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Dive into the research topics where Danielle Moinier is active.

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Featured researches published by Danielle Moinier.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

Isolation of a Tarantula Toxin Specific for a Class of Proton-gated Na+ Channels

P. Escoubas; J. R. de Weille; A. Lecoq; S. Diochot; Rainer Waldmann; Guy Champigny; Danielle Moinier; A. Ménez; Michel Lazdunski

Acid sensing is associated with nociception, taste transduction, and perception of extracellular pH fluctuations in the brain. Acid sensing is carried out by the simplest class of ligand-gated channels, the family of H+-gated Na+ channels. These channels have recently been cloned and belong to the acid-sensitive ion channel (ASIC) family. Toxins from animal venoms have been essential for studies of voltage-sensitive and ligand-gated ion channels. This paper describes a novel 40-amino acid toxin from tarantula venom, which potently blocks (IC50 = 0.9 nm) a particular subclass of ASIC channels that are highly expressed in both central nervous system neurons and sensory neurons from dorsal root ganglia. This channel type has properties identical to those described for the homomultimeric assembly of ASIC1a. Homomultimeric assemblies of other members of the ASIC family and heteromultimeric assemblies of ASIC1a with other ASIC subunits are insensitive to the toxin. The new toxin is the first high affinity and highly selective pharmacological agent for this novel class of ionic channels. It will be important for future studies of their physiological and physio-pathological roles.


British Journal of Pharmacology | 1999

Effects of phrixotoxins on the Kv4 family of potassium channels and implications for the role of Ito1 in cardiac electrogenesis

Sylvie Diochot; Milou-Daniel Drici; Danielle Moinier; Michel Fink; Michel Lazdunski

In the present study, two new peptides, phrixotoxins PaTx1 and PaTx2 (29–31 amino acids), which potently block A‐type potassium currents, have been purified from the venom of the tarantula Phrixotrichus auratus. Phrixotoxins specifically block Kv4.3 and Kv4.2 currents that underlie Ito1, with an 5


FEBS Letters | 1999

MIT1, a black mamba toxin with a new and highly potent activity on intestinal contraction

Hugues Schweitz; Pierre Pacaud; Sylvie Diochot; Danielle Moinier; Michel Lazdunski

Mamba intestinal toxin (MIT1) isolated from Dendroaspis polylepis venom is a 81 amino acid polypeptide cross‐linked by five disulphide bridges. MIT1 has a very potent action on guinea‐pig intestinal contractility. MIT1 (1 nM) potently contracts longitudinal ileal muscle and distal colon, and this contraction is equivalent to that of 40 mM K+. Conversely MIT1 relaxes proximal colon again as potently as 40 mM K+. The MIT1‐induced effects are antagonised by tetrodotoxin (1 μM) in proximal and distal colon but not in longitudinal ileum. The MIT1‐induced relaxation of the proximal colon is reversibly inhibited by the NO synthase inhibitor L‐NAME (200 μM). 125I‐labelled MIT1 binds with a very high affinity to both ileum and brain membranes (K d=1.3 pM and 0.9 pM, and B max=30 fmol/mg and 26 fmol/mg, respectively). MIT1 is a very highly selective toxin for a receptor present both in the CNS and in the smooth muscle and which might be an as yet unidentified K+ channel.


FEBS Letters | 2003

New partners of acyl carrier protein detected in Escherichia coli by tandem affinity purification

D Gully; Danielle Moinier; Laurent Loiseau; E Bouveret

We report the first use of tandem affinity purification (TAP) in a prokaryote to purify native protein complexes, and demonstrate its reliability and power. We purified the acyl carrier protein (ACP) of Escherichia coli, a protein involved in a myriad of metabolic pathways. Besides the identification of several known partners of ACP, we rediscovered ACP/MukB and ACP/IscS interactions already detected but previously disregarded as due to contamination. Here, we demonstrate the specificity of these interactions and characterize them. This suggests that ACP is involved in additional previously unsuspected pathways. Furthermore, this study shows how the TAP method can be simply used in prokaryotes such as E. coli to identify new partners in protein–protein interactions under physiological conditions and thereby uncover novel protein functions.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2014

An ArsR/SmtB Family Member Is Involved in the Regulation by Arsenic of the Arsenite Oxidase Operon in Thiomonas arsenitoxydans

Danielle Moinier; Djamila Slyemi; Deborah Byrne; Sabrina Lignon; Régine Lebrun; Emmanuel Talla; Violaine Bonnefoy

ABSTRACT The genetic organization of the aioBA operon, encoding the arsenite oxidase of the moderately acidophilic and facultative chemoautotrophic bacterium Thiomonas arsenitoxydans, is different from that of the aioBA operon in the other arsenite oxidizers, in that it encodes AioF, a metalloprotein belonging to the ArsR/SmtB family. AioF is stabilized by arsenite, arsenate, or antimonite but not molybdate. Arsenic is tightly attached to AioF, likely by cysteine residues. When loaded with arsenite or arsenate, AioF is able to bind specifically to the regulatory region of the aio operon at two distinct positions. In Thiomonas arsenitoxydans, the promoters of aioX and aioB are convergent, suggesting that transcriptional interference occurs. These results indicate that the regulation of the aioBA operon is more complex in Thiomonas arsenitoxydans than in the other aioBA containing arsenite oxidizers and that the arsenic binding protein AioF is involved in this regulation. On the basis of these data, a model to explain the tight control of aioBA expression by arsenic in Thiomonas arsenitoxydans is proposed.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2016

