizes the same side of S15 as 16S rRNA, although shielding a smaller surface area. It turned out that the G-U/G-C motif is recognized from the minor groove in both cases, and that the G-C pair is recognized in a very similar manner. However, the wobble G-U pair of the mRNA is not directly contacted by S15, as in rRNA, but is most likely involved in building a precise conformation of the RNA, essential for binding. Otherwise, unique specific features are utilized, such as the three-way junction in the case of 16S rRNA and the looped out A(-46) for the mRNA pseudoknot.

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Chantal Ehresmann

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Bernard Ehresmann

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Eric Ennifar

University of Strasbourg

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Maria Garber

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Alexander Serganov

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Claude Philippe

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Alexander Serganov

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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