Insights into the Quorum Sensing Regulon of the Acidophilic Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans Revealed by Transcriptomic in the Presence of an Acyl Homoserine Lactone Superagonist Analog

Sigde Mamani; Danielle Moinier; Yann Denis; Laurent Soulere; Yves Queneau; Emmanuel Talla; Violaine Bonnefoy; Nicolas Guiliani

While a functional quorum sensing system has been identified in the acidophilic chemolithoautotrophic Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans ATCC 23270T and shown to modulate cell adhesion to solid substrates, nothing is known about the genes it regulates. To address the question of how quorum sensing controls biofilm formation in A. ferrooxidansT, the transcriptome of this organism in conditions in which quorum sensing response is stimulated by a synthetic superagonist AHL (N-acyl homoserine lactones) analog has been studied. First, the effect on biofilm formation of a synthetic AHL tetrazolic analog, tetrazole 9c, known for its agonistic QS activity, was assessed by fluorescence and electron microscopy. A fast adherence of A. ferrooxidansT cells on sulfur coupons was observed. Then, tetrazole 9c was used in DNA microarray experiments that allowed the identification of genes regulated by quorum sensing signaling, and more particularly, those involved in early biofilm formation. Interestingly, afeI gene, encoding the AHL synthase, but not the A. ferrooxidans quorum sensing transcriptional regulator AfeR encoding gene, was shown to be regulated by quorum sensing. Data indicated that quorum sensing network represents at least 4.5% (141 genes) of the ATCC 23270T genome of which 42.5% (60 genes) are related to biofilm formation. Finally, AfeR was shown to bind specifically to the regulatory region of the afeI gene at the level of the palindromic sequence predicted to be the AfeR binding site. Our results give new insights on the response of A. ferrooxidans to quorum sensing and on biofilm biogenesis.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2017

The Global Redox Responding RegB/RegA Signal Transduction System Regulates the Genes Involved in Ferrous Iron and Inorganic Sulfur Compound Oxidation of the Acidophilic Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans

Danielle Moinier; Deborah Byrne; Agnès Amouric; Violaine Bonnefoy

The chemical attack of ore by ferric iron and/or sulfuric acid releases valuable metals. The products of these reactions are recycled by iron and sulfur oxidizing microorganisms. These acidophilic chemolithotrophic prokaryotes, among which Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans, grow at the expense of the energy released from the oxidation of ferrous iron and/or inorganic sulfur compounds (ISCs). In At. ferrooxidans, it has been shown that the expression of the genes encoding the proteins involved in these respiratory pathways is dependent on the electron donor and that the genes involved in iron oxidation are expressed before those responsible for ISCs oxidation when both iron and sulfur are present. Since the redox potential increases during iron oxidation but remains stable during sulfur oxidation, we have put forward the hypothesis that the global redox responding two components system RegB/RegA is involved in this regulation. To understand the mechanism of this system and its role in the regulation of the aerobic respiratory pathways in At. ferrooxidans, the binding of different forms of RegA (DNA binding domain, wild-type, unphosphorylated and phosphorylated-like forms of RegA) on the regulatory region of different genes/operons involved in ferrous iron and ISC oxidation has been analyzed. We have shown that the four RegA forms are able to bind specifically the upstream region of these genes. Interestingly, the phosphorylation of RegA did not change its affinity for its cognate DNA. The transcriptional start site of these genes/operons has been determined. In most cases, the RegA binding site(s) was (were) located upstream from the −35 (or −24) box suggesting that RegA does not interfere with the RNA polymerase binding. Based on the results presented in this report, the role of the RegB/RegA system in the regulation of the ferrous iron and ISC oxidation pathways in At. ferrooxidans is discussed.


Protein and Peptide Letters | 2007

Unexpected Altered Specificity Is Responsible for St. Louis Encephalitis Virus Recombinant Protease Autoproteolysis

Boris Pastorino; Christophe N. Peyrefitte; Marc Grandadam; Régine Lebrun; Danielle Moinier; Dominique Rolland; Hugues J. Tolou; Maël Bessaud

We report herein the study of the cleavage fragments generated by autoproteolysis of the St. Louis encephalitis virus recombinant protease. The cleavage sites leading to truncated forms were identified by microsequencing, which revealed an unexpected altered specificity of the recombinant proteinase towards unusual sequences.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1992

A new member of the natriuretic peptide family is present in the venom of the green mamba (Dendroaspis angusticeps).

Hugues Schweitz; Paul Vigne; Danielle Moinier; Christian Frelin; Michel Lazdunski


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1995

Kalicludines and Kaliseptine TWO DIFFERENT CLASSES OF SEA ANEMONE TOXINS FOR VOLTAGE-SENSITIVE K+ CHANNELS

Hugues Schweitz; Thomas Bruhn; Eric Guillemare; Danielle Moinier; Jean-Marc Lancelin; Lászlo Béress; Michel Lazdunski

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Michel Lazdunski

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Alain Dolla

Aix-Marseille University

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Emmanuel Talla

Aix-Marseille University

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Deborah Byrne

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Hugues Schweitz

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Régine Lebrun

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Sylvie Diochot

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Zorah Dermoun

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